On Saturday, 19,431 fans — the largest crowd to ever witness a sporting event in North or South Dakota — packed Dana J. Dykhouse Stadium in Brookings to watch the South Dakota State University Jackrabbits defeat the North Dakota State University Bison 33-16. It was the 115th meeting between the two football teams, an annual contest that has come to be called the Dakota Marker game. The winning team goes home with a trophy that resembles the quartzite markers that surveyor Charles Bates used to mark the border between North and South Dakota in 1891, just two years after they became the 39th and 40th states. Photographer Christian Begeman traveled to Brookings to capture all of the afternoon’s festivities.
Tag: football
A Decade of State-U
Just under decade ago, on an overcast and cool November afternoon, I got into a small two-seater airplane, camera in hand, and lifted off for a memorable and unique photo opportunity. Drones with cameras were not quite a thing yet, so to capture aerials of the renewed SDSU-USD rivalry football game — on hold for nearly a decade as each school transitioned from Division II to Division I — I was obliged to open the side window while the pilot circled the stadium and occasionally dipped the left wing so I could lean my lens out into the air and start snapping. I found myself reminiscing about this experience during halftime of this year’s rivalry game in Brookings, a 28-3 Jackrabbit victory on October 8. Ten years has seen a lot of change, but much remains the same.
This game always draws a crowd, but this year’s nearly set a record. The 19,332 people who packed Dana J. Dykhouse Stadium created the second largest crowd ever assembled in the Mount Rushmore State to watch a football game. Since the rivalry was renewed, I’ve attended and recorded media at all but three of the games. Since 2012, both stadiums have undergone major renovations and upgrades, resulting in larger capacity, better lighting and bigger scoreboards, all of which make this game an even better experience.
Over the last decade, these games have also showcased talented players who have gone on to the NFL. SDSU tight end Dallas Goedert is now with the Philadelphia Eagles. USD quarterback Chris Streveler won a Canadian Football League championship and now plays on the New York Jets practice squad. I also remember admiring the athletic prowess of SDSU running back Zach Zenner in 2012; he subsequently played with the Detroit Lions. As for memorable plays, just last year we witnessed a Hail Mary for the ages inside the DakotaDome that propelled USD to an upset victory and made the rounds on national TV and social media.
Every game of this magnitude is fun to work, but the meeting that really stands out happened on a cold and bitter day in November of 2018. The temperature topped out at 16 degrees before kickoff and steadily declined throughout the game. The 10-mile-an-hour breeze cut right through my multiple layers of clothing by the second quarter, but the light was gorgeous. The cold made every exhaled breath a misty work of art, and the icy atmosphere added elements in the air around the players. It is ironic that the most physically trying day of photographing this series was also the best day to have a camera. That said, I left sometime in the latter half of the third quarter. The sun had set behind the stadium, so I lost the good light … as well as the feeling in my fingers.
Christian Begeman grew up in Isabel and now lives in Sioux Falls. When he’s not working at Midco he is often on the road photographing South Dakota’s prettiest spots. Follow Begeman on his blog.
Super Skillet
I have previously shared that I am probably the least athletic person alive, and aside from following our local high school team enough to not embarrass myself while subbing, I am not a sports fan by any measure. However, I am told that the upcoming Sunday game is more about the food than anything else. So, here I am, cheering from the sofa with a vat of nachos in front of me. My version of Skillet Nachos is much like a warm variety of Seven-Layer Dip. It has seasoned beef and beans, melty cheese and all the toppings you have been dreaming of digging into with crispy tortilla chips. Turn on the game, or not. It doesn’t matter to me. Just enjoy the nachos.
