Beginnings of football at Alabama According to a November 25, 1926 article in
The Crimson White,
football was first introduced at the University of Alabama in 1892 by W.G. Little of
Livingston, Alabama, who had been a student at
Andover, Massachusetts and "went to the University for the game." Alabama's first football game was played in
Birmingham on Friday afternoon, November 11, 1892, at the old Lakeview Park. Alabama defeated a team composed mostly of high schoolers 56-0. That Saturday, November 12, Alabama played the Birmingham Athletic Club, losing 5-4 when Ross, of B.A.C., kicked a 65-yard
field goal. This field goal was a collegiate record at the time. In 1896 the university's board of trustees passed a rule forbidding athletic teams from traveling off-campus. The following season only one game was played and in 1898 football was abandoned at Alabama. Student opposition to the ruling forced trustees to lift the travel ban and football was resumed in 1899. The 1918 season was canceled on account of
World War I but the game was resumed the following year. Alabama first gained national recognition for football in 1922 when it defeated the
University of Pennsylvania 9-7 in
Philadelphia. The following season
Wallace Wade became head coach and in 1925 led the Crimson Tide to its first undefeated and untied season and its first trip to Pasadena, California, with a
Rose Bowl invitation. On January 1, 1926, in the Rose Bowl, Alabama came from behind to upset the
University of Washington 20-19.
The Crimson Tide Early newspaper accounts of the university's football squad simply referred to them as the "varsity" or the "Crimson White". The first nickname popular with the media was the "Thin Red Line", which was used until 1906. Hugh Roberts, former sports editor of the
Birmingham Age-Herald, is credited with coining the phrase "Crimson Tide" in an article describing the 1907
Iron Bowl played in Birmingham with
Auburn a heavy favorite to win. The game was played in a sea of red mud which stained the Alabama white jerseys crimson. The headline for the article was "Crimson Tied", referring to the 6–6 tie Alabama had with Auburn, who had been heavily favored before the game.
The Elephant There are two stories, perhaps both true, about how Alabama's football squad became associated with the
elephant, both dating to the coaching tenure of
Wallace Wade (1923–1930). The earliest account attributes the Rosenberger's Birmingham Trunk Company for the elephant association. Owner J. D. Rosenberger, whose son was a student at the university, outfitted the
undefeated 1926 team with "good luck" luggage tags for the trip to the
1927 Rose Bowl. The company's trademark, displayed on the tags, was a red elephant standing on a trunk. When the football team arrived in
Pasadena, the reporters greeting them, including syndicated columnist
Grantland Rice, associated their large size with the elephants on their luggage. When the
1930 team returned to the
Rose Bowl, the company furnished leather suitcases, paid for by the Alumni Association, to each team member. Another story dates to
1930. Following the October 4 game against
Ole Miss,
Atlanta Journal sports writer and
Hall of Fame former
Georgia Tech back Everett Strupper wrote: At the end of the quarter, the earth started to tremble, there was a distant rumble that continued to grow. Some excited fan in the stands bellowed, 'Hold your horses, the elephants are coming,' and out stamped this Alabama varsity. It was the first time that I had seen it and the size of the entire eleven nearly knocked me cold, men that I had seen play last year looking like they had nearly doubled in size. Yet, despite the unofficial status as the Crimson Tide's mascot, the elephant was very much part of the school's football traditions by the 1940s. It was in that decade that a live elephant mascot named "Alamite" was a regular sight on game days in Tuscaloosa. For several years it was traditional for the pachyderm to lead the homecoming parade and Alamite would also bear that year's queen onto the field prior to the game. Sports writers continued to refer to Alabama as the "Red Elephants" afterward, referring to their crimson jerseys. The 1930 team shut out eight of ten opponents, allowing a total of only 13 points all season. The "Red Elephants" rolled up 217 points that season, including a 24-0 victory over
Washington State in the Rose Bowl. Despite these early associations of the elephant to the
University of Alabama, the university did not officially accept the elephant as university mascot until 1979. Alabama's elephant mascot is known as "
Big Al". == The Million Dollar Band ==