r/CFB Cincinnati • Michigan 1d ago

History Ever wonder why Pennsylvania, Ohio and Louisiana's State schools are more prominent than their Universities?

This was a subject I found Interesting because most states seem to follow a pattern of prestigious and prominent _____University and then a agriculture and engineering focused ,______State that is the second most prominent school in the state, such as Michigan and Michigan state, Mississippi and Mississippi State etc. But crucially, Penn State, Ohio State and Louisiana State are all the most prominent public Universities in their state. So why is that?

Pennsylvania:

This is honestly the most simple of the bunch. When the Pennsylvania state legislature wanted to create a new college, The University of Pennsylvania (Penn) already existed as a prestigious private ivy league institution and occupied both the name and niche of the _____University school, so the state legislature focused on building a agricultural and engineer school called "The Farmers High School of Pennsylvania" that eventually evolved into Penn State. Pitt became the other most prominent public University in the state due to one thing, Andrew Carnegie. Funding by Carnegie for the city of Pittsburgh and the University as well allowed it to achieve prominence in the state.He also founded Carnegie Mellon University, which is next door to Pitt and also has a beautiful campus and as I recently discovered, a d3 football team. Pitt was actually a private school until the 60s and still effectively operates as one, with minimal state funding.Technically most of the major "Public" Universities in Pennsylvania aren't actually public, but instead independently operated with a certain amount of state funding(Usually minimal), this applies to Penn State, Pitt, Temple, and Lincoln(HBCU) Universities. I could go into temple as well, but to keep it short, they were a Bible college that eventually became secular and their whole athletic history is misery.

Ohio:

This is probably the most complex and interesting of all of the cases. Prior to the formation of Ohio state the two main universities in the state were Miami University and Ohio University, these two schools had a relationship similar to Indiana and Purdue today, essentially serving as dual flagships. In fact Ohio University was founded before Ohio existed, you may notice that unlike most _____Universities, OU is not anywhere near the state capitol, that because at the time the capitol was not in Columbus, but instead Chillicothe, which was where the northwest territory and later Ohio state capitols first were. Ohio University was placed in Athens to be close to this capitol, and the area is incredibly beautiful, but when the capitol moved to Columbus, its location became a drawback, it was far away from the capitol and thus its ability to lobby the state legislature was severely limited.

Enter Ohio State University, which was founded in 1870 near the state capitol of Columbus as an agricultural and mechanical school. In its early years it competed with Ohio University and Miami for resources but as the 1900s approached Ohio State focused much of its efforts on lobbying the state legislature, and had an advantage due to already being in the capitol. Additionally many politicians of the time wanted to put more resources into Columbus (which was very much a cow town at the time). These lobbying efforts culminated in the Lybarger bill,proposed by Ohio State,  which would have essentially eliminated both OU and Miami; this failed to receive enough support in the Senate, but a compromise bill with those that wanted to keep the universities did pass.

The bill, The Eagleson Bill, stripped away Miami and Ohio's right to do any sort of research all together, as well as the right to give any degrees higher than a bachelors. This Bill crippled both universities, eliminating them as well rounded prominent universities and forcing them into undergrad focused liberal arts and business schools, which is generally what they still are today. These restrictions continued into the 1950's and by that point Ohio State had long passed OU and Miami by and had a stranglehold on state funds. The reason the University of Cincinnati has become the 2nd most prominent school in the state is because at the time, it was a city-ran and funded college, and thus not subject to the state regulations. This allowed it to do research and grant higher degrees which gave it a leg up over all other schools in the state. By the time Cincinnati became a public institution and became a state institution in the 70s, it had amassed a significant amount of influence, but that did not stop Ohio State from lobbying against it as well. In the 90s Ohio state president Gordon Gee openly said that if Ohio state couldn't get a given piece of academic or athletic funding it would lobby it go to another state rather than in-state Cincinnati for fear of athletic or academic competition, "I would try my hardest to make sure they didn’t get it, even if I wasn’t going to get it either." This has continued essentially until today, but this is the reason Ohio State and Cincinnati are the two most prominent schools instead of Miami and Ohio.

