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Texas A&M Aggies
History
Reveille
Reveille, the first lady of Aggieland, is the official mascot of Texas
A&M University. She is the highest ranking member of the Corps of
Cadets, and she is a Five-Star General.
Reveille I came to Texas A&M in January 1931. A group of cadets hit a
small black and white dog on their way back from Navasota. They picked
up the dog and brought her back to school so they could care for her.
The next morning, when "Reveille" was blown by a bugler, she started
barking. She was named after this morning wakeup call. The following
football season she was named the official mascot when she led the band
onto the field during their half-time performance. When Reveille I died
on January 18, 1944, she was given a formal military funeral on the
gridiron of Kyle Field. She was then buried at the north entrance to the
field, as all Reveilles are, facing the scoreboard so that she can
always watch the Aggies outscore their opponent.
Before naming Reveille II, there were several other unofficial mascots,
such as Tripod, Spot, and Ranger. It was not until a later Reveille that
she was a full-blood Collie. The most current Reveille is Reveille VII
who was inducted during Parents Weekend in April 2001. Since that time
Reveille VI, her predecessor, has been living in retirement with a local
veterinarian.
Reveille is the most revered dog on campus. Company E-2 has the
privilege of taking care of Reveille. If she is sleeping on a cadet's
bed, that cadet must sleep on the floor. Cadets address Reveille as
"Miss Rev, ma'am." If she is in class and barks while the professor is
teaching, the class is to be immediately dismissed.
Reveille is a highly cherished mascot and receives only the best.
Gig 'em
At a yell practice before the 1930 TCU game, A&M board of regent Pinky
Downs '06 shouted, "What are we going to do to those Horned Frogs?" His
muse did not fail him as he improvised, borrowing a term from frog
hunting. "Gig 'em, Aggies!" he said as he made a fist with his thumb
extended straight up. And with that the first hand sign in the Southwest
Conference came into being.
Aggie Muster
"Softly call the Muster, let comrade answer 'Here'..."
Aggies gathered together on June 26,1883 to live over again their
college days, the victories and defeats won and lost upon the drill
field and in the classroom. By April 21, 1903, this annual gathering
evolved into a celebration of Texas' Independence on San Jacinto Day.
These early meetings included field games and banquets for Aggies to
reflect and celebrate their memories of Aggieland. 'Let every alumni
answer a roll call' wrote the former students. It was not until 1922,
however, that April 21 became the official day of events for all Aggies,
thus, the annual tradition of Muster was born. The March 1923 Texas
Aggie urged, 'If there is an A&M man in one-hundred miles of you, you
are expected to get together, eat a little, and live over the days you
spent at the A&M College of Texas.
Still remembering and honoring the time spent in Aggieland, the
tradition of mustering has grown in strength, meaning, and spirit. By
1929, meeting had grown worldwide, and in 1942 Aggie Muster gained
international recognition. Twenty-five men, led by General George Moore
'08, mustered during the Japanese Siege of the Philippine island of
Corregidor. Knowing that Muster might soon be called for them, these
Aggies embodied the essence of commitment, dedication, and friendship-
the Aggie Spirit. They risked their lives to honor their beliefs and
values. That small group of Aggies on an outpost during World War II
inspired what has developed into one of our greatest traditions.
Muster is celebrated in more than four-hundred places world wide, with
the largest ceremony on the Texas A&M campus in College Station. The
ceremony brings together more Aggies, worldwide, on one occasion than
any other event.
The students of Texas A&M University coordinate the Campus Muster.
Because Muster was established to bring Aggies together, each Campus
Muster is dedicated to the fifty-year reunion class. The Campus Muster
involves an entire day of activities for students both present and past.
Alumni enjoy a special program including tours of the ever-changing
campus. At noon, all Aggies congregate at the Academic Plaza for the
Camaraderie Barbecue that rekindles the tradition of the original Muster
celebration. That night, the Muster ceremony consists of an address by a
keynote speaker, the reading of poems, followed by the Roll Call for the
Absent. The Roll Call honors Aggies that have fallen since the last
Muster roll was read. As the names are read, a friend or family member
answers 'Here', and a candle is lit to symbolize that while those Aggies
are not present in body, they will forever remain with us in Aggie
Spirit.
Century-old roots provide the basis of Muster as Aggies know it today.
It has changed, yet the Spirit in which it was established remains the
same. Since the beginning, every Aggie has lived and become a part of
the Aggie Spirit. What is felt today is not just the love of a fellow
Aggie, it is the spirit of hundreds of thousands of Aggies who have gone
before. Muster is how that Spirit is remembered and will continue to
unite Texas A&M and the Aggie family. A&M may change, but the Spirit
never will. |