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cockyhoskins
07-17-2007, 04:14 PM
I am starting to get the fever. This is a good article from August 2005 for those who didn't see it:

The history behind the home of the Gamecock football team

When 7:30 rolls around Thursday night, more than 80,250 seats at Williams-Brice Stadium will be filled for a nationally televised ESPN contest. But how many people know that in that very same spot in 1934, the same building held just 17,600 people?

How many of those fans realize that even before that, the USC football team played its games on the grounds where they now enjoy the Grand Market Place, Chick-fil-A or Taco Bell?

In 1896, USC's football team played Clemson on the other side of Elmwood Avenue, where the game was held on what was then the fairgrounds. The annual game was held there until 1902, when a group of Clemson students marched on the Carolina campus only to find the USC faithful waiting for them armed and dangerous. When the series renewed in 1909, the game was held at the corner of Rosewood and Assembly, where the fairgrounds stand today. The game was played on the fairgrounds every year until 1959, when the game became a home-and-home series.

However, the Clemson game was the exception to the rule. The original USC football team played most of its games on Melton Field, which stood where the Russell house is today. The final game at Melton field featured a jam-packed crowd of 4,800 people, according to USC historian Tom Price. For bigger games, the team would sometimes use the adjacent Davis Field, which had better bleachers and was home to Carolina's baseball team.

In 1934, university officials realized Melton Field was becoming overcrowded and that its wooden bleachers would not be able to contain the Gamecock faithful any longer.

So the Work Progress Administration, a program created under Franklin D. Roosevelt's administration, began construction on a new football stadium, Columbia Municipal Stadium, adjacent to the state fairgrounds. The City of Columbia would later turn the stadium over to the university after World War II, and it was aptly renamed Carolina Stadium.

When first constructed, the stadium held 17,600 people. The Gamecocks' first game in their new home was Oct. 2, 1934, when USC defeated Virginia Military Institute, 22-7.

One end of what was then Carolina Stadium was filled in the early 1940s, increasing stadium capacity to 34,000.

Coach Warren Giese, who was at USC from 1956 to 1960, oversaw another expansion in which the horseshoe like stadium was completed into a bowl and the capacity was increased to 43,000.

Williams-Brice Stadium is known for its combination of the upper deck and the lighting structures, which make the stadium look like a "cockroach," as some have called it. Imagine the cockroach with only one side of its legs. That's what the stadium looked like as of a 1971-1972 expansion. After rebuilding the lower level of the west stands, USC built an upper deck, but only half of one. Mrs. Martha Williams-Brice, the wife of Gamecock letterman Thomas Brice, left a large inheritance to her two nephews, who left a great deal of it to USC. Now with a capacity of more than 54,000, the stadium was renamed Williams-Brice Stadium on Sept. 9, 1972.

The university finally finished the upper deck in 1982 after 10 years of having a lop-sided Williams-Brice. However, unlike the west side, the east side lower level was not rebuilt, leaving it as the only original part of Columbia Municipal Stadium that still stands today.

Beginning in 1983, fans began to notice that the newly constructed east upper-deck appeared to be swaying. Some claimed the stadium moved a good number of inches, and some even claimed the structure swayed over a foot.

Bumper stickers and other items were released featuring the saying "If it ain't swaying, we ain't playing" before architects and engineers supposedly "fixed" the problem before the 1987 season.

The project boosted the stadium's capacity into the low-70 thousands under new coach Joe Morrison. Morrison ripped up the artificial turf that had served as the playing surface and reinstalled natural grass.

During a two-year period from 1995-1996, USC spent more than $20 million to expand Williams-Brice; renovations included the building of the new South endzone, new press and luxury boxes, a new football office building and an 11,000-square-foot banquet facility known as "The Zone".

Finally, with the dedication of the Dr. Charles Crews Football Facility this year, Williams-Brice Stadium is the home of a state-of-the-art workout and meeting room facility that cost the university more than $3 million.

From Melton Field, to Columbia Municipal, to Williams-Brice Stadium, the Gamecock football team has enjoyed 112 years of football and on Thursday looks to start 112 more.


http://media.www.dailygamecock.com/media/storage/paper247/news/2005/08/31/Sports/Where.They.Play-972745.shtml

smoovecock
07-17-2007, 04:27 PM
I always liked the lit up block C and Gamecock that sat on top of that aluminum box seating section on the 50 yard line on the east side of the stadium......

ihateclemson
07-17-2007, 04:41 PM
So let me get this straight. We played Clemson up until 1959 on a field where the fairgrounds are today even though there was a stadium across the street that was built in 1934? That doesn't make sense.

