The Origins of Southern College Football

The Origins of Southern College Football - Cover

How an Ivy League Game Became a Dixie Tradition

by Andrew McIlwaine Bell

200 pages / 6.00 x 9.00 inches / 10 halftones

ebook available

History / United States - 19th Century | Sports & Recreation / Football | Sport & Recreation / Sports History

Hardcover / 9780807171202 / August 2020

College football is a massive enterprise in the United States, and southern teams dominate poll rankings and sports headlines while generating billions in revenue for public schools and private companies. Southern football fans worship their teams, often rearranging their personal lives in order to accommodate season schedules. The Origins of Southern College Football sheds new light on the South’s obsession with football and explores the sport’s beginnings below the Mason-Dixon Line in the decades after the Civil War.

Military defeat followed by a long period of cultural unrest compelled many southerners to look to northern ideas and customs for guidance in rebuilding their beleaguered society. Ivy League universities, considered bastions of enlightenment and symbols of the modernizing spirit of the age, provided a particular source of inspiration for southerners in the form of organized or “scientific” football that featured standardized rules and scoring. Transported to the South by men educated at northern universities, scientific football reinforced cultural values that had existed in the region for centuries, among them a tolerance for violence, respect for martial displays, and support for traditional gender roles. The game also held the promise of a “New South” that its supporters hoped would transform the region into an industrial powerhouse. Students and townspeople alike embraced the new sport, which served as a source of pride for a region that lagged woefully behind its northern counterpart in terms of social equity and economic prowess.

The Origins of Southern College Football is an entertaining history of the South’s most popular sport cast against a broader narrative of the United States during the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, two momentous periods of change that gave rise to the game we recognize today.

Andrew McIlwaine Bell earned a PhD in history from George Washington University and works at the University of Virginia.

Praise for The Origins of Southern College Football

“A rich gumbo of political, cultural, and sports history that will satisfy the appetite of anyone who has ever wondered why southerners obsess over college football. Bell is a gifted writer and a meticulous scholar. Go Hoos!”—Larry J. Sabato, Director, UVA Center for Politics

“Andrew McIlwaine Bell does a masterful job of describing the early days of southern college football and explaining why the game meant so much to the people who played and watched it back then. A must-read for those who want to know more about the South’s most popular sport and the era in which it was conceived.”—Curt Cignetti, head coach of James Madison University Dukes football team

“The Origins of Southern College Football is an important addition to the historiography of southern collegiate football. Bell provides us a rich new understanding of the game’s growth in the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. In the process, he uses the South’s growing obsession with football to contextualize the region’s faltering, haphazard transition to modernity. It will change the way we talk about the growth of the early southern game.”—Thomas Aiello, author of Bayou Classic: The Grambling-Southern Football Rivalry

The Origins of Southern College Football is an important addition to college football history.”—Journal of Southern History

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