"The Last Game Every Fall..."  | | Photo by Marilyn Culler. | | The DePauw and Wabash mascots shake hands before the Monon Bell Game. Wabash won the 2003 game, but the Tiger Pep Band will there at next year's game to bring the Bell home! | The DePauw-Wabash rivalry has been around since 1890, but when the Monon Railroad donated it's 300-pound locomotive bell in 1932, the rivalry only got stronger. As one of the oldest football rivalries in the United States, the games are always emotional, exciting, and action-packed. The #1 Indiana Rivalry... The Bloomington-Herald Times discussed the Monon Bell Game in the context of Indiana rivalries: "Best rivalry? If you're guessing IU-Purdue basketball, try again. IU-Purdue football? That isn't even seen as a rivalry anymore. IU-Kentucky basketball? Nope, a distant fourth. Notre Dame-Purdue football? Getting closer -- third. The state's No. 1 rivalry at this point in time is... drum roll, please... DePauw-Wabash football. That is saying the state's biggest prize is the Monon Bell, not the Old Oaken Bucket," Lynn Houser writes. Now, the series sits tied at 51-51-9, after a great day in Wabash's Little Giant Stadium in November 2004. DePauw's tickets for the The 111th Monon Bell Game sold out in record time -- the contest played host to over 11,000 fans -- a record turnout for the game. The Tiger's victory returned the Bell to its proper home Greencastle, where it had been absent for two years. The 112th Monon Bell Classic, which will be played November 12, 2005, at DePauw's Blackstock Stadium, will again be nationally televised on DirecTV channel 321. The Tiger Pep Band stands ready to lead the Tigers in an all-out battle to keep the Bell which is most rightfully ours. An Amazing Moment... Perhaps no Battle for the Monon Bell ended with such a surprise than the 2001 game. After DePauw held back the Wabash Little Giants for five consecutive years, they held the game at a tied score of 21-21. Alas, the Tigers lost the Monon Bell that year with an impossible play in the last 2.7 seconds of the game on November 10, 2001 at DePauw University (final score was 27-21). [VIDEO: "Amazing Last Play in Monon 2001" 1,060 KB] This snapped DePauw's five-year win streak. However, as they say, all good things must come to an end. | | The Monon Bell |  | | Photo by Marilyn Culler. | | “The Tigers pounce We'll Wabash trounce Your defeat we can announce!” -Jason "The Colonel" Dibler Hey Little Giants, bring it on. | History of The Monon Bell Game Based upon "Bells, Buckets, and Brass Spittoons" by Brad Herzog, a feature article of US Airways' flight magazine, Attaché. Copyright 2001, Pace Communications. While Greencastle is in the heart of Indiana here at Greencastle, tiny Wabash College can be found 29 miles north on US-231 a town called Crawfordsville. For years, a train called the Monon, famous for its enormous bell, offered service between the two towns. Although the rivalry between these schools has existed since 1890, it did not become the Monon Bell rivalry until 1932, when the bell was removed from the Monon and a tradition was begun, awarding it to the winner of the football finale. Each year, the game is broadcast internationally on satellite television. The in-stadium crowd of over 8,000 exceeds the size of the combined student bodies, requiring expansion seating to be installed. The rivalry is so intense that additional security and police patrol the stadium, and the visiting team is escorted down US-231 by a county sheriff. (The Tiger Pep Band is even assigned it's own security force!) How close is this series? The first Monon Bell game ended in a 0-0 tie. So did the fourth game. The 1998 game placed the series record in a tie at 48-48-9. Although DePauw tipped the scales back to their favor in 1998 and 1999, Wabash's victories in 2001 and 2002 closed the gap. Going into the 2003 season, the series was again tied at 50-50-9. With a Little Giant victory last year, DePauw will fight again to bring the series into balance. | The Field of Battle |  | | Photo by Marilyn Culler | | Blackstock Stadium gets a special paint job for the Monon Bell Game. | Efforts to steal the bell are equally