History
of Cheerleading
Cheerleading
first started at Princeton University
in the 1880s
with the crowd chant, "Rah rah rah, tiger tiger tiger, sis sis sis,
boom boom boom ahhhhhhh, Princeton Princeton Princeton!" as a way to
encourage school spirit at football games. A few years later, Princeton
graduate Thomas Peebles introduced the idea of organized crowd chanting
to the
University
of
Minnesota
in 1884, but it was not until 1898 that
University
of
Minnesota
student Johnny Campbell stood in front of the crowd, and directed them
in a chant, making
Campbell
the very first cheerleader. Soon after that, the University of
Minnesota organized a "yell leader" squad of 4 male students.
Click on picture for video
Although it is
estimated that 90% of today's cheerleading participants are female (50%
of collegiate level cheerleaders male), cheerleading started out as an
all-male activity. Females started to participate in cheerleading in
the 1920s,
due to limited availability of female collegiate sports. By the 1940s, it was
a largely female activity.
Cheerleading is
most closely associated with American football,
and to a lesser degree basketball.
Sports such as soccer,ice hockey,
and wrestling,baseball
rarely have cheerleaders.
In1948,
Lawrence
"Herkie" Herkimer formed the National Cheerleaders Association (NCA) as
a way to hold cheerleading clinics. The National Cheerleaders
Association held its first clinic in 1949 with 52
girls in attendance. The next year, the clinic had grown to 350
cheerleaders. By the 1950s, most
American high schools had formed cheerleading squads. By the 1960s,
cheerleading had grown to be a staple in American high school and
collegiate sports. Organized cheerleading competitions began to crop up
with the first ranking of the "Top Ten College Cheerleading Squads" and
"Cheerleader All America" awards given out by the International
Cheerleading Foundation (now the World Cheerleading Association or WCA)
in 1967. In 1978,
America
was introduced to
competitive cheerleading by the first broadcast of Collegiate
Cheerleading Championships on CBS.
In the 1960s National Football
League (NFL) teams began to organize professional cheerleading
teams. 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.
The 1980s saw the
onset of modern cheerleading with more difficult stunts and gymnastics
being incorporated into routines. Cheerleading organizations started
applying safety guidelines and offering courses on safety training for
coaches and sponsors. In 1984, Cheer Ltd. Inc. (sic) established the
National Cheer Conference (NCC) for cheer coaches to receive
instruction and hands-on course work in cheerleading techniques. AACCA
is the nationally recognized safety organization, conducting safety
courses since 1987. A more recent organization to conduct safety
courses is the NCSSE.
The spirit
industry leaders were united with the unprecedented 2004
establishment of SITA, the Spirit Industry Trade Association. Founded
by leaders of nine major cheerleading companies including American
Championships,
America's
Best, AmeriCheer,
Athletic Championships, Atlantic Cheer & Dance, Cheer Ltd. Inc,
COA, ECA, and UPA, the industry trade association includes both
cheerleading companies, affiliate companies, and safety organizations.
Another trade organization, OSIP, the Organization of Spirit Industry
Providers, consists of over 33 member organizations including Universal
Cheerleaders Association, National Spirit Association, USASF,
Fellowship of Christian Cheerleaders, Ross Athletic, CheerSPORT, and
others.
Today,
cheerleading has grown to an estimated 4 million participants in the
United States
alone.
The 2000 major
motion picture Bring
It On was a movie based on cheerleading.
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