From Woody's Couch

Our Playbook on OSU History

Category: People (page 52 of 52)

Passing the (Director’s) Baton

Jon Woods

You might have heard last weekend that Jon Woods, director of the OSU Marching Band for the past 25 years, is retiring after this season. We are sorry to see him go, and we thought we’d take the opportunity to tell you a little bit more about the directors who came before him. (Our thanks to the editorial staff of Script Ohio, a must-have for any OSU Marching Band aficionado who wants to have the full score on the band’s history.)

Gustav Bruder

The band started in 1878 as an all-student affair – a drum corps to play accompanying music as ROTC cadets marched. It wasn’t until 1896 when Gustav Bruder was hired as the first full-time director. Bruder had quite a military background: He was accepted into the U.S. Army at age 12 and played for the Columbus Barracks Band. He was offered a position in the U.S. Marines Band by none other than John Philip Sousa. When he started the job as OSUMB director (1896-1928), there were only about a dozen students; by 1914 he had increased the number to 64, and by 1921 there were 100. Under his leadership, the band began playing at football games, they performed the first O-H-I-O, and started wearing spats and pompons.

Eugene Weigel Conducting a Band Rehearsal, 1938

Eugene Weigel was the next director, serving from 1929-1938. He had served as supervisor of instrumental music for the Cleveland Public Schools for five years before leading the OSUMB. While serving as OSU Marching Band director, he was a professor of music at OSU, and was the head of the School of Music for five years afterward.  Under his leadership, the supervision of the band transferred from the Dept. of Military Science to the School of Music, the entrance to the Stadium ramp incorporated the herald trumpet fanfare and the band playing the Buckeye Battle Cry, the band transformed from the traditional woodwind, brass and percussion to all-brass and percussion – the first all-bass college band in the U.S. – and “Script Ohio” was introduced.

Manley Whitcomb

The next director, Manley R. Whitcomb (1940-1942 and 1946-1951), was the first with a Ph.D – in education, from Columbia University – and had been assistant to Eugene Weigel. Before “Whit,” as he was called by band members, came aboard, only the director had a chart of formations. Whitcomb gave every member of the band a copy, which enabled more complicated formations. He also introduced the “8-to-5’ style of marching in which members would make eight steps for every five yards, and the accompanying high knee and leg lift. This allowed the band to match the phrasing of music, which meant even more complicated routines.

William McBride

From 1943 to 1945, while Whitcomb served in the Army, William B. McBride served as director. He had served as supervisor of music for several townships, then as instructor of music at both Ohio Northern and Miami universities, before coming to OSU. After Whitcomb returned, McBride continued to serve as associate, then full professor of music at OSU until his retirement in 1970.

Jack Evans

Jack O. Evans, former director of instrumental music for the Shaker Heights school system, began his tenure in 1952, after serving as Whitcomb’s assistant for four years. One of his biggest accomplishments was to move the band rehearsal room from a stock judging pavilion to the Stadium recreation room, which also meant there were two nearby practice areas – the Stadium parking lot and the fields behind the south end of the Stadium. He’s also credited with introducing the Orton Hall chimes arrangement to introduce “Carmen Ohio” at the end of each game. Also during his tenure, the first sound motion pictures were made of the band, by the OSU Dept. of Photography and Cinema.

Charles Spohn

Charles O. Spohn started his OSU career long before he served as OSUMB director (1964-1969). He first served as associate conductor of the OSU Concert Band in 1951, shortly after receiving a bachelor of music degree from Butler University. While he was OSUMB director, two important band traditions were introduced: the band’s arrangement of “Hang On, Sloopy,” and the TBDBITL alumni band, which annually combines with the OSUMB to perform multiple “Script Ohio”s. He also introduced indoor concerts and marching practice before the Saturday skull sessions.

Paul Droste

Paul E. Droste (1970-1983) began his long association with OSU as an OSUMB member in the 1950s, the only director to do so. After serving stints as music director for several Ohio school districts, he returned to OSU to interview for the top band job, just before the campus was closed because of student demonstrations. Even so, Droste took the job, and spent his first year as director leading centennial-themed shows to celebrate the University’s 100th year. During Droste’s tenure, the and was expanded not only in number – by 50 mnusicians – but also in gender. For the first time ever, women were allowed to try out to be members during the 1973 season.

