Tech Triumph


"Tech Triumph" is the fight song of Virginia Tech. It was composed in 1919 by Wilfred Pete Maddux and Mattie Eppes.
The song is noted for beginning with the opening notes of Reveille — a nod to Tech's past as an all-male military school.

Composers

Wilfred Preston Maddux, a trombone and baritone player in the Virginia Tech Regimental Band, jointly composed "Tech Triumph" in 1919 along with Mattie Walton Eppes. Mattie Eppes was a neighbor of Pete in his hometown of Blackstone, Virginia. When he was home, Pete would often play violin with Mattie accompanying him on the piano. One evening in the summer of 1919, Pete asked her to help him compose a fight song for VPI. She played the tune and Pete wrote out the score and the words for two verses in a single evening. Pete Maddux is not listed in the yearbook with the band after 1919. Miss Eppes later married John C. Boggs, Superintendent of Randolph-Macon Military Academy.

First performance

The song was first performed on Saturday, November 1, 1919, before the football game between V.P.I. and Washington and Lee University. The issue of the university newspaper noted:
In a letter to The Virginia Tech published on Dec. 10, 1919, Maddux expressed his appreciation to the student body.

Other uses

A strain of the Bliss Triumph potato developed for its disease resistance by Virginia Tech researchers in 1926 and was named Tech Triumph.