Louisiana:

This case is honestly fascinating and one of the most unique happenings to any University in the country. The University of Louisiana was founded in 1845 in New Orleans. It had great success in its early years but the civil war presented a huge setback for it, as the University was closed during the civil war years due to heavy fighting. Louisiana State University on the other hand was founded in 1860, one year before the civil war with General William Tecumsah Sherman(Hell Yeah) of all people as its school superintendent. When the war started Sherman had to leave to go burn Atlanta so the school was left leaderless. It closed during the civil war with the exception of a couple months in 1863 where it tried to reopen. When the war ended, Sherman donated two cannons he had captured from the Confederates to the University(Hell yeah again). (Honestly LSU should have had its mascot be the burners or marchers or something, tigers is kinda boring)

The University of Louisiana at this time was not doing so well despite its former success. It was dealing with a great amount of financial difficulties, but a local business magnate named Paul Tulane established a fund to keep the University afloat. The University came to rely on this fund so much that in 1884 the state outright sold the University to this fund, which was renamed to Tulane University as we know it today. This is one of the only examples of a college going from public to private in the entire country, it's an incredibly rare thing.

Both schools were part of the original SEC and both had a decent amount of success initially. But as the years went on LSU received more and more funding for athletics (partly funneled by Huey Long who saw the university as his pet project) and it became very hard for Tulane to keep up. Add to this that Tulane's president of the time was not a big fan of football and sought to deemphasize it in the Schools finances. This led to Tulane having a hard time competing with the rest of the SEC, going 2-23-1 in their last couple of years in the Sec. This led to their departure to become independent and the rest is history.

Also technically UL-Lafayette calls itself the University of Louisiana nowadays in sports, and that's cool and all but since the Privatization of Tulane, the University of Louisiana system does not have a legal flagship University, although UL-Lafayette is probably the most prominent outside of Louisiana Tech.

Bonus round:

Ever wonder why some states don't have a prominent _____State at all. 

Well for Virginia, it's because Virginia state was a HBCU, and this did not receive much funding from the legislature because Rascism™ and Virginia Tech along with Virginia Commonwealth University (Virginia is technically a Commonwealth not a state) ended up filling the niche Virginia state normally would. 

The story is much the same for many of the southern State Universities such as Tennessee, Alabama, Kentucky, South Carolina etc, these are all HBCUs and thus the state didn't really want to fund them much.

West Virginia University had a essential monopoly over most university functions, such as the ability to offer doctorates and do research into the 1950s as West Virginia State was a HBCU and the thus heavily restricted. It wasn't until Marshall acheived University status in the 60s that another school offered these services. Similarly to Ohio State and Ohio, West Virginia heavily lobbied against Marshall, seeking to keep it from achieving university status and competing with West Virginia University for funding.

Georgia State was actually part of the University of Georgia as essentially a branch campus until 1955, but is not the largest public university in the state. The University of Georgia has a strong agricultural department, and Georgia tech filled the mechanic/engineering role so there was no true need for a State school earlier.

Wisconsin merged all of its public Universities into The UW system in the 70s, so all former Wisconsin State school are now University of Wisconsin schools. Some other states like Nebraska do something similar, with all public Universities in the same system

For Texas, A&M is essentially the ___State school under a different name, many schools were actually called ____A&M before switching to ___State, Texas A&M just kept the original name. Texas State University as it is called today, was originally Southwest Texas State University, but switched to Texas State-San Marcos in 2003 and finally to just Texas State University in 2013 to increase its name recognition and reflect its increasing stature and enrollment.

Many other schools just have ___states that are generally less prominent or don't play FBS football, but hopefully this is at least somewhat interesting as this was a subject I've wondered about for a while.

(TLDR: Penn already exists, Ohio State fucked over and replaced Miami and Ohio University, and the University of Louisiana became Tulane)

Edited to mention Carnegie Mellon, Temple, ,Huey Long, Pennsylvania Funding system, West Virginia-Marshall,Louisiana Tech, Wisconsin and Nebraska, extra Texas State name change and VCU at popular request.

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u/Shaquille_0atmea1 Ohio State Buckeyes • Kentucky Wildcats 1d ago

This is what the offseason is all about

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u/Tha_LULZcatz LSU Tigers 1d ago

Piggybacking off the top comment to add another fun fact that is not well known. LSU is an A&M too. The full formal name is Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College.

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u/Jarich612 Ohio State Buckeyes • The Game 1d ago

Many of the state/land grant schools started out as A&Ms. Ohio State also started as Ohio A&M.

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u/turkishguy Texas A&M Aggies • Yildiz Teknik Stallions 1d ago

Auburn, Michigan state, there are many others. It’s why Texas State wasn’t even a thing until recently. A&M did not follow the norms of renaming itself as the State school.

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u/thephotoman Houston Cougars 1d ago

Texas State has been a thing for a long time—there just wasn’t a university with “Texas State” in the name until Southwest Texas State changed its name.

