DU played its first football game in 1885, and by 1909 had moved to a 10,000-seat grandstand in University Park. By 1924, DU football had outgrown that grandstand, and DU alumni decided to launch an ambitious public bond drive to fund a new stadium. The University broke ground for Hilltop Stadium in March 1925.
Construction
The construction costs ran just under $571,000, with the project using one million board-feet of lumber, of concrete and 295 tons of steel. The community called the new structure by the nickname “Monument to Concrete.” The famous sculptor Robert Garrison created two massive figures of athletes, one male and one female, for the Stadium’s main entrance as symbols of the value of coeducation and “the vitality, the vigor, and the strength of modern American youth”.
Features
In the venue’s first official game, DU defeated Colorado School of Mines by a score of 27–7. However, no regional match-up overshadowed the annual rivalry game between DU and the University of Colorado, Boulder at Thanksgiving. This tradition came to end when CU joined a different athletic conference in 1948. The facility also hosted other sports during its history including soccer and track and field. The use of Hilltop Stadium extended beyond the realm of athletic competition as well. For example, Charles Lindbergh visited the Denver landmark during a parade held in his honor in 1927. Hilltop Stadium also hosted outdoor theater productions and DU commencement ceremonies for a number of years. The U.S. Air Force AcademyFalcons shared the stadium with DU until their Falcon Stadium opened in Colorado Springs in 1962. Additionally, the professional Denver Broncos, then in the AFL, played 11 pre-season and 2 early regular season games at the DU stadium in the early and mid-1960s. Perhaps the most famous of those DU-hosted Bronco games was the 1967 pre-season game when the Broncos beat the Detroit Lions, the first time an AFL team had defeated an NFL team. The Broncos' home venue, Bears Stadium, was shared with the Triple-ADenver Bears baseball club.
Demolition
The university decided to demolish Hilltop Stadium in 1971. The venue had started to crumble, and after the discontinuation of the DU football program in 1961, a costly reconstruction of the main grandstand seemed unwarranted. Although the large crescent-shaped section on the west side was removed, the far smaller section to the east remained until 1974. DU also needed the space for its growing intramural sports program: new plans included 10 lighted tennis courts and three regulation-sized playing fields for a wide variety of sports. Today, the Benjamin F. Stapleton, Jr. Tennis Pavilion, Diane Wendt Sports Field, University of Denver Soccer Stadium and Peter Barton Lacrosse Stadium, all stand on the site of the old Hilltop Stadium. A few remnants of the stadium remain today. The light towers now stand in working order at Englewood High School's football field, and the old line markers are housed at Penrose Library on the DU campus.