impressive in their numeric outcome. Each school has successfully pilfered the prize three times over the past four decades. In 1959, a Wabash student stole it after posing as a foreign dignitary. In 1966, DePauw students, hoping to keep the bell safe, stole it from their own school and buried it in the end zone for 11 months. A dozen years later, 11 students were arrested as hundreds of Wabash fans invaded the DePauw campus in an attempt to recover the bell. To successfully steal the bell is no small feat -- the bell weighs 300 pounds and it is kept in a secure display location. | | Multimedia Highlights Edited by Ken Owen '82 and the DePauw Publications Office. Copyright 2002, DePauw University. These "Monon Memories" feature some of the greatest moments of the DePauw/Wabash rivalry. To see these, and the rest of the 28-part series, in high-quality format, purchase the Monon Bell 2003 DVD. The disc features every play-by-play of the 109th meeting of the schools, as well as profiles of DePauw University and Wabash College. Much of the historic footage used in the clips has not been seen publicly before. The several other Battles for the Monon Bell are also available on DVD. | The Ballad of the Monon Bell The Ballad of the Monon Bell was introduced during the week of the 1985 Monon Bell Game. The words were written by Nancy Ford Charles, DePauw class of 1957. Jim Ibbotson '69, a member of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, performed and recorded his arrangement of the ballad, which is heard here. The ballad also appears on the 2001 and 2003 Monon Bell DVDs.  | Long before the cannonball traveled through her towns, The state of Indiana owned the jewel of the crown. The train, they called the Monon, the stories they still tell, The Cavemen and the Tigers playing for her bell. It rode like a masthead on engine ninety-nine Crawfordsville to Greencastle, then further down the line. The Cavemen came from Wabash, the Tigers from DePauw, Since eighteen-ninety they have played the last game ev'ry fall. Many years they played for pride, oh the stories they could tell, Then in thirty-two the Monon train gave up her precious bell. They said, "Here take this symbol of smoke and fire and grit, And give it to the winner, a symbol not to quit." Ring the Bell for Wabash, ring for old DePauw, Ring the Bell for victory in the last game ev'ry fall. Ring the Bell for Wabash, ring for old DePauw, Ring the Bell for victory in the last game ev'ry fall. Suddenly the boys of autumn had a fire in their eyes. Blood and spit, but never quit, fighting for the prize. The medal to the victor, the symbol to the school. Wabash and DePauw became a yearly duel. Ring the Bell for Wabash, ring for old DePauw, Ring the Bell for victory in the last game ev'ry fall. Ring the Bell for Wabash, ring for old DePauw, Ring the Bell for victory in the last game ev'ry fall. Now history has recorded the players and their games, And to this day they still play for the Bell in Monon's name. Those who've gone before return each November day, Swapping stories and the legends for those who did not play. Ring the Bell for Wabash, ring for old DePauw, Ring the Bell for victory in the last game ev'ry fall. Ring the Bell for Wabash, ring for old DePauw, Ring the Bell for victory in the last game ev'ry fall. |  |  |  |  |  | Credits: "The Ballad of the Monon Bell" | Song Credits Lyrics Darel Lindquist, DePauw '68 Music Nancy Ford Charles, DePauw '57 Vocal and Arrangement Jim Ibbotson, DePauw '69 of the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band Concept Patrick Aikman, DePauw '57 | Video Credits Produced by DePauw University Producers Melissa Martin Goldsmith, DePauw '71 Goldsmith Marketing Group, Inc. John B. Scofield, IV, DePauw '72 Scofield Editorial, Inc. Patrick Aikman, Public Relations DePauw University With Assistance from Dick Baldwin, Indianapolis Richard Bowen, Bloomington Railroadman's Federal Savings & Loan DePauw University Archives Wabash College Archives Wabash College News Bureau Monon Railroad Historical Technical Society Seaboard Railroad | | Copyright 1985, DePauw University. | |
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