Cheerleader History
Princeton
graduate Thomas
Peebles introduced the idea of organized crowds cheering at
football games
to the University of Minnesota.
However, it was not until 1898 that University of Minnesota
student Johnny Campbell directed a crowd in cheering "Rah, Rah, Rah!
Sku-u-mar, Hoo-Rah! Hoo-Rah! Varsity! Varsity! Varsity,
Minn-e-So-Tah!”, making
Campbell the very first cheerleader and November
2, 1898
the official
birth date of organized cheerleading. Soon after, the University of Minnesota
organized a "yell leader" squad of 6 male students, who still use
Campbell's original cheer today[4] In 1903 the first cheerleading fraternity, Gamma Sigma was
founded.[5]
Cheerleading started out as an all-male activity, but females began
participating in 1923, due to limited availability of female collegiate
sports.
At this time, gymnastics, tumbling, and megaphones were incorporated
into popular
cheers, and are still used today.[5]
Today it is estimated that 97% of cheerleading participants overall are
female,
but males still make up 50% of cheering squads at the collegiate level.[6]

In 1948,
Lawrence
"Herkie" Herkimer, of Dallas, TX and a former cheerleader at Southern Methodist University
formed
the National Cheerleaders Association (NCA) as a way to hold
cheerleading clinics. In 1949, The NCA held its first clinic in
Huntsville, TX
with 52 girls in attendance.[6]
"Herkie" contributed many "firsts" to the sport including
the founding of Cheerleader & Danz Team uniform supply
company,
inventing the herkie,
(where one leg is bent towards the ground and the other is out to the
side as
high as it will stretch in the toe touch position)[7] and creating the "Spirit Stick".[5]
By the 1960s, college cheerleaders began hosting workshops across the
nation,
teaching fundamental cheer skills to eager high school age girls. In
1965, Fred
Gastoff invented the vinyl pom-pon
and it was introduced into competitions by the
International Cheerleading Foundation (now the World Cheerleading
Association
or WCA). Organized cheerleading competitions began to pop up with the
first
ranking of the "Top Ten College Cheerleading Squads" and
"Cheerleader All America" awards given out by the International
Cheerleading Foundation in 1967. In 1978, America was introduced to
competitive
cheerleading by the first broadcast of Collegiate Cheerleading
Championships on CBS[4][5]
In the 1960s National Football League (NFL)
teams began
to organize professional cheerleading teams. The Baltimore Colts (now the Indianapolis Colts) was the first NFL
team to
have an organized cheerleading squad.[8] It was the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders
who gained
the spotlight with their revealing outfits and sophisticated dance
moves, which
debuted in the 1972-1973 season, but were first seen widely in Super
Bowl X (1976). This caused the image of cheerleaders to permanently
change,
with many other NFL teams emulating them. Most of the professional
teams'
cheerleading squads would more accurately be described as dance teams
by
today's standards; as they rarely, if ever, actively encourage crowd
noise or
perform modern cheerleading moves.
The 1980s saw
the
onset of modern cheerleading with more difficult stunt sequences and
gymnastics
being incorporated into routines. ESPN first broadcasted the National
High
School Cheerleading Competition nationwide in 1983. Cheerleading
organizations
such as the American Association of Cheerleading Coaches and Advisors
(AACCA),
founded in 1987, started applying universal safety standards to
decrease the
number of injuries and prevent dangerous stunts, pyramids and tumbling
passes
from being included in routines. [9]
In 2003, the National Council for Spirit Safety and Education (NCSSE)
was
formed to offer safety training for youth, school, all star and college
coaches. The NCAA requires college cheer coaches to successfully
complete a
nationally recognized safety-training program. The NCSSE or AACCA
certification
programs are both recognized by the NCAA.
Today,
cheerleading
is most closely associated with American
football and basketball. Sports such as association football (soccer), ice
hockey, volleyball, baseball,
and wrestling
sometimes sponsor cheerleading squads. The ICC Twenty20 Cricket World
Cup in
South Africa in 2007 was the first international cricket event to have
cheerleaders. The Florida Marlins were the first Major League Baseball team to have
cheerleaders. Debuting in 2003, the "Marlin Mermaids" gained national
exposure and have influenced other MLB teams to develop their own
cheer/dance
squads.
Types of teams in the world today.
High School
Cheerleading
College
Cheerleading
Youth league/ Athletic Association
All-Star cheerleading
Professional Cheerleading
Leagues
NBA Cheerleading
NFL Cheerleading
CFL
Cheerleading |