Slacker USC
07-17-2007, 05:01 PM
So let me get this straight. We played Clemson up until 1959 on a field where the fairgrounds are today even though there was a stadium across the street that was built in 1934? That doesn't make sense.

No, I think they meant we played first at the Fairgrounds (c.1909), then the on-campus sites, then the current site every year from 1934 until 1959. In 1959 we started alternating between playing in Pickens and in Columbia.

It is poorly worded, but that's the understanding that I have.

ChucktwnLawCock
07-17-2007, 05:03 PM
Being a younger gamecock, that was one of the coolest articles ive read in a while.....Thanks!

Also this part is so wierd to think of...."The original USC football team played most of its games on Melton Field, which stood where the Russell house is today."

ihateclemson
07-17-2007, 05:04 PM
No, I think they meant we played first at the Fairgrounds (c.1909), then the on-campus sites, then the current site every year from 1934 until 1959. In 1959 we started alternating between playing in Pickens and in Columbia.

No, it says we played at the fairgrounds every year until 1959.

hardcock2
07-17-2007, 05:08 PM
"Beginning in 1983, fans began to notice that the newly constructed east upper-deck appeared to be swaying. Some claimed the stadium moved a good number of inches, and some even claimed the structure swayed over a foot.

Bumper stickers and other items were released featuring the saying "If it ain't swaying, we ain't playing" before architects and engineers supposedly "fixed" the problem before the 1987 season."



My seats are in the East Upper....and I can tell you, that section still sways. So I think that saying "If it ain't swayin', we ain't playin'" is still very appropriate and I love it!
:football:

hardcock2
07-17-2007, 05:11 PM
No, it says we played at the fairgrounds every year until 1959.

But where the stadium is was part of the fairgrounds back then. So we did play the taters in the original part of Willy B.

ihateclemson
07-17-2007, 05:14 PM
But where the stadium is was part of the fairgrounds back then. So we did play the taters in the original part of Willy B.

Yeah but it says the field was on the corner of Rosewood and Assembly, and the stadium is not. I am not trying to be complicated, the article is just confusing.

Gamerooster
07-17-2007, 05:21 PM
Before 1934 the game was played on the fairgrounds then moved to the stadium after it was built. So originally it was a nuetral site and Clemson students traveled to the fair every year. Since the stadium became our home field the Clemson teams lead by Howard began to complain about playing at Carolina Stadium every year.

hardcock2
07-17-2007, 05:25 PM
Yeah but it says the field was on the corner of Rosewood and Assembly, and the stadium is not. I am not trying to be complicated, the article is just confusing.

Your right...I gotchya. But once the stadium was built, the games were moved there.

NastyNash
07-17-2007, 06:01 PM
I never knew that is why they said that saying, "If it ain't swaying, we ain't playing." Learn something new every day

bleepbloop
07-17-2007, 06:05 PM
"Beginning in 1983, fans began to notice that the newly constructed east upper-deck appeared to be swaying. Some claimed the stadium moved a good number of inches, and some even claimed the structure swayed over a foot.

Bumper stickers and other items were released featuring the saying "If it ain't swaying, we ain't playing" before architects and engineers supposedly "fixed" the problem before the 1987 season."



My seats are in the East Upper....and I can tell you, that section still sways. So I think that saying "If it ain't swayin', we ain't playin'" is still very appropriate and I love it!
:football:

Indeed it does!!!

doccock
07-17-2007, 11:43 PM
Yeah but it says the field was on the corner of Rosewood and Assembly, and the stadium is not. I am not trying to be complicated, the article is just confusing.

Y'all are just to dadgum young.lol
It's not a question. It's not open to interpretation. Some of us were actually around for many of them.

We played Big Thursday at Carolina Stadium(now WB) from 1934 until 1959. It has rotated between Clemson and Carolina Stadium ever since.
doc

Cocky2001
07-18-2007, 12:37 AM
After rebuilding the lower level of the west stands, USC built an upper deck, but only half of one.

This is backwards...the upper was built first and it was this way for one season. The lower deck was replaced with what is now the West Lowers for the next season.

And...this comes from reading and seeing pix of the chronology...I am not as young as some, but, I am too young for that. Check out GamecockHistory.com if you doubt me (I would link it if I could...but, no smilies...no ability to create links either..."I have a dream...someday, I'll be a full member of CockyTalk and get the options that everyone else gets to post with...I have been to the mountain top, but even this defies imagination...")...he has a good pictorial history showing two pix of the West Upper with the original West Lower deck.

SpuR48
07-18-2007, 04:19 AM
A poster on here (GamecockHistory) has a cool website which actually has the history of the stadium with pictures in chronological order. I won't post the pics here, but you should definitely check the site out!

Click here for the pictures! (http://www.gamecockhistory.com/content/Stadium/Stadium.htm)