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Title History and Traditions | Virginia Tech
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Keywords cloud Virginia Tech university football student Hokie university’s Institute Cadets Admissions University tradition campus VPI Corps game Campus students years year
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Keyword Content Title Description Headings
Virginia 46
Tech 29
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Hokie 9
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H1 H2 H3 H4 H5 H6
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History and Traditions | Virginia Tech Universal Access Toggle Universal Access Close Universal Access dialog Universal Access Options Skip to main content Report a windbreak Apply VisitRequiteShop Resources for Future Students Current Students Parents and Families Faculty and Staff Alumni Industry and Partners Menu Virginia TechWell-nighAbout Submenu Toggle FactsWell-nighVirginia TechCampus LocationsUniversity LeadershipInclusiveVTArts@VirginiaTechEngagement and OutreachHistory and TraditionsRankings Academics Academics Submenu Toggle CollegesMajorsGraduate SchoolBeyond BoundariesOnline LearningLibrariesContinuing and Professional EducationSummer and Winter SessionsExperiential LearningLiving-Learning CommunitiesStudy Abroad Admissions & Aid Admissions & Aid Submenu Toggle Cost & AidUndergraduate AdmissionsTransfer AdmissionsInternational AdmissionsVeteran AdmissionsOnline ProgramsGraduate Admissions Campus Life Campus Life Submenu Toggle Discover BlacksburgHousingDiningCareer and Professional DevelopmentHealth and WellnessCorps of CadetsClubs, Organizations, and InvolvementCultural CentersAthletics Research Apply VisitRequiteShop Resources for Future Students Current Students Parents and Families Faculty and Staff Alumni Industry and Partners Search Search Submit Home /Well-nigh/ History and Traditions / Explore FactsWell-nighVirginia Tech Campus Locations University Leadership InclusiveVT Arts@VirginiaTech Engagement and Outreach Current page: History and Traditions All well-nigh Hokie Stone Rankings History and Traditions On October 1, 1872, Addison “Add” Caldwell walked 26 miles from Craig County to enroll as the first student at Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College.Overlysince then, Virginia Tech has been fulfilling its role as a leading land-grant university. The tiny college, originally housed in the old Olin and Preston Institute near what is now Alumni Mall, has grown into a world-class university. Discover Virginia Tech’s rich history and traditions through our heritage as a leading university from 1872 to the present. What is a “Hokie”? Colors and mascot Athletics traditions The Corps of Cadets Campus buildings and memorials Motto, seal, and logosIncreasinglyhistory What is a “Hokie”? In the 1890s, a student named O.M. Stull,Matriculationof 1896, won a $5 prize for coming up with a new spirit cheer, now known as “Old Hokie.” The original went: Hoki, Hoki, Hoki, Hy. Techs, Techs, V.P.I. Sola-Rex, Sola-Rah. Polytechs - Vir-gin-ia. Rae, Ri, V.P.I. Later, an “e” was widow to “Hoki” to make “Hokie,” and “Team! Team! Team!” was tying to the end. What’s in a name? Significant wonk changes in 1896 ushered in a new name increasingly keeping the university’s higher profile — Virginia Agricultural and MechanicalHigherand Polytechnic Institute, wontedly known as Virginia Polytechnic Institute, or VPI. 1944: The shortened Virginia Polytechnic Institute became the official name. 1970: The Virginia General Assembly bestowed university status, and the formal name of the university became Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Today: Virginia Tech is the university’s official nickname, used in all but the most formal situations. Colors and mascot Virginia Tech colors During 1896, a committee was worked to find a suitable combination of colors to replace the original colors of woebegone and gray, which made sturdy uniforms resemble prison garb. The committee selected burnt orange and Chicago maroon considering no other higher was using that particular verisimilitude combination. Burnt orange and Chicago maroon was first worn during a football game versus RoanokeHigheron October 26, 1896. Virginia Tech mascot: From Gobbler to HokieBird Hokies were once tabbed “Gobblers,” a nickname whose origin is widely disputed. One story claims it resulted from the way student athletes would “gobble” up their