An orangish glow cast strange shadows over the town of Ruston during the early morning hours of Monday, January 6, 1936. The eerie sky seemed to reflect that fiery haven ruled by the devil.
When the morning revealed the glow had risen from the complete destruction of the main building at Louisiana Tech, some predicted the end of the small north Louisiana college. But others soon saw it as a “fortunate calamity.”
The day students were scheduled to return to classes after their Christmas holidays, a fire struck “Old Main,” the primary administrative and classroom building and the symbol of the school’s early growth since its founding in 1894.
However, the opportunity for the erection of expanded and up-to-date facilities following the fire led some members of the education community to conclude the burning of Old Main was, in the long run, fortuitous.
Fire broke out sometime before 3:25 a.m. in a biology laboratory under the auditorium at the rear of the building. Ruston, Monroe and Arcadia fire trucks responded but the fire in the massive building could not be stopped until it ran out of fuel.
Although the external walls were brick, the floors, internal walls, attic and roof, and anything constructed of wood nearly 40 years old burned quickly.
The death of Louisiana Tech, then called Louisiana Polytechnic Institute, was a given, according to the pessimists. No small school like Tech could survive the loss of a huge building like the Old Main, the largest structure on campus, containing administrative offices, classrooms, laboratories, and an auditorium.