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| Skillet Nachos will please football and food fans alike. |
Skillet Nachos
(adapted from Cooking Light)
olive oil
1/2 cup chopped yellow onion
1/2 pound ground beef
2 teaspoons cumin
2 teaspoons chili powder
1 teaspoon garlic powder
salt and pepper, to taste
1/4 cup plain tomato sauce
1 cup canned pinto beans, drained
1/2 cup shredded Monterey jack cheese
1/2 cup shredded cheddar cheese
1/2 cup chopped tomato
1/2 cup chopped avocado
1/2 of a jalapeno, sliced
1/4 cup black olives, sliced
1/4 cup chopped red onion
2 tablespoons Mexican crema or sour cream
Tortilla chips
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
Heat oil in a large cast-iron skillet. Add yellow onion and sautÈ until tender. Add ground beef and crumble, cooking until no longer pink. Add the seasonings and tomato sauce and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to a simmer and add the beans. Cook a couple of minutes to evaporate extra liquid. Stir in Monterey jack cheese. Remove pan from heat.
Sprinkle with cheddar cheese and place skillet in the oven for 8-10 minutes until the cheese is melted. Top with remaining ingredients and serve with tortilla chips. (Serves 4-6)
Fran Hill has been blogging about food at On My Plate since October of 2006. She, her husband and two dogs reside near Colome.
Football Revolutionaries
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| South Dakotans (from left) Joe Robbie, Joe Foss and Frank Leahy all played roles in professional football. |
South Dakota’s connections to the Super Bowl are huge. I consider the start of Super Bowl history to be late 1963, when former South Dakota governor and then American Football League commissioner Joe Foss sent a letter to National Football League commissioner Pete Rozelle. Foss wrote, “The overriding fact is the establishment of a World Series of professional football is necessary for the progress of our game if we’re to be true sportsmen and not merely businessmen in sports.”
Rozelle said no, understanding the contest that Foss envisioned would pit the upstart AFL against the NFL, suggesting to the public that the two leagues were somewhat equal. But I suspect Rozelle knew he couldn’t say”no” for many more seasons. For starters, Foss was an affable yet intimidating adversary, a look-you-in-the-eye South Dakota sportsman as likely to be found hunting pheasants west of Sioux Falls as sitting in his New York office. Sportswriters coast to coast loved Foss. Rozelle, by contrast, was more like a … well … businessman in sports.
In 1963, had Foss and Rozelle publicly debated the merits of a championship game, Americans would have demanded the big game be played immediately … like the very next Sunday.
More important than personalities, though, was the fact that Foss was building the most successful rival sports league in history, with the help of a couple South Dakota cronies. The day was quickly coming when fans would no longer assume the NFL’s top team was the best in professional football.
Frank Leahy of Winner, the former Notre Dame coaching legend, built the first edition of the Chargers. And as Foss argued for the big game’s development, Sisseton’s Joe Robbie was in Florida preparing to unveil his Dolphins, who would play in three consecutive Super Bowls in the 1970s and win two of them. By then AFL teams had been merged into the NFL. It was a classic case of, “If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em.” Or from the NFL perspective, “let ’em join us.”
Half a century later professional football could use a leader with Foss-like vision, natural leadership and a sense of ethics. But rather than bashing the NFL, which has been a fad the past several months, I want to focus in a positive way on the Super Bowl. Beloved as it is, it would be easy to improve the big game in ways Foss likely would have appreciated.
First, let’s give the game a real name. I only met Foss once, so I could be wrong, but he didn’t strike me as a purveyor of puns. And the name Super Bowl is a 1960s pun, a takeoff on Super Ball, which was a synthetic rubber bouncy toy. Why not call the contest something no-nonsense and to the point, like World Championship Game. Wow! Did I just make that up? Nope. A little research tells me that was the big game’s original moniker in 1967.
Second, lose the Roman numerals. In Joe Foss’s home state, the only people who think in terms of Roman numerals are those who refurbish antique watches and grandfather clocks.
