A
powerful storm literally came out of nowhere on a hot July day in
Sherman last Saturday. The storm took out all power on campus during
Austin College Legends weekend. But the ceremony and celebration were
moved elsewhere, and the resilient Roos were honored all the same. Sounds appropriate for this week's Roo Tale.
This
Roo Tale is dedicated to my friend and Texas Tech graduate and fan Reid
Baker. It is also dedicated to AC alum Tina Cook, whose daughter is
currently a Red Raider, and to Roo Mascot & Lubbock native Stacy
Jacob. And to all Roos who have ever yelled "guns up".
Every
Tech fan knows where they were on November 1, 2008. The #1 ranked Texas
Longhorns came to Lubbock to meet the #5 ranked Red Raiders. College
GameDay was in town. That evening's game would be the fifth-most viewed
telecast of any regular-season game in ABC history. And the Jones
stadium crowd was the largest in Texas Tech history.
The
home crowd would not be disappointed. After blowing a big lead, the
final Tech drive ended with a dramatic Harrell-to-Crabtree TD pass with
one second left. Your humble author and Horns fan was not pleased. But
much of America was riveted. Just like that, the Red Raiders had
defeated the top team in the country for the first time in its history.
Tech would soon find itself as the #1 team in the land in some polls.
How far the boys in Lubbock had come.
Texas, Texas
A&M, and Austin College had all been playing football for nearly
three decades before Texas Tech even EXISTED. And that existence was
actually in doubt for a good portion of the early 20th century. After
Tech's birth, there was no guarantee that athletic success would follow
at ANY level, let alone at the highest level. To reach that stratosphere
would require a sustained and dedicated effort by administration,
coaches, and players. Not to mention a lot of support from the citizens
of Lubbock County.
What was needed was a family of
coaching leaders to turn this new state college in a small West Texas
town into a national athletic power. This would be no small task for a
community about to experience the catastrophic effects of both the Great
Depression and the Dust Bowl. How could western Lubbock ever expect to
compete with eastern Austin & College Station, given the state of
Texas's eastern wealth and focus? And how could the community, this new
institution, and its athletic heroes endure the hardships to come and
emerge stronger on the other side?
The answer would be found in Sherman, TX.
Little do most Texans know. But Texas Tech athletics just happens to be…………….."The House That AC Built".
Chapter 1: Go West, Young Man
Chapter 2: Land of the Free, Home of the Roos
Chapter 3: The Dust Bowl & the Cotton Bowl
Chapter 4: For Whom The Dell Tolls
Story posted in the comments below.
All other Roo Tales can be found in the archives here:
http://bit.ly/1UM0CSH
Go Roos!
"Crabtree.......pulls free......"
Chapter 1: Go West, Young Man
Texas
is first and foremost a southern state. And Texas fought a violent
civil conflict alongside other southern states in order to preserve its
unjust economic institutions. Fighting and losing a war that itself is
on the wrong side of history can be
humiliating and painful. Just ask Imperial Japan or the Turks in the
wake of WWI. Nations deal with this pain by turning to mythology.
Most
southern states did so by embracing the "Lost Cause", the bravery of
those who fought, and the aggression committed by the other side. Texas,
however, chose a different story in order to cope. Texas looked West.
The mythology of Texas slowly evolved into one of ranching, not farming.
Prairie, not thicket. Sunsets, not swamps. Cowboys, not chains. That
ol' war way back when? More of an east coast thing. Texas is western and
its own unique region, we soothingly told ourselves.
This
mythology was aided by actual western expansion in the U.S. Discovery
of oil and other natural resources in the Permian Basin lured Texans and
non-Texans out of the Pine Curtain. Small villages in Odessa and
Amarillo turned into boom towns within a decade. Lubbock was the future.
Galveston was the past.
The natural resource boom
coincided with one of the wettest periods in the history of the Texas
High Plains. Those not getting rich from oil soon found that money was
to be had by cultivating the land and turning the Panhandle into Iowa.
Experts warned against this. The High Plains were not the Midwest. The
native grasses holding down the earth were there for a reason, and
removing them would release the dust when the inevitable drought came.
