For the last week of December, we’re re-posting some of our favorite posts from 2012. Cross-posted at Jezebel, the Huffington Post, and Pacific Standard.
You might be surprised to learn that at its inception in the mid-1800s cheerleading was an all-male sport. Characterized by gymnastics, stunts, and crowd leadership, cheerleading was considered equivalent in prestige to an American flagship of masculinity, football. As the editors of Nation saw it in 1911:
…the reputation of having been a valiant “cheer-leader” is one of the most valuable things a boy can take away from college. As a title to promotion in professional or public life, it ranks hardly second to that of having been a quarterback.*
Indeed, cheerleading helped launch the political careers of three U.S. Presidents. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Franklin Roosevelt, and Ronald Reagan were cheerleaders. Actor Jimmy Stewart was head cheerleader at Princeton. Republican leader Tom DeLay was a noted cheerleader at the University of Mississippi.
Women were mostly excluded from cheerleading until the 1930s. An early opportunity to join squads appeared when large numbers of men were deployed to fight World War I, leaving open spots that women were happy to fill.
When the men returned from war there was an effort to push women back out of cheerleading (some schools even banned female cheerleaders). The battle over whether women should be cheerleaders would go on for several decades. Argued one opponent in 1938:
[Women cheerleaders] frequently became too masculine for their own good… we find the development of loud, raucous voices… and the consequent development of slang and profanity by their necessary association with [male] squad members…**
Cheerleading was too masculine for women! Ultimately the effort to preserve cheer as an man-only activity was unsuccessful. With a second mass deployment of men during World War II, women cheerleaders were here to stay.
The presence of women changed how people thought about cheering. Because women were stereotyped as cute instead of “valiant,” the reputation of cheerleaders changed. Instead of a pursuit that “ranks hardly second” to quarterbacking, cheerleading’s association with women led to its trivialization. By the 1950s, the ideal cheerleader was no longer a strong athlete with leadership skills, it was someone with “manners, cheerfulness, and good disposition.” In response, boys pretty much bowed out of cheerleading altogether. By the 1960s, men and megaphones had been mostly replaced by perky co-eds and pom-poms:
Cheerleading in the sixties consisted of cutesy chants, big smiles and revealing uniforms. There were no gymnastic tumbling runs. No complicated stunting. Never any injuries. About the most athletic thing sixties cheerleaders did was a cartwheel followed by the splits.***
Cheerleading was transformed.
Of course, it’s not this way anymore. Cultural changes in gender norms continued to affect cheerleading. Now cheerleaders, still mostly women, pride themselves in being both athletic and spirited, a blending of masculine and feminine traits that is now considered ideal for women.
See also race and the changing shape of cheerleading and the amazing disappearing cheerleading outfit.
Citations after the jump:
* Adams, Natalie & Pamela Bettis. 2003. Commanding the Room in Short Skirts: Cheering as the Embodiment of Ideal Girlhood. Gender and Society 17, 1: 73-91.
** Davis, Laurel. 1994. A Postmodern Paradox? Cheerleaders at Women’s Sporting Events. In Women, Sport, and Culture, edited by Susan Birrell and Cheryl Cole. Human Kinetics.
*** McElroy, James. 1999. We’ve Got Spirit: The Life and Times of America’s Greatest Cheerleading Team. New York: Simon & Schuster.
Photos borrowed from How to be a Retronaut.
Comments 75
Missa Ndrea — March 19, 2012
This reminds of the post about women boxers. As soon as women get involved in any sport, all of a sudden (or perhaps gradually) school officials decides the activity needs to sell woman-as-sex in order to appeal to men.
Imagine what would happen if the audience was all lesbians. It wouldn't even occur to anybody to do that.
Elena — March 19, 2012
In Japan, cheerleading squads are still quite manly, too. There's a hilarious game for the Nintendo DS called Osu! Tatakae! Ouendan in which you tap to the rhythm of the music to direct your cheerleading squad to, eh, cheer people up when they need determination. Like this.
Zaewen — March 19, 2012
At Texas A&M University, the male cheerleader tradition is going on quite strong. Except they're called Yell Leaders and it's become a very masculine tradition, to the point of completely excluding femininity. Part of the tradition is that cheerleading groups shouldn't be or aren't allowed on campus, as well as the belief that women shouldn't be Yell Leaders (the Yell Leaders are an elected position, and the popular vote almost never goes for women or non-white men).
A very strong undercurrent of the Yell Leader tradition is that Yell Leaders are better than cheerleaders because they don't dance around in skimpy outfits waving pompoms and doing silly little cheers. In essence, they are more masculine, which is always better than the femininity of cheerleading.
Samgarrison22222 — March 20, 2012
Actually four former US presidents got their start cheerleading.. George W. Bush wielded the megaphone as head cheerleader at Phillips Academy.
