A Cheer's Possible Origin Story
Was it 1967 or 1968? Linda Wood Thompson isn鈥檛 sure of the year, but it was definitely in the fall, during Austin Peay鈥檚 Homecoming celebration.
鈥淚t could have been the fall of 1966,鈥 she said, pausing in her story. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a picture of it somewhere, if I could just find it.鈥
So in 1966 or 1967 or 1968, Thompson was a student at Austin Peay State University (or State College, depending on the year), and a Governette with the Governors鈥 Own Marching Band. Her parents, a proper, well-mannered couple, drove from Nashville to attend that Saturday鈥檚 homecoming football game, and as they sat bundled in the stands of Municipal Stadium, they were among the first people, according to Thompson, to hear the school鈥檚 now infamous cheer鈥擫et鈥檚 Go Peay!
鈥淚 think it was the fall of 1967,鈥 Thompson said. 鈥淒uring homecoming, we used to decorate the dorms and they used different themes. That year, we did 45 records鈥攖hat was the theme, and every dorm did something record-wise. Cross Hall was the jock dorm, and they built an outhouse because the song 鈥楲ittle Brown Shack Out Back鈥 was a hit.鈥
The song, performed by country music singer Bobby Bare, was a lament about a new town ordinance forcing a man to tear down his beloved outhouse. To honor this love story, the Cross Hall residents built an outhouse and wrote 鈥淟et鈥檚 Go Peay鈥 on the door. Thompson said that鈥檚 the first time she ever saw those words together, and throughout homecoming week, Austin Peay students kept repeating the phrase. During that Saturday鈥檚 game, someone chanted 鈥淟et鈥檚 Go Peay,鈥 and within a few minutes, the student section turned the words into a cheer.
鈥淭he reason I remember it so well is because my parents came to that game,鈥 Thompson said. 鈥淒ad turned to my mother and said, 鈥楢re they saying, 鈥淟et鈥檚 go pee?鈥濃 And mother said, 鈥業鈥檓 afraid they are Ralph.鈥 I will remember that forever.鈥