I can't speak to what SO once was since I've only been here a few years. But I do think that getting rid of reputation would help make the site better. SO is the best site I've seen for programming questions. But as a community and a user experience it still has a lot of warts. By making some fundamental changes, I think it could be improved a lot. I think getting rid of reputation would improve the user experience. But I would go a bit further to improve things more.
Get rid of reputation, badges, and downvoting. Keep upvoting and the current system of closing posts. (Also overhaul the review queue, but that issue is a separate can of worms that I won't get into). @Sina Madani's answer is right on the money about how downvoting feels like a hostile act. There is no need to build that negative behavior into the user experience. Upvoting is a positive act and provides a way to separate the good posts from the bad ones: the good ones get upvoted and rise to the top, the bad ones don't and stay at the bottom.
I understand the gamification argument for badges and I have even chased some badges myself. But for a community like SO, I feel that from a high-level, long-term perspective, this sort of gamification with badges has a subtly pernicious effect, overall. The same argument can be made against the gamification aspect of reputation. But I will would an additional complaint against reputation.
Reputation on SO is more directly used as an incentive mechanism to encourage participation. It also serves to mark users who are perhaps experts in a certain area, or at least have been especially active on the site. But it has a negative side effect: it steals focus away from the questions & answers and turns that attention toward reputation. Instead of focusing exclusively on writing good posts, people become distracted by how big their rep number is and how they measure up against the rep number of other users.
People who truly care about the SO community and want to help others will do it without needing to be "rewarded" with reputation. For these people, the act of participating and helping is its own reward. And these are the sort of people that you really want participating---not the person who begrudgingly writes a hasty, low-quality answer because they want to inflate their reputation number. And by removing reputation from the user experience, you also do away with all the complaints, abuse, and other problems that are associated with the reptuation system. You will regain all of the lost time and attention that people spend dealing with these problems.
With these changes made, usercards will consist solely of a user's name and image. People can still get to another user's profile via their usercard. Profiles will continue to track the number and type of posts made, so people can still find out how knowledgable another user is about a subject by looking at their profile. Profiles can even show a tally of how many upvotes a user received for each subject/tag. In a way, this provides a sort of replacement for reputation. But by keeping the upvote tally only on the profile, you have removed the focus on "reputation" by one level of abstraction away from the core user experience, which is now centered squarely on writing questions and answers.
For people who are consistantly visiting SO, they will eventually start to recognize certain usercards popping up in posts about a certain subject, and they will realize, "I've seen this person posting before and they always seem to write good answers". So you will naturally learn to recognize other users as quality posters in this manner. No more looking at the rep score on a usercard and assuming, "This person has 275k rep so they must know what they are talking about". The first way is better because you learn which users are reliable sources of knowledge from your own experiences reading their posts. The second way is not reliable because someone's overall reputation score is not always a good indicator that someone can write posts that are useful to you.