Jmpwawoo — March 20, 2012
Trent Lott, the former Republican Senate leader, not Tom Delay, was a Rebel Yeller. And GW Bush '43 was a Yale cheerleader. Throw in Rick Perry at Texas A&M and in aggregate, they do not add luster to the avocation. Currently, cheer leading is a hyper demanding athletic enterprise. There are certain odd entry's that are realized from college cheerleading such as the University of Kentucy pipeline to high end medical sales as an example.
Off to Slovakia | Foreign Holidays — March 20, 2012
[...] http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2012/03/19/the-manly-origins-of-cheerleading/ [...]
No, Seriously, What About Teh Menz? — March 21, 2012
[...] God And/Or Evolution And Definitely Has Nothing To Do With Social Construction or Anything people: Cheerleading was originally considered a manly sport. 1911: …the reputation of having been a valiant “cheer-leader” is one of the most valuable [...]
Cuando ser cheerleader era cosa de hombres | Cooking Ideas — March 21, 2012
[...] y Ronald Reagan. El actor James Stewart también fue cheerleader en Princenton, según recuerta The Society Pages. Princenton fue, por cierto, la primera universidad en crear la figura del cheerleader, allá por [...]
Primanti Brothers, Chick-fil-a, Ken Myers, Powerpoint, Cheerleading, and Vaccinations « 81 Inches — March 21, 2012
[...] The Manly Origins of Cheerleading – Fascinating! (via Laura McLay) [...]
Leblue — March 21, 2012
Well, in Japan, cheerleading is still seen as a very masculine thing, with the commanding presence and leadership skills it requires to keep a crowd enthusiastic. However, Japanese cheerleading doesn't require gymnastic, just sort of a masculine charisma. Of course they know of the "western" cheerleader, but it's seen as two very different types of activities.
Cheerleaders waren ooit macho mannen « De Zesde Clan — March 22, 2012
[...] Reagan met elkaar gemeen? Ze waren alledrie cheerleaders. Ze kozen voor deze activiteit omdat het een goed podium was om hun mannelijkheid te bewijzen, waarna ze konden doorstromen naar belangrijke banen met status. De Minnesota Rooster Kings, circa [...]
Doug H — March 22, 2012
love this post, lisa. a fascinating little case study with uses and applications not only for gender studies but also for sport scholarship, research on body culture, and theories of social change. also, on a much different note, reminded me of a editor's column chris and I wrote in Contexts about being cheerleaders for social science. have to admit, i don't remember and don't think we discussed, the gendered angles of all that.
Epicene Cyborg — March 22, 2012
[...] The Manly Origins of Cheerleading. [...]
Best of the Interwebs « thescarletapple — March 23, 2012
[...] The Manly Origins of Cheerleading. Lisa Wade. Did you know that Cheerleading was NOT ONLY a male sport, but considered to be on par with being equivalent in masculinity and prestige to football. I didnt, and this is incredibly interesting – including how perceptions of cheerleading changed as it became a female activity (note that I dropped the word sport…) [...]
Teknologeek.com » Ser “Porrista” No Siempre ha sido cosa de Mujer — March 25, 2012
[...] y Ronald Reagan. El actor James Stewart también fue cheerleader en Princenton, según recuerta The Society Pages. Princenton fue, por cierto, la primera universidad en crear la figura del cheerleader, allá por [...]
The Manly Origins of Cheerleading – Sociological Images « Dead Wild Roses — March 26, 2012
[...] over to SI and read the whole thing. Share this:StumbleUponDiggRedditFacebookTwitterEmailMoreLinkedInPrintLike this:LikeBe the first to [...]
Open Thread And Link Farm, I’ll Dig Out Your Eye Edition | Alas, a Blog — March 27, 2012
[...] The Manly Origins of Cheerleading » Sociological Images [...]
Link share goodness! « umsu.wom*n's — March 29, 2012
[...] The manly origins of cheerleading [...]
Muško podrijetlo navijačica (cheerleaders) » Centar za društveno-humanistička istraživanja — May 15, 2012
[...] Autorica: Lisa Wade Prevela: Marija Šarić Izvor: http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2012/03/19/the-manly-origins-of-cheerleading/ [...]
Cheerleaders (m/f) and why workforce diversity policies only work if you’re not a bigot « My Gender Is Awesome — May 20, 2012
[...] you know cheerleading was a men’s sports? ‘Cause, I didn’t, until I encountered this article about the origins of cheerleading. Apparently, it started as an all male sports, a very athletic [...]
US American Irish Stereotypes | I blame it on cultural capital — June 7, 2012
[...] Sociological Images has a lot of interesting features, by the way, such as this one on the male origins of cheerleading. [...]
