Clean Old-Fashioned Hate
By: Jennifer Herseim | Categories: Traditions

Many cherished Tech traditions spring from the long-held rivalry between Tech and the University of Georgia, which began the very first time these two teams played each other in 1893. Today, the teams meet every November to carry on that rivalry, which author Bill Cromartie coined “Clean, Old-Fashioned Hate.”
The Origin—Hate From The Start

Ramblin’ Wrecks

To Hell With Georgia!
The feud between Tech and UGA escalated in 1908, leading to the game that year being canceled. That year, an early version of the fight song appeared for the first time in print in Tech’s yearbook, the Blue Print. The song was “sung only under the bleachers” and written under the title “What Causes Whitlock to Blush,” which was a reference to Tech’s football manager.
“To Hell With Georgia” was a line in the first arrangement of the fight song written in 1910 by Mike Greenblatt, Tech’s first official band leader, and then re-arranged in 1914 by Frank Roman. The lyric goes, “If I had a son, sir, I tell you what he’d do. He would yell to hell with Georgia like his daddy used to do.”
While all Yellow Jackets know the phrase “To Hell With Georgia,” some choose to add further insult by lowercasing only the “g” in Georgia—THWg!
131-year Rivalry

No Red Zone
“Up With the White and Gold” is Georgia Tech’s second fight song, and it also takes a dig at the University of Georgia with lyrics, such as “Drop a battle axe on georgia’s head.” The song celebrates Tech’s school colors, gold and white, while stomping on the University of Georgia’s red and black. The first two lines —“Up with the white and gold! Down with the red and black!”—also reinforce a fashion rule that’s become tradition for Tech fans: No red clothing.
Birth of a Prankster
Tech’s most famous student was born out of the intrastate rivalry. When Ed Smith, CerE 1927, received two cards to register at Tech, he decided to play a prank and enroll a fictional student named George P. Burdell. Smith initially wanted to use the name of his high school principal, George P. Butler, who at the time was a strong UGA fan and served as captain of the UGA team that played Tech in 1893. At the last minute, Smith got cold feet and changed Butler to Burdell, the maiden name of his friend’s mother. George P. Burdell immediately took up the good cause, becoming the mischievous mind behind several shenanigans and pranks played against UGA over the years.