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The Cotton Bowl
by Archie P. McDonald |
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East
Texans claim Dallas-Big "D," as we once said-so a story of the Cotton Bowl falls
into our area; well, at least the stadium is located in Dallas' east side, in
Fair Park. Liza Maxwell's excellent article in the New Handbook of Texas
tells that story.
That site hosted earlier statia as well, including a
preliminary wooden structure erected for a prizefight in the 1890s. A 15,000-seat
stadium constructed in 1921 for football was used during the 1920s, and then in
1930 construction on the Fair Park Bowl began. This latest facility was created
around a doughnut; that is, dirt excavated from the middle to the sides supported
seating and left the playing surface 24 feet below level ground and seating-for
about 40,000 spectators-15 feet above ground. In addition to football games, Fair
Park Bowl hosted outdoor drama during the Texas Centennial Celebration and an
address by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1936.
The leadership of
oilman J. Cutis Sanford produced the first Cotton Bowl Classic game in the stadium
on January 1, 1937, and although Sanford lost money while promoting the game for
several years, the stadium eventually acquired the name of its most famous activity.
"Sanford's Folly" became a community asset following an arrangement that
led to the champion of the Southwest Athletic Conference playing in the annual
New Year's Day Classic against another conference champion or outstanding independent
college team such as Notre Dame. In addition, Southern Methodist University and
three professional teams, including the Dallas Cowboys, played there awaiting
their own stadiums or moving on to other cities. |
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Dallas
Cotton Bowl 1954 postcard courtesy rootsweb.com/ %7Etxpstcrd/
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The
Cotton Bowl Classic "sold out" by the 1940s and getting to play in its annual
bowl game became Holy Grail for every Southwest Conference team. By the 1950s
the Cotton Bowl ranked equally with other holiday classics such as the Orange
Bowl and the Sugar Bowl, as all three strove to one day equal the Rose Bowl in
prestige. Then entrepreneurs and the NCAA proliferated bowl games and spread them
from mid-December to mid-January. The Southwest Conference dissolved, robbing
the Cotton Bowl of its glamour among Texans, its natural constituency. Worse,
collegiate football developed a formula for pitting highest-ranking teams in a
single bowl game to determine a mythical national championship in lieu of a true
playoff system. All these forces diminished the prestige of Dallas' Cotton Bowl
Classic.
One day each fall, the old stadium rocks again during the annual
Longhorn-Sooner shootout, awakening the ghosts of Doak Walker and Slingin' Sammy
Baugh, and the spirits of Roger Staubach and Don Meredith. © Archie
P. McDonald All
Things Historical
>
May 7, 2007 column A syndicated column in 70 East Texas newspapers (This
column is provided as a public service by the East Texas Historical Association.
Archie P. McDonald is director of the Association and author of more than 20 books
on Texas.)
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