Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference

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Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference
Image:Iiac_logo.png
Data
Classification NCAA Division III
Established 1922
Members 9
Sports fielded 21 (11 men's, 10 women's)
Region Midwestern United States
States 1 - Iowa
Headquarters Cedar Rapids, Iowa


The Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (IIAC) is an College Athletic Conference which competes in the NCAA's Division III. As the name implies, member teams are located in the state of Iowa.

Contents

The Iowa Conference dates back to December 8, 1922, when representatives from 12 colleges got together and formed the “Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Association.” Charter members were Buena Vista University, Central College, Ellsworth College, Iowa Wesleyan College, Luther College, Morningside College, Parsons College, St. Ambrose University, Simpson College, Upper Iowa University, Western Union College and William Penn University. Des Moines University was voted into the conference at that meeting as well.

The first Conference constitution was published in January 1923. Also that year, Judge Hubert Utterback of Des Moines, Iowa was named the first conference commissioner and Iowa Teachers (now known as University of Northern Iowa was accepted as a member. Columbia College (now known as Loras College) was admitted in 1926. Ellsworth left the Conference in 1927. That spring the Conference’s name was changed to the “Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference.” After a three-year ban, athletics were reinstated at the University of Dubuque in 1928-29, and it joined the conference in 1929. Wartburg College was admitted to the conference in 1936, beginning competition the following year. Morningside College dropped out in 1936 because of inactivity. William Penn was suspended from the Conference in 1949 for using ineligible players. The school was back in the Conference in 1951, though it did not compete in football until later. In 1951, St. Ambrose and Loras dropped from football competition.

The Iowa Conference reorganized in 1953, effective with the 1954-55 school year. Nine schools remained in the Conference: Buena Vista, Central, Dubuque, Iowa Wesleyan, Luther, Parsons, Simpson, Upper Iowa and Wartburg. William Penn was readmitted to the Conference in 1960, effective in the spring of 1962. Parsons left the Conference around 1963, while Iowa Wesleyan left effective June 1, 1965. Loras rejoined the Conference in 1986, increasing the Conference membership to nine schools, which continued until 1997 when Coe and Cornell left the Midwest Conference to join the IIAC. The Conference was at 11 schools until its 80th Anniversary year (2001-02) when William Penn decided to leave and switch its affiliation from the NCAA to the NAIA. The IIAC became a nine school Conference when Upper Iowa reclassified to NCAA Division II prior to the start of the 2003-04 academic year.

Institution Nickname Location Founded Affiliation Enrollment
Buena Vista Beavers Storm Lake, Iowa 1891 Private 2,775
Central Dutch Pella, Iowa 1853 Private 1,575
Coe Kohawks Cedar Rapids, Iowa 1851 Private 1,355
Cornell Rams Mount Vernon, Iowa 1853 Private 1,155
Dubuque Spartans Dubuque, Iowa 1852 Private 1,361
Loras Duhawks Dubuque, Iowa 1839 Private 1,743
Luther Norse Decorah, Iowa 1861 Private 2,573
Simpson Storm Indianola, Iowa 1860 Private 1,966
Wartburg Knights Waverly, Iowa 1852 Private 1,804

Member teams field men's and women's teams in cross country, basketball, track and field, swimming and diving, golf, soccer, tennis. Men's teams are field for baseball, football and wrestling. Women's teams are field for softball and volleyball.



NCAA Division III Football Conferences
American Southwest ConferenceAtlantic Central Football ConferenceCollege Conference of Illinois and WisconsinCentennial ConferenceFreedom Football ConferenceHeartland Collegiate Athletic ConferenceIllini-Badger Football ConferenceIowa Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceLiberty LeagueMichigan Intercollegiate Athletic AssociationMiddle Atlantic CorporationMidwest ConferenceMinnesota Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceNew England Football ConferenceNew England Small College Athletic ConferenceNew Jersey Athletic ConferenceNorth Coast Athletic ConferenceNorthwest Athletic ConferenceOhio Athletic ConferenceOld Dominion Athletic ConferencePresidents' Athletic ConferenceSouthern California Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceSouthern Collegiate Athletic ConferenceUniversity Athletic AssociationUSA South Athletic ConferenceWisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic ConferenceIndependents
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