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"Tigers" name:
Posted on 5/17/26 at 1:51 pm
Posted on 5/17/26 at 1:51 pm
JUST in case any of you are still confused or uninformed or even, deluded.....:)
In 1893,
Dr. Charles Coates was recruited by LSU from the Ivy League to be the Director of the Department of Chemistry; as well as the school's first football coach, in the early 1890s.
HEEEEEEEEE chose the name "Tigers" , using the then current custom in the Northeast of naming schools' mascots after ferocious animals (Yale Bulldogs, Brown Bears, Princeton Tigers, etc.).
He even chose the initial Mascot Tiger Head and helped pick the school colors (the first game in 1893 vs Tulane was during Mardi Gras, and the only colors available in stores were purple, green and gold The original colors were blue and white.)
In addition, Coates felt that purple and gold (yellow) - being complementary colors on the Artist's Color Wheel - would lend themselves very well with the image he had in mind...rather than blue and white.
Over 75 years later, La. Author Dan Hardesty, in one of his sports history books, recalled a speech Dr. Coates made at a reunion banquet given in honor of his first 1893 Tiger team, decades later, in the 1930s.
In it, Coates put to rest the erroneous myths of his supposedly naming the team after the Louisiana Tigers - a Confederate regiment who had fought at Manassas three decades before he arrived in Baton Rouge.
"It was a myth," Coates related. "I had never even heard of that war outfit from thirty years in the past. I actually borrowed the team name from my Ivy League experience and tradition. But, rumors being what they were."
In other words, when Coates arrived on campus, he borrowed the moniker 'Tigers' from Princeton of the Ivy League. He had never heard of any war unit from 30 years prior. (They HAD in fact, existed of course, but Coates had no way of knowing about them when he came down to Louisiana in 1893, and so had nothing at all to do with his deciding on the name Tigers from his background in the Northeast.)
Another interesting fact is that the word "Fighting" was not added to the name until the 1950s, in honor of a brigade of World War Ii fighter pilots from Louisiana! - Major General Claire Lee Chennault - who led the Flying Tigers. :)
In 1893,
Dr. Charles Coates was recruited by LSU from the Ivy League to be the Director of the Department of Chemistry; as well as the school's first football coach, in the early 1890s.
HEEEEEEEEE chose the name "Tigers" , using the then current custom in the Northeast of naming schools' mascots after ferocious animals (Yale Bulldogs, Brown Bears, Princeton Tigers, etc.).
He even chose the initial Mascot Tiger Head and helped pick the school colors (the first game in 1893 vs Tulane was during Mardi Gras, and the only colors available in stores were purple, green and gold The original colors were blue and white.)
In addition, Coates felt that purple and gold (yellow) - being complementary colors on the Artist's Color Wheel - would lend themselves very well with the image he had in mind...rather than blue and white.
Over 75 years later, La. Author Dan Hardesty, in one of his sports history books, recalled a speech Dr. Coates made at a reunion banquet given in honor of his first 1893 Tiger team, decades later, in the 1930s.
In it, Coates put to rest the erroneous myths of his supposedly naming the team after the Louisiana Tigers - a Confederate regiment who had fought at Manassas three decades before he arrived in Baton Rouge.
"It was a myth," Coates related. "I had never even heard of that war outfit from thirty years in the past. I actually borrowed the team name from my Ivy League experience and tradition. But, rumors being what they were."
In other words, when Coates arrived on campus, he borrowed the moniker 'Tigers' from Princeton of the Ivy League. He had never heard of any war unit from 30 years prior. (They HAD in fact, existed of course, but Coates had no way of knowing about them when he came down to Louisiana in 1893, and so had nothing at all to do with his deciding on the name Tigers from his background in the Northeast.)
Another interesting fact is that the word "Fighting" was not added to the name until the 1950s, in honor of a brigade of World War Ii fighter pilots from Louisiana! - Major General Claire Lee Chennault - who led the Flying Tigers. :)
Posted on 5/17/26 at 2:04 pm to MetryTyger
I support you trying to inform people but the rantards here don’t care and there’s no educating people like another huge melt or derpton.
