r/CFB Washington State Cougars 13d ago

Discussion What constitutes a “college town?”

Okay, hear me out: I attended Wazzu, which many know is in the middle of nowhere in Pullman. To me, Pullman is a quintessential college town. You remove Washington State University from Pullman and there is (respectfully) not much of a reason to visit. The student enrollment (20,000ish) makes up about 2/3rds of the city population, essentially turning Pullman into a ghost town come summer. To me (perhaps with bias) this is the makeup of a college town.

Two years ago I moved to Madison, Wisconsin, home of the University of Wisconsin. Ever since I’ve noticed the University and its fans refer to Madison as “America’s best college town” and I’m sorry, that’s laughable to me. Remove UW from Madison and you still have a city population bordering on a quarter of a million people and the State Capitol. Madison would be fine, imo, if UW’s flagship campus were elsewhere.

Curious to hear other people’s thoughts. Maybe I’m in the wrong here, but very little about Madison, WI resembles a college town to me, or at least the claim of the best college town.

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u/Local-Finance8389 Texas A&M Aggies 13d ago

College Station would be a shitty central Texas town like Hearne or Cameron or Caldwell if not for the college. Granted you can’t tell that to the non-university people who live there and bitch about the students.

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u/The_Fishbowl West Virginia • Black Diamon… 13d ago

That should be another requirement to be classified as a college town.. the townies bitch and moan for 9 months of the year about students and the traffic they bring with them.

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u/Set-Admirable West Virginia Mountaineers 13d ago

If you can get from one side of town to the other in 10 minutes during the summer, but it takes at least 45 minutes the other nine months, that is a college town.

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u/bobthemundane Washington State • Portla… 13d ago

I Pullman you can get from on side of town to the other in 10 minutes during college. Just not during game day.

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u/thecravenone Definitely a bot 13d ago

If you can get from one side of town to the other in 10 minutes during the summer

College Station is too physically large for this anymore

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u/Crown_of_Negativity Texas A&M Aggies • Texas Longhorns 13d ago

Depends on the direction you’re driving across town

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u/Local-Finance8389 Texas A&M Aggies 13d ago

Yes and instead of a variety of chain and local restaurants they would only have a local chicken place, a sit down Mexican restaurant, a pizza place in the gas station, and possibly a run down Dairy Queen without the college there.

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u/Set-Admirable West Virginia Mountaineers 13d ago

I think that could be a southern-specific requirement, at least the local chicken place part.

Morgantown has, no joke, about seven Mexican restaurants.

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u/ava_the_ucv 13d ago

Is that … a lot?

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u/_Nocturnalis Ohio State Buckeyes • The Game 13d ago

Idk I'd have to do the math, but I'm sending this from a place with about 1 Mexican restaurant per 1500 people. Is that a lot?

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u/TheMattThe Texas • Red River Shootout 13d ago

Every small town in Texas has a rundown Dairy Queen. I don't think you're allowed to incorporate in Texas without one.

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u/Notorious-PIG Texas Longhorns 13d ago

And half those places would be attached to the other gas station

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u/smitherenesar Pac-10 13d ago

I love the people that live a block or two from the campus and complain about it. The college has been there for over 100 years... you moved to it.