 

Jon Woods

Then, of course, there is Jon Woods, who has served as director for the past 25 years. Woods served as associate director for 10 years before that. One of his first innovations as director was charting the formations by computer; he also initiated an invitational for high school bands in order to recruit members. Also during his tenure, the uniforms were updated, and the band had its first female assistant director. It also moved into its current location, the Joan Zieg Steinbrenner Band Center.  Read more about Woods in the Dispatch story here. (http://www.dispatch.com/content/stories/local/2011/09/03/jon-woods-retires.html)

 

Fall Sports (Part 2)

Men’s Golf

The Men’s Golf team has won numerous championships, including 23 Big Ten Championships, most recently in 2004. The team has been part of the Big Ten since at least 1928, when it won its first Championship. Jim Brown, who played the No. 1 position on the golf team from 1963-65 as a student, served as team coach from 1974-2009, one of the longest-serving coaches in Buckeye history.

Men's Golf Team, 1928

 

 

 

 

 

 

Golfer John Cook with sister Cathy, 1978

Jim Brown, golf coach

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Women’s Golf

Ohio State was actually the originator of the first women’s golf championship in the country, which also happened to be the first national championship to be held for any women’s sport.

In 1941 Ohio State hosted the 1st Women’s National Collegiate Golf Tournament, made possible by the work of Gladys Palmer – then-chairwoman of the women’s division of the phys-ed department – and the support of then-Director of Athletics Lynn St. John. The tournament went on to be hosted by other institutions for many years and was eventually taken over in 1973 by the Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women. The NCAA took control of the championships in 1982.

Women's Golf action, 1940s

Gladys Palmer, 1957

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Women’s Volleyball

The Women’s Volleyball Team was formed in 1971, and joined the NCAA in 1975. The team has won the Big Ten Championship in 1989, 1991 and 1994.

Women's Volleyball action, no date

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Women’s Field Hockey

The earliest reference to Women’s Field Hockey that we know of comes from a brochure in 1920, listing Field Hockey under fall women’s sports. Throughout the 1920s and 1930s the sport was sponsored by the women’s department of athletics, which sponsored tournaments. The sport gained Varsity Status in 1971. The sport was officially sanctioned by the Big Ten Conference in 1981, and OSU hosted its first conference later that year.

Women's Field Hockey action, 1959

Women's Field Hockey action, 1982-83

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Where the Presidents Live

OSU’s 13 Presidents have lived in only five different residences since the University opened in 1873.

Rickley House, 1892

The first University Residence, known as the Rickley House, had a total of 18 rooms (five bedrooms) and was nearly 7,200 square feet. It stood at the corner of 15th and High, where Mershon Auditorium now stands. It originally was the home of William Neil, for whom Neil Avenue is named, and whose farm was bought as the location for the then-new University. A businessman named J.J. Rickley bought it in 1866, then sold it to the University in 1871. By the 1920s, it was decided High Street had become too busy for a president’s house, so after Pres. Thompson moved out, it served as the home for the School of Music until it was torn down in 1949.  (See article below for more information on the Rickley House.)

The last President to live on campus was Pres. Novice Fawcett, specifically at the mansion now known as the Kuhn Honors and Scholars House on 12th Avenue above Mirror Lake. The house was first built to be the residence of the astronomer at McMillan Observatory, which used to occupy the site just about where the Faculty Club stands now. OSU Architect Joseph Bradford (see our first “Bleeds Scarlet and Gray” posting) designed it. President George Rightmire and his family were its first occupants, and the Fawcetts vacated the residence in 1972.

President's House, n.d.

President's Home on Croswell Road, 1973

The next OSU President, Harold Enarson opted not to live on campus, so a residence was procured in 1972 at 285 Croswell Road in Clintonville, just north of Whetstone Park. At the time it was bought for the president, the house was eight years old, had three bedrooms and a total of 7,000 square feet. Pres. Edward Jennings also lived there, but the house was sold prior to President E. Gordon Gee’s first term, because it was no longer considered suitable for hosting University events, both in space and parking.

A house on Commonwealth Park in Bexley (not pictured) was then purchased with University Foundation funds. President E. Gordon Gee, the new president at the time, wanted a home spacious enough for entertaining but one that was also located in a residential neighborhood. It had five bedrooms and 4,800 square feet and was more suitable to hosting University events. After Gee’s term ended, Pres. William Kirwan moved there, in 1998.

President's Home on North Drexel Avenue in Bexley, 2005

Kirwan then moved into the current University Residence, on North Drexel Avenue in Bexley, in 2000. Ron and Ann Pizzuti donated the house to the university in exchange for the OSU residence at Commonwealth Park.  The house is nearly double the Commonwealth House in size, at approximately 8,900 square feet.

Check out Buckeye Stroll for more information on the two on-campus residences!

 

Article on first president's house, 1970

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