The Big Ten Conference reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Apr-2004
(provided by Fixed Reference: snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org)

Big Ten Conference

For people who check facts
The Big Ten Conference is a College Athletic Conference located in the northern United States, stretching from Iowa in the west to Pennsylvania in the east. The conference competes in the NCAA's Division I-A.

Despite its name, there are eleven teams in the conference:

Member schools participate in baseball, men's and women's basketball, cross country, field hockey, football, golf, gymnastics, indoor and outdoor track, rowing, men's and women's soccer, softball, swimming and diving, tennis, volleyball and wrestling.

The University of Chicago was a founding member of the Big Ten (1895-1946), but left when it decided to deemphasize varsity athletics just before World War II. Chicago discontinued football in 1939 and left the Conference in 1946.


The Big Ten was founded in 1895 as the Intercollegiate Conference of Faculty Representatives. The first reference of the Conference as The Big Nine was in 1899 after Iowa and Indiana had joined the Conference.  The first reference as the Big Ten was in 1917 after Michigan was reinstated to the conference (and Ohio State added in 1912).  It again was known as the Big Nine after the University of Chicago’s departure in 1946, and back to the Big Ten in 1950 when Michigan State joined.  The Conference’s official name throughout the time was still the Intercollegiate Conference of Faculty Representatives and was also known as the Western Conference. It did not formally adopt the name Big Ten until 1988 when it was incorporated as a not-for-profit corporation.

External link