North Carolina State University. Media Relations.
Athletics officially began at the North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts (later, North Carolina State University) on March 2, 1892, when a football team made up of students at the college defeated a team from the Raleigh Male Academy. After the college's Board of Trustees made the decision to grant the team requested funds in 1893, North Carolina A&M played its first formal (non-scrimmage) intercollegiate game that fall against the University of North Carolina's football second team. In 1921, NC State became a charter member of the Southern Intercollegiate Conference, remaining until 1953, when along with Duke, UNC-Chapel Hill, Maryland, South Carolina, Wake Forest, and Clemson, the university withdrew to form the Atlantic Coast Conference. In 1974, the first women's athletic teams began play. As of 2009, NC State had eleven men's and eleven women's varsity athletic teams in the Atlantic Coast Conference. The Media Relations office (formerly, Sports Information) has existed in some form at NC State since the 1940s, as a reference and records-keeping center for statistics and information relating to NC State Athletics.
From the description of North Carolina State University, Athletics, Media Relations records, 1889-2009 [manuscript] (North Carolina State University). WorldCat record id: 475752550
Athletics began officially at the North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts on March 2, 1892, at what is today Raleigh's Pullen Park, when a football team made up of students at the college defeated the Raleigh Male Academy, a local high school, by the score 12-6. That fall, the team scrimmaged for the first time against the second teams of area colleges. After losing badly to the University of North Carolina and Wake Forest, the football team decided that they lacked the funds necessary to compete on an equal level with other colleges and universities. Therefore, they petitioned the college Board of Trustees for fifty dollars to finance travel and team equipment. With this request, the faculty and trustees of the college first became involved with intercollegiate athletics. After the board made the decision to grant the team the requested funds in 1893, North Carolina A&M played its first formal (non-scrimmage game) that fall against the University of North Carolina second team, to which it lost, 22-0.
Football remained the most popular sport at the college throughout its first decades of intercollegiate athletics. Its first on-campus game was played in 1907 at the athletic field that would become Riddick Stadium. That same year, North Carolina A&M won the Southern Intercollegiate Association football championship, with six wins and one tie. The baseball team, which had played its first official game in 1894 against Guilford College, won its first state championship also in 1907. Four years later, the school played its first official basketball games against Wake Forest, with North Carolina A&M's home games played in the Pullen Hall auditorium.
Until 1921, all teams used the nickname "Red Terrors." In 1921, the NC State football team began using the name "Wolfpack," which by 1947 had spread to all other athletic teams as well. Also in 1921, NC State became a charter member of the Southern Intercollegiate Conference, which also included Alabama, Alabama Polytechnic Institute (later Auburn), Clemson, Georgia, Georgia School of Technology (later Georgia Tech), Kentucky, Mississippi A&M (later Mississippi State), North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, Washington and Lee, and Virginia Tech. In 1923, the conference changed its name to the Southern Conference. NC State remained in the Southern Conference until 1953, when along with Duke, North Carolina, Maryland, South Carolina, Wake Forest, and Clemson, it withdrew to form the Atlantic Coast Conference.
The racial integration of athletics at NC State began in 1957, when Manuel Crockett and Irwin Holmes joined the track team. The integration of "major" sports, however, did not begin until 1969, when Clyde Chesney became the first African American football player. In 1973, basketball player David Thompson was the first African American athlete to be named All-American in any sport.
In 1974, the first women's athletic team began play in basketball, and the following year, women's softball and volleyball were introduced. Susan Yow, on the basketball team, became the first woman All-American in any sport for NC State in 1976. As of 2009, NC State had eleven men's and eleven women's varsity athletic teams in the Atlantic Coast Conference.
The Media Relations office (formerly, Sports Information) has existed in some form at NC State since the 1940s, as a reference and records-keeping center for statistics and information relating to NC State Athletics.
For more information on the history of particular sports, see historical notes in the series for those records.
From the guide to the North Carolina State University, Athletics, Media Relations Records, 1889-2009, (Special Collections Research Center)
Role | Title | Holding Repository | |
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creatorOf | North Carolina State University, Athletics, Media Relations Records, 1889-2009 | North Carolina State University. Special Collections Research Center | |
creatorOf | North Carolina State University. Media Relations. North Carolina State University, Athletics, Media Relations records, 1889-2009 [manuscript] | North Carolina State University, NCSU Libraries |
Role | Title | Holding Repository |
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Filters:
Relation | Name | |
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associatedWith | Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Atlantic Coast Conference. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Case, Everett N. 1900-1966. | person |
associatedWith | Esposito, Sam | person |
associatedWith | Esposito, Sam. | person |
associatedWith | National Collegiate Athletic Association. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts | corporateBody |
associatedWith | North Carolina State College | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Sloan, Norman, 1926- | person |
associatedWith | Southern Conference. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Southern Intercollegiate Conference. | corporateBody |
associatedWith | Valvano, Jim. | person |
associatedWith | Weedon, Frank. | person |
associatedWith | Weedon, J. Franklin | person |
associatedWith | Yow, Kay, 1942-2009. | person |
Place Name | Admin Code | Country | |
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North Carolina | |||
North Carolina--Raleigh |
Subject |
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Athletics |
Athletics |
Baseball |
Baseball |
Basketball |
Basketball |
Basketball coaches |
Basketball for women |
Basketball for women |
Cheerleading |
Cheerleading |
Coaches (Athletics) |
Coaches (Athletics) |
College athletes |
College athletes |
College sports |
College sports |
Cross-country running |
Cross-country running |
Diving |
Diving |
Diving for women |
Diving for women |
Fencing |
Fencing |
Golf |
Golf |
Golf for women |
Golf for women |
Gymnastics |
Gymnastics |
Lacrosse |
Lacrosse |
Rifle practice |
Rifle practice |
Soccer |
Soccer |
Soccer for women |
Soccer for women |
Softball |
Softball |
Sports facilities |
Sports facilities |
Sports records |
Swimming |
Swimming |
Swimming for women |
Swimming for women |
Tennis |
Tennis |
Track and field |
Track and field |
Volleyball |
Volleyball |
Women athletes |
Women athletes |
Wrestling |
Wrestling |
Occupation |
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Activity |
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Corporate Body
Active 1889
Active 2009