Remembering a Thanksgiving classic: Byrd vs. Fair Park

YES, THAT LEE HEDGES:  Fair Park’s Lee Hedges running the ball against C.E. Byrd in the 1947 Turkey Day Game. (Photo courtesy Nico Van Thyn)

By NICO VAN THYN, Journal Contributor

For about 30 years, it was Yellow Jackets vs. Indians on Thanksgiving afternoon at State Fair Stadium. It was our “Game of the Year” every year; it drew the biggest crowds of the year (probably 25,000 to 30,000), and almost always determined which team was going to the state playoffs.

It was purple and gold, The City of Byrd, vs. yellow and black, the Tribe from The Reservation.

Lee Hedges was one of Fair Park’s biggest stars as a player in the late 1940s, an assistant coach there in 1955 and the Byrd head coach from ’56 to ’59, and went on to be the winningest head coach in Shreveport-Bossier high school football history. On a two-part series on Shreveport’s KTBS-TV (Channel 3) about his career, the first topic was this rivalry.

“We never talked about championships at Fair Park,” Coach Hedges said. “We talked about beating Byrd on Thanksgiving Day. That was the main goal. Anything beyond that I don’t remember them talking about that very much.”

My Woodlawn friends will swear that our rivalry with Byrd in the 1960s was unmatched. And it was an intense rivalry. But I’d be hard-pressed to call it a bigger rivalry than Byrd-Fair Park over all those years.

Those schools came into being almost together — Byrd opened in the fall of 1926, Fair Park in 1928. It was, and maybe this is a cliche’, a cultural clash.

Byrd was just a couple of miles from downtown with an upscale enrollment, sons and daughters of doctors and lawyers, oil and gas execs, one-time debutantes turned Junior Leaguers, and the city’s politicians, movers and shakers. It was a school known for academic achievement — and its leaders didn’t mind bragging about it.

Fair Park was the school out west of town — right across from the State Fairgrounds and State Fair Stadium, with hard-scrabble kids whose parents were blue-collar workers, and some of the kids actually had to come into the city limits to go to school.

Woodlawn, which opened in 1960 as the third white public high school in town, was much more like Fair Park than Byrd.

But let’s tone this down, and be realistic. Byrd had its less-fortunate kids; Fair Park had its well-to-do kids. Still, the feeling was Fair Park (and later Woodlawn) was “the other side of the tracks.”

So feelings, and maybe jealousy, ran deep.

I came into the rivalry late; I had never seen a high school game in any sport until my ninth-grade year (fall 1961). I had read about Byrd and Fair Park in the newspaper and two of the older kids who lived across the street had gone to Fair Park, but I knew little about the depth of the rivalry.

As the Thanksgiving Day game approached, Byrd always had “Go West Day” when its students dressed up as cowboys. Fair Park had “Beat Byrd Day” when its kids dressed as Indians and teepees were built on the front lawn in front of the school.

And so, I saw one Byrd-Fair Park football game on Thanksgiving Day … the last one, in 1962. Byrd clinched the district championship with a resounding 28-0 victory and got the only playoff spot from District 1-AAA (only the champions advanced), leaving — yes — Woodlawn in second place.

A vivid memory of that Byrd-Fair Park game in ’62: Some Fair Park students boldly crossed over to the Byrd side of the stadium — Fair Park always was on the stadium’s East side, closest to the school across the street — and stole the papier mache Jack the Jacket mascot.

They nearly got it to the top of the stadium and were going to send Jack flying to the ground before a Byrd posse got there and saved Jack’s crown. It wasn’t that funny. But Byrd did get the last laugh on the football field.

Starting in 1963, the Louisiana High School Athletic Association state football playoffs expanded, with the second-place team in each district also advancing. That meant starting the playoffs earlier, and so Thanksgiving Day was too late for a regular-season game.

Byrd vs. Fair Park became just another final regular-season night game.

Here, though, is one endearing memory from the Byrd-Fair Park rivalry. This was a Byrd student section special.

Because in the early ’60s, Byrd regularly beat Fair Park in football and because Byrd also had Fair Park’s number in basketball — at one point Byrd won 21 of 22 in the series (even in the 1962-63 season when Fair Park won the state title, Byrd won four of the teams’ five meetings) — the Byrd student section during those heated basketball games regularly taunted Fair Park with this chant, “Same Way Turkey Day! … Same Way Turkey Day!”

Well, it’s no longer same way Turkey Day, is it?

But the memories of a great time, a great regular event, in Shreveport athletics carries on with those of us who remember. Even those of us from Woodlawn could appreciate the historic schools, Byrd and Fair Park.

(Editor’s note – this piece was originally published in Nico Van Thyn’s excellent “Once a Knight” blog in November 2013.)

Contact Nico at nvanthyn@aol.com