Wednesday, April 11, 2007

 

Baylor History, Part 28

One of the true athletic success stories at Baylor has been the Equestrian squad. The team came close to winning a national championship in 1929. Back then, equestrian was the only “mixed” intercollegiate sport (and remains so in Olympic competition), in which men and women competed directly against one another. The competitions were in the form of a three-day event; the first day was devoted to jumping, the second day to dressage, and the third day to open team competition, in which teams were given wide leeway in exhibiting their skills. Baylor’s team in the 1920's consisted of four Polish veterans of the Cavalry in World War I. To fend off accusations of foreign recruitment, each of the four took on an Americanized name while here. In order of accomplishment, the four were Tomasz Wboroda (“Tommy Whip”), Jacszlk Szkorski (“Jack Smith”), Szyzlyk Nowasciski (“Sam Novak”) and Wyslszic Chrzystski (“Wally Christian”).

Thus renamed, they were undefeated through the entire season until the national championship, largely due to their unusual style: They loafed through the jumping and dressage competitions, but would focus on the open team event on the third day. For this part of the competition, they relied on their wartime skills and made a full cavalry charge on their opposition, causing their opponents to flee and their horses to run away. They then commenced to slaughtering the supporters of the other team with their sabres, removing any valuables from the remains of their opponents before leaving the field. This was quite a departure from the unison trotting and prancing that was the norm in this event, to say the least. In the final, however, BU faced the most powerful equestrian school in the nation, Sweet Briar of Virginia, a school so supportive of the sport that each girl at the college was guaranteed stable space for her horse upon enrollment.

Sweet Briar, hearing of the BU tactics, pre-emptively mounted an artillary barrage on the brave men of Baylor during the dressage competition, killing all of their horses. Baylor’s protests fell on deaf ears due to their own prior tactics, and Sweet Briar was awarded the blue ribbons upon the Baylor forfeit. Embarrassed, three members of the Baylor team (save “Wally Christian,” who took a faculty position at Baylor), returned to Poland, where sadly each perished in 1939 when Germany’s Panzer Division invaded their homeland and the once-proud cavalry saw its last use in modern warfare. In honor of his fallen camrades, Prof. Christian founded Cavalry Baptist Church in Waco, which I believe still exists.

Comments:
Sweet Briar is not the only HORSEY school around... I have a friend, Stephanie, who went to boarding school at Stoneleigh Burnham School For Girls in Greenfield, MA She brought her stupid horse to school with her too.

I am sure horses are nice. They make me sneeze so I do not like them. I spent a LOT of time with her after school at the GP Hunt Club with that animal, sneezing and hanging out.
 
Tyd-- Did you hear that the barn burned down at the hunt club, and the horses all died. Some doofus with firecrackers on Halloween. They did rebuild it, but it wasn't the same.
 
Yes sadly I did hear that the front barn burned down. I know why and how, too because I watched the trial on Court Tv. It was terribly, terribly sad, and I knew that one guy who worked in that barn like FOREVER He was a hero trying to save all of those horses from the fire. It was TERRIBLE However I also know that it was going to happen someday.. I mean that back barn is at least 150 years old and probably the front one was too. People were always saying you know its just a tinder box waiting to catch fire. They were just so old and pretty and historic that one one wanted to tear them down and rebuild them. That was sooo sad.

It happened for such a STUPID reason some kid that was not from GP but was visiting people who lived on Cook Rd wanted to scare the horses with firecrackers.. sooooo stupid.. But the WORST thing was that they DID NOT call 911 right away and not only that, they all tried to CYA you know? That was the most appalling thing to me. THey did not care that like 28 horses died that night, and that many many people lost beloved members of their families, all they cared about was not getting caught.

That made me sick. From hanging around the horse people a couple of years, I know what those animals meant to some of the owners. There were a lot of people there where their horse was like their ENTIRE LIFE... they did not have kids or a family or anything, they like only had their horse. I remember this one guy his entire life was his horse. His stayed in the back barn, last I knew. I think he might have just killed himself if that had happened to his beloved horse.

There have been times I wanted to go to Law School and be a prosecutor and bust all the mean awful people in the world. I was actually studying for the LSAT when I got pregnant in 2003.. I was thinking of trying to go to UC Hastings or Santa Clara BUT after Spencer my life got too crazy. I probably would have been a crappy lawyer anyway.

Now I just am a lwyer by proxy, thanks to Osler's razor...
 
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