Yep. It’s well known that many of the state schools started off as (Insert State Name here) A&M and they were colloquially known as ( insert state name here) Aggies. Kansas State was Kansas A&M, or Kansas Aggies. Oklahoma State was Oklahoma A&M, or Oklahoma Aggies. Most of them ditched the A&M moniker around the 1940’s and became (insert state name here) State University. Probably the right move.
Texas A&M, being steeped in tradition and history, rejected this trend and stayed A&M. For those that don’t know, we were actually the A&M College of Texas until the 1960’s. Membership in the corps of cadets was mandatory, and student enrollment was about 6,000. Think Citadel or VMI type of institution. No women were allowed.
Then, in 1963, they changed the name to Texas A&M University and I think started admitting women and being in the corps was optional. This is the reason why sometimes you’ll hear references to Ol’ Army and see mascots like Ol’ Sarge. Ol Army really refers to the corps only A&M of yesteryear.
I don’t think much changed until the 1970’s, until enrollment started going up and up every year, women went from being a small contingent to half or more of the student body, and the core dwindling down to a token amount. Even now, the size of the corps is roughly equal to when I was a student, about 2,000, even though enrollment went up by 30,000.
I’m glad we kept the A&M part, I think it makes us unique, and I’d like to think that if A&M is mentioned the default school is Texas A&M is the first thought. Like the Dr Pepper ads mock, they mention “ State” and “Tech”, because there are so many.