Third, retire the over-the-top halftime shows. This is a sore topic in South Dakota because of what happened in 2004 (whoops, I mean Super Bowl XXXVIII). Yankton-born and Rapid City-raised Adam Vinatieri kicked a game-winning field goal in the final seconds, but afterward all anyone talked about was Janet Jackson’s “wardrobe malfunction” during the halftime show.
Fourth, as all South Dakotans know, some of the best football happens outdoors in the snow and cold. We need those kinds of championship contests now and then. The NFL should schedule more, like every other year or so. Or maybe a system should be devised so that one team is granted home field advantage and snow could fall where it may. Even in Green Bay in February.
Finally, sign a TV contract with a network that understands a football game can stand on its own merits. Americans are football savvy and don’t need hours of pre-game analysis and reminders to stay tuned for clever commercials should the big game fall flat. They’re also media savvy and can see that everything that distracts from the game is supported by more commercials, the work of “merely businessmen in sports,” to use Foss’s words.
Anyway, I hope readers enjoy the game on Feb. 5. Consider turning down your TV’s volume during one of the commercial breaks. Then raise a toast to Joe Foss and his South Dakota team of football revolutionaries.
Editor’s Note: This column is revised from the January/February 2015 issue of South Dakota Magazine. To order a copy or to subscribe, call (800) 456-5117.
South Dakota Sports at its Best
The Lady Leatherheads of Madison
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| A football game at Eastern following World War II seemed impossible until the women decided to have one of their own. Back Row: Mary Pardy, Beverly Coombs, Marlys Bower, Doris Treloar, Muriel Tupper, Joyce Rave, Nancy Baughman, Susie Lowry. Middle Row: Anna Ruth Lang, Dorothy Carper, Phyllis Linafelter, Ruth Hart, Joyce Walters, Beverly Rubin, Barbara Stearns, Captain. Front Row: Donna Haley, Laurel Caldwell, Dona Keiner, Jeanette Johnson, Carol Weber, Elaine Norris, Captain, Janis Holsworth, Pauline Grytness. Photo courtesy of Barbara Stearns Turner |
Rosie the Riveter was everywhere during World War II, flexing her biceps, representing the women who were proving they could weld and grind and rivet as well as the men who had been called away to the front lines. Rosie’s real life sisters changed a lot of attitudes about what”the delicate flower of womanhood” could do, not in the least their own, and that empowering message was not lost on the young ladies of Eastern State Teachers School in Madison.
Like many colleges, Eastern felt obliged to give up some campus activities during the war years. Among these were the annual homecoming celebration and most intercollegiate sports, including football, which would have been next to impossible in any case because so many of the region’s young men were overseas or away doing war-related work.
Victory had been achieved in Europe and the Pacific by September of 1945, and the entire country was eager to resume their interrupted lives. Homecoming was again on the schedule at Eastern, but the traditional football game seemed out of the question: just three men enrolled for the fall term that year. Where could 11 Trojans be found to don the blue and gold?
Enter the women of Eastern.”A bunch of us were sitting around after gym class and we thought, if we’re going to have homecoming, we’ve got to have a football game,” says Susie Lowry, who was a freshman in 1945. None of them had ever heard of women playing football before, but that didn’t mean they couldn’t do it.”We decided we should have a game of our own.”
Susie, who now lives in Globe, Arizona, was the daughter of V.A. Lowry, Eastern’s president from 1933 to 1962 — a state college residency second only to I.D. Weeks’ tenure as head of the University of South Dakota in Vermillion. V.A. took the unprecedented notion of women playing football, not to mention his daughter playing football, more or less in stride. Daisy Lowry might have objected more strenuously, as any mother might, if she harbored any hope of changing her daughter’s mind.
“My mom saw this coming,” says Susie with a laugh.”She tried to make me a lady but it never really worked out.”
Barb (Stearns) Turner, a freshman enrolled in commercial courses, was another woman ready and willing to strap on a leather helmet. Barb, whose home is in Brookings, was the best natural athlete among the women at Eastern, according to Pauline (Grytness) Lunde, one of her teammates.
