UT Wordmark Primary UT Wordmark Formal Shield Texas UT News Camera Chevron Close Search Copy Link Download File Hamburger Menu Time Stamp Open in browser Load More Pull quote Cloudy and windy Cloudy Partly Cloudy Rain and snow Rain Showers Snow Sunny Thunderstorms Wind and Rain Windy Facebook Instagram LinkedIn Twitter email alert map calendar bullhorn

UT News

DKR: The Royal Scrapbook

Just in time for football season, a new book from UT Press takes an intimate look at Darrell K Royal, “The Coach.” Take a sneak peek with our DKR photo slideshow.

Two color orange horizontal divider

Just in time for football season, a new book from The University of Texas Press gives an intimate look at Darrell K. Royal, “The Coach.” DKR: The Royal Scrapbook uses an extraordinary collection of never-before-published photographs, letters, newspaper clippings, football ephemera and recollections to reveal the man behind the Longhorn football legend. Written by Austin-based author and University of Texas at Austin alumna Jenna McEachern, with Edith Royal, the book will be published September 1.

Decades after his last game in 1976, Darrell K Royal remains the winningest football coach in University of Texas history. The driving force behind eleven Southwest Conference and three national championships, winner of Coach of the Year and Coach of the Decade awards and honored namesake of the Darrell K RoyalTexas Memorial Stadium, Royal is still revered as “a coach who would rather lose a game than engage in unsportsmanlike tactics; who would neither make excuses for losing nor brag about winning; and who by his own example contributes to the building of stalwart character in men,” in the words of the City of Austin’s “Darrell Royal Day” proclamation.

The 192-page volume offers an intimate, insider’s view of the private life of the man behind the legend through a remarkable collection of photographs and memorabilia lovingly preserved by Royal’s wife of more than sixty-five years, Edith. This irreplaceable family archive offers revealing snapshots of Royal’s life, from his impoverished youth in Oklahoma, through his courtship of Edith and his glory days as a player at Oklahoma and a coach at Texas, to his retirement career as a goodwill ambassador for the university. Accompanying the images are moving recollections from fellow coaches and former players, family members and friends who testify to Royal’s honesty and integrity and the transformative effect that his character has had on the legions of people whose lives he has touched. Access to additional archival material was also generously provided by UT’s Dolph Briscoe Center for American History.

DKR: The Royal Scrapbook: http://www.utexas.edu/utpress/books/mcedkr.html