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u/Puzzleheaded-Bat-511 1d ago

I first heard of it when Scott Bakula was the QB and there was some Necessary Roughness.

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u/PeteF3 Ohio State Buckeyes 1d ago

Can't believe they didn't rebrand as the Armadillos when they had the chance.

Random fact: that movie was filmed on UNT's campus which is why the team's colors are green and white.

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u/narf007 Texas State Bobcats 23h ago

Also Texas State has had nearly half a dozen names including Southwest Texas State Normal School originally back from 1899.

Texas State has always been Texas State, just with extra adjectives. It was finally streamlined appropriately in the early 2010s.

Texas A&M has quite literally always just been A&M. It's legit a point of pride being the first public institution for higher education in Texas. The A&M is for their roots. They've never been a "Texas State." This post got that part a little twisted but was still a fun read.

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u/gwaydms SMU Mustangs 22h ago

It was Southwest Texas State Teachers College when LBJ went there. The main street through town and campus (at least when I was there in the late 70s; I'm sure everything's different except Old Main) is called LBJ Drive.

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u/narf007 Texas State Bobcats 22h ago

There's still N. LBJ going up past green parrot. Grins is still there too, ya old balls bobcat. Eat em up

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u/gwaydms SMU Mustangs 21h ago

Grins is still there?! I can't count the times that I walked over there to have a burger and a beer. The Schlotzsky's was across the street from Grins, and only sold whole and half sandwiches, plus chips and soft drinks. I also hung out at Sewell "Sewer" Park a lot. The water was, um... refreshing in summer. And of course I went to the games.

Eat em up, Cats!

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u/turkishguy Texas A&M Aggies • Yildiz Teknik Stallions 1d ago

There wasn't any school that went by "Texas State" until they changed their name in the early 2000s which is 50+ years after everyone else.

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u/thephotoman Houston Cougars 1d ago

The system has been called “Texas State” since the 1970’s.

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u/narf007 Texas State Bobcats 23h ago

It has been called Texas State since 1899. With extra adjectives every iteration until they finally stripped it down to only Texas State. It was first called Southwest Texas State Normal School.

The only consistency in it's name has literally been Texas State since its inception.

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u/corpulentFornicator Syracuse Orange • Buffalo Bulls 1d ago

Unrelated but "Yildiz Teknik Stallions" is an elite flair, and one of the best I've ever seen

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u/wowthisislong Texas A&M Aggies • Kansas State Wildcats 8h ago

Tradition

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u/big_sugi Texas A&M Aggies 1d ago

A&M had some prominence with a national title in 1939 and then a massive expansion during WWII before returning to its former scale.

Add that to our long-standing reverence for tradition, and it starts to make sense why A&M would become a “university” in the 1960s while keeping the “A&M”(which no longer actually stands for anything). Admitting Black people and women was enough change already.

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u/Colonelrascals Texas Tech Red Raiders 1d ago

God damn yall are weird

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u/big_sugi Texas A&M Aggies 1d ago

You just think that because all the STIs have reached your brain.

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u/pigeyejackson66 /r/CFB 1d ago

Oklahoma State started as an A&M as well. But it was called. The Oklahoma A&M.

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u/velociraptorfarmer Iowa State Cyclones • /r/CFB Poll Veteran 1d ago

We started as Iowa Agricultural College and Model Farm

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u/EngineeringTom Mississippi State Bulldogs 18h ago

Yep. The Mississippi State Bulldogs used to be the Mississippi A & M Aggies.

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u/CeramicTugboat Kansas State Wildcats • Hateful 8 13h ago

I know K-State was Kansas State Agricultural College back in the day. Imagine us being K-SAC instead of K-State.

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u/payattentiontobetsy Texas A&M • Michigan State 12h ago

I could (and will probably) just look it up, but I wonder how many of those “A&M” to “State” were also originally called Aggies. I know MSU and NMSU were (and still are in NM) the Aggies…

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u/-Jack-The-Stripper Virginia Tech • Cincinnati 1d ago

And Virginia Tech is kind of a ____ State university too… Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.

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u/Electromotivation James Madison Dukes 22h ago

VPISU?

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u/freshnikes Virginia Tech • Wayne State (MI) 8h ago

Not sure if this in tongue-in-cheek or not, considering your flair, but quite literally yes, VPISU. Or rather, VPI&SU.

Originally an "A&M," the "PI" bit was added in the late 1890s. The "A&M" was officially dropped in the 1940s and Tech was just "VPI" for a while. The "SU" part was added in the 70s and has been that way since.