Nobody listened, as there was too much money to be made from the ground.
During
this early 20th century boom, the new residents of West Texas
increasingly looked East with resentment. Two state institutions of
higher learning in Texas, and both were east? A demand for a third state
college to represent West Texas was quietly requested. The response of
the Texas legislature was a loud NO. The requests grew louder and more
numerous. The legislature began to offer compromises. How about a branch
campus of UT or A&M? The response was an unequivocal "no deal".
By
the Roaring 20s, the Texas Lege cried uncle and created a third state
university to represent the citizens of West Texas. Texas Technological
College would be located in Lubbock, and would open its doors in 1925
(see photo). The quarter century fight to create a West Texas school to
rival UT & A&M had been won. But another quarter century fight
was just about to begin. Could Tech compete?
It was
next to impossible to lure coaching talent from the large state schools.
Nearly as hard was convincing administration at increasingly large
private schools in the Southwest Conference (SWC) to head West and build
new traditions out of dust. What Tech needed was to become an outlet
for top notch coaching talent at a smaller, private school that had a
history of strong competition against the larger schools. Preferably a
school whose priorities (avoiding growth & remaining academically
focused) were increasingly the opposite of those being championed in
Lubbock.
Matadors turned their lonely eyes to Sherman, and the Roos came a calling.
Chapter 2: Land of the Free, Home of the Roos
Austin
College won its first football conference championship in 1920, under
the guidance of Coach Ewing Freeland. The large state schools had
departed the TIAA for the SWC in the previous decade, leaving the
Roos in a strong position to dominate those that remained. When Texas
Tech asked Freeland to become the first football coach in Matador
history, he just couldn't say no.
Yes, the Matadors. The original mascot of Texas Tech. More on that later.
Freeland's
duties in Lubbock extended beyond the gridiron. He was also named Tech
athletic director in 1925, as well as the first head coach of Texas Tech
baseball. Success came quickly during Freeland's tenure. Over his four
years, Tech compiled 21 wins and a winning percentage just under .700,
albeit against non-SWC competition. Lubbock fans liked what they saw.
The
second game in Texas Tech football history was in Lubbock against
Austin College (see photo). This defensive struggle ended in a 3-3 tie,
and marked the first time any opponent had ever scored on Tech. Pete
Cawthon's Roos had high expectations of traveling west and scoring a
victory, but Freeland's Matadors put up a tough fight. Tech's first
season would end impressively, with a record of 6-1-2. Former AC Coach
Freeland is created with designing and implementing the famous
"Double-T" Texas Tech logo the following season. You'll never look at
the logo the same way again.
Athletic Director
duties in addition to coaching duties proved to be too much, so in 1927
Tech hired Grady Higginbotham as AD. Grady ("Big Hig") and little
brother Roswell ("Little Hig") are famous Aggies. They are also both
very familiar to the AC community. Little Hig was an assistant coach to
Pete Cawthon at AC in the 1920s, and a summer school student at AC in
the 1930s. During his time in Sherman, Little Hig met and married
Elizabeth Tuck of Sherman. Elizabeth's brother H.G. Tuck and cousin B.T.
"Bap" Brown are both famous AC alumni and athletes who reside in the
Hall of Honor. Oh what I tangled web we weave Austin College.
Freeland
took a hiatus from coaching after the 1928 season, and handed the
reigns for one year to "Big Hig" Higginbotham. Freeland's time away from
coaching would not last long, however. In 1935, he returned to Sherman
to take over coaching duties of the Roos once again. That same year the
Austin College Kangaroos would finish the season as conference champions
once again. Winning seemed to follow Freeland whether East or West.
"Big
Hig" was more focused on finding a replacement for Freeland than he was
coaching the 1929 team. And his efforts would be rewarded. Austin
College had come to the rescue once before. And would do so yet again in
even bigger fashion.
Austin College (and future Tech) Coach Ewing Freeland, 1920...
Chapter 3: The Dust Bowl & the Cotton Bowl
No
one got hit harder than those in the High Plains of Texas. Wall Street
suffered after the markets crashed. Americans in general fell into
despair as the economy contracted by 30%. Livelihoods in natural resources
suffered as commodity markets tanked. And tenant farmers like the Joad
family endured foreclosure and long trips out west looking for the land
of milk and honey. Shoot, they all had it easy.
