Started By
Message

How many SEC football teams are named after civil war references?
Posted on 3/4/10 at 3:17 pm
Posted on 3/4/10 at 3:17 pm
LSU, Ole Miss, and South Carolina are.
What about Auburn?
What about State. Haha, jk state didn't exist during the civil war.
What about Auburn?
What about State. Haha, jk state didn't exist during the civil war.

Posted on 3/4/10 at 3:20 pm to inelishaitrust
Alabama's "Rammer Jammer" is a reference to what Confederate soldiers from Alabama were referred to often (as well as the state bird).
Posted on 3/4/10 at 3:23 pm to CapstoneGrad06
quote:
Alabama's "Rammer Jammer" is a reference to what Confederate soldiers from Alabama were referred to often
ghey

Posted on 3/4/10 at 3:24 pm to Volmanac
By the way, your welcome New Orleans.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 3:24 pm to inelishaitrust
"Gamecocks" is a Revolutionary War reference. Named after General Thomas Sumter, the Fighting Gamecock.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 3:25 pm to CatFan81
quote:
Not Kentucky.
I wouldn't expect Kentucky to, as it was a "border state". However, it seems it does get the Wildcat nickname from somewhat military origins.
quote:
Commandant Carbusier, then head of the military department at old State University, told a group of students in a chapel service following the game that the Kentucky football team had "fought like Wildcats."
Posted on 3/4/10 at 3:26 pm to greenie
So, now you're going to stalk.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 3:26 pm to inelishaitrust
Auburn: No, Came from the town its in, which is a common town name through the English speaking world. It came from an Irish poem by Oliver Goldsmith.
Tigers: No, also came from a William Blake poem
War Eagle: Yes, since the nominal "war" from the legend is the civil war.
Tigers: No, also came from a William Blake poem
War Eagle: Yes, since the nominal "war" from the legend is the civil war.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 3:27 pm to SpringBokCock
quote:
"Gamecocks" is a Revolutionary War reference. Named after General Thomas Sumter, the Fighting Gamecock.
Meh Bad.
Revolutionary War>Civil War.
Would make sense that Fort Sumter would be named after someone who fought in the revolutionary war as opposed to someone who was fighting in the civil war.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 3:28 pm to CapstoneGrad06
No stalking. Just post in threads at the top. Don't flatter yourself, sweetheart.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 3:29 pm to Volmanac
quote:We payed you back with Peyton.
By the way, your welcome New Orleans.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 3:31 pm to NOLATide
You didn't even point out my gramatical error.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 3:31 pm to CatFan81
Kentucky wasn't even part of the Confederacy. Go join the Big 10 

Posted on 3/4/10 at 3:47 pm to NOLATide
quote:
By the way, your welcome New Orleans.
We payed you back with Peyton.
Good One

Posted on 3/4/10 at 4:09 pm to inelishaitrust
Actually MSU does have a civil war reference. They were the Maroons before the bulldogs. A maroon was a runaway slave that lived on an island like Jamaica.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 4:11 pm to SabanIsAGod
So they were the Mississippi State runaway slaves?
Posted on 3/4/10 at 4:13 pm to CapstoneGrad06
Alabama confederate soldiers were known as Yellowhammers or the Yellowhammer Company because of their grey uniforms being trimmed in yellow. The Alabama soliders were proud of the name and after the war the civil war veterans of Alabama would wear Yellowhammer feathers in their caps or lapels.
Thus the Rammer Jammer Yellowhammer.
Thus the Rammer Jammer Yellowhammer.
Posted on 3/4/10 at 4:13 pm to SabanIsAGod
Surely that has to be a coincidence.
Popular
Back to top
