1920s

The 1920s

The birth of a stadium

1920 - 1929

With a permanent home atop the hill overlooking Cincinnati and a series of concrete seating sections lining Carson Field, Cincinnati football was charging into a new era as the sport’s popularity grew nationwide. 

 

The rapid expansion also brought growing pains––a series of challenges standing in the way of modernization. Nobody could’ve imagined at the time that two of these hurdles would be cleared in 1923, making it one of the most historic seasons in the history of Bearcats athletics. 

The first roadblock would be finding a creative way to marry academics and athletics. 

Nippert at Night

The University of Cincinnati is a public school established for its people with a mission of educating the masses. To this end, in 1906, the university invented cooperative education, providing students with real-world experience by sending them to workplaces during the day. “[Dean of Engineering] Herman Schneider’s contemporaries ridiculed his plan to send university students to work in factories,” wrote UC Magazine. “Business owners worried about fraternity boys mangling their machinery. Faculty pictured grimy-fingered factory boys in class.” 

 

What was originally a one-year trial that only narrowly received board approval quickly caught on. By 1909, Cincinnati football had a problem: The team needed to practice, but many of its players were down the hill working in factories until sunset, leaving no daylight hours to prepare for Saturdays. Schneider did what he could, putting boys interested in playing football on the same rotation, meaning the co-op students (half of the roster at the time) would spend their days in factories one week and attend classes the next. Unfortunately, that still wasn’t enough to provide adequate time for game preparation. The solution proved to be both obvious and unprecedented. They’d set up lights and practice in the dark. 

 

The team first practiced at night on September 27th, 1909. “They went through a stiff workout, lasting over two hours,” wrote The Enquirer. “About a half dozen electric poles have been erected in the hollow, each suspending large electric lights. The lights did not give forth expected rays … No punting can be done by the present system.” Things continued this way for a while. Head coach Robert Burch made a habit of keeping an electrician on site at practices to attend to any needs, adjusting the carbon arc lights on the fly to provide optimal illumination. They even painted the ball white so they could see it. Eventually, it became normal—a way of life for kids wanting a blue-collar education to go with their blue-collar sport. The system incrementally improved until the university decided to spring for something bigger. 

 

In 1921, electrical engineering student Jack Bernard Silverman designed an incandescent lighting system as his co-op thesis––the genesis of a problem crafting its ultimate solution. The new array consisted of 28 light towers, providing five times the illumination as the original setup. “They make the field almost as bright as day after dark,” claimed The Enquirer. 

 

The lights were good enough that university officials had an idea. If a team could practice at night, why not play a game? 

A Pioneering Idea

In 1923, Cincinnati set out to play the first intercollegiate night game in the Midwest, fourteen years after it began practicing under the stars. They felt their system was reliable enough, and the team was used to the concept, though outsiders remained skeptical. The Cincinnati Post sent a photographer to Carson Field the night before the game to stage photographs of the team “without the aid of a flashlight” just to prove the whole thing was real, and it was. Cincinnati invited Kentucky Wesleyan to be its opponent and offered them the field one night to get themselves acclimated to the lights, then they grabbed a white football and put their idea to the test.  

 

“Other schools located in large cities throughout the country are watching the experiment closely,” reported The Cincinnati Post. “And if it is as successful as these photos indicate it will be, night football games early in the season are likely to become common in a year or two.” 

 

The Bearcats beat Kentucky Wesleyan by a 17-0 final score that night, but the real story was the spectacle: 

 

“Substituting a great battery of searchlights for the sun, the University of Cincinnati eleven introduced a new game to pigskin followers and one which was the first to be played in gridiron history under similar conditions, when it defeated Kentucky Wesleyan at Carson Field last night, 17 to 0.  

 

With the huge lights turning the night into bright daylight, every play could be followed in every detail, and punts and passes were as plain to the 5,000 spectators as if the game was being conducted with the sun shining brightly.  

