From Woody's Couch

Our Playbook on OSU History

Category: Football (page 3 of 9)

Happy 100th birthday to Rec Sports!

1910s

1910s

Athletic events have been held at Ohio State almost from the beginning, when student groups organized races from High Street to University Hall, tug-of-war contests across Mirror Lake, and informal football games on the grounds west of Neil Avenue. It wasn’t until December 1913, though, that the University decided to get involved and organize an “Intra-Mural Athletic Association.”

Intramural sports owe a debt of gratitude to former Director of Athletics Lynn St. John, both for his vision and his willingness to carry it out. In 1913 the University reorganized the Department of Athletics, appointing former student St. John as its head. J.W. Wilce (namesake of the Wilce Student Health Center) was also appointed as head football coach and director of intramural athletics. Ohio State had joined the Western Conference in 1912, and St. John was committed to providing “competitive athletics for every student.”

Women's track, 1929

Women’s track, 1929

The intramural program was soon a success, with other colleges asking for advice on starting their own programs. In fact, despite a brief interlude during World War I, the program grew from its five original sports (football, baseball, basketball, tennis, and track and field) to about 20 sports (both team and individual) in 1921. These included soccer, swimming, and bowling for team sports, and fencing, cross country, fowl shooting and golf for individual competitors. By 1937, there were 21 sports for men, with 10,000 participants, and 14 sports for women, with more than 1,000 participants.

Handball court in Larkins, nd

Men playing handball in Larkins Hall, no date

Many of the men’s indoor sports were played at Larkins Hall, first opened in 1931 as the Men’s Gymnasium and Natatorium, and located just east of where the Recreation and Physical Activity Center (RPAC) now stands. Women’s indoor recreational sports were played at Pomerene Hall, which opened in 1927.

By 1968, however, recreational facilities were deemed insufficient by a University committee charged with evaluating the program. The report found that while the number of students participating in intramurals had tripled since 1945, the number of facilities had decreased slightly. Ohio State, in fact, was far behind other Big Ten universities; for example, while Indiana University had 29 indoor basketball courts at the time, Ohio State had six.

Intramural softball group, 1978

Intramural softball group, 1978

By 1970 OSU’s intramural program was the nation’s largest, encompassing around 30 sports. Today, OSU offers more than 25 different sports throughout the year, ranging from traditional football, basketball and soccer to indoor cricket, chess, “wallyball,” and something called “Battleship” involving canoes and bucket-wielding participants in a pool. It does so at a wide variety of venues, from the Jesse Owens North, South, and West Recreation Centers, which opened in 1976, to the nearly 600,000-square-foot RPAC, which opened in 2005.

So if you are looking for something to do this year, check out the department’s web site. For more on its history, check out its historical timeline.

Filed by C.N.

OSU couple’s marriage – and love of the Buckeyes – lasted a lifetime

Virginia and Glenn at a game in the 1940s

Virginia and Glenn at a game in the 1940s

(Editor’s note: Below, Karen Lane, an OSU alumna, writes a wonderful short history of her aunt and uncle’s love of the Buckeyes that marked their long, long happy marriage. Have a similar story of OSU football faithfuls? Contact Kevlin Haire at haire.14@osu.edu. We want to most sincerely thank Karen for sharing both her relatives’ story and some wonderful photos of them.) 

On September 26, 1934, Glenn and Virginia Spangler stepped onto The Oval as freshmen, who became incidentally, the youngest married couple to simultaneously attend The Ohio State University. Glenn was 19 and his bride of four months was just 17. Their marriage was for a lifetime as was their love for OSU.

Enrolled as students in the College of Education, Glenn and Virginia spent a four-year honeymoon at Ohio State, studying, sometimes chaperoning student events, and on many weekends going “home” to help work the Armstrong farm on Salt Creek (Pickaway/Hocking Counties) near Laurelville, Ohio. But on football weekends there were no trips to southern Ohio, only west to Ohio Stadium.

From left to right, Wesley Leas, Virginia Spangler and Glenn Spangler, Spring Commencement, 1938

From left to right, Wesley Leas, Virginia and Glenn Spangler, Spring Commencement, 1938

On October 6, 1934, Glenn and Virginia watched the Buckeyes trounce Indiana, 33 to 0, under the direction of new head football coach, Francis Schmidt. From that victory until they graduated in 1938, the young Spanglers were on hand to cheer the OSU football team to victory.  

