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re: How did your SEC school get their name?

Posted on 2/7/13 at 10:38 pm to
Posted by Timber Dawg
Perry, FL
Member since May 2012
107 posts
Posted on 2/7/13 at 10:38 pm to
quote:

But on Nov. 3, 1920, Morgan Blake of the ATLANTA JOURNAL wrote about school nicknames and said "The Georgia Bulldogs" would sound good because there is a certain dignity about a bulldog, as well as ferocity." After a 0-0 tie with Virginia in Charlottesville on Nov. 6, 1920, ATLANTA CONSTITUTION writer Cliff Wheatley used the name "Bulldogs" in his story five times. The name has been used ever since.



LINK
Posted by OBReb6
Memphissippi
Member since Jul 2010
37668 posts
Posted on 2/7/13 at 11:23 pm to
Rebels is pretty straight forward, but the official reason we chose that name was to honor our fallen confederate soldiers. When the civil war broke out our entire student body enrolled in the confederate army and experienced a 100% casualty rate.


Prior to the 30s we were known as the mississippi flood, after the floods that ravaged the delta way back in the day.
Posted by Wishnitwas1998
where TN, MS, and AL meet
Member since Oct 2010
58082 posts
Posted on 2/7/13 at 11:26 pm to
I thought it was bc Ole Miss fans are racist?
Posted by dbt_Geaux_Tigers_196
Dystopia (but well cared for)
Member since Mar 2012
25235 posts
Posted on 2/7/13 at 11:39 pm to
quote:

Latarian
We have a Super Bowl victory over LSU to thank...

According to newspaper accounts and the history of the university, the Arkansas football coach Hugo Bezdek stepped down from the train to address the throng of students that came to meet the team. It was during his recounting of the 16-0 win over LSU that Coach Bezdek was to have said that the team played: "like a wild band of Razorback hogs."


For a little context, the 1908 LSU team was one of CFB's 'GOAT's'...10-0 ,442 - 9 points (44-1 per game average ), so beating them the next year was a pretty big deal.
Posted by McRebel42
North Mississippi Hollywood
Member since Oct 2012
11606 posts
Posted on 2/8/13 at 12:12 am to
Really do we have to go there this is a pretty civil thread.
Posted by McRebel42
North Mississippi Hollywood
Member since Oct 2012
11606 posts
Posted on 2/8/13 at 12:19 am to
quote:

Ole Miss, I think the Rebel is pretty straight forward. But black bear? Wtf?


quote:

The Story of the Teddy Bear

In 1902, President Theodore Roosevelt came to the Mississippi Delta to hunt black bear. He was the guest of Mr. Mangrum owner of Smedes Plantation in southern Sharkey County. The great bear hunter and guide, Holt Collier, was hired to be the president’s guide on this hunt.

On the first morning of the hunt, the dogs hit upon the scent of the bear and the hunt was on. Holt Collier told President Roosevelt where to wait for the bear to come out of the cane brake. The president and his companion, Mr. Huger Foote, waited for the bear to emerge and listened to the barking of the dogs as they pursued the bear. They could tell that the dogs were going in a different direction and decided to return to camp for lunch. Not long after they had left, the bear turned again and eventually came out of the woods almost exactly where Holt Collier had said it would, but the president was not in position to get his shot.

The bear became cornered by the dogs in a slough and turned on them. In its fury, the bear grabbed Holt’s favorite dog, Jocko. Holt Collier jumped down off his horse and clubbed the bear with the stock of his gun, stunning the 250 pound bruin. He then threw a rope around the semiconscious creature and sent for the president to shoot the bear.

When the president arrived, he was disappointed to see the addled bear at Holt’s feet. Despite encouragement from the crowd of hunters, President Roosevelt refused to shoot the injured bear stating that it would be unsportsmanlike.

The press went wild with this story of the President, Holt Collier and the bear, and it soon traveled across the country in news stories and cartoons. Morris Mitchom a toy shop owner in New York, wrote the president asking if he could name the stuffed toy bears in his shop “Teddy’s Bears.” The president agreed and before long all stuffed bears were known as Teddy Bears.

Since that time, stuffed toy bears have been called Teddy Bears. This children's icon was named because of a hunt President Theodore Roosevelt attended in the Mississippi Delta in 1902 where he refused to kill a black bear. The Teddy Bear is the state toy of Mississippi, and each year a different commemorative teddy bear is sold at the Great Delta Bear Affair.