 

While those in the first three or four rows were bothered a bit by the lights directly across the field from them, those in the upper tiers and at the end of the rows never missed a move, and announced that the new game was a great success.  

 

Never at any time during the contest were the players of either team bothered by the bright rays. This was shown particularly by the fact that the contest was marked by few fumbles. Few punts were misjudged, and when they were it was the player’s fault.” 

 

Participants in that pioneering game remembered it fondly. “We were sure of one thing,” recalled Kentucky Wesleyan captain George Ditto years later. “We were going to carry the battle to the Bearcats if we had to wear miners’ caps to see.” 

 

Word of the experiment’s success quickly traveled. Reports reached newspapers in Texas, New York, Wisconsin, Minnesota, The Miami Herald, and The Boston Globe.  

 

The game was such a hit locally that the Bearcats turned around and tried to schedule their Week 2 game against Kentucky after dark, though opposing head coach Jack Winn refused. “Whether Winn’s refusal to play at night is caused by fear of the Bearcats … is not known,” speculated The Kentucky Post.  

 

The season opener would be the only game the Bearcats played under the lights in 1923. While the pioneering move would help popularize a tradition that continues across college football today, September 29th wouldn’t be the most fateful day of that season. The enduring legacy of the 1923 Bearcats was cemented two months later and involved a team captain who didn’t even intend to play football that season but who would provide an unexpected and tragic solution to the stadium’s funding issue. 

The Legend of Jimmy Nippert

James Nippert––or “Jimmy,” as everyone knew him––retired from the sport after his junior season to focus on the final year of his law studies. Yet by October 1923, the Bearcats were floundering, having lost the two games following their twilight debut, and head coach George McLaren determined that Louis Nippert––Jimmy’s younger brother––was “not quite ready” to replace Jimmy at center. 

 

The Bearcats needed a proven, veteran presence in the middle of their offensive line, so with a year of eligibility remaining, they called upon Jimmy, and he answered. On October 20th, 1923, Nippert started the first game of his senior season. 

 

Jimmy stepped in and led his Bearcats to a 13-6 victory against Ohio in Athens, and soon the tides were turning. Heading into the season’s final game, the team was riding a three-game win streak. Rival Miami loomed large, with the 30th Battle for the Victory Bell slated for Thanksgiving Day at Carson Field. 

 

The weather was terrible that day. 

 

“Eleven football players wearing the colors of the University of Cincinnati and without stockings stepped forth in the mud and rain before 5,000 fans at Carson Field Thursday,” wrote the Enquirer‘s Tom Swope. 

 

Cincinnati surged to a dominating 14-0 lead at halftime through the rain. “Miami never showed anything resembling a real offense,” reported the Enquirer. 

 

When the teams returned to the mud after halftime, it happened. Early in the third quarter, “some player” stepped on Jimmy’s left leg with a muddy cleat, gashing him to the bone. He remained in the game, helping to complete a 23-0 UC victory that newspapers called “the worst licking Cincy has dealt out to the Oxford team since 1904.” After just two wins in 16 games, the Bearcats went 5-1 to end the season, capping 1923 with a rivalry win to earn a 6-3 record.  

 

Nobody, not even Jimmy, knew of the severity of the injury until after the game. “The warm water of the shower started the pain in the injury, and examination disclosed an ugly wound.” He was cleaned up and sent to his home in Westwood, encouraged to rest for a few days. Yet two weeks passed, and Jimmy’s leg continued to bother him to such an extent that his family checked him into Christ Hospital on December 15th, where physicians discovered blood poisoning. “Half a dozen doctors” initially believed a blood transfusion could top the deterioration, and scores of teammates and students lined up to donate. Seven players, including his brother Louis, donated blood, but doctors decided Jimmy was too weak for the procedure. By December 20th, the Cincinnati Post was reporting that Jimmy was fighting for his life.  

 

“UC football fans never rooted as hard for the Bearcats at Carson Field or any other gridiron as they are rooting for Jimmy Nippert as he fights to break thru the strongest line he ever tackled,” wrote the Enquirer. “Personally, we think so much of Jimmy our eyes are dim with tears as we write this.” 