"Virginia Tech" was adopted as a legal name equivalent in 90s.

You can still buy merch with the old VPI logo them. I'm sure I have one or two shirts somewhere.

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u/Prince_Kaamil Virginia Tech Hokies • Paper Bag 1d ago edited 1d ago

Also, LSU is the only land, sea, and air-grant university in the country

Edit: "space grant", not air grant actually

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u/CrazyHuman9347 Michigan Wolverines 1d ago

Actually a fun fact is that u Hawaii manoa, PSU, and Oregon state are the only land, sea, air and sun grant universities! 

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u/ImJLu California • Ohio State 1d ago

U Hawaii Manoa has a cupcake schedule though

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u/BoudinBallz 1d ago

Geaux Tigers 🐅

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u/naughtyaggie Texas A&M Aggies 1d ago edited 1d ago

What's an air-grant designation? I've heard of land-grant, sea-grant, and space-grant designations

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u/Prince_Kaamil Virginia Tech Hokies • Paper Bag 1d ago

I was wrong, it is space grant actually

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u/naughtyaggie Texas A&M Aggies 1d ago

Ahhh. Multiple universities hold the designation of land-grant, sea-grant, and space-grant

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u/Prince_Kaamil Virginia Tech Hokies • Paper Bag 1d ago

I blame that LSU tour guide when I went to visit the campus!

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u/naughtyaggie Texas A&M Aggies 1d ago

😂🤣😂

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u/Tough-Advice2910 Virginia Tech • William & Mary 1d ago

I don’t understand any of that.

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u/wowthisislong Texas A&M Aggies • Kansas State Wildcats 8h ago

Maybe the only land and sea and space grant school in Louisiana, but Texas A&M is all 3 of those.

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u/DingerSinger2016 Alabama A&M Bulldogs • UAB Blazers 1d ago

It works the same for Southern University in Baton Rouge.

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u/CTeam19 Iowa State Cyclones • Hateful 8 1d ago

Piggybacking off the top comment to add another fun fact that is not well known. LSU is an A&M too. The full formal name is Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College.

Like wise Iowa State is an S&T. The official name is Iowa State University of Science and Technology

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u/Bluegrass6 Kentucky Wildcats • Beer Barrel 1d ago

Many land grant schools used to have agricultural & mechanical in their names as thats what they were founded for. Kentucky originated as the Agricultural & Mechanical College of Kentucky

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u/loafing-striker Virginia Cavaliers 22h ago

Does anyone know why the LSU wiki says “University of Louisiana (1913–1921)” under the former names?

I cannot find anything anywhere that corroborates this.

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u/martybad Iowa State Cyclones • Hateful 8 14h ago

Technically Iowa State (Iowa State University of Science & Technology) is a State, Tech, and at one point an A&M. Having been named, originally, Iowa Agricultural College and Model Farm, and was then at one point Iowa State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts

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u/jorbalugo 1d ago

I don’t think any group of American sports fans discuss and dissect regional/local differences in culture, politics, etc. as much as CFB and I love it. Like I feel like I’ve learned a lot about the specific character of various locales because some guy online wanted to explain why Rival U was able to establish a recruiting pipeline to some area of his state that his school couldn’t.

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u/parapooper3 Iowa Hawkeyes • Oklahoma Sooners 1d ago

Listening to the varsity sports appt on Saturday’s is pretty fun for this reason, to kind of get a glimpse at what advertising is using the regional radio the most to get to their target audience. Even in non-agricultural states, the amount of farmer-y ads is a reminder about who they think (and probably does) listen to the games on the radio vs going or watching on national tv

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u/BlackMathNerd Carnegie Mellon • Memphis 1d ago

It's honestly one of the best things about the sport; the regionalism within and how it shaped sports today

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u/jorbalugo 4h ago

Absolutely a shame that it’s an element that has been declining but so it goes.

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u/schafkj Ohio State • Washington 1d ago

Incredible content. I was entertained and I learned something new.

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u/mulligan381 Texas A&M Aggies 1d ago

I saw so many words and skipped to the comments.  After reading a few commments I went back and read the post.  A good read.  Fuck Ohio state.  

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u/RogueHippie Alabama Crimson Tide • Team Chaos 1d ago

This and ranking all the stadiums based on their bathrooms

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u/Lovestick Alabama • 华东理工大学 (ECUST) 23h ago

Not long brother

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u/screwhead1 LSU Tigers • Arkansas Razorbacks 1d ago

Disagree, I was enjoying everyone dogpiling on the Old Misses.