Centennial commemoration of Jack Trice closes with ceremony, posthumous degree

Iowa State's yearlong commemoration of Jack Trice on the 100th anniversary of his death will close on Sunday, Oct. 8, with a central campus ceremony, including the awarding of a posthumous degree to family members.

Jack Trice in his 1923 football uniform

Jack Trice

The closing ceremony begins at noon northwest of the campanile. (In case of inclement weather, the event will move to the Durham Great Hall of the Memorial Union.) The event is free and open to the public.

The ceremony will feature:

  • Remarks by President Wendy Wintersteen; George Trice, a first cousin twice removed of Jack Trice and an Iowa State alumnus; Jill Wagner, a past student government president; Gerry Vaughn, a Cyclone football linebacker and this year's recipient of the Jack Trice Endowed Scholarship; and senior vice president for student affairs Toyia Younger, who chairs the Jack Trice 100-Year Commemoration Committee.
  • A memorial tribute by members of Alpha Phi Alpha, the fraternity Trice joined at Iowa State.
  • The presentation of a posthumous degree by Wintersteen and Jeff Johnson, the Lora and Russ Talbot Endowed President and CEO of the ISU Alumni Association.
  • A performance by Iowa State's Jubilee Choir.

A reception will follow in the Memorial Union Great Hall, and at 3 p.m. ISU carillonneur Tin-Shi Tam will have a brief performance to mark the time of Trice's death on Oct. 8, 100 years ago.

"This ceremony culminates a year of outstanding programs and events that have broadened awareness and appreciation of Jack Trice's story across Iowa and the nation -- but his story doesn't end here," Wintersteen said. "Jack's legacy of courage, commitment and character will remain an enduring source of pride and inspiration for generations to come."

Remembering Jack Trice

Trice was Iowa State's first Black athlete, competing on the football and track and field teams. He was a student of animal husbandry. And he aspired to use his education to help Black farmers in the South.

He suffered severe injuries in his second collegiate football game and died in Ames on Oct. 8, 1923. He was 21. He is the namesake of the university's football stadium, the only stadium at the nation's major college football schools to be named for a Black man.

Last November, the commemoration of Trice opened with the renaming of the street north of the stadium to "Jack Trice Way." The university also unveiled the walk-through sculpture "Breaking Barriers" by Ivan Toth Depeña in the Albaugh Family Plaza just outside the stadium.

In August, the university celebrated Trice's legacy at the Iowa State Fair with an exhibit featuring a replica of the "Breaking Barriers" sculpture and displays of Trice's "I will" letter and the history of the naming of Jack Trice Stadium.

"The commemoration year has been a journey of remembrance, tradition, sacrifice and deep appreciation for the legacy Jack Trice left at Iowa State," Younger said. "It has been amazing to learn more about Jack throughout the year and help share his story."

Other remaining commemoration events:

Lecture, "Trice 100: The Name, The Legacy," by George Trice and Jill Wagner, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 5, in Parks Library. They'll discuss how students supported naming Jack Trice Stadium and how the Trice family honors Jack with the Trice Legacy Foundation.

Football game, The Cyclone football team will honor Trice during its game Saturday, Oct. 7 (7 p.m. kickoff, televised by Fox Sports 2) against TCU by wearing throwback uniforms featuring the five chevron bars that Trice and his teammates wore in 1923. The uniforms and helmets also feature "I will" in Trice's handwriting from the letter he wrote on the eve of his last football game: "The honor of my race, family, and self are at stake. Everyone is expecting me to do big things. I will!"

Exhibition, Through the Photographic Lens of King Au: Honoring Jack Trice, special hours 1-4 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 8, in the Christian Petersen Art Museum, Morrill Hall.

Cover story for the fall issue of Iowa Stater magazine, "Honoring Jack Trice: The lasting legacy of ISU's first African American student-athlete, 100 years later."