 

Jimmy Nippert died on Christmas morning, 1923. The passing of Cincinnati football’s “most-loved player” sent shockwaves through the community. The Bearcats men’s basketball team had a game against Yale on the 29th, and school officials debated postponing in light of the tragedy. Ultimately, they determined Jimmy would’ve wanted them to play on. “Jimmy was never a boy to ask special concessions for himself,” explained the Cincinnati Post. “He was just one of the student body and one of the football team.” 

 

The funeral was held on December 28th at Westwood Methodist Episcopal Church. Coach McLaren, Athletic Director Boyd Chambers, and several football players served as pallbearers. “James Nippert gave promise of great things to his beloved city, state, and nation,” read his eulogy. “His loyalty to his team, his experience in the game and his great ability to handle men did much to stabilize the team and carry it on to victory.” 

A Stadium is Born

Jimmy, whose middle name was Gamble, came from Procter & Gamble lineage. Amidst the crushing sadness of his sudden death, his grandfather sprang to action. James N. Gamble––son of the Procter & Gamble co-founder and inventor of ivory soap––wrote a letter to UC president Fredrick Hicks just one week after Jimmy’s passing and announced a gift that would change the university forever: 

“I have no particular wishes or conditions attaching to the development of this plan,” Gamble elaborated. “But should like to add to the regular stadium structure certain dressing rooms, bathrooms and two fully equipped dispensaries, one for each contending team, so that in case of even the slightest injury to a player the best and most scientific treatment may be administered immediately.”

 

A stadium construction project mired in fundraising problems for years––and only partially completed since 1915 when workers first began building its permanent structures––was suddenly saved.  

 

The stadium would be named James Gamble Nippert Memorial Stadium. It’s an enduring legacy that he couldn’t have envisioned; then again, neither could he have envisioned dying from a football injury after returning to the Bearcats when they needed him most. There’s some irony in such a distinction being bestowed upon a player who didn’t seek any of it, but there’s no irony in the fact that it was Jimmy Nippert. In many ways, he’s a prototypical Bearcat: Courageous and gritty, ready to rise to the occasion when needed, and doing it all for the pride of himself, his school, and his city. 

 

Gamble’s gift of $270,000 added 18 sections to the 14 that had already been completed, in addition to the medical facilities, which were state-of-the-art for their time. 

 

Nippert’s final words, “Five more yards to gothen drop!” were carved into a memorial at the south end of the stadium, just above a 10-foot etching of Jimmy himself. 

 

The dedication ceremony took place on November 8th, 1924, before the game against Oberlin. More than 10,000 fans were in attendance, according to the Enquirer. Among them were Jimmy’s parents, as well as representatives from colleges and universities in Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, and West Virginia. 

 

UC’s yearbook, The Cincinnatian, dared to dream that games would be played at Nippert Stadium “long after we, our sons, and perhaps our grandsons” passed through the halls of UC. At the ceremony, James N. Gamble delivered a similar message in his address to the crowd: 

In presenting the completed stadium to the University of Cincinnati, I feel deeply that this structure includes far more than mere brick, stone, and mortar—but that, like the invisible iron rods and steel girders which bind these concrete walls into indestructible solidarity, there is here a certain invisible but ever-present spirit of a noble, loyal, democratic youth who played the game of life according to the rules of that game and in recognition of the rights of his fellow men.
I should be, indeed, very happy in the assurance that, in this vast structure, in these tons of iron, concrete, brick, and stone, erected here on Carson Field, if there might be embodied all that is fine and noble in our American youth, so that each successive generation of students might be mindful, at all times, that the primary object of this athletic field is to develop sound minds in sound bodies, so that at the conclusion of life’s race, each contestant may truly say:
“I have fought the good fight. I have finished the course. I have kept the faith!”
The walls of this stadium will now and in future years resound with the joyful shouts of victories fairly won, as, no doubt, they will also witness heartbreaking defeats and bitter disappointments; but, remember, that whatever may be the result to the contending teams on this field, may it always be said that either in victory or defeat, good, clean sportsmanship is the sine quo non on the campus of the University of Cincinnati.
In this spirit, President Hicks, I deem it a great privilege to offer this stadium to the university, with the fond hope that victories in untold number may crown its loyal teams, and bring fame, honor, and glory to the fair name of the university and the city of Cincinnati.
James N. Gamble

The Early Years

The Early Years

Carson Field in Burnet Woods

1800 - 1920

It was a farm, at first.