After graduation, Glenn and Virginia became beloved teachers, first at North Canton High School and then in the Bellevue (Ohio) schools. They regularly made trips south to help on the farm and, during football season, to watch the OSU Buckeyes play.

In 1961 they settled permanently in Central Ohio, building a house in the booming little suburb of Grove City. It was from this house that a weekly tradition began: If the Bucks played at home, a hamper full of fried chicken, coleslaw and cake shared trunk-space with blankets and a thermos of hot chocolate for a tailgate picnic beside Ohio Stadium. Televised away-games were anticipated, talked about, watched and dissected by all who dropped in for a visit during football season.  If the game was not televised, then the radio was tuned in to the game.

In the early 1980s, Glenn bought an RCA video camera and recorder, which regularly taped OSU games that were inconveniently aired on Channel 34 Sunday mornings during church. And when QUBE, the precursor to cable television, was pioneered in Columbus, they became one of the first subscribers . . . to watch OSU football. 

Virginia and Glenn, 1980s

Virginia and Glenn, 1980s

After retiring from South-Western City Schools, Glenn and Virginia also traveled to watch the team. Trips with their football-loving nephews took them to nearby Big Ten games – Indiana, Illinois and Northwestern. They attended at least two Rose Bowls, a Gator Bowl, and to one last trip out west for the Fiesta Bowl.

 After Glenn’s death in 1990, Virginia continued to follow the Buckeyes on television and in the newspaper. Although no longer able to attend all the games in the Stadium she continued to purchase season tickets, which she shared with her family, passing on her (and Glenn’s) affection for the game and for the Ohio State University Buckeyes.

A brief genealogy of Glenn and Virginia Spangler:

Glenn Edison Spangler (03 March 1915 – 22 May 1990)

Virginia Adele Armstrong Spangler (11 August 1917 – 08 March 2005).

Adelphi (Ohio) High School graduates: Glenn-1932. Virginia – 30 April 1934.

Married in Greenup, Kentucky – 03 May 1934

Ohio State University graduates – 13 June 1938

Bleeds Scarlet and Gray: Athletics Director Larkins hired without applying for job

Richard Larkins, 1930

Richard Larkins, 1930

Before the imposing RPAC was the place to work out, there was Larkins Hall. It was much smaller, and by the time it was torn down in 2005, a lot worse for wear. But it had long served the OSU community, much as its namesake, Richard C. Larkins, did, as athletics director for nearly a quarter-century.

Larkins was associated with the University since he came to OSU as a student in the late 1920s. As a student, Dick Larkins played both on the varsity football team and the varsity basketball team, lettering in football from 1928-1930 and in basketball from 1929-1931. He displayed both leadership and smarts from the beginning: He was captain of the basketball team and class president, and he won the Western Conference Medal for scholastic achievement his senior year. Larkins was also a member of the junior honorary, Bucket & Dipper, and the senior honorary, Sphinx.

After earning a bachelor of science degree in Business Administration in 1931, Larkins coached the freshman football team while he worked on his MBA, which he received in 1935. Later that year he left OSU to serve as head coach for the University of Rochester football team.

Larkins, 1966

Larkins, 1966

In 1937 Dick Larkins returned to his alma mater to teach physical education. When the position of Director of Athletics became vacant in 1947, Larkins never actually applied for the job. However, when members of the Athletic Board sat down to discuss possible candidates, Larkins was the only one who had the support of the coaching staff, the physical education department, and retiring Athletic Director Lynn St. John, according to an Alumni Monthly profile.

Larkins’ term as Director of Athletics included the hiring of three head football coaches – the last was Woody Hayes. But his influence on OSU athletics was much broader: Under his leadership, the program expanded to 18 sports, and he oversaw the construction of St. John Arena, French Field House and the adjacent ice rink, as well as an extensive renovation of Ohio Stadium.

In 1976, the Board of Trustees named the recreational facility after Larkins, who had retired in 1970 after 24 years as athletics director. Larkins died April 5, 1977, at the age of 67.

Larkins Hall, 1977

Larkins Hall, 1977

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