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re: Aggies, today we think of you

Posted on 11/18/15 at 11:43 am to
Posted by Masterag
'Round Dallas
Member since Sep 2014
18799 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 11:43 am to
Wow. This is really heartwarming DOT.
Posted by AgCoug
Houston
Member since Jan 2014
5858 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 11:47 am to
Here.
Posted by 4th and 1
Member since Sep 2013
282 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 11:48 am to
Why would anyone downvote this?
Posted by SpartyGator
Detroit Lions fan
Member since Oct 2011
75408 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 11:53 am to
frick the person downvoting
Posted by cardboardboxer
Member since Apr 2012
34330 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 11:54 am to
quote:

Why would anyone downvote this?



Terrorists walk among us.

Posted by G2160
houston
Member since May 2013
1750 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 12:03 pm to
quote:


I was on campus that night, that's not something I'll ever forget.



Not to shite on the sentiment of your post, but the pic isn't really applicable to this '99 bonfire thread. Kind of misleading for those that aren't familiar.
Posted by Agforlife
Somewhere in the Brazos Valley
Member since Nov 2012
20102 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 12:10 pm to
Here
Posted by Pitch To Johnny
Houston
Member since Jun 2015
4195 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 12:22 pm to
Thank ya sir. Here.
Posted by AWG 12
Member since Feb 2015
47 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 12:34 pm to
Whoever down voted you are awful. This is about college students that lost their lives
Posted by TbirdSpur2010
ALAMO CITY
Member since Dec 2010
134026 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 12:39 pm to
Here.

And thanks, Dawgsontop34.
Posted by aggressor
Austin, TX
Member since Sep 2011
8714 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 1:14 pm to
Thanks for this, one more reason I love the SEC. We were some school from afar to most of you then and we appreciate your understanding.

For me it is still an open wound that will never heal. Bonfire was THE event on the A&M campus, it is hard to overstate it. Thousands of students worked for months building it. Every part of the school from Corps to Frats to GDI's picked up an axe and helped move logs. It was 10,000 trees cut down by hand with axes and moved to the site where they were cleaned up and put in to place. The size and scope of the project was incredible and it was the true unifying event for all Aggies. Watching it burn after building it for months was always very emotional. My Senior Year my outfit in the Corps got the gameball from coach Slocum just as Bonfire was lit and ran 3 laps around Bonfire before starting a relay run for the 93 mile relay run to deliver it to Austin.

I remember hearing the news that morning on the radio as I was several years out of school at the time. I just couldn't believe it. Bonfire had fallen before but it was always something they could see coming and fell gradually, the concept of such a catastrophic failure with no real warning was incomprehensible. Seeing the images of the bodies and the injured students were haunting and gut wrenching. This probably will sound wrong to many but it hit me harder and certainly more personally than 9/11.

At the same time the way the campus rallied was also incredibly inspiring. The outpouring of support was amazing. I remember going to the memorial the night Bonfire was scheduled to burn and walking in with my old outfit from the Corps which had lost one of its members in the collapse. I remember going to the blood bank in Austin to donate and having to wait over an hour because of the huge line of primarily UT students who were lined up waiting to give and do whatever they could.

Then the game. The campus was still reeling and lost but we had the big game with Texas where they were #5 coming in to Kyle. They released doves before the game. The Texas band played "Amazing Grace" followed by "Taps" at halftime and lowered their own flags and replaced them with Texas flags. Still makes me tear up Then of course the game came down to the last drive where the Aggies strip sacked the Texas QB and Brian Gamble recovered with one of the most iconic pictures in Aggie football history.

The open wound is that it will never be the same. Bonfire eventually came back as an off campus shadow of what it was, still a nice event but nothing like before. A generation of Aggies have grown to never even know Bonfire except in what they have heard or seen in old videos. I was only able to even go to the Bonfire Memorial a couple of years ago as it was just too painful and it is an amazing monument.


This post was edited on 11/18/15 at 1:16 pm
Posted by agswin
The Republic of Texas
Member since Aug 2011
4341 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 4:00 pm to
quote:

I just couldn't believe it


Still, I don't want to believe it but it did.

It still causes this old ag to tear up.
Posted by 18handicap
Member since Jul 2014
5314 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 4:25 pm to
As a Texas Tiger growing up in Sugar Land and living in College Station for 10 years until I retired last year, I do honor this day for all of my Aggie friends and relatives. This is the one day which our rivalries stop and we remember those who lost their lives in the tragedy.

Here.

Posted by Farmer1906
The Woodlands, TX
Member since Apr 2009
50318 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 4:36 pm to

This was Kyle Field the night before the game.


The football team helped clear logs


Our rivals playing amazing grace at halftime

Crazy how everyone comes together in a tragedy.
This post was edited on 11/18/15 at 4:37 pm
Posted by Wolfhound45
Hanging with Chicken in Lurkistan
Member since Nov 2009
120000 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 5:07 pm to
Rest in Peace

Posted by cas4t
Member since Jan 2010
70898 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 5:13 pm to
Posted by Patton
Principality of Sealand
Member since Apr 2011
32652 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 5:13 pm to
What is "Here" referring too?
Posted by Wolfhound45
Hanging with Chicken in Lurkistan
Member since Nov 2009
120000 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 5:14 pm to
quote:

What is "Here" referring too?
Aggie roll call. One of their most solemn and sacred traditions.

Posted by Lsupimp
Ersatz Amerika-97.6% phony & fake
Member since Nov 2003
78453 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 5:29 pm to
I can't believe it was that long ago.
What a shock and tragedy that was.
RIP.
Posted by aggressor
Austin, TX
Member since Sep 2011
8714 posts
Posted on 11/18/15 at 5:44 pm to
quote:

What is "Here" referring too?


It's a Muster related tradition for honoring the dead.

quote:

Aggie Muster is a time-honored tradition at Texas A&M University which celebrates the camaraderie of the school while remembering the lives of Aggies who have died, specifically those in the past year. Muster officially began on April 21, 1922 as a day for remembrance of fellow Aggies. Muster ceremonies today take place in approximately 320 locations globally. The largest muster ceremony occurs in Reed Arena, on the Texas A&M campus. The "Roll Call for the Absent" commemorates Aggies, alumni and current students, who died that year. Aggies light candles, and friends and families of Aggies who died that year answer “here” when the name of their loved one is “called”.
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