[OT: Big Red Tasty]

Started by Big Red Colonel, March 17, 2005, 07:39:45 AM

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Big Red Colonel

--> this was my calender entry today

"In 1898, while attending a Cornell University v. University of Pennsylvania football game, Herberton Williams, a Campbell Soup Company executive, was so taken by Cornell’s bright new red-and-white uniforms that he convinced the company to adopt the colors as its own."






Al DeFlorio

[Q]Big Red Colonel Wrote:

 --> this was my calender entry today

"In 1898, while attending a Cornell University v. University of Pennsylvania football game, Herberton Williams, a Campbell Soup Company executive, was so taken by Cornell’s bright new red-and-white uniforms that he convinced the company to adopt the colors as its own."
[/q]
They played football in March back then?  :-O
Al DeFlorio '65

Jeff Hopkins '82


KeithK

[q] --> this was my calender entry today [/q]Are you sure you didn't just steal it from the Cornell website?  :-)  One of the links posted on the "Relaunch" thread pointed right to that story yesterday.

ben03

[Q]Big Red Colonel Wrote:

 --> this was my calender entry today

"In 1898, while attending a Cornell University v. University of Pennsylvania football game, Herberton Williams, a Campbell Soup Company executive, was so taken by Cornell’s bright new red-and-white uniforms that he convinced the company to adopt the colors as its own."[/q]
from the "new" website:
[Q]Q: Why are your colors red and black[/U]?

The Cornell colors were actually established on the University's Inauguration Day on Oct. 7, 1868. The account from Morris Bishop's A History of Cornell follows:

At sunrise on Inauguration Day, said the New York Times envoy, "from all the hills poured forth delightful music, and every few minutes the thunder of artillery from the eastern hills responded to the booming of cannon from a lofty eminence on the west side of town." Students and citizens thronged to Library Hall, which was tastefully decorated with marble vases of flowers and a large cross covered with moss, entwined with myrtle. One the side wall, the motto of the new university was blazoned in evergreen letters, and behind the speakers the illustrious names of CORNELL and WHITE appeared in large white letters against artistically draped red flannel, on which stars cut out of silver paper were pinned at pleasing intervals. Thus, entirely unintentionally, the Cornell colors were established for all time, on the first Cornell banner.

Although the Cornell football team was defeated 12-6 in the 1898 Thanksgiving Day game by the University of Pennsylvania, the Big Red made quite an impression that day.

The team's colors impressed Herberton L. Williams, comptroller and general manager of Campbell Soup Co., who attended that game in Philadelphia.

The story is that Williams was impressed by the brilliance of Cornell's red and white uniforms and later insisted that the company adopt those colors for the labels on its cans. The company's original colors were black and orange. The new colors began appearing in 1899.

That decision has been a lasting one. There has been little change in the design of the basic labels and no change in their color since then.[/Q]
either this is a typo or we've been wearing the wrong uniforms for 130+ years ...  ::nut::
Let's GO Red!!!

Scersk '97


The Rancor

[Q]ben03 Wrote:

 [Q2]Big Red Colonel Wrote:

 --> this was my calender entry today

"In 1898, while attending a Cornell University v. University of Pennsylvania football game, Herberton Williams, a Campbell Soup Company executive, was so taken by Cornell’s bright new red-and-white uniforms that he convinced the company to adopt the colors as its own."[/Q]
from the "new" website:
[Q2]Q: Why are your colors red and black?

The Cornell colors were actually established on the University's Inauguration Day on Oct. 7, 1868. The account from Morris Bishop's A History of Cornell follows:

At sunrise on Inauguration Day, said the New York Times envoy, "from all the hills poured forth delightful music, and every few minutes the thunder of artillery from the eastern hills responded to the booming of cannon from a lofty eminence on the west side of town." Students and citizens thronged to Library Hall, which was tastefully decorated with marble vases of flowers and a large cross covered with moss, entwined with myrtle. One the side wall, the motto of the new university was blazoned in evergreen letters, and behind the speakers the illustrious names of CORNELL and WHITE appeared in large white letters against artistically draped red flannel, on which stars cut out of silver paper were pinned at pleasing intervals. Thus, entirely unintentionally, the Cornell colors were established for all time, on the first Cornell banner.

Although the Cornell football team was defeated 12-6 in the 1898 Thanksgiving Day game by the University of Pennsylvania, the Big Red made quite an impression that day.

The team's colors impressed Herberton L. Williams, comptroller and general manager of Campbell Soup Co., who attended that game in Philadelphia.

The story is that Williams was impressed by the brilliance of Cornell's red and white uniforms and later insisted that the company adopt those colors for the labels on its cans. The company's original colors were black and orange. The new colors began appearing in 1899.

That decision has been a lasting one. There has been little change in the design of the basic labels and no change in their color since then.[/Q]
either this is a typo or we've been wearing the wrong uniforms for 130+ years ...[/q]

im sorry, but do we not wear red and whte uni's?

pfibiger

[Q]The Rancor Wrote:

 [Q2]ben03 Wrote:

from the "new" website:
[Q2]Q: Why are your colors red and black?
[/Q]
either this is a typo or we've been wearing the wrong uniforms for 130+ years ...[/Q]
im sorry, but do we not wear red and whte uni's?[/q]

we do. see the underlined portion above.

Phil Fibiger '01
http://www.fibiger.org

The Rancor


jeh25

[Q]The Rancor Wrote:

 doh!!  [/q]

Doesn't red and black refer to the main color and the accent color with white just being assumed as the alternate to the main color?

Cornell '98 '00; Yale 01-03; UConn 03-07; Brown 07-09; Penn State faculty 09-
Work is no longer an excuse to live near an ECACHL team... :(

KeithK

[q]Doesn't red and black refer to the main color and the accent color with white just being assumed as the alternate to the main color? [/q]Huh?  Since when is black one of Cornell's colors at all, whether main, alternate or accent?