Indiana
HOOSIERS
Like many other schools that have adopted their state’s nickname,
Indiana University’s “Hoosier” nickname reflects the namesake of its
home state. While the nickname selection process was a natural
occurrence, the actual definition of what the Hoosier nickname
represents is still undetermined.
The Hoosier term certainly has received vast exposure through the years.
Bobby Knight’s Hoosier basketball team has long been a household name in
college basketball circles. The Indianapolis Colts play in the Hoosier
Dome and Gene Hackman coached his high school basketball team to an
improbable state championship in the blockbuster movie Hoosiers. Despite
the common usage of the word, it seems there have been more theories of
its origin dribbled around by historians than basketballs in Indiana.
One theory that was fostered by Indiana historian Howard Peckman, was
that the nickname might have resulted from the work performed by crew
that was directed by either Samuel Hoosier or Hoosher. The men, most of
which hailed from Indiana, were building a canal on the Ohio River in
1825 and were referred to as “Hoosier’s men.”
Perhaps the most popular “Hoosier” tales is the one that echoes a
response to a knock on the door. Apparently when early Indiana settlers
were alarmed by a knock on their cabin door, they would respond with the
question: “Who’s there?” Eventually according to the theory, “Who’s
there,” evolved into “Hoosiers.”
|