There was a lot of clowning around. A few of us fell down, just to make it look good, but it wasn’t really rough or anything.
“That might be stretching it a bit,” says Turner modestly. If nothing else, she at least qualified as one of the most experienced women when it came to rough and tumble. Her training began early, at home where she learned to hold her own with five brothers, and continued through school as she played pick-up football in vacant lots around Madison. Turner also played intramural sports,”but we didn’t have opportunities (or intercollegiate competition) like the girls of today,” she says with an understandable touch of envy.
Lining up with such eager athletes were a bunch of ladies on a lark.”Football was the last thing some of the girls would have thought about. Unless they were interested in a boy, of course,” says Lunde, of Rapid City.”But when you’re 18 and unattached, you make your own fun.”
Which was also a case of making a virtue of necessity, according to Turner.”Gas was rationed. Tires were rationed. We couldn’t just get in the car and go like they can today. We had to make our own fun.”
Robert C. Nelles, another freshman at Eastern that year, was on the committee in charge of organizing homecoming. The very idea of women playing football”was enough to curl your teeth,” he wrote in an account of the game for the History of Lake County, but the committee nonetheless gave its stamp of approval.
“Football Game To Be Played By Debs,” announced the Madison Daily Leader, which doubtless led to a few fussbudgets around town muttering about what that campus crowd would think of next, and how the younger generation was going to hell in a hand basket. They were a silent minority, however.
“Nobody had a real problem with girls playing each other in football,” says Turner.”Boys playing girls … now that might have caused a stir.”
So it was game on in Madison!
Miss Leota Van Ornum, the college’s physical education teacher, agreed to serve as coach. There was a high school on Eastern’s campus where students training to be teachers did their practice teaching. Robert Ormseth, who coached the school’s football team, promised to lend her a hand.
There were two groups of Eastern coeds at the time: those who lived at their homes in Madison while attending classes on campus, and those from surrounding small towns who lived in the dorm. They were as distinct as oil and water, so the 23 girls who wanted to play quite naturally divided into two teams, Townies and Dormies.
“What’s a nicer word than rivals?” wonders Lunde when asked how the two groups related to one another. Though the game was played in good fun, in other words, it would be safe to say that the spirit of competition was not entirely absent.
Uniforms presented a minor problem, and not for the reasons that might come to mind first. After five years in storage, apparently without mothballs, the college’s jerseys were rife with holes and most of the pads were literally coming apart at the seams. Enough serviceable uniforms were eventually scrounged from the on-campus high school and Madison Central; with a nip here and a tuck there, the Dormies in gold and Townies in blue were ready to take the field when Homecoming Day arrived.
Football was the last thing some of the girls would have thought about. Unless they were interested in a boy, of course.
“A fairly large group of spectators showed great interest and enthusiasm during the game,” according to The Eastern, the campus newspaper. Friends and family and alumni had to be well represented for that to be so because the 23 players constituted almost half of Eastern’s enrollment that term. Robert Nelles and Paul Tommeraasen, two of the three male students, had been pressed into service as game officials; the third was married, and he had to baby-sit. That left precious few student bodies to fill the stands — which dimmed the women’s enthusiasm and sense of fun not at all.
“We tried to be almost real, with huddles and all that,” says Lowry.”There was a lot of clowning around. A few of us fell down, just to make it look good, but it wasn’t really rough or anything.”
Pauline Lunde remembers that she and some others went to the homecoming tea that night with bandages on,”which was kind of funny because it was supposed to be this formal affair,” but a few skinned knees and grass burns weren’t enough to assuage the disappointment of at least one young lady. Joyce (Rave) Evans was one of a number of players who had never even seen a football game before; she later recalled that the game wasn’t as hazardous as she’d been led to expect after all the bother of getting fitted out in a helmet and pads.”Football didn’t impress us farm girls much,” she told a reporter when the two teams held a reunion in 2001.