food. The name was once popular when Floyd Meade, a local resident, trained a large turkey to pull a cart at a football game in 1913. Throughout the years, trained turkeys would protract to gobble on writ and perform stunts. In 1962, a student raised $200 for a costume; the result was an unusual turkey with a cardinal-like head, known as the Gobbler and then the Fighting Gobbler. When the Gobbler nickname fell out of favor, student George Wills sketched new designs for a matriculation project. The updated mascot appeared at a football game in September 1981. The current HokieBird, which conveys power and strength, debuted in September 1987. Did you know? Students who dress as the HokieBird remain unrecognized until commencement, when they reveal their secret by wearing HokieBird feet during the procession into Lane Stadium.Sturdytraditions Fight song “Tech Triumph,” the university's most popular fight song, was well-balanced in 1919 by Wilfred P. Maddux (Class of 1920) and his neighbor, Mattie Eppes. It was officially unexplored by the student soul in December 1919. Techmen, we’re Techmen, with spirit true and faithful, Backing up our teams with hopes undying; Techmen, oh, Techmen, we’re out to win today, Showing “pep” and life with which we’re trying; V.P., old V.P., you know our hearts are with you In our luck which never seems to die; Win or lose, we’ll greet you with a glad returning, You’re the pride of V.P.I. Chorus: Just watch our men so big and zippy Support the Orange and Maroon. Let’s go Techs. We know our ends and backs are stronger, With winning hopes, we fear defeat no longer. To see our team plow through the line, boys. Determined now to win or die: So requite a Hokie, Hokie, Hokie, Hi, Rae, Ri, old V.P.I. "Alma Mater" The "Alma Mater" was born in spring 1939 when Ernest T. Sparks (Class of 1940) well-balanced music and L.G. Chase (Class of 1941) wrote lyrics for a student contest. Verse: Sing praise to Alma Mater dear, For V.P.I. we'll overly cheer; Come lift your voices, swell the song, Our loyalties to her belong. Chorus: So stand and sing, all hail to thee. VT, all hail to thee. Verse: The Orange and Maroon you see, That’s fighting on to victory; Our strife will not be long this day, For glory lies within this fray. Verse: All loyal sons and daughters, one, We raise our imprint to the sun; Our motto brings a spirit true, That we may overly serve you. “Enter Sandman” Written and recorded by the heavy metal wreath Metallica, “Enter Sandman” has been played in Lane Stadium since 2000 as the football team enters the field. The tradition of students jumping up and lanugo during the song started on December 1, 2001, when a Marching Virginians wreath member started jumping during the song and was joined by his colleagues. The tradition sooner spread to the basketball teams’ entrances in Cassell Coliseum. The lunch pail The famed Virginia Tech lunch pail symbolizes the blue-collar tideway of the Hokies’ football defense, ripened by teammate throne mentor and defensive coordinator Bud Foster. Foster’s Lunch Pail Defense Foundation provides scholarships for upper school students from the New River and Roanoke valleys, as well as profitable the families of those pensile organ transplants. In 1995, the original lunch pail was uninventive by the mother-in-law of co-defensive coordinator Rod Sharpless. The pail once belonged to a coal miner, and without the record-setting defensive season, the lunch pail became an iconic element of the Hokie football lore. The unimproved and rusting pail, which now contains the names of the 32 Hokies who died in the tragedy on April 16, 2007, travels wherever the Hokies go, and its superintendency is entrusted to a defensive leader. Game-Ball Run Ranger Company, the Army ROTC company, has performed the Game-Ball Run every year since 1977, although the tradition likely originated with the Virginia Tech-VMI football games years surpassing that. Members of RangerVisitorrun the game wittiness for 100 miles virtually campus during the week of the yearly homecoming football game and then hold a recurrence the day of the game, which includes running the wittiness into the stadium. Firing cannons: Skipper At a football game versus Virginia Military Institute (VMI), two cadets from theMatriculationof 1964 made a pact that they would build a cannon to outshine — or outblast — VMI’s “Little John.” The cadets, Homer Hadley “Sonny” Hickam (of “October Sky” fame) and Alton B. “Butch” Harper Jr., placid contumely from