This is from 1901. This is around where the library currently is.
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I absolutely love the historical pics...thanks to all for posting. I was at ISU in the mid 80s and Clyde Williams Field was gone by then (however the track was there). When did they tear down the seating?
These photos are just awesome. Always neat to see a little bit of the past that most of us here weren't even born early enough to see.
Next topic on old facilities should include the former basketball facilities. I would love to see some photos of what games looked like before Hilton was built.
That would be the Armory.
Didn't they once play in State Gym too?
Same here. I knew that the stadium used to be there... Just never thought about it.I walked past that 1,000 times in college, I never put 2 and 2 together to figure out what those gates were for.
I would love to see some photos of what games looked like before Hilton was built.
This is from 1901. This is around where the library currently is.
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I find it somewhat alarming that ISU invested to expand the stadium in '61 and '66, only to move to JTS after 1974.Clyde Williams held about 28,000 when I attended in the mid 70s. Football was pretty low-key back then. In fact, I was able to score a "press pass" to walk the sidelines and shoot photos for a black and white photography class I was taking (believe it was JLMC 318). Shot some photos (which I still have) of OU's Joe Washington (he was a stud who later played in the NFL) sport'n his silver cleats. As I recall the field was mowed fairly long and got watered several days the week prior to the game in an attempt to slow him down. If I'm remembering correctly (and I'd like to think I am), he still gained 200+ yards in an ISU thumping.
Kind of fun tradition had us tossing oranges onto the field when ISU scored its first TD (Big 8 champ received an automatic beth in the Orange Bowl). I rememer K-State players picking oranges off the field and throwing them back at the fans in the stands. Pretty crazy times. Then we moved into the new place and oranges, bottles, etc were banned. So was my "press pass."
Judging from the bottom right corner, it appears that there was hilltop seating long before the hillside seating at JTS. There also appears to be a crew working in a trench - presumably excavating for a building foundation. Great find.
I find it somewhat alarming that ISU invested to expand the stadium in '61 and '66, only to move to JTS after 1974.
Page four of this PDF has good insight into the planning and operation for Clyde Williams Field and JTS up to 1980.
http://www.lib.iastate.edu/spcl/exh...and Its Buildings - South Hall - Workshop.pdf