"Lone Star" Dietz coached the 1915/1916 champion football team. W.S.U. (then W.S.C.), in their first Rose Bowl appearance, defeated Brown by a score of 14 to 0.
1 printed page: 9 x 12 inches. The first live cougar to serve as a Washington (State College mascot, Butch I, died January 19, 1938. Immediate plans were made to replace him, and on September 24, 1938, the student body was presented with Butch II. …
1 photograph; 5 x 7 inches.The first live cougar mascot was presented to Washington (State College at halftime of the 1927 homecoming game against the University of Idaho by Governor Roland H. Hartley. The two official looking gentlemen standing to…
1 postcard; 5.5 x 3.5 inches. This dog may or may not have been one of a series of small dogs who served as unofficial Washington (State College Mascots before 1919.
1 postcard; 3.5 x 5.5 inches. Washington (State College had a variety of small dogs as mascots in its early days. Bull's tenure probably fell between 1908 and 1919, most likely in the mid-to-later part of the 1910-1919 decade.
1 photographic print; 3 x 4 inches. Squirt was one of the earliest, if not the first, Washington (State College athletic mascots. Squirt had the distinct honor of being a co-mascot for a time- on a football trip to the state of Oregon on October…
1 photograph; 3 x 4 inches. This photo is captioned as: "Squirt" Famous Campus Mascot, 1903-1907.Squirt was one of the earliest Washington (State College Mascots, if not the first. It is nearly impossible to date for certain his tenure as mascot. …
1 photographic print; 8 x 10 inches.The Washington (State Cougars went to the Rose Bowl for the second time in their history in 1931 (losing to Alabama 0-24). This is Butch I, who was presented to the College in 1927 and died in 1938.
1 photographic print; 8 x 10 inches.Washington State University's last live cougar mascot, Butch VI, was gifted to the school by state governor Albert Rosellini in September 1964, and died on August 24, 1978.
1 photographic print; 8 x 10 inches.Butch IV was one of a pair of cougar kittens given to Washington (State College in 1942. She died in December of 1954.
1 photographic print; 8 x 10 inches.From left to right. Standing: Jim Love, Everett Jensen, Ken Stenbey, Jim Repp, George Barclay, Russ Michaels. Kneeling: Carl Uppman, Al Hunt, Grant Jochimsen. Butch III and IV were twin cubs presented by Governor…
Looking west up Main St. from approximately the corner of Main and Spring. The tall building on the right in the distance on Sunnyside Hill is the old Pullman School, now Gladish.