Those
on the High Plains had no Wall Street assets. Jobs in Permian Basin oil
simply disappeared completely. And unlike the Grapes of Wrath tenant
farmers, High Plains farmers owned their land and were therefore
financially and emotionally invested in it and reluctant to move. And in
spite of all of this cruelty, the Gods decided to inflict yet more
suffering by ending the historic wet period in 1931 and initiating an
unprecedented drought. And the land in this drought was now plowed,
farmed, and dangerously unmoored.
The dust storms
were small at first. But as the years progressed they got worse. Much
worse. One of the most catastrophic occurred on Black Sunday, April 14,
1935. This storm looked more like an approaching hurricane than anything
else as it began in Kansas, gathered strength, and rolled into Texas.
Illness and death rates due to dust pneumonia increased. Poverty rose.
Misery was everywhere. There was very little to cheer for in the Texas
Panhandle during the 1930s. Only two things really. The promise that
next year would be 1928 again. And the promise that Pete Cawthon's
Matadors would bring a Tech victory.
Pete Cawthon
left Austin College after the 1927 season in order to recuperate from
exhaustion. By 1930, he was ready to coach once again when Higginbotham
asked him to take over in Lubbock. Tech would not be the same. Over the
course of 11 years, Cawthon transformed Texas Tech into a regional
power. 10 winning seasons. 76 victories. 5 Border Conference
championships. And two Bowl games.
Tech's first wins
over future SWC foes Baylor & TCU occurred during the Cawthon era.
No surprise really. Cawthon had already bested these schools while
leading the Roos.
The high mark of the Cawthon years
was 1938. Led by star running back Elmer Tarbox (a distant cousin of AC
Roo Wes Tarbox….thanks Wes for confirming), Texas Tech won the Border
confererence with a 10-0 mark and was invited to the 1939 Cotton Bowl. A
Cotton Bowl loss to St. Mary's tarnished a perfect season, but a final
AP national ranking of #11 cushioned the blow. See Cotton Bowl photo.
Cawthon's
success was not his alone. He had help from Sherman. When Cawthon
departed for Lubbock, he basically took Austin College with him. Russell
"Dutchy" Smith played for Cawthon at AC; Smith would join Cawthon at
Tech as the OL coach. W.L. "Crip" Golightly was another former Roo who
would make the trip; he assisted Cawthon in football and was made head
coach of Tech basketball. Roo Virgil Ballard did not want to be left
out, and made the trip with Cawthon to help out on the gridiron. He
would later take over Tech basketball from Golightly and coach Tech
track. Finally, one of Cawthon's stars in Sherman named John O'Dell
Morgan was already in Lubbock as the head football coach of the Lubbock
High Westerners. In 1930, he would resign in order to assist Cawthon at
Tech right down the road. He would also later coach Tech basketball as
well.
5 Roo coaches leading Tech to the Cotton Bowl during the despair of the Dust Bowl. Not. too. shabby.
According
to legend, Cawthon is credited with ditching the Matador mascot and
replacing it with the Red Raider mascot we are familiar with today. He's
also famous for spending heavily on his athletes. Cawthon's Red Raiders
were actually the first college team to travel by plane to play a
football game. These budgetary issues resulted in frequent clashes with
administration as the 1930s came to an end. As much success as Cawthon
had brought, he believed that more could be had if only university
administrators would focus less on money. These frustrations would lead
to Cawthon's resignation in 1941.
Cawthon today is
considered something of a founding father at Tech, with good reason. He
was nominated for the College Football Hall of fame in 2016, for his
heroic efforts in both Sherman & Lubbock.
In
spite of Pete Cawthon's departure, a decade of Roo effort meant that the
program was on an upward trajectory. Tech dreams were growing. Who
would replace Cawthon? As DKR famously said, you dance with the "one
that brung ya". Tech wisely went back to the Austin College Sports well
and picked another Roo. You betcha.
Pete Cawthon and the 1938 Texas Tech Red Raiders...
Black Sunday, 1935...
