Fans & Traditions

Fans & Traditions

On October 1, 1872, Addison “Add” Caldwell walked 26 miles from Craig County to enroll as the first student at Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College. Ever since then, Virginia Tech has been fulfilling its role as a leading land-grant university. The tiny college, originally housed in the old Olin and Preston Institute near what is now Alumni Mall, has grown into a world-class university.

Discover Virginia Tech’s rich history and traditions through our heritage as a leading university from 1872 to the present.

The Pylons & War Memorial Chapel
The Pylons & War Memorial Chapel

One of the most important and symbolic structures on campus, The Pylons above War Memorial Chapel bear the names of every Virginia Tech student and graduate who died defending our nation’s freedom, beginning with those lost during World War I.

Virginia Tech Corps of Cadets
Virginia Tech Corps of Cadets

The Virginia Tech Corps of Cadets became official in the 1890s, drawing from the university’s origin in 1872 and its required military training for students. Mandated four-year participation in the corps for all males changed to two years in 1923 — the same year women were first admitted — and then participation became voluntary in 1964.

Skipper
Skipper

“Skipper” is named for President John F. Kennedy, who had been a PT-boat skipper. Today, Skipper is fired at football games and for other notable occasions.

The Lunch Pail
The Lunch Pail

The famed Virginia Tech lunch pail symbolizes the blue-collar approach of the Hokies’ football defense, developed by former assistant head coach and defensive coordinator Bud Foster. Foster’s Lunch Pail Defense Foundation provides scholarships for high school students from the New River and Roanoke valleys, as well as assisting the families of those awaiting organ transplants.

Virginia Tech mascot: From Gobbler to HokieBird
Virginia Tech mascot: From Gobbler to HokieBird

Hokies were once called “Gobblers,” a nickname whose origin is widely disputed. One story claims it resulted from the way student-athletes would “gobble” up their food. The name was already popular when Floyd Meade, a local resident, trained a large turkey to pull a cart at a football game in 1913. Throughout the years, trained turkeys would continue to gobble on command and perform stunts. In 1962, a student raised $200 for a costume; the result was an unusual turkey with a cardinal-like head, known as the Gobbler and then the Fighting Gobbler.

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Enter Sandman

The most electrifying entrance in college football features Metallica's iconic song. The band performed at Lane Stadium in 2025.

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Three-Day Weekend at Virginia Tech

Get a pulse on what it’s like being in Blacksburg for a weekend, with ACC Network’s Jess Roy checking out some of the best places around.

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ACC Traditions – Skipper

Take an in-depth look at how the tradition of the Corps of Cadets firing off a cannon at Virginia Tech football games came to be.

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