Memorial Stadium
Home to Lions Football and Track and Field
Memorial Stadium began as a project of the Ex-Students Association
in the fall of 1945. The ESA and friends of the University raised a
portion of the funds before East Texas State Teachers College
received a state appropriation for the rest of the $300,000 to
build the facility.
Construction on the facility was started in the fall of 1949 and
work continued fast and furious to have the stadium ready for the
start of the 1950 season.
The stadium was opened and dedicated on Sept. 23, 1950. The
dedication ceremony featured U.S. Speaker of the House Sam Rayburn
and former lieutenant governor Walter Woodul. General Douglas
MacArthur, while not in attendance, wrote then University President
James Gee that "I am delighted and honored," to have his quotation
affixed to the plaque honoring the Lions fallen comrades. That
quote, also chisled on the stadium at the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point, is a famous one:
"Upon the fields of friendly strife,
Are sown the seeds that,
Upon other fields, on other days,
Will bear the fruits of victory."
The Lions met North Texas before 12,000 fans that night, but the
Eagles came out on top 42-20. It's one of the few losses in the
stadium for the Blue-and-Gold. A&M-Commerce has posted a
189-98-8 all-time record, winning 67.4% of the time.
The Lions have put together winning streaks of 14 and 12 straight
games at Memorial Stadium. Some of the greatest highlights in Lions
history have come on the field.
The Lions won a share of the 1969 Lone Star Conference Champonship
with a miraculous closing seconds pass from James Dietz to George
Daskalakes for a touchdown and again for a two-poiint conversion to
beat Stephen F. Austin, 36-35. The Lionscelebrated the 1972 NAIA
National Championship in front of the home folks, with the fog
rolling in on a chilly December afternoon. Texas
A&M-Kingsville's 46-game unbeaten streak crashed in 1977 when
Tom Hay split the uprights with an extra-point win 7-6. Pittsburg
State came here in 1991 with 56 conescutive regular season
victories. However, the Lions sent the team that would go on to the
NCAA Division II championship home with a 20-13 defeat.
The seating has been altered only
slightly over the last five decades. In 1973, alumninum seating,
the President's Box under the Press Box and the T-Lounge at the
south end of the stadium were added. A rubberized all-weather track
replaced the cinders in 1980. In 1987, a ticket booth was
constructed in the main entry and new light fixtures were installed
in 1999.
A monument to the fighting spirit of the Lions and the 78 former
students who died in World War II, Memorial Satdium celebrated its
50th anniversary when the Lions downed Midwestern State in
2000.
Prior to the 2006 season, the stadium went through its most
extensive renovations since being built in 1949. A new scoreboard
and playing surface, as well as a new track was installed at the
conclusion of the football season.
In 2009, a new building housing a football locker room and training room was constructed at the north end of the stadium to replace the T-Lounge.