Thanksgiving weekend in Texas this year wasn’t just about turkey and pumpkin pie—it brought back a legendary football rivalry that hadn’t been seen in over a decade. On Nov. 30, Kyle Field turned into a battleground as Texas A&M faced off against the University of Texas, renewing a storied rivalry that had been on pause for 13 years.
The two Lone Star State teams last clashed in 2011 when both universities were in the Big 12 Conference. Texas A&M's move to the Southeastern Conference in 2012 temporarily sidelined this rivalry, which began in 1894. “The conflict has been quiet since the teams last clashed, in 2011, but many folks can recall a time when scant few Texans identified as anything other than an Aggie or a Longhorn (Even those who didn’t attend either school!),” wrote the Texas Monthly’s Texanist columnist. “Come Thanksgiving season, neighbors became less neighborly, friendships were friendship wrecked upon the shores of gridiron grievances, and family ties were left frayed, the Texanist is ’fraid to say.”
The 2024 Thanksgiving weekend football showdown between the University of Texas and Texas A&M not only brought a flood of memories for fans across the state but also highlighted the growth and impact of these two iconic university systems. While the game marked a thrilling new chapter in the storied Aggies vs. Longhorns rivalry, it also put the spotlight on UT and A&M as institutions that extend far beyond their main campuses in Austin and College Station. Both universities boast branch campuses, medical facilities, and other locations stretching from the Permian Basin to the Rio Grande Valley, across Texas’s major cities, and even to Washington, D.C., and Doha, Qatar. As the dust settles from the game, we take a closer look at the history of these storied institutions and what makes this rivalry so deeply rooted in the culture of the Lone Star State.
|
Texas A&M |
University of Texas |
Colors |
Maroon and white |
Burn orange and white |
Student Body |
Aggies |
Longhorns |
Primary Location |
College Station |
Austin |
Other Locations |
Galveston, McAllen, Fort Worth, Washington D.C. & Qatar |
Arlington, Dallas, El Paso, Permian Basin, Rio Grande Valley, San Antonio, Nacogdoches and Tyler |
Campus Size |
5,200 acres (College Station) |
431 acres (Austin) |
Opened |
1876 |
1883 |
Main Campus Enrollment |
72,560 |
53,864 |
Let's take a closer look at each.
If Texas A&M and University of Texas have anything in common, except for a deep love of football, it would be that both schools took their time getting established.
“The two major university systems in Texas had slow and shaky beginnings,” writes the Texas Almanac.
The idea of the University of Texas came first, with a bill in 1858 establishing UT and setting aside funds to develop the university but the Civil War sidelined plans and it took 25 years for the first students to attend classes in Austin in 1883.
Texas A&M can trace its roots back to the Morrill Land-Grant Bill passed by the U.S. Congress in 1862 which granted Texas 180,000 acres of land to establish an agricultural and mechanical college. It took 14 years for the first class to open the school in 1876.
Each university is also home to a prominent presidential library, reflecting the rich political heritage and influence of these institutions. Texas A&M hosts the George H.W. Bush Presidential Library and Museum in College Station, while the Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library resides at UT Austin, showcasing the legacy of these influential leaders.
The two schools are located less than two hours from each other in Austin and College Station but there were other choices of where to locate the campuses, according to the Texas Almanac:
Texas A&M is one of the largest public universities in the nation, and one of the few to have land-, sea- and space-grant designations.
“Texas A&M University is always expanding to make a quality education accessible to as many students as possible. Our main campus is in College Station. We also have a higher education center in McAllen, a law school in Fort Worth, a government and public service school in Washington, D.C., a comprehensive health science center with various locations in Texas, and branch campuses in Galveston and Qatar,” says the university.
The Texas A&M University System comprises:
The University of Texas system has an enrollment of more than 256,000 students at academic and health institutions across the state, as well as an operating budget of $32 billion, making it one of the largest public university systems in the nation and the world.
“UT institutions are powerful drivers of economic and social mobility in Texas, producing more than 66,000 graduates annually, including more than one-third of the state’s undergraduate degrees and about 63 percent of the state’s medical degrees,” says UT.
The UT system includes: