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Campus Alert Archive
Auburn

85,000 Watched "The Barn" Burn to the Ground During the LSU Game and Nobody Left

ALfireadvisorymedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

On the night of September 21, 1996, the Auburn Sports Arena -- universally known as 'The Barn' -- burned to the ground during the Auburn-LSU football game while 85,000 fans watched from the adjacent Jordan-Hare Stadium. The fire, started by embers from a nearby tailgate grill left too close to the old wooden building, produced flames that shot as high as the stadium upper decks. The Jordan-Hare PA announcer repeatedly reassured the crowd the fire was out of range of the stadium and no one was in danger; the game was not stopped.

Alerts
1
Response
Killed
0
Injured
0
Institution
Auburn University
Public R1 · AL
~21,000 studentsNone (pre-mass-notification era; Jordan-Hare PA system only)
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

1 message in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTPA System
Approximate reconstruction356 chars
[Ladies and gentlemen, please remain calm. There is a fire near the stadium involving a university building. The fire department is responding. The fire is out of range of this stadium. The wind is blowing the other way and rain is falling. There is no danger to the fans inside Jordan-Hare Stadium. The game will continue. Thank you for your cooperation.]

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

PA announcer Carl Stephens made repeated public address announcements assuring the 85,000 fans in Jordan-Hare Stadium that the fire was out of range and posed no danger to stadium occupants
Stephens specifically told the crowd the wind was blowing the other way and rain was falling overhead as justification for the game continuing
The fire started when embers from a tailgate grill left too close to the wooden arena ignited the structure; the old building had no sprinkler system and burned quickly
Flames shot as high as the Jordan-Hare Stadium upper decks, making the fire visible to all 85,000 fans in the stadium
Context

Background

The night of September 21, 1996, produced one of the most remarkable scenes in college football history when the Auburn Sports Arena -- 'The Barn' -- burned to the ground while 85,000 fans watched from inside the adjacent Jordan-Hare Stadium during the Auburn-LSU game. The fire started when embers from a tailgate grill left too close to the old wooden building ignited the structure. The arena, built in 1949 and used primarily as a practice facility for the women's gymnastics team, had no sprinkler system and was quickly engulfed. Flames shot as high as the upper decks of Jordan-Hare Stadium. PA announcer Carl Stephens repeatedly reassured the crowd that the fire was out of range of the stadium, the wind was blowing the other way, and rain was falling -- assertions that appeared sufficient to keep 85,000 fans in their seats. The game was never stopped. Auburn lost 19-15. The incident illustrates how campus emergency communication in the mid-1990s depended almost entirely on the good judgment of a single PA announcer: there was no coordinated mass-notification infrastructure, no email blast system, and no protocol for assessing structural risk to the adjacent stadium. In the years since, Auburn and most major universities have implemented formal incident command procedures and mass-notification systems that would trigger a coordinated assessment whenever a major fire breaks out on or adjacent to a campus venue.
Analysis

Key Findings

The Auburn Sports Arena ('The Barn') burned to the ground on September 21, 1996 while 85,000 fans watched from Jordan-Hare Stadium during the Auburn-LSU football game
Fire was started by embers from a tailgate grill left too close to the old wooden arena, which had no sprinkler system
Jordan-Hare PA announcer Carl Stephens made repeated live announcements reassuring the crowd; the game was never stopped
No fatalities or serious injuries were reported; Auburn lost the game 19-15
The incident illustrates the pre-modern era of campus crisis communication, in which a single PA announcer served as the primary emergency messaging channel for 85,000 people
Outcome
The Auburn Sports Arena ('The Barn'), used as a practice facility for the women's gymnastics team, was destroyed. No fatalities or serious injuries reported. The building had no sprinkler system. Auburn lost the football game 19-15.
Provenance

Sources

  1. News
  2. News
  3. Source
  4. News
Tags
firesports-facilitystadiumfootballpre-modern-alertingalabamapublic-r11990spa-systemno-injuriestailgatehistoric
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion