McGee Field

McGee Field/Harris Stadium (officially Benjamin Humphreys McGee Field at Eugene O. Harris Stadium) located in Sewanee, Tennessee is the home of the Sewanee Tigers football and lacrosse teams. It was dedicated as McGee Field at homecoming on October 22, 1977. Before then the stadium was known as Hardee Field, named for Lt. General William J. Hardee of the Confederate States of America. Thus sometimes the field is also called Hardee-McGee Field. McGee Field is the oldest stadium in the South still in use.[1]

McGee Field
Former namesHardee Field
LocationFlorida Ave. Sewanee, Tennessee
Coordinates35.209162°N 85.922023°W / 35.209162; -85.922023
OwnerSewanee: The University of the South
OperatorSewanee: The University of the South
Capacity3,000
SurfaceTurf
Construction
Broke ground1891
OpenedNovember 7, 1891
Tenants
Sewanee Tigers (NCAA) (1891–present)

Benjamin Humphreys McGee

McGee was a Greenville, Mississippi native and 1949 graduate of Sewanee, known as "Ug."[1]

Eugene O. Harris

The stadium was dedicated to Harris in November 1957.[2]

History

McGee Field dates back to the first instance of the Sewanee–Vanderbilt football rivalry on November 7, 1891, and is the oldest in the south and the fourth oldest in the nation.[1] That day in '91 saw Sewanee's first ever football game and Vanderbilt's second. The Commodores won 22 to 0. Just eleven years before, Stoll Field at the University of Kentucky saw the South's first football game. For twenty years (1894-1913) Sewanee did not lose a game played "on the mountain." Perhaps the first big event happened in 1897 when Sewanee held John Heisman's Auburn Tigers to a scoreless tie on McGee Field.

References

  1. Williamson, S. and Smith, G. Yea, Sewanee's Right, p. 62, Published by the University of the South, 2011, ISBN 978-0-918769-63-3
  2. "Stadium Has Harris Name" (PDF). The Sewanee Purple. November 6, 1957.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.