The first Michigan Football Stadium

Submitted by Wolverine Devotee on

Since people liked the post I did on the first home of Michigan Basketball--Waterman Gymnasium--a couple weeks ago, I figure I'd continue doing these posts.

Now the first playing field of Michigan Football was a place called the Washtenaw County Fairgrounds. The first home game in Michigan history was on May 12, 1883 against the Detroit Independents. A 40-5 Michigan win. The game was part of a Field Day schedule of events at the Fairgrounds that included a 10-mile walk, wrestling and a "hop-skip and jump contest".

But the first dedicated stadium with stands didn't come until the 1890s when the people saw the early Michigan teams in the 1880s roll through opponents. Demand was high for an actual stadium.

The Board of Regents authorized construction of the new field in May 1891 for a cost of $4,000 which is $110,000 in 2017.

The stadium was simply named "The Athletic Field" and had a grandstand capacity of 400.

The first game at the Athletic Field was on October 7, 1893 against the Detroit Athletic Club, a game Michigan won, 6-0.

The stadium was renamed Regents Field the following summer. 

The grandstand burned down in 1895 and had to be replaced. When it was, the capacity was doubled to 800. 

As the Wolverines continued to get better, the demand for tickets called for an increase of capacity. The capacity was upped to 6,800 just one year after the new grandstand was built with construction of bleachers to the left of the grandstand.

When Michigan won the 1898 Western Conference Championship, it also increased demand for seats. But few could imagine the demand that would come just three years later.

The capacity was raised to a then-massive 15,000 in 1900. The following year, Fielding H. Yost boarded a train to Ann Arbor and declared Michigan would not lose a single game in 1901.

And they did not for four straight years. Yost's teams never lost a game at Regents Field. The biggest destructions in program history happened at Regents Field.

119-0 over Michigan State in 1902 where Albert Herrnstein scored 7 rushing TDs. 130-0 over West Virginia in 1904. Pictured below, the 86-0 win over Ohio State in 1902-

In 1902, Detroit businessman Dexter M. Ferry donated a huge chunk of land North of Regents Field.

Regents Field was renamed Ferry Field in 1902. Not to be confused with the Ferry Field that Yost's dynasty would build in 1906 on said-donated land when the success of the program outgrew tiny Regents Field. 

The final game at Regents Field (Ferry Field I) was on November 25, 1905 against Oberlin. Michigan survived, 75-0. 

From 1893-1905, Michigan Football teams amassed records of

  • 87-2-3 (.962) Overall
  • 16-2-0 (.889) Western Conference
  • 44-0 under Fielding Yost from 1901-1905, outscoring opponents 2821-42

Regents Field had a Baseball field, as well. The Baseball team played there from 1893 until the first house of Michigan Football was demolished in 1923.

The land Regents Field once sat is where this building now sits-

 

RobM_24

March 30th, 2017 at 10:22 PM ^

Would've been nice to have been born a century earlier. Well, until that whole Great War thing. It'd be cool to watch Michigan be the "Alabama" of that time period.

Clarence Boddicker

March 30th, 2017 at 11:13 PM ^

"The following year, Fielding H. Yost boarded a train to Ann Arbor and declared Michigan would not lose a single game in 1901."

No doubt the term shan't was used at some point. Good bit of M history!

M-Dog

March 31st, 2017 at 7:37 AM ^

WD can be, um, out there.  And kind of preachy for a 21 year old.  

But I've always said two things about him:

1) MGoBlog should hire him. For actual money.

2) If you were starting a blog like this from scratch, you would kill for a user like WD.

 

M-Dog

March 31st, 2017 at 10:03 AM ^

At least he does it.  It takes some time and effort to do it and look out for that kind of stuff.
 
I find a lot of his posts useful even if they are just reposts of Twitter links or Bentley stuff.  It's stuff that I like to know but don't have time to keep track of.
 
I'm not saying that they should make him co-owner of the blog, but he does show initiative and adds some value.
 
As long as he does not try to portray that stuff as his own original work, which I will admit he crosses that line sometimes.  He needs to clean that up, it will burn him sometime in his future carreer if he does not get used to attribution.
 

Wolverine Devotee

March 31st, 2017 at 11:42 AM ^

I didn't even go to Bentley library's site. I have all of that information in my Football SG. A long, possibly front page post will be coming next week. Something I researched for 7 years and finally completed. Historic records that I am the only person in possession of in full in this world.

Wolverine Devotee

March 31st, 2017 at 12:41 PM ^

I have a different style. Not everyone knows WMU was Western State Teachers College or Southwestern Louisiana is now UL-Lafayette. This way makes sure there is no confusion and I don't need to clutter footnotes. No opponent is special enough for special notation.

WolverineHistorian

March 30th, 2017 at 11:25 PM ^

I wonder if that was considered a big "stadium" in those days. I'd like to think there was a 1895 version of Carl Grapentine saying over the speakers, "The University of Michigan appreciates your continued support of being part of the largest crowd watching football anywhere in the US today. Today's attendance...800."

Wolverine Devotee

March 30th, 2017 at 11:30 PM ^

It would've fit in nicely.

1901 team outscored opponents 550-0, but 1902 put up more points.

They gave up 12 points. People took it hard when those teams gave up points. Case scored 6 points in the second game and people treated it like we got upset.

1902 results-

  • W 88-0 vs Albion
  • W 48-6 vs Case
  • W 119-0 vs Michigan State
  • W 60-0 vs Indiana
  • W 23-0 v.s. Notre Dame at Toledo
  • W 86-0 vs Ohio State
  • W 6-0 v.s. Wisconsin at Chicago
  • W 107-0 vs Iowa
  • W 21-0 at Chicago
  • W 63-0 vs Oberlin
  • W 23-6 vs Minnesota

LSAClassOf2000

March 31st, 2017 at 8:15 AM ^

The original Fairgrounds are basically where Burns Park is now, if I am not mistaken. I remember because I designed the upgraded service to the elementary school right there and that came up in a conversation on site. Very cool piece of the university's history as well as the city's history. 

Thanks for sharing this. 

Wave83

March 31st, 2017 at 6:12 PM ^

I came here to add that the original game at the Fairgrounds was on the site of current Burns Park (and Burns Park Elementary).  My wife grew up in the neighborhood and went to Burns Park, along with her siblings.  I know that Ace grew up in the Burns Park neighborhood and I presume went to the school.

Some Call Me.... Tim

March 31st, 2017 at 10:00 AM ^

As someone who has recently fallen more in love with rugby as opposed to football, I'm curious how similar to rugby old football was. Clearly the development could not have been too far apart, but some of those pictures look almost identical to league