Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association

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The Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association, or SIAA was the first collegiate athletic conference formed in the United States. Twenty-seven (almost a quarter) of the current Division I FBS (formerly Division I-A) football programs can claim membership in this conference, as can at least nineteen other schools. Every member of the current Southeastern Conference except for Arkansas, as well as eight of the twelve members of the Atlantic Coast Conference, can claim membership. (Duke and Wake Forest did not participate in the league; Boston College is a historically northern school; and Florida State did not sponsor football until after the league dissolved.)

It was founded in 1895 by Dr. William Dudley, Dean of the Vanderbilt University Medical College. The original members included Alabama, Auburn, Georgia, Georgia Tech, North Carolina and Vanderbilt. Clemson, Kentucky, LSU, Mississippi State, Tennessee and Tulane would join a year later.

On February 25, 1921, fourteen of the thirty schools in the conference — Alabama, Auburn, Clemson, Georgia, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, Maryland, Mississippi State, North Carolina, North Carolina State, Tennessee, Virginia, Virginia Tech and Washington & Lee — left the conference to form the Southern Conference. In 1922, six more schools — Florida, LSU, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tulane and Vanderbilt — would join them, as would the University of the South (now known as Sewanee) in 1923 and VMI in 1925. With many of its members gone, it would have a renaissance of sorts, adding almost as many members as it had lost. Due to competition from the Southeastern and Southern Conferences, it would eventually disband after the 1941 season, as many of its teams would disband during World War II.

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(Please note; this is a partial list. For sake of convenience, current school names are used.)

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