The neophyte gridders proved more adept at defense than offense, holding each other scoreless until the game’s final minute. Doris Treloar of the Dormies finally broke through and scored a touchdown, which was immediately answered by Nancy Baughman of the Townies. A.E. Swan, the college librarian who was serving as the referee, considered that an opportune moment to end the contest on an amiable note. Either that or he was tired and wanted to go home, as a rumor later alleged.
Nelles claimed that a large number of broken nails contributed to getting the game called early, and we could dismiss this as a frivolous tale told by men, a mere stereotype, if not for the halftime show. There were no rousing, locker room exhortations to win one for the Gipper for these women. They had more important things to do: namely, to stay on the field and touch up their rouge and face powder before the amused spectators.
Vanity of vanities, all is vanity! If only they’d chosen to do something entertaining, to poke a little fun at themselves, the Daily Leader might not have dubbed them”The Powderpuff and Rouge Elevens,” and the demeaning, now-common term”Powderpuff Football” might never have been heard.
As football games go, Eastern’s homecoming contest wasn’t quite the stuff of legend. That doesn’t mean the women didn’t make a little history. This was the era of great football nicknames, like Michigan’s four-sport phenom Elroy”Crazy Legs” Hirsch and Illinois’ legendary runner Harold”The Galloping Ghost” Grange. An epic nickname was likewise born that day in Madison: Pauline”Swivel Hips” Lunde, so christened by her husband Bud.”I think it’s kind of cute, don’t you?” says Pauline’s daughter Holly, a moment after letting slip the family secret.”I just think it’s great they played the game. It’s just so hard to imagine my mom ever playing football!”
On a grander stage, Madison’s Lady Leatherheads can make a credible case they were the first women to ever play an organized football game. Not that any of them seem terribly interested in making such a claim. They seem quite content with the shared memory of a crisp October day when they were young and brimming with life and able to make their own fun.
Editor’s Note: This story is revised from the November/December 2011 issue of South Dakota Magazine. To order a copy or to subscribe, call (800) 456-5117.
A Respectful Rivalry Rekindled
I remember the old days of State-U games, and I suspect many of you do, too. I saw my share of students escorted out of stadiums and arenas for flinging dead animals and other obnoxious behavior. But the only dead critter that came with the renewal of the South Dakota State/University of South Dakota football rivalry showed up months ago: a dead coyote strung from USD’s cleverly placed billboard near Brookings advertising Saturday’s game.
One team did indeed”have an old friend for dinner,” as the billboard sardonically read, but it was the Jackrabbits who were left picking coyote from their teeth after SDSU’s 31-8 victory at Coughlin-Alumni Stadium in Brookings. I wasn’t sure what to expect walking into the stadium for the first meeting between these old rivals since 2003. I was a student at SDSU from 1998 to 2002. I remember the weeklong anticipation that preceded the football game each fall seemed to surpass that for every other opponent on the schedule. There were offensive T-shirts and equally offensive chants on game day. I saw a few shirts, and maybe the chants were confined to the tailgating lot before the game, but overall Saturday’s game seemed to introduce a new chapter in the history of these two schools.
Both teams have made the leap to Division I, which accounts for the nearly decade long hiatus in these games. It seems the entire state is trying to lift this rivalry to a new level. It’s being billed as the “South Dakota Showdown Series,” which is a new competition sponsored by the South Dakota Corn Utilization Council and Feeding South Dakota that pits the two schools athletically and academically. Head coaches John Stiegelmeier and Joe Glenn seemed to embrace the challenge, meeting at midfield before and after the game with hugs and broad smiles.
And the game day experience has been elevated. Not many people would have thought of tailgating before the game 15 years ago. Today a sea of cars, tents and smoking grills fills the lot north of the stadium. USD brought their marching band along, which never happened when I was in school.”I hope they don’t try to play while we’re playing,” said a fan seated near me, demonstrating that some alums still harbor a faint sense that any group from Vermillion must be in Brookings with innately evil intentions. But there were none. Band members from each school chatted on the sidelines, and Jacks fans even gave The Sound of USD a modest round of applause after their halftime show.
