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re: An education on Texas A&M's history and traditions please

Posted on 3/26/14 at 2:29 pm to
Posted by TeLeFaWx
Dallas, TX
Member since Aug 2011
29192 posts
Posted on 3/26/14 at 2:29 pm to
quote:

1) Gig'em. What the hell does this mean and where did it come from?


Used to play TCU every year. Gigging is frog hunting.

quote:

2) Aggies. I read that this came as an old nickname that came from A&M's agricultural background and it just kind of stuck. Is that essentially the story


Correct. Some Oklahoma Sooners still condescendingly refer to some Oklahoma State fans as "Oklahoma Aggies". They used to be Oklahoma A&M, and at the time lots of schools were dropping the "A&M label" as they wanted to reveal that they provided more than just ag majors. Oklahoma A&M did it in 1957 I believe. Can't think of other schools that dropped the name, but there have been a few more I think.

quote:

3) The use of Texas as opposed to A&M when referring to your school. (this one is a bit longer)


The only instance I can think of this, is saying "Fightin Texas Aggies" but it really has to do with the blending of the name of the school/mascot ambiguity. I mean back in the day, the label of schools changed all the time, Auburn wasn't officially called Auburn, but it was always called Auburn... and being an "Aggie" was synonymous with the state Ag school. So "Texas Aggie" meant you went to Texas A.M.C.

Iunno. I'm a first generation Ag, so I did think that was strange the first time it was said, but when you realize its always been said that way, and most likely for a good reason, it makes sense.
Posted by tmc94
Member since Sep 2012
11559 posts
Posted on 3/26/14 at 2:55 pm to
quote:

Can't think of other schools that dropped the name, but there have been a few more I think.
LSU, NMSU, KSU, Utah St, Cal-Davis off the top of my head. I'm unsure on schools like MSU, Auburn, and Clemson however.

The history of our school is somewhat complex bc we were one of 3 designated branches of the University of Texas (what is called that now was the 2nd created branch). The objective was to create one university with 3 distinct colleges. The AMC branch was the first college created and our charter actually wasn't changed til Rudder around 60.

What we today call UTx was the humanities college (located in the capital for good reason as it incl Hist, Poly Sci, Law, etc) but due to politics and money issues, the 3rd college was scrapped and it's charter rolled in there.

Then, again because of politics, the college in Austin was made into a University and began offering engineering. We fought for a good 10 years over what each school's goals and charters should be until they eventually split into two separate Systems. Because we only repped 1/3 of the original UT charter and they had 2/3, the land (which has led to what is called the PUF which is the primary endowment of both schools) was split giving them 2/3 and us 1/3.

Anyway, our history is not Texas A&M University. It's the Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas. This is true of many state schools in that they were not chartered as Universities. The Texas Aggies is more a designation of which portion of the University we were from. It actually predates traditional mascots and we just never gave it up (most of the others that did, did so when they changed to a full-fledged University).
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