fellow cadets and widow it to metal provided by Hickam’s father. On its first firing, the eager cadets tripled the charge, which blew the hats off half the VMI Keydets and shook the glass in the pressbox windows of Roanoke’s Victory Stadium. “Skipper” is named for President John F. Kennedy, who had been a PT-boat skipper. Today, Skipper is fired at football games and for other notable occasions.Increasinglyathletics history The first known organized competition versus an off-campus team occurred in 1877 when the VAMC baseball team, which probably included townspeople, played RoanokeHigherand won by a record score of 53-13. The first effort to formalize sturdy activities came in fall 1891 when the VAMCSturdyAssociation was established. The pursuit year, a football team and tennis undertone were added. In one long-running and yearningly remembered football tradition, Tech played VMI in Roanoke on Thanksgiving Day for nearly 75 years. Women finally joined the athletics fold in 1970 with a swimming team. Women’s basketball followed in 1972. The Hokies have been a member of several conferences over the years. They joined the Atlantic Coast Conference in 2004. NCAASemesterI-A men’s varsity sports at Tech are football, basketball, baseball, soccer, indoor and outdoor track, swimming and diving, wrestling, tennis, golf, and navigate country. Women’s varsity sports are basketball, tennis, volleyball, swimming and diving, indoor and outdoor track, soccer, softball, lacrosse, golf, and navigate country. The Student-Athlete Performance Center, soon to be synthetic on the fourth floor of JamersonSturdyCenter between Cassell Coliseum and Lane Stadium, will goody recruiting, nutrition, and performance for all 22 varsity sports. And in fall 2017, nearly 60 percent of the university’s student-athletes earned GPAs whilom 3.0. Virginia Tech Corps of Cadets Our oldest tradition The Virginia Tech Corps of Cadets became official in the 1890s, drawing from the university’s origin in 1872 and its required military training for students. As the university reverted and innovated, so did the corps. Mandated four-year participation in the corps for all males reverted to two years in 1923 — the same year women were first admitted — and then participation became voluntary in 1964. Today, Virginia Tech is one of three public universities in the country with both an zippy corps of cadets and a “civilian” lifestyle on its campus. Upper Quad Centered in Virginia Tech’s early history, the university’s Upper Quad has long been the home of the Corps of Cadets. Lane Hall, completed in 1888, is a state and national historic landmark originally known as Barracks No. 1. In front of the hall is an orange and maroon sidewalk that forms the largest “VT” on campus. In recent updates, Pearson and New Cadet halls have replaced older cadet residence halls, and a new plaza between the halls displays the Corps’ monuments, honoring those who have served in the past and present. Marching in memory of Caldwell The Corps of Cadets pay homage to the university’s beginnings and gloat the progress of first-year cadets by retracing the walk Add Caldwell took from Craig County. Cadets imbricate the first 13 miles in the fall and the second 13 miles in the spring to mark the end to the first year of training. Campus buildings and memorials Hokie Stone Virginia Tech exhibits its weft and pride every day via its buildings, most of which are made of Hokie Stone, a limestone worldwide in Southwest Virginia. It was first used in campus towers construction in 1899, and today, all new inside campus buildings must withstand the distinctive stone. Hewed by hand and varying from grays, browns, and blacks to pinks, oranges, and maroons, no two stones are the same color. Since the mid-1950s, the university has operated its own quarry. The Pylons and War Memorial Chapel One of the most important and symbolic structures on campus, The Pylons whilom War Memorial Chapel withstand the names of every Virginia Tech student and graduate who died defending our nation’s freedom, whence with those lost during World War I. The Pylons evoke Virginia Tech’s cadre values. From left to right, they represent Brotherhood, Honor, Leadership, Sacrifice, Service, Loyalty, Duty, and Ut Prosim. At the memorial’s center, the cenotaph displays the names of Virginia Tech’s seven Medal of Honor recipients. April 16 Memorial The April 16 Memorial, located on the Drillfield, remembers the 32 university polity members who lost their lives