Click for the story behind "Deo Vindice".
"Glory to the Victor: God Vindicates"
    I am also finding that "Gloria Victis" translated as "Glory to the Defeated", which seems more the case, but I doubt it. Some profess that The South just postponed Victory, and indeed, The South did rise again.
Clinton, Louisiana
From the Statue:
Behind the Courthouse
My Uncle, Judge Bennett, occupied one of them.
Bennett-Brame House, cerca 1840, my Aunt's place.
   It would be difficult for me to imagine a more "Southern" town than Clinton. It is still small, though growing. It is less than 35 miles from LSU's Tiger Stadium. Now where could have that "Tiger" thing have come from?
      According to Arthur W. Bergeron, Jr., PhD. and the "Guide to Louisiana Confederate Military Units, 1861-1865" (LSU Press, 1989), the name Louisiana Tigers evolved from a volunteer company nicknamed the Tiger Rifles, which was organized in New Orleans. This company became a part of a battalion commanded by Major Chatham Roberdeau Wheat and was the only company of that battalion to wear the colorful Zouave uniform. In time, Wheat's entire battalion was called the Tigers. 

That nickname in time was applied to all of the Louisiana troops of Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia. The tiger symbol came from the famous Washington Artillery of New Orleans. A militia unit that traces its history back to the 1830s, the Washington Artillery had a logo that featured a snarling tiger's head. These two units first gained fame at the Battle of First Manassas on July 21, 1861. Major David French Boyd, first president of LSU after the war, had fought with the Louisiana troops in Virginia and knew the reputation of both the Tiger Rifles and Washington Artillery.

Another interesting Civil War tidbit about LSU. When LSU was founded in 1860, a man named William Tecumseh Sherman was asked to be the university's first president. When the Civil War began, Sherman departed to assume command in the Union Army while his entire student body left to join the Confederacy.

last modified Oct 8, 2003 at 13:56  I took this from
HERE.
More Information on Lee's Tigers
    Now you know the rest of the story on the "Tigers". The mascot was not some damn Indian cat, it was the embodyment of the fighting spirit of some of Louisiana's Civil War Warriors.
I bet the athletes don't know that. Don't tell them.
     That "Sherman" information must have been a tough pill to swallow.
I got carried away about Southern Stuff being here in Clinton.
     YOU CAN'T HELP IT. YOUR BLOOD TURNS GRAY
         if you are in the least prone to that transformation.
And More, Read this about reputation.
    Visit Clinton this Spring. Don't just stop at St.Francisville. Come on out to Clinton and see a non-river town.
Along the way you have to do Jackson, that's where we're headed next. Go Tigers.
On to Jackson