How the Tiger got Their Name
By: Dr. Charles
E. Coates, Coach of the First L.S.U. Football Team
When I first came to the
University in 1893, I found to my surprise that
there was practically no athletics in the student
body; no football, no tennis, and only a very little
baseball in the spring. It struck me we ought to
have that sort of thing. I had played at Johns
Hopkins, where I had received the bachelor's and the
doctor's degree, though I had never considered
myself much of a player. Dr. H.A. Morgan,
subsequently president of the University of
Tennessee, had played in Canada. Toether we
undertook to train two teams to play football. We
nailed cleats on leather shoes, but we had no
uniforms.
Morgan and I did the
coaching quite poorly. I thaught the boys the Leland
flying wedge and the turtle back.
To arouse interst and
give the whole thing point, my friend T.L. Bayne of
New Orleans, who had been on the Yale team and was
known as Nervy Bayne, undertook to get up a team of
New Orleans players, composed mostly of ex-college
men from Tulane and the southern Athletic Club.
Our game in New Orleans
was made a gala day in the city. As far as I know it
was the first game of football played in the city.
The game was played some time in November, on
November 25, 1893, to be exact.
I knew we had to have
some colors, so Ruff Pleasant, who was later
governor of Louisiana, a couple of other men and I
went to Reymond'd store, at that time at the corner
of Third and Main streets. We told them we wanted
quite a lot of ribbon for colors, but no one knew
what our colors were. It happened that the store was
stocking ribbon for the coming Carnival season and
had a large supply of purple and gold. The green had
not yet come in. So we adopted the purple and old
gold, bought out the stock, and made it into
rosettes and badges. Purple and old gold made a good
combination and we have stuck to it ever since. We
also had to have college yells so we composed some
and adopted others. One of the latter was the frog
chorus, popular at Yale. Most of our yells have been
superceded by others more modernistic.
When the time came for
the game, we went down to the city and met our
opponents, most of whom had played football before.
They gave us a very good beating, to the intense
indignation of many of our local followers. Ruff
Pleasant got a small cut on the forehead which bled
a little bit and he was borne from the field. Today,
of course, he would have been back in five minutes.
Fred Lyons took his place, I believe.
Barring the fact that we
were defeated, everybody had a good time and we came
home very tired, resolved to do better next year.
Morgan and I had also resolved to get a coach for
this "next" year, which we did. This was very
largely because I had hurt my hand in tackling and
had to lay up for a time while Morgan ran down the
field, tripped over his sheer ferocity, and sprained
his knee. This was the beginning of our football as
far as I can remember.
In 1894 we did not play
Tulane but we employed A.P. Simmons to coach us. He
was a Yale man. I think we paid him $300, which we
raised by subscription.
The following year,
1895, we scheduled a game with what was supposed to
be the Tulane team, but as there were not enough
football men at Tulane they played anybody they
could get hold of. We again employed Simmons to
coach our team. We won this game.
It was the custom at the
time, for some occult reason, to call football teams
byt he names of vicious animals; the Yale Bulldogs
and the Princeton Tigers, for example. This is still
the vogue. It struck me that purple and gold looked
Tigerish enough and I suggested that we choose
"Louisiana Tigers," all in conference with the boys.
The Louisiana Tigers had represented the state in
the Civil War and had been known for their hard
fighting. This name was applied collectively to the
New Orleans Zouaves, the Donaldsonville Cannoniers,
and to a number of other Louisiana companies sent to
Virginia, who seemed to have the faculty of getting
into the hardest part of the fighting and staying
there, most of them permanently. One company I knew
of went in 200 strong; only 28 returned and many of
these were wounded.
So "Louisiana Tigers"
went into the New Orleans paper and became our
permanent possession.
Our team didn't compare
with present-day teams, in skill, ability, or power.
But we had a pretty good time and if there was any
professionalism involved I never heard of it.
A few years later when
Col. David F. Boyd, who had been president of the
University from 1865 to 1880 and again from 1884 to
1886, returned to the University he was rather
surprised to find purple and gold as the colors. He
told me they were not the colors, that white and
blue had been chosen by him many years ago. But
purple and gold had by that time established itself
and nothing was ever done about it. Colonel "Dave"
also liked the name, "Tigers." I think he was one of
them himself during the Civil War.
Article from LSU Alumni
News, Oct. 1937, Page 25 |