The original football field for
New Mexico A&M was located just northwest of the Horseshoe at Espina Street and College Drive, on the site now occupied by Skeen Hall. Known as Miller Field, its entrance gates, constructed in 1924, still stand on a traffic island in front of Skeen Hall's main entrance. In 1933. Aggie football moved to a new field located just to the northeast of Hadley Hall (the university's Administration building), originally known as Quesenberry Field. The original Memorial Stadium was built at the same site in 1950. It was dedicated as a memorial to New Mexico A&M students who had died in
World War II,
World War I, and the
Spanish–American War, among whom was Henry C. Gilbert Jr., whose parents were instrumental in the 10-year-long fundraising drive. Memorial Stadium, which served for 28 seasons, was replaced both due to its small size (maximum seating capacity of 12,155) and the want of an expanded athletics plant with more infrastructure and parking. (Currently Memorial Tower, which was originally part of the press box of the stadium, is the only remaining reminder of the stadium. It is now structurally incorporated into the university's Health and Social Services building and houses a memorial lounge and computer lab.) ==The "New" stadium==