By the way little kids around the world can thank Mississippi & Roosevelt for Teddy Bears

LINK

This post was edited on 2/8/13 at 12:22 am
Posted by spacecataz
baton rouge
Member since Mar 2010
203 posts
Posted on 2/8/13 at 12:37 am to
The "Rebels" have always been associated with losing since the war, so that's where their name came from.
Posted by Ole Colonel 27
Member since Oct 2011
2448 posts
Posted on 2/8/13 at 1:12 am to
I believe LSU's "fighting tigers" and auburn's "war eagle" were the names of the confederate troops from those areas of their respectable states.
Posted by Mizzeaux
Worshington
Member since Jun 2012
13893 posts
Posted on 2/8/13 at 1:38 am to
quote:

The name comes from a band of armed guards called the Missouri Tigers who, in 1864, protected Columbia from Confederate guerrillas during the Civil War.
Posted by The_Joker
Winter Park, Fl
Member since Jan 2013
16316 posts
Posted on 2/8/13 at 2:02 am to
quote:

I hate the Cardinals with a burning passion. Die hard Cubbie fan. However, it was not a dig at anyone in particular. I just think having a bird for a mascot sucks.



At least birds win World Series'

GO CARDS
Posted by The_Joker
Winter Park, Fl
Member since Jan 2013
16316 posts
Posted on 2/8/13 at 2:04 am to
quote:

According to newspaper accounts and the history of the university, the Arkansas football coach Hugo Bezdek stepped down from the train to address the throng of students that came to meet the team. It was during his recounting of the 16-0 win over LSU in 1909 that Coach Bezdek was to have said that the team played: "like a wild band of Razorback hogs."


In other news, I have always thought this story was cool.
Posted by BossHog13
Member since Aug 2009
121 posts
Posted on 2/8/13 at 3:20 am to
AND ... you're welcome for us giving you Mike the Tiger!

The Fighting Tigers of LSU got their FIRST live Bengal mascot in 1936 from the Little Rock Zoo for $750, money collected from the student body. The mascot was renamed in honor of LSU's Athletic Trainer Mike Chambers and became Mike I. A permanent home was constructed for Mike "the tiger" near Tiger Stadium, and he was a GREAT mascot until his death in 1956.
This post was edited on 2/8/13 at 6:01 am
Posted by GoldenFlakes
Member since Dec 2012
549 posts
Posted on 2/8/13 at 5:25 am to
Cornelius Vanderbilt, who donated $1 million to found the university in 1873 (supposedly at the behest of a Methodist preacher who told him that he needed to do something generous and charitable to avoid the gates of hell for all he had previously done), had an affinity for yachting and was nicknamed "Commodore" by his robber-barron friends.
Posted by ugasickem
Allatoona
Member since Nov 2010
10747 posts
Posted on 2/8/13 at 7:26 am to
quote:

woooohhhh sorry shite crossed over from a school thing im working on


bullshite. just own it.
Posted by Omahareb
Member since Jan 2013
182 posts
Posted on 2/8/13 at 7:31 am to
people were slow to post from Ole miss....see thats why....it is what it is...we have moved forward some and still moving in the right direction
Posted by Porky
Member since Aug 2008
19101 posts
Posted on 2/8/13 at 9:02 am to
quote:

Arkansas residents took pride in being labeled "razorbacks" by this point so the cardinal was replaced by Razorbacks.

That was one ugly Cardinal too. Here's a link:
LINK
This post was edited on 2/8/13 at 9:03 am
Posted by Master of Sinanju
Member since Feb 2012
11305 posts
Posted on 2/8/13 at 9:14 am to
Another story about the Alabama elephants.

quote:

One account of the mascot’s derivation began in 1930, when Rosenberger’s Birmingham Trunk Company, whose trademark is a red elephant standing on a trunk to signify the luggage’s durability, presented red elephant good luck charms to members of Rose Bowl-bound Alabama.

When the team, composed of predominantly large men, emerged from the train in Pasadena with red elephant trinkets suspending from their luggage, reporters were awed by the players’ mass and quickly seized upon the insignias on their baggage. Thus, the connection was born
Posted by DaleDenton
Member since Jun 2010
42346 posts
Posted on 2/8/13 at 9:22 am to
quote:

Not sure. Our red is still "cardinal red" officially.

Cardinal & white.

And apparently anthracite.


Plus cool grey and black.
Posted by CrimsonCoast
The Coast
Member since Jun 2012
1409 posts
Posted on 2/8/13 at 9:24 am to
quote:

I thought it was bc Ole Miss fans are racist?


They are, but that's not why they are called the Rebels. It is just a coincidence.
Posted by VFL1800FPD
Nashville, TN
Member since Aug 2012
9056 posts
Posted on 2/8/13 at 10:25 am to
(no message)
This post was edited on 2/8/13 at 10:26 am
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