Posted on 5/17/26 at 2:06 pm to MetryTyger
Doth protest too much
This post was edited on 5/17/26 at 2:08 pm
Posted on 5/17/26 at 2:07 pm to navy
I like the myth, so it doesn’t bother me.
Way better than “we copied some Ivy League silver spoons”
Way better than “we copied some Ivy League silver spoons”
Posted on 5/17/26 at 2:07 pm to bigDgator
Nice try, but no.
1. The Civil War RootsThe name stems from the "Tiger Rifles," a volunteer infantry unit from New Orleans that fought in the Civil War. Known for their unique Zouave uniforms and ferocious fighting style, they were said to have "fought like tigers". Eventually, the nickname expanded to cover all Louisiana troops in the Army of Northern Virginia
.2. Adoption by the Football TeamWhen the LSU football team played its first seasons in the 1890s, they went without a nickname. In 1896, the team finished a perfect 6-0 season, and it was during this time that Coach A.W. Jeardeau and Professor Charles E. Coates officially adopted the "Tigers" moniker to honor those storied Civil War veterans.
( AI dont lie ! )
1. The Civil War RootsThe name stems from the "Tiger Rifles," a volunteer infantry unit from New Orleans that fought in the Civil War. Known for their unique Zouave uniforms and ferocious fighting style, they were said to have "fought like tigers". Eventually, the nickname expanded to cover all Louisiana troops in the Army of Northern Virginia
.2. Adoption by the Football TeamWhen the LSU football team played its first seasons in the 1890s, they went without a nickname. In 1896, the team finished a perfect 6-0 season, and it was during this time that Coach A.W. Jeardeau and Professor Charles E. Coates officially adopted the "Tigers" moniker to honor those storied Civil War veterans.
( AI dont lie ! )
Posted on 5/17/26 at 2:09 pm to MetryTyger
From LSU’s website:
LINK
quote:
THE NICKNAME: “FIGHTING TIGERS”
Way back in the fall of 1896, coach A.W. Jeardeau’s LSU football team posted a perfect 6-0-0 record, and it was in that pigskin campaign that LSU first adopted its nickname, Tigers.
‘Tigers’ seemed a logical choice since most collegiate teams in that year bore the names of ferocious animals, but the underlying reason why LSU chose ‘Tigers’ dates back to the Civil War.
According to Arthur W. Bergeron, Jr., PhD. and the “Guide to Louisiana Confederate Military Units, 1861-1865” (LSU Press, 1989), the name Louisiana Tigers evolved from a volunteer company nicknamed the Tiger Rifles, which was organized in New Orleans. This company became a part of a battalion commanded by Major Chatham Roberdeau Wheat and was the only company of that battalion to wear the colorful Zouave uniform. In time, Wheat’s entire battalion was called the Tigers.
That nickname in time was applied to all of the Louisiana troops of Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia. The tiger symbol came from the famous Washington Artillery of New Orleans. A militia unit that traces its history back to the 1830s, the Washington Artillery had a logo that featured a snarling tiger’s head. These two units first gained fame at the Battle of First Manassas on July 21, 1861. Major David French Boyd, first president of LSU after the war, had fought with the Louisiana troops in Virginia and knew the reputation of both the Tiger Rifles and Washington Artillery.
Thus when LSU football teams entered the gridiron battlefields in their fourth year of intercollegiate competition, they tagged themselves as the ‘Tigers’. It was the 1955 LSU ‘fourth-quarter ball club’ that helped the moniker ‘Tigers’ grow into the nickname, ‘Fighting Tigers’.
Thanks to Arthur W. Bergeron, Jr., PhD., a historian at the Pamplin Historical Park, for contributing to the above information.
LINK
Posted on 5/17/26 at 2:10 pm to MetryTyger
“Tyger” is gonna educate us on “Tigers”


Posted on 5/17/26 at 2:11 pm to bigDgator
No one should care about any of this. 
Posted on 5/17/26 at 2:19 pm to AHM21
Wow....from LSU's own athletic website ! 
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