quote:
As much as Aggies would like to believe that Kyle Field is indeed a memorial to A&M's World War I casualties, it is not. When the college began to expand its football facilities in the 1920s, plans were submitted to make the field a memorial stadium called Alumni Memorial Stadium. The Battalion reported on April 1, 1920 that in addition to seating for 5,000, dressing rooms, baths, field offices and reception rooms, the field would also have a room with "bronze historical tablets carrying a complete list with photos and biographies of those who lost their lives" in WWI—53 Aggies were killed in the war.
The university collected pledges from former and current students and even made a cornerstone that bore the proposed name of the stadium. But when all of the pledges did not come through and the paperwork was delayed, the plan to have a memorial stadium was overlooked. To complicate matters further, the University of Texas had done its own field renovations, and had broke ground on Texas Memorial Stadium—a facility that was dedicated to the Texans who fought in WWI. Instead, in 1924 the informal name of the field was made its official moniker—Kyle Field, named after horticulture professor E. Jackson Kyle '99 who allowed part of his gardening plot to be used for an athletic field in the early 20th century. The flags flying from the upper deck of Kyle Field are also not related to A&M's fallen WWI soldiers. Ernest Langford, who designed the upper portions of the stadium, denied that the flags were memorials. In a Nov. 4, 1969 letter to retired sports information director H.B. McElroy '38, Langford wrote, "I have not counted the ‘pilasters' whose number Mr. McElroy gives as 52. If there are 52, the number is a mere coincidence as the idea of a ‘memorial stadium' never entered our minds at the time of design."
The number of WWI casualties has changed over the years as more names are added to those who were lost. However, the fallen soldiers may not have been honored with a football stadium, but trees planted in their honor line Simpson Drill Field.
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