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Oxford’s Olden Days: Blind Jim Ivy, Honorary Dean of Freshman
A great many Ole Miss fans will remember the booming voice of Rebel cheers that were led by Blind Jim Ivy. For over fifty-eight years from 1896 to 1955, Blind Jim was a fixture on the Ole Miss campus. He was the self-styled “Dean of Freshmen” and would tell you when asked, “We’s going to win all our games and I expect to be right back in that Sugar Bowl come next New Year. I’se been to more Ole Miss games that any other man who ever lived, and never seen them lose yet.”
The story of Blind Jim Ivy starts on sharecroppers’ farm in Alabama in 1872. As a teenager he came to Oxford in search of work. In 1892 while working on the construction of the Tallahatcie River Bridge he got coal tar paint in his eyes. Blind Jim could not afford medical help so he used old family remedies from his close friends. These remedies would not give him his eyesight back, and he would later state that there were some things in which a friend could not help.
Several years later in 1896, Mr. Ivy wandered into the University baseball park during a game between Ole Miss and the University of Texas.
The Longhorns were leading by a hefty margin when a student told Mr. Ivy how bad the Ole Miss team was losing. Mr. Ivy began cheering the home team on in his famous loud booming voice. The team was strangely inspired by Mr. Ivy’s enthusiastic cheering, and won the game decisively. From then on Blind Jim Ivy became a fixture on the Ole Miss campus and at most athletic events.
Not long after his arrival on campus, Blind Jim proclaimed himself as the “Dean of Freshmen”. Members of the freshman class were assigned to guide him about the campus. On several occasions he had been led by three generations of freshmen from the same family. On Thursday night of the first week of school, freshmen would gather at the front of the Lyceum. Blind Jim would make a speech to the incoming freshmen about what was expected of them while they were at Ole Miss. He would do this “so they won’t get into any trouble”.
Graduates, returning to the campus, always looked forward to seeing Blind Jim. It is said that he could still tell many of the former students just by their footsteps. In March of 1923 Schwartz Tailoring Company’s salesman was on campus to take orders and fit male students for a new suit of clothes. The salesman started a fund by giving up his commission to get Blind Jim a new suit of clothes. In accordance with Blind Jim’s wishes the suit was a “snuff-colored” brown.
For many years he operated a candy and refreshment stand in the Lyceum. He would also sell small brown bags of peanuts at the gate to the football stadium at home games. In 1919 the University signed new vendors contracts that caused him to lose his vendor status. The Associated Student Body passed a resolution that was supported by the campus officials to allow Blind Jim to keep his vendor station at the cafeteria. Blind Jim had become one of the traditions of Ole Miss. In his humble way he had become a friend of the entire student body.
On campus, Blind Jim was always ready to reminisce with students about past ballgames, or to solicit donations for his football traveling fund. He would travel with students to away games and even made a trip to the Sugar Bowl. He was also a mainstay at pep rallies whether on campus in Fulton Chapel or at the annual Welcome Rebel Party sponsored by the citizens of Oxford at the beginning of each fall semester. The Welcome Rebel Party was a street dance and pep rally held on the square each year, much like the homecoming parade held at present. Blind Jim would speak to the students along with local dignitaries, Ole Miss team captains and coaches, cheerleaders, and campus officials.
Due to his advanced age and health in 1955 he was ordered by his doctor not to exert himself by yelling or getting in a large crowd of people. He said that he didn’t imagine he would feel like traveling with the football team that year, and if he went to the games on campus that he would just sit at the gate. In late October he died at his son’s home in Chicago. He was buried in St. Peter’s Cemetery in Oxford and a large number of students and campus officials attended a memorial service for him at Second Baptist Church.
For the first time in nearly sixty years, Blind Jim would miss the homecoming game that year. Ole Miss played the University of Arkansas and beat them 17 to 7. An announcement of his death was made over the public address system at the game. A monument at his gravesite was erected by the students and alumni of Ole Miss. The inscription on the monument states, “This monument was erected by the students and alumni of the University of Mississippi in memory of James Ivy, who was affectionately known by generations of Ole Miss students as “Blind Jim”. A member of the Baptist church, he was a devoted and consecrated Christian.”
In a 1920 article in the Mississippian it was written about him, “Blind Jim should be a living sermon for all of us. Laboring under one of life’s most serious physical handicaps he has never given up, has been always the cheeriest person on the campus, and has been a loyal a supporter as our school has ever had. He numbers among his acquaintances some of the south’s greatest sons, and has as his friends, all of the University’s students.” At the Ole Miss vs Houston game in October of 1964 the University of Mississippi Rebel Band paid respect to Blind Jim by forming the word “Jim” and playing “Do You Recall”. The letters represented the beloved figure Blind Jim, a character dear to the hearts of many alumni.
Jack Lamar Mayfield is a fifth generation Oxonian, whose family came to Oxford shortly after the Chickasaw Cession of 1832, and he is the third generation of his family to graduate from the University of Mississippi. He is a former insurance company executive and history instructor at Marshall Academy in Holly Springs, South Panola High School in Batesvile and the Oxford campus of Northwest Community College.
In addition to his weekly blog in HottyToddy.com Oxford’s Olden Days, Mayfield is also the author of an Images of America series book titled Oxford and Ole Miss published in 2008 for the Oxford-Lafayette County Heritage Foundation. The Foundation is responsible for restoring the post-Civil War home of famed Mississippi statesman, L.Q.C. Lamar and is now restoring the Burns Belfry, the first African American Church in Oxford.
Ham Moore
August 26, 2016 at 6:38 pm
He never forgot a voice. While I was there my brother who had not been on campus for several years came up and as usual Blind Jim was standing in front of the ole student union. My brother said “hello, Jim” and with no hesitation Jim said “Mr. Junior. How you doing? You have not been here in a while”.