From Woody's Couch

Our Playbook on OSU History

Month: December 2011 (page 1 of 4)

Twelve Days of Buckeyes: Win or lose, we’ll always be nuts about OSU

Football program cover, 1968

How often have you said you’re going to go watch the Buckeyes play [fill-in-the-blank-sport]? Though the term “Buckeye” has been around for hundreds of years, the nickname for Ohio State athletic teams has a much shorter history.

The nickname in English derives from the Native-American term, “Hetuck,” which can be translated as eye of the buck. Native Americans apparently first made the reference when they saw a procession of settlers in 1788. Ohioans have been referred to as Buckeyes as far back as when William Henry Harrison was running for president in 1840.

And here at OSU, in terms of sports, “Buckeye” has been used as an intramural sports team name since about 1900. A short article in a 1902 issue of The Lantern concerns an intramural baseball game in which one team apparently was less than experienced at the sport:

“The Buckeye and Columbia clubs played a game of ball on the University diamond Saturday afternoon, and as a result the former now heads the Boarding House League. The score was 8 to 4. The victory was mainly due to the fact that a number of the Columbia players failed to understand the various hits sent in their direction, all these misplays being in evidence in the score.”

1975

The first time “Buckeyes” shows up in The Lantern when talking about Varsity sports isn’t until 1951 when, again, baseball is the subject:

“The Buckeye baseball team treated home fans to a double victory over the week end with wins over Dayton University and Bowling Green. Friday the Buckeyes trounced the Flyers, 15-1, and followed with a win over the Bowling Green Falcons in a Saturday game.”

So it might be surprising that “Buckeyes” has been used regularly for only about 60 years, but is it really hard to believe that the first Lantern article in which it appears is about not just one but two OSU victories?

You may play sports for OSU, cheer the teams on or you might not pay any attention to them at all. It doesn’t matter. Being a Buckeye can mean different things to different people, but it still means a lot. We hope you have enjoyed this season’s version of “Twelve Days of Buckeyes,” and that your new year is a happy and successful one.

 

 

Twelve Days of Buckeyes: Why “Carmen, Ohio” is our alma mater

Fred Cornell, 1915

It’s hard to imagine a home football game not being followed by the team and fans singing OSU’s alma mater, “Carmen, Ohio.” It took years, however, for this ritual to become a steadfast tradition.

Fred Cornell, a member of the Men’s Glee Club in the early 1900s, definitely wrote the lyrics, but it’s unclear how he was inspired to do so. One story has Fred writing the song in the fall of 1902, on the train taking him and the football team from Ann Arbor, after a loss of 86 to 0. Cornell felt that the team and fans needed an inspirational song to lift their spirits.

A more likely account, supported by a 1910 article in the Alumni Monthly, has Fred himself saying that he wrote the piece in the fall of 1903, because the Glee Club was looking for an alma mater. There were several entries submitted by women, and Cornell was urged by several other men to write something.

What’s not in doubt was that it was first performed in 1903 on New Year’s Eve at an off-campus event. The first on-campus presentation was at the Wednesday Convocation, when students returned to campus. It was then sung at football games, but did not have any great popularity at first. The tune also seems to have been undecided for some time, with several different pieces of music used until the Spanish March was finally chosen.

By 1918 “Carmen, Ohio” was played on the chimes at Orton Hall everyday at 4:30, following taps. A phonograph record was produced of the song in 1921.

Twelve Days of Buckeyes: OSU and the 19th U.S. President

Hayes, 1887

It’s common knowledge that Rutherford B. Hayes served as President of the United States (1877-1881), but it’s not nearly as well-known about his impact on OSU’s history.

In 1862, Congress passed the Morrill Act, which created a system of land-grand colleges focusing on engineering and agriculture. Ohio lawmakers were not keen at first in supporting the law. Some feared, for instance, that it would become a big burden for states, which had to manage the sale of federal lands in order to create endowment funds for these universities. Finally, in 1870, the state legislature passed the Cannon Act, one of a series of bills to resolve the many issues of the original Morrill Act.

Cannon Act

One of the major sticking points was whether the money should be divided among the pre-existing schools, or whether a new college devoted to engineering and agriculture should receive the funds. Rutherford B. Hayes, a Republican elected Governor of Ohio in 1868, did not like the idea of awarding the federal funds to any existing school: he saw this was an opportunity to start something new. When he signed the Cannon Act into law, he got his wish: there would be a new school: the Ohio Agricultural and Mechanical College.

Within two months of the law’s passage, Hayes had selected the required nineteen-member Board of Trustees (one for each Congressional district in Ohio), choosing as many Democrats as Republicans as he could, to make the group as bi-partisan as possible. The next hurdle was the new college’s location. Four counties from around the state vied for the new campus, and it was likely Hayes who influenced the board to choose Neil Farm, just north of Columbus.

University Hall engraving, c1873

Hayes was a tireless supporter of OSU, right up until his death in January 1893. Just a few years before, using his political influence, he urged members of the U.S. House and Senate to support a second Morrill Act that would add to land grants awarded in the original law a maximum of another $25,000 per year. In 1891, the Ohio General Assembly granted the support from the second Morrill Act to the Ohio State University.

Ironically, despite his own achievements – Civil War hero, Governor of Ohio, President of the United States – Hayes felt the office of University president was beyond most men, presumably including himself. During a discussion concerning a presidential search for the University, Hayes told other members of the Board of Trustees: “We are looking for a man of fine appearance, of commanding presence, one who will impress the public…he must get along with and govern the faculty, he must be popular with the students … a man of affairs; he must be a great administrator. Gentlemen, there is no such man.”

When news reached the campus that Hayes had died, then-OSU President William Henry Scott ordered classes be adjourned and that the faculty attend a special meeting. University Chapel in University Hall was draped in black. In a memorial resolution, the Board called it an “irreparable loss” to the University.

(We owe much – again – to retired University Archivist Raimund Goerler’s “The Ohio State University: An Illustrated History” (2011) for this post. Another good source for early OSU history, also used for this post, is James Pollard’s “History of The Ohio State University: 1873-1948” (1952).)

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