Last week, SDSU officials believed Saturday’s game could break Coughlin’s crowd record of 16,345, set at the Dakota Marker game against North Dakota State in 2007. That record still stands, but none of the 15,270 people who attended saw a single frozen rabbit or coyote. Instead, they watched the respectful rekindling of an old rivalry, and the beginning of a new era of State-U football.
Gorillas, Honkers and Beetdiggers
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A fierce fiberglass ape welcomes fans to Gregory’s football field.
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Editor’s Note: This story is revised from the March/April 2001 issue of South Dakota Magazine. To order a copy or to subscribe, call 800-456-5117.
Unless a small town is blessed with a tornado or some other natural disaster, its residents are pretty much resigned to the fact that they’ll never see their community on the evening news. That’s why high school sports are so important in South Dakota — they’re an opportunity for small towns to get statewide recognition without having to experience death and destruction.
Because towns identify with their teams, the powers who decide such things often look to graceful, powerful animals for mascots. Bears. Bobcats. Golden Eagles. But there are those who take the road less traveled, mascot-wise, and opt for…something else. Which is how the Gregory Gorillas, Turton Frogs, Claremont Honkers, Waverly Woodchucks, Bruce Bees and Provo Rattlers came to be.
Others forego the animal kingdom for dashing role models. Knights. Cavaliers. For those who want a little outlaw in their mascots, however, we have the Sioux Valley Cossacks, Ethan Rustlers and Bristol Pirates. Other communities choose to honor less romantic figures. The Keystone Dynamiters, Armour Packers and Newell Irrigators, for example. Two schools even found inspiration in the sugar beet fields, which yielded the Vale Beetdiggers and Nisland Beettoppers.
Then there are those officials who truly went where no man had gone before, like the ones who settled on the Irene Maroons. (No doubt to the team’s relief, they later became the Cardinals.) Lastly, we salute the too-clever-for-their-own-good group, which would certainly include whoever came up with the Quinn Tuplets.
One South Dakotan, Jerry Miller, has been collecting sports stories for a long time — he started cutting basketball pictures out of the newspaper when he was still in grade school. His list of state schools and their sports team nicknames grew out of that hobby.
One of the more unusual state names belongs to the Sturgis Scoopers, which most people assume has something to do with mining. Not so, according to Miller. Back when nearby Fort Meade was a frontier fort, the soldiers would make their way into town, where they were often relieved of their pay by dance hall girls and card sharks. The local term for those folks was “scoopers” — they scooped the money out of the soldiers’ pockets. Hence the name honoring these previously ignored citizens.
“My favorite is Monroe,” said Miller.”They were the Canaries to begin with. Then just after the turn of the century a lot of Dutch people moved into the area, so they became the Monroe Wooden-Shoed Canaries.”
When ESPN had a program on unusual sports team names, Miller submitted the Monroe mascot to its producer.”They thought I made it up,” laughed Miller.”They wanted to know what I’d been drinking!”
There will be no Wooden-Shoed Canaries in this year’s matches. Monroe’s school is long closed, and for reasons unclear, no other has taken up the name. Likewise, no Beetdiggers or Beettoppers will take the court. Such names will live on only in the memories of”guys as goofy as I am,” laughed Miller.
When longtime Yankton sportswriter Hod Nielsen wrote a column about Miller and the sports team names he’d collected, it prompted a tongue-in-cheek follow-up story about new and improved names.
How about an athletic team known as the Allen Wrenches? Who would want to meet the Blunt Instruments on a football field? Could any athlete hold his head high if he was a member of the Custer Puddings or Lemmon Aides? Imagine the time announcers would have if the Florence Nightingales, Garretson Keillors, Gregory Pecks and Clark Kents were thrown together for a tournament.
