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Started By
Message
Dr. Charles E. Coates, first football coach explains LSU colors, nickname
Posted on 8/1/13 at 11:14 am
Posted on 8/1/13 at 11:14 am
Posted on 8/1/13 at 11:18 am to BooHoo Tbow
ive heard that story many times before
Posted on 8/1/13 at 11:18 am to BooHoo Tbow
So that's the guy who thinks canary yellow is the same as gold
Posted on 8/1/13 at 11:34 am to biglego
quote:
So that's the guy who thinks canary yellow is the same as gold
Well he did say the colors were purple and old gold. Old gold is more like the Saints gold than yellow.
Posted on 8/1/13 at 11:41 am to MountainTiger
LINK
ATLETIC GOLD .............. google images
p.s. WHATEVER, the same color that is used for mardi gras with purple and green...
whatever that color is!!
ATLETIC GOLD .............. google images
p.s. WHATEVER, the same color that is used for mardi gras with purple and green...
whatever that color is!!
Posted on 8/1/13 at 11:43 am to MountainTiger
quote:
Well he did say the colors were purple and old gold. Old gold is more like the Saints gold than yellow.
So it changed since then?
I'm just trying to start a good healthy debate about colors!
Posted on 8/1/13 at 11:44 am to BooHoo Tbow
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’s 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.
...
It was the custom at that time, for some occult reason, to call football teams by the 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 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 papers and became our permanent possession.
...
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.
whole story as op: LINK
...
It was the custom at that time, for some occult reason, to call football teams by the 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 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 papers and became our permanent possession.
...
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.
whole story as op: LINK
Posted on 8/1/13 at 11:53 am to biglego
quote:
So it changed since then?
I'm just trying to start a good healthy debate about colors!
Either that or he doesn't know what old gold is. I'd be OK switching to old gold but I know a lot of the traditionalists around here will go crazy if that happens. Look at the uproar over a minor change to the numbers.
Posted on 8/1/13 at 12:52 pm to MountainTiger
Can't remember the exact quote and I apologize that my Civil War Book, Louisiana Tigers from LSU press is not handy at the moment but I believe its close to this and certainly paraphrased, Robert E. Lee says to Jubal Early , Where are my Louisiana Tigers, send them in there and I know they will stand their ground against the Yankees. Something to that effect but I like the tenacity of Louisiana Tigers.
Posted on 8/1/13 at 2:50 pm to MountainTiger
The shade of gold was changed by Paul Dietzel in 1957 away from "old gold" to "sunflower yellow" when the football uniforms took the basic pattern they do now. The accurate old gold is much darker than most schools use, almost bronze, making it harder to see the logo on the side of the helmet (see the 09 Arkansas game). Dietzel figured that the new color would be more distinctive than the old, which was too similar to Notre Dame and Army.
GEAUX TIGERS
GEAUX TIGERS
This post was edited on 8/1/13 at 2:52 pm
Posted on 8/1/13 at 2:56 pm to Thorny
Washington uses gold in their uniforms.
Posted on 8/1/13 at 3:09 pm to MetryTyger
quote:
Washington uses gold in their uniforms.
So did we in our pro combats a few years back. The Auburn game was it? I thought it looked sharp as hell myself.
ETA: Not Auburn, Arky.
This post was edited on 8/1/13 at 3:11 pm
Posted on 8/1/13 at 3:14 pm to biglego
quote:
canary yellow
It does show up well on TV.
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