Military Wiki
Larry V. Birleffi
Personal details
Born (1918-04-17)April 17, 1918
Hartville, Platte County, Wyoming, USA
Died September 27, 2008(2008-09-27) (aged 90)
Cheyenne, Laramie County, Wyoming
Denomination Roman Catholic
Spouse Lois Sturtevant Birleffi (married, 1942 – her death)
Children

Lynn Birleffi
Bobbie Birleffi

Laurie Rosen
Occupation Broadcaster; journalist
Alma mater University of Wyoming

Larry V. Birleffi (April 17, 1918 – September 27, 2008) was a Wyoming broadcaster known as the original "Voice of the University of Wyoming Cowboys", having announced all UW football and basketball games from 1947 to 1986.[1] He helped to build the UW sports program in Laramie and was a vigorous promoter of its athletic teams. He also won a Bronze Star for his service during World War II.

Background[]

Birleffi was one of four children born to Victor Birleffi (1888–1970), a miner, and Louise Birleffi (1895–1986)[2] in Hartville in Platte County in southeastern Wyoming and lived in the state for his entire life except for four years in the military. During Birleffi's youth, Hartville had a population of two thousand, compared to fewer than one hundred in the 2000 census. Birleffi was of Italian ethnicity and Roman Catholic in a predominantly Protestant state.[3] He graduated from Sunrise High School, now Guernsey-Sunrise High School in Guernesey, where he was quarterback of the football team. In 1942, he received his bachelor of arts degree in English from the University of Wyoming. He was a major in the United States Army 92nd Infantry Division, having served in Italy.[4]

Sports career[]

Birleffi's career spanned the history of broadcasting. While in college, he was a sportswriter for the Laramie Daily Boomerang, the daily newspaper in Laramie, the seat of Albany County. He thereafter moved into radio and television. An icon of Wyoming sports, he was renowned for his booming, enthusiastic voice. He also co-owned a radio station and appeared on regional and national television. He had a regular sports column in the Wyoming Tribune Eagle in Cheyenne. He was the announcer for UW football and basketball for some thirty-seven years.[5] Birleffi's love of athletics was shown in his writing; according to his obituary,he demonstrated a belief in the importance of teamwork, commitment, discipline, and spirit as essential to all sports.[4]

He hosted regular television sports programs created a radio talk show called Cheyenne Today.[4] He was the station manager and eventually a part-owner of KFBC Radio. He received assignments, such as the National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas, Nevada, from ABC Wide World of Sports,[5] created and originally produced by another Wyoming native, Curt Gowdy, a personal friend of Birleffi's.[3]

Birleffi was "Wyoming Broadcaster of the Year" in 1954. In 1992, the press booth at UW's War Memorial Stadium was named in his honor.[1] In 1996, he was inducted into the University of Wyoming Intercollegiate Athletics Hall of Fame. In 2001, he was named "Outstanding Alumni" for the UW College of Arts and Sciences. At the time, Governor Jim Geringer described Birleffi as "indeed a gentleman cowboy and a scholar. His service to community, country, and nation brings honor and credit to Wyoming, our university, and to the College of Arts and Sciences.”[5] In 2003, he was inducted to the Wyoming Broadcasters Association Hall of Fame, having also been a former president of the organization. He was a member of Rotary International, a founding member and past president of the Cheyenne Quarterback Club. He was active in the UW Cowboy Joe Club, the Wyoming Heritage Foundation, the American Heart Association, and the American Cancer Society.[5]

Family and death[]

In 1942, he wed the former Lois A. Sturtevant (March 16, 1920 – June 10, 2004); the marriage lasted until her death. The couple had three daughters, Lynn Birleffi and husband Phil Noble of Cheyenne, Bobbie Birleffi of New York City, and Laurie Rosen and husband Steve of Chevy Chase, Maryland, and two grandchildren. Birleffi died at Davis Hospice in Cheyenne. He was also survived by a sister, Evelyn B. Johnston, of Billings, Montana. He was preceded in death by two brothers, Arthur Birleffi[4] and John A. Birleffi (1929–1999) of Greeley, Colorado.[2] Services were held on September 30 at St. Mary's Cathedral, 2102 Warren Avenue, in Cheyenne.[6] News of Birleffi's death was carried by the Associated Press and many newspapers in the American West.

References[]

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