Traveler is a horse who is the mascot of the University of Southern California. Traveler appears at all USC home football games in the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum as well as many other outdoor events, including numerous Rose Parades. The current horse is Traveler IX. Although the Traveler web site describes Traveler as "pure white," most of the horses who have served as Traveler are actually gray horses whose hair coats have become completely white. (Truly white horses are rare.) The rider, dressed as an idealized Trojan warrior, is often mistaken for Tommy Trojan, the Trojan portrayed in USC's famous Trojan Shrine statue; however, the rider is unnamed and simply designated as a Trojan warrior with the horse as the official mascot. On November 6, 2013, the costumed version of Tommy and Traveler were introduced for men's and women's basketball games.[1]
Traveler | |
---|---|
University | University of Southern California |
Conference | Big 10 |
First seen | 1961 |
Introduction
editTraveler was introduced in the autumn of 1962, during the USC Trojans football team's home opener at the Coliseum, against the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets. To dress Saukko as a Trojan warrior, USC used its connections to the film industry to procure the costume worn by Charlton Heston in Ben Hur two years earlier. The costume proved to be too heavy for extended use, so Saukko made his own leather uniform for the 1962 season and the same costume has been used since. The name was believed to have been inspired by the gray horse Traveller, ridden by Civil War Confederate general Robert E. Lee,[2] In August 2017 concerns that the horse's name had a connection to Lee led to further research, which revealed that the first Traveler was acquired with his name, spelled with one L, in 1958 after he had become unreliable as a movie horse.[3] On Equinespot.com, Traveler is listed as one of the six most common horse names to begin with the letter T. [4]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Chris Foster, USC basketball has a new mascot ... named Traveler, Los Angeles Times, November 6, 2014
- ^ "Origin of Traveler name". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ Daily Trojan, [1], August 23, 2017
- ^ Popular Horse named [2]
External links
edit- Traveler's official site at USC.