Sunny Boy (mascot)
Appearance
Sunny Boy | |
---|---|
Team | Sun Dodgers |
University | University of Washington |
Conference | Pacific Coast Conference |
Origin of name | Sun Dodger |
First seen | 1920 |
Related mascot(s) | Dubs, Harry the Husky |
Sunny Boy is a wooden statue of an undergraduate that served as the mascot of the University of Washington Sun Dodgers.[1][2][3][4]
References
[edit]- ^ "New Mascot for Washington "Sunny" Adopted by Athletes". The Seattle Times. May 30, 1920. p. 15.
Yale has its Bulldog; Princeton, its Tiger; California its Golden Bear; and Washington State College, its Cougar. Now the University of Washington has its 'Sunny', who becomes mascot to all the Purple and Gold athletic teams, now known as 'Sun Dodgers'.
- ^ "Old Mascot of Washington U., Found after 23 Years in South Bend Yard". The South Bend Tribune. November 23, 1948.
A 'kidnaping' that occurred 23 years ago in Seattle, Wash., has been solved in South Bend and all has been forgiven. How Sunny Boy happened to turn up in South Bend is a puzzling story and there are still some missing links.
- ^ Kugiya, Hugo (June 7, 1994). "Cloud Of Mystery Shades Sunny Boy". The Seattle Times.
'Sunny Boy,' the 74-year-old wooden statue the University of Washington called its mascot for three years, forgotten for the better part of the century, is missing.
- ^ Marmor, Jon (September 1, 1997). "UW's first mascot was a hunk of wood that got around". Columns.
Sunny Boy, a 3 1/2-foot, gold-painted wooden statue. And despite being a 70-pound still object, he sure got around. A sculptured replica of the happy-faced character Sunny, who appeared in the University's lusty humor magazine Sun Dodger, in 1919, Sunny Boy was whittled into being by Ballard artist Maurice S. Holcomb to be a symbol of "Joe College," dressed in a bow tie, holding books under one arm and a football under the other. Behind him are the four columns originally part of the first University building.