East Carolina University Football
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About this ebook
East Carolina University's Pirates triumphs and tragedies are captured in this collection of striking images.
East Carolina University played its first intercollegiate football game on October 29, 1932, against the Scots of Presbyterian Junior College. In the more than eight decades that have followed, the ECU Pirates have experienced triumph and tragedy while creating a premier game-day experience. From the team's early days playing on farmland through the decade-long quest to join the Southern Conference, ECU's rise is recounted through these pages. Players are featured alongside legendary and colorful coaches in this history of Pirate football.
Arthur Carlson
Arthur Carlson serves as the university archivist and records manager, and Elizabeth Brooke Tolar is the assistant university archivist. Greenville native John Tucker is a professor of Asian history and university historian at East Carolina University. The majority of these images are from the archives of Joyner Library and the Department of Athletics at East Carolina University.
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East Carolina University Football - Arthur Carlson
Athletics.
INTRODUCTION
East Carolina University (ECU) football traces its beginnings to the administration of Robert H. Wright, the school’s first president. As an undergraduate, Wright served as captain of the football team at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Yet with an overwhelmingly female campus at East Carolina, President Wright had to wait until the 1930s, when men began enrolling in significant numbers, to oversee the emergence of East Carolina football. In 1932, two years before Wright’s 25th year as president, the first men’s football team took the field. Wright’s consistent support for physical fitness, intramural sports, and finally, intercollegiate football, set the tone for much that would follow.
Early on, the team was known as the Teachers,
reflecting the school’s charter mission of teacher training. The team practiced on the east end of campus. Early pictures feature the distinctive architecture of the Model School (now Messick Theater Arts Building) in the background. Lacking bleachers, spectators stood along the sidelines to cheer on the Teachers. Games were initially played off-campus, at Guy Smith Stadium. In 1949, College Stadium, on the southeast end of campus, became the new venue for Pirate football.
With increased male enrollment and the resulting transformation of campus culture, the Teacher name was revisited: noting that the pirate Blackbeard was supposedly named Edward Teach, campus historians punned that the Teachers might be the Pirates, with none other than Blackbeard as their mascot. The 1934 yearbook, the Tecoan, illustrated this new identity with cartoon figures depicting buccaneers, pirate ships, and buried treasure juxtaposed with images of campus culture. By the early 1950s, the team and the campus had embraced the pirate image as their own.
Pirate momentum halted during World War II due to wartime exigencies. Just prior to the war, Coach John Christenbury led the 1940 team to an unprecedented 6-2 season. The next year, East Carolina went undefeated in seven games, a unique achievement in Pirate football history. Christenbury enlisted to serve his country, but died tragically in an accidental explosion at Port Chicago, California, in 1944. Due to his team’s historic achievement in 1941 and his outstanding contributions to Pirate football, the new gymnasium on the east end of campus was named for him in 1953. Forty years later, Christenbury was inducted into the ECU Athletics Hall of Fame.
The GI Bill made higher education possible for many veterans, as well as those who served in the years following World War II. Many chose to study at East Carolina, which remained largely female in 1945. Football returned in 1946, and a succession of solid seasons ensued. In 1952, Coach Jack Boone led the team to its first bowl game. While the Pirates lost to Clarion College in the Lion’s Bowl, the achievement set a new standard for athletic success at East Carolina.
In the postwar years, the football team advanced the pirate identity on the field as well as on campus. The 1952 Tecoan contributed to this with a cover featuring a peg-legged buccaneer standing on a treasure chest, with a skull-and-crossbones flag behind him. Homecoming parades featured floats with maritime themes and coeds wearing pirate boots. In 1953, a sword-brandishing swashbuckler again graced the front cover of the yearbook, now renamed the Buccaneer.
By 1960, East Carolina had grown from a teacher training school into a teacher’s college, and then from a teacher’s college into a liberal arts college. In the 1960s, phenomenal growth continued, culminating in the school’s attainment of university status in 1967. Along with increased enrollment and the development of diverse graduate programs came the expansion of the athletic complex, now moved from the east end of campus up College Hill and across 14th Street. This new stadium was originally named James S. Ficklen Memorial Stadium (1963–1994). New leadership appeared with Clarence Stasavich, who served as head coach from 1962 to 1969. During the Stasavich era, the Pirates achieved an outstanding 50-27-1 record and successive bowl game invitations. In 1963, the Pirates won their first bowl game with a victory over Northeastern in the Eastern Bowl. In 1964, the team won another bowl game, against the University of Massachusetts. In 1965, the Pirates racked up yet another bowl victory, this time against Maine in the Tangerine Bowl. In 1966, Stasavich led the Pirates, new to the Southern Conference as of 1965, to a conference championship, their first in 13 years.
Pirate football in the 1970s featured a succession of coaches including Mike McGee (1970), Sonny Randle (1971–1973), and Pat Dye (1974–1979). Dye emerged as the most successful coach in Pirate history, achieving an overall record of 48-18-1, along with a Southern Conference championship in 1976. In 1977, Dye led the Pirates to victories against in-state rivals NC State (28-23) and Duke (17-16). In 1978, the Pirates defeated Louisiana Tech in the Independence Bowl. Following the 1979 season, Dye left East Carolina to become head coach at Wyoming before moving to Auburn in 1981. He was inducted into the ECU Athletics Hall of Fame in 2006.
The 1980s was not the best of decades for the Pirates: apart from the 1983 season, during which the team achieved an 8-3 record and national ranking, there were no winning records, and certainly no bowl games. Bill Lewis’s tenure as head