A Scottish family was the first people of record to tame the land up the hill from Cincinnati in the early decades of the 1800s. In a 1901 Enquirer article published just after his death, Archibald Johnston recalled planting corn on his uncle’s farm before the family moved to Blue Ash in 1839. 

The Shoemaker family later owned the land before the Burnets and the Groesbecks bought it. In 1874, Robert Burnet and William Groesbeck sold it to the city of Cincinnati for use as a park––named Burnet Woods in honor of Robert’s father Jacob, the first president of Cincinnati College, which would later become UC. 

In 1889, the land found a third life when Jacob Donelson Cox, UC’s president, negotiated with the city to acquire the southernmost 43 acres to serve as the new campus for his rapidly growing university.

And then, in 1901, the land evolved once more when that university’s young football team, with the help of a donation from the mayor of Cincinnati, went to work preparing its first on-campus playing field and dug up an old farmhouse.

The foundation of an old house was struck by the plow of the workmen excavating the athletic field on the grounds of the university in Burnet Woods yesterday, and the discovery created quite a lot of talk among the old inhabitants of that locality. None of the oldest can remember anything of a house ever having been at the place, and they were all puzzled to know how old the house was and who lived in it. The foundation is of brick and stone, and is covered by about five inches of light loam. It is partly beneath a big sycamore tree, which evidently stood in front of the house originally. It is located at the west end of the athletic field, and was a good-sized house, and was probably occupied by some well-to-do farmer over 75 years ago. Burnet Woods has been in the possession of the city for about 30 years, and before that it was private property. It belonged to the estate of Jacob Burnet and the Groesbeck prior to that. Old residents say there used to be a house on top of the hill facing Clifton Avenue, but none of them know of a house that stood in the bottoms where the foundation was discovered.
Cincinnati Enquirer
August 18, 1901

 

Cincinnati athletic director Dr. Arch Carson founded Cincinnati football in 1885. The team played its early home games off campus, in venues like the Reds’ League Park—the future site of Crosley Field. By 1895, Carson realized the program needed a venue at its home in Clifton. Carson hatched a plan to construct a playing field in UC’s Burnet Woods home, and the university chose the location based on feedback from students who had held the traditional Flag Rush in a lagoon at the heart of campus. The sunken, marshy plot of land was filled in with soil from other campus construction projects and served as a perfect place for an athletic field because of the way the surrounding hills served as natural walls.

Estimated stadium costs came in at $4,650. Despite a $2,000 donation from Cincinnati Mayor Julius Fleischmann, the fundraising efforts took five years to complete. Work began with wooden bleachers on the sideline hills in 1901, and Cincinnati football played its first game in Clifton that year.

In 1910, the university officially named the field “Carson Field” in honor of the father of Cincinnati football. It was then that UC began planning for a permanent, concrete stadium. Original plans called for the seats to be installed in an oval, but that plan was abandoned due to other oval-shaped stadiums struggling with air circulation. Surely, Carson Field, set deep into the ground, would fare poorly. They went with a horseshoe.

Construction on permanent structures began in 1915. In 1916, the first nine sections of the stadium were financed by a city bond. In 1920, two more sections were added with war reclamation funds. In 1921, another three sections were added thanks to student subscriptions—a story in its own right. It was then, according to The Cincinnatian, that the well had dried up. The stadium stood incomplete, and there was no feasible way to find the money to finish it.