What about the Irene Good Knights? Marion Ettes? Wall Papers? Emery Boards? Faith Healers? Last but not least, can you imagine having to face the Webster Dictionaries on the field of athletic battle? Consternation would almost certainly ensue if they prevailed.
“We hasten to assure anyone who might take offence that there is none intended,” said Nielsen of his efforts.”It’s just that, in the middle of a cold winter, the mind wanders.”
Keeping Time
Editor’s Note: This story is revised from the July/August 2011 issue of South Dakota Magazine. To order a back issue or to subscribe, call 800-456-5117.
Guidance from a legendary wrestling coach helped turn Daktronics into the world’s leading scoreboard builder.
Al Kurtenbach and Duane Sander were electrical engineering teachers at SDSU when they founded Daktronics in 1968 as a medical device manufacturer. They built other projects, like an electronic voting system for state legislatures, but the fate of the business was sealed when Kurtenbach met Warren Williamson for coffee.
Williamson, an SDSU coach, was involved with college wrestling nationally. He told Kurtenbach the scoreboards used for national tournaments were too big and didn’t display pertinent information. Kurtenbach and Sander developed a prototype and used it during a meet at SDSU in 1970. Other coaches liked it so they built 17, and with help from Williamson the new boards were used in the national wrestling tournaments that year.
Those were the first of thousands of scoreboards the Brookings company has built over 40 years. As of 2011, Daktronics had equipment in 26 of 30 Major League Baseball parks, 29 of 31 NFL stadiums and 20 of 29 NBA arenas. Early scoreboards used simple incandescent lamps, but today’s huge, colorful boards are illuminated by thousands of tiny light emitting diodes, or LEDs. They convert energy to light more efficiently and don’t have a filament, so instead of burning out they gradually grow dimmer.
Much of Daktronics’ business is sports related, but the company also designs computer software, billboards and the signs along South Dakota interstates displaying road conditions and Amber Alerts.
Cavour’s Lady Leatherheads
In our November/December 2011 issue, Roger Holtzmann wrote about the Lady Leatherheads of Madison, an all-girls football team fielded at Dakota State University during World War II, when many of the school’s men were serving in the military. They effectively saved the school’s homecoming in 1945 by staging a football game.
We deemed it the first”powderpuff” game ever played, and even reported our find to Wikipedia, which promptly changed its powderpuff page to reflect the discovery. Hopefully the online encyclopedia’s editors are willing to make one more change.
After our article appeared, LeRoy Barton, a former executive at the Huron Chamber of Commerce, sent us a newspaper clipping about a girls football team at Cavour High School in 1926. What’s more is that the team defeated the Lake Preston boys squad 13-7.
Boys were in short supply in Cavour that year, so the school’s girls decided to fill the void. A photograph of the team shows 20 girls and their coach, a Miss M. Dauwen, smiling brightly for the camera. All are wearing jerseys (one with a number 10, another with a capital C), short pants and leather helmets. They played exhibitions against each other prior to Huron College football games and apparently played against other high schools.
I couldn’t dig up any details of the girls’ game against Lake Preston, but it did become national news.”Cavour woke up one morning to discover that it had the only nationally famous high school football team in America,” one newspaper announced.
One player from the Madison team recalled that their game wasn’t as rough as she was led to believe it would be. But Cavour fielded Marjorie Gilchrist, who reporters called the”low-tackling demon of the team and a female Red Grange,” after their first game of the season in early October.
“The girls exhibited surprising ability,” a reporter wrote.”A fumble was a rare occurrence. Line plunges were much in evidence. Marjorie Gilchrist looked like a real football player. She goes low on tackles, unhesitatingly diving through the air. She is fast and she can handle the ball.”
Little else is known about the team and its 1926 season. If you have any information, please comment below.




