Ralph William Cooper (1908 – 1994) was a Canadian football and construction industry executive who was the first president of theHamilton Tiger-Cats as well as president of theInterprovincial Rugby Football Union and theCanadian Football League.
Cooper was born on November 3, 1908 inHamilton, Ontario to William Henry and Edith Elizabeth Cooper. On June 18, 1938, he married Evelyn Joanne McArthur. They had one son and two daughters.[1]
Cooper took over his father's company, Cooper Construction Company, in the 1940s.[2] The company worked on a number of large projects in and aroundHamilton, Ontario, including installations forProcter & Gamble,McMaster University, theAmerican Can Company, Dominion Glass,International Harvester,Bell Telephone of Canada,Canadian Industries Limited, Chicago Rawhide, Canadian Canners,Dominion Electrohome Industries, F. W. Fearman Co., and theUniversity of Waterloo.[1][3][4][5][6][7][8] Cooper Construction built theCanadian Football Hall of Fame at cost.[2] Cooper was also a director of theCanadian Imperial Bank of Commerce,Hamilton General Hospital, theMutual Life Assurance Company of Canada,Dominion Tar & Chemical, Dominion Glass, Slater Steel Industries, theCanada Trust Company, and theHamilton Street Railway.[1][9][10] He retired in 1975 and was succeeded by his son, Bill Cooper.[2]
Cooper was a driving force behind the merger of theHamilton Tigers and theHamilton Wildcats and was the first president of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats.[11] He served as president of Interprovincial Rugby Football Union in 1955.[12] In 1956, Cooper was elected chairman of the Canadian Football Council, a newly formed organization created by the IPRFU and theWestern Interprovincial Rugby Football Union clubs to oversee professional football in Canada.[13] On February 15, 1956, Cooper andNational Football League commissionerBert Bell reached an agreement for both sides to recognize each other's contracts, which ended years of "raids" between the NFL and Canadian teams.[14] Cooper was president of the Canadian Football League during the 1960 season and, along withFrank M. Gibson and Ralph Parliament, devised an interlocking schedule for 1961 which saw teams from the East and West divisions play each other in the regular season for the first time.[12] He remained on the Tiger-Cats board of directors until 1973, when he was succeeded by his son, Bill.[15] From 1973 to 1977, he was a member of the club’s board of governors. In 1992, Cooper was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame.[12] He died in September 1994 at the age of 85.[11]