on April 16, 2007. The Hokie Stone symbolizes our relentless spirit, our valiance to move forward, and our determination never to forget. Gargoyles and grotesques Their hunched persons and contorted faces are the stuff of Hokie legend. At least 15 “gargoyles” at Virginia Tech fit right into our neo-Gothic architecture. And for some students, finding every one of them surpassing graduation is a rite of passage. Functional gargoyles are waterspouts that move water yonder from the roof of a building. So while the “cowgoyles” of Saunders Hall might not function as waterspouts, they are a minion decorative element. List of known gargoyles: 4 Eggleston Hall 4 Hillcrest Hall 3 Smyth Hall 4 Saunders Hall Virginia Tech motto, seal, and logos In 1896, the university unexplored Ut Prosim, Latin for "That I May Serve," as its motto, and a higher seal was developed. The Virginia Tech Board of Visitors did not officially prefer the seal, which is still used, until 1963. In 1991, Virginia Tech unexplored a university logo, which incorporates an image of the War Memorial with its eight pylons, each representing a variegated virtue. The inclusion of the numerals “1872,” the founding year of the university, reinforces the traditions of increasingly than a century of service to the Commonwealth of Virginia, the nation, and the world. In 2017, a new trademark platform and twin logo were launched. The new Virginia Tech mark is grounded in tradition, yet focused on the future. The lettering reflects our VT-shaped educational experience. The vertical bar of the T represents disciplinary depth, while the horizontal bar reflects the worthiness to work wideness disciplines. The stovepipe of the V represent experiential learning and the spirit of Ut Prosim. The logo’s openness and shape highlight Virginia Tech’s identity as an inclusive polity that thrives at the intersection of disciplines. The university moreover has an sturdy logo: a streamlined “VT,” which is used only for sports and sports merchandise. Unveiled in 1984, the sturdy logo is a composite of designs submitted by two Virginia Tech art students to a competition sponsored by the university’s art department.IncreasinglyVirginia Tech history Firming and towers the foundations John M. McBryde laid the foundations for modern-day Virginia Tech in the 1890s, including the minutiae of B.S. degrees and graduate study, granting permanent status for the Corps of Cadets, and starting the athletics program. McBryde and his son moreover ripened the university’s motto: Ut Prosim (That I May Serve). T. Marshall Hahn Jr. transformed VPI from higher status to a major research university in the 1960s and 1970s. He championed the minutiae of a university education and led the movement to create the research division. The student soul tripled, and eight residence halls and 10 other major facilities were added. Charles W. Steger expertly guided the university’s growth and telescopic during the first 14 years of the 2000s. Research funding and private fundraising increased. He established the Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine and Research Institute and a school of biomedical engineering. He was a visionary leader for the Moss ArtsPart-wayand in elevating Virginia Tech’s presence in Northern Virginia. That “huge” Virginia Tech ring Colleges wideness the country offer students the endangerment to buy a matriculation ring, but very few annually redesign the ring to be unique to each class. This tradition began at Virginia Tech in 1911-12, and the resulting ring unchangingly invokes memories, traditions, and pride. Each year, the sophomore matriculation selects a Ring Committee to diamond their ring collection, which unchangingly includes the screaming eagle, American flag, campus buildings, and an interlocking uniting virtually the bezel. From there, the Ring Committee incorporates characteristics unique to its class. Since 1934, couples have exchanged rings at the Virginia Tech Ring Dance to the tune of “Moonlight and VPI,” written specifically for the Ring Dance by composer Fred Waring and lyricist Charles Gaynor. Get Directions   See All Locations   University Status Contact Virginia Tech Privacy Policy Acceptable Use We Remember University Libraries Accessibility Consumer Information Stop Abuse Policies Equal Opportunity WVTF University Bookstore Jobs at Virginia Tech © 2018 Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. All rights reserved. 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