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In 1943, being over the
draft age, Siler volunteered and served overseas with the
American Red Cross during World War II. Upon his return, Siler
continued coaching football, boys and girls basketball, track,
baseball, tennis and golf. He taught physical education to
every student that attended Morristown High School for 25
years.
As Physical
Education Director of Morristown City Schools, Siler established
an annual Field Day to provide track competition among the
elementary schools. Coach Siler believed athletics should
be available to every student.
In football,
Coach Siler compiled a total record of 200-111-13. He coached
Knoxville High to a State Championship and an East Tennessee
Championship. In basketball, Coach Siler won a combined 514
wins for boys and girls. At Knoxville High, his boys basketball
team won 63 consecutive games. His teams won four East Tennessee
Championships, one Big Six Championship and ten District Championships.
In golf, Siler's Morristown High team won the TSSAA Championship
in 1938.
Perhaps
Coach Siler's most celebrated accomplishments were in track,
where his Knoxville High teams won a State Championship and
two Class A Track and Field University of Tennessee Championships.
In 1928, Coach Siler's Morristown High two-mile relay team
won the Vanderbilt Invitational Track Championship and also
established a new national high school record of 8:25:7, which
stood several years. He also coached several individual state
track champions.
Throughout
his life, Siler maintained his love for athletics and for
the thousands of students he helped influence. He was known
for his "toughness tempered with love" and for leaving
a positive impact on his players.
Coach
Siler owned and operated a city swimming pool in Morristown.
He also operated the golf course and, after retirement, installed
the first bowling alley in Morristown with an automatic pin-setter.
Coach
Siler was inducted into the East Tennessee Chapter of the
National Football Foundation Hall of Fame, the Northeast Tennessee
Hall of Fame, and was honored in 1966 with "Petie Siler
Day."
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