For those interested in the unique difficulty of the West Texas Panhandle in the 1930s, I highly recommend this book...
https://www.amazon.com/Worst-Hard-Time.../dp/0618773479
Chapter 4: For Whom The Dell Tolls
There
were many "Cawthon boys" at Austin College, and John O'Dell "Dell"
Morgan was one of the most famous. He was likely the best natural
athlete on the AC teams that won a TIAA championship in 1923 and
famously defeated Baylor in 1924. He was
also one of the few Roos who occassionally had the guts to stand up to
Cawthon's fiery temper. His years assisting Cawthon at Tech ended in
1934, when Jack Meagher at Auburn hired Morgan to coach his offensive
line in the SEC. Morgan's time in Alabama would only last for 6 years
though, when Tech offered him the job of replacing Cawthon as head
coach.
Dell picked up where Cawthon left off. 11
years. 4 Border Conference championships. And 3 bowl games. Morgan's
only losing seasons during the 1940s were the WWII years when fielding
teams was a challenge. Interestingly, one of those bowl games was a 6-0
loss to the Tulsa Golden Hurricane in the 1942 Sun Bowl. Morgan's 9-1
Tech team played Henry Frnka's Tulsa squad to a 0-0 tie for 58 minutes,
before a last minute Tulsa TD got Frnka the win. Henry Frnka was a
former Roo teammate of Morgan under Cawthon in the 1920s, and the 1942
Sun Bowl remains the only college football game in which two former Roos
squared off. That is, until Bill Snyder/Kansas State and Larry
Fedora/North Carolina meet each other next year in the national
championship game. ;)
Morgan's
tenure would include Tech's first two wins over Texas A&M. As all
good Aggie fans and as this College Station boy are aware, Tech has
always been a thorn in the side of the Aggies. This tradition can be
traced to Morgan's teams just after WWII. See photo of Morgan's first
Tech win over the Aggies.
In spite of his success
coaching football, Morgan was a baseball guy. He shined in Sherman on
the diamond, coached baseball at Auburn in addition to football, and
decided to part ways with Tech in 1950 to return to the sport he truly
loved. He would spending the rest of his days coaching collegiate
baseball in Texas.
After Morgan's departure in 1950,
Tech was well on its way. A long awaited first victory over the Texas
Longhorns came in 1955. Southwest Conference membership arrived in 1956.
In 1976, Tech claimed its first SWC title in football. By the 1980s
Tech had established itself as a surprising threat to any SWC foe,
especially at the dreaded Jones stadium in Lubbock. The Mike Leach days
and the victory over UT in 2008 were just around the corner.
All
schools have to decide their own destinies, and we can all agree or
disagree on which outcomes are preferable. The priorities of Austin
College remained fairly consistent over the 20th century. AC was
determined to stay small, private, and academically focused, with
athletics maintained at a D3 level. Texas Tech, on the other hand, was
an outward expression of the desire of West Texas to find its rightful
place in the state, and its priorities were geared toward growth, public
funding, and establishing an athletic tradition at the highest
collegiate levels. It's probably not surprising that the athletic
tradition of AC found an outlet in Lubbock when priorities in Sherman
proved too much to overcome.
Roo coaches guided Tech
for 25 years in multiple sports throughout the horrors of Great
Depression and WWII, handing over the reigns to others during the much
easier task of continuing their work during America's post WWII boom. To
Texas Tech, we Roos gracefully say…. You. Are. Welcome.
Many
of you Big XII fans have your team. Some of you are Horns fans, others
Aggies, still others Sooners. I know a few Baylor & TCU fanatics.
That is all well and good. But when your team is not playing, I might
suggest that you root for the Red Raiders on any given Saturday. Why?
That's your work. That's the work of the Roos. For Texas Tech truly is
"the house that AC built". Go Red Raiders. And Go Roos!
"Dutchy" Smith, Pete Cawthon, & "Dell" Morgan. The Roos at Tech in the 1930s, building the Red Raider house.
Roo Dell Morgan coaching Tech in Lubbock, 1940s...
Pete Cawthon, 2017 College Football HOF nominee for his work in Sherman & Lubbock...
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