Book Review – Bullied by Carrie Goldman | survivingthemadhouse — September 20, 2012
[...] know cheer-leading, a primarily “girl sport” (a very sexualized one at that), was a male dominated sport until the 1930s? Women were a rare sight in a secretarial pool until the [...]
Manly Cheerleading — The Good Men Project — November 20, 2012
[...] God And/Or Evolution And Definitely Has Nothing To Do With Social Construction or Anything people: Cheerleading was originally considered a manly sport. 1911: …the reputation of having been a valiant “cheer-leader” is one of the most valuable [...]
John Hensley — December 28, 2012
As a male I'm very upset about this appropriation of my distinctive identity[/mensrights]
7 Stories to read this weekend — Tech News and Analysis — December 29, 2012
[...] The manly origins of Cheerleading: No seriously. [...]
7 Stories to read this weekend | Wikisis — December 29, 2012
[...] The manly origins of Cheerleading: No seriously. [...]
Global Tech Review | 7 Stories to read this weekend — December 29, 2012
[...] The manly origins of Cheerleading: No seriously. [...]
7 Stories to read this weekend - Cleantech Reporter — December 29, 2012
[...] The manly origins of Cheerleading: No seriously. [...]
The History Of Cheerleading | Centives — January 1, 2013
[...] Read more about the surprising history of cheerleaders over here. [...]
Assorted Links 49 | The London School of Attraction — January 21, 2013
[...] Real cheerleaders wear pants. Have a look what cheerleaders really looked like until about [...]
From Manly to Sexy: the History of the High Heels | Jenn's Closet — March 7, 2013
[...] tainted their power as a status symbol for men. (This, by the way, is exactly what happened with cheerleading, originally exclusively for men). With the Enlightenment, which emphasized rationality (i.e., practical footwear), everyone quit [...]
BIGBOY — April 10, 2013
yehaw
The Manly Origins of Cheerleading - — April 30, 2013
[...] post originally appeared on Sociological Images, a Pacific Standard partner [...]
Meet the "Prancing Elites," Mobile, Alabama’s All Black, Mostly Male Cheer Squad | Alabama News Feed — June 30, 2013
[...] cheerleaders are, of course, zero new. In fact, the competition was creatively recognised of as exclusively for men — not surprising, perhaps, given that during a time of a pregnancy (the midst 1800s), women were [...]
Kyle — July 31, 2013
Thinking it was a good idea to make saying your breasts is lovely a "crime"? What do we call dumb,conceited,spiteful,irreverent women like you? Give me a B, give me an r, give me an a, give me an i, give me an n, give me a w, give me an a, give me an s, give me an h, give me an e, give me a d, give me an f, give me an o, give me another o, give me an l, give me an s, what does that spell? Brainwashed fools. Thats what you are, the foemeanists are and all of of you are going to be punished for judging and incriminating innocent men over trivial compliments. Harlotry is not a profession,calling,etc. and its not the oldest either, hunting and gathering is alot older as is blacksmithing should be called the oldest profession instead because its an actual occupation.
Gear Cheer — August 28, 2013
Well of course cheerleading was once an all male sport, everything was.
Cheerleading-The Vintage Edition | The Vintage Inn — September 10, 2013
[...] and Ronald Reagan were cheerleaders. Actor Jimmy Stewart was head cheerleader at Princeton (“The Manly Origins of Cheerleading” by Lisa Wade, [...]
Good luck! | Anneli & jag — October 13, 2013
[...] ps läs mer om cheerleadingens historia [...]
9 Facts That Prove Traditional Definitions Of Gender Roles Are Bullsh*t | Pride & Equality Post — April 16, 2014
[…] His legacy was carried on by Dwight D. Eisenhower, Franklin Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan — all cheerleaders. It wasn’t until the 1920s and 1930s that women were really included (and not until the 1960s […]
9 Facts That Prove Traditional Definitions Of Gender Roles Are Bullsh*t | Times of News | Online breaking and Latest News From USA — April 17, 2014
[…] His legacy was carried on by Dwight D. Eisenhower, Franklin Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan — all cheerleaders. It wasn’t until the 1920s and 1930s that women were really included (and not until the 1960s […]
Bărbați feminiști: “O femeie la conducere nu este o performanță, e normalitate” (II) | TOTB.ro - Think Outside the Box — September 19, 2014
[…] articulează istoric în funcție de modul în care sunt conceptualizate rolurile sociale (de ex., primele majorete au fost bărbați, la fel și primii însoțitori de zbor, iar până la începutul secolului XX, rozul era culoarea […]
“O femeie la conducere nu este o performanță, e normalitate” (II) | TOTB.ro - Think Outside the Box — September 19, 2014
[…] articulează istoric în funcție de modul în care sunt conceptualizate rolurile sociale (de ex., primele majorete au fost bărbați, la fel și primii însoțitori de zbor, iar până la începutul secolului XX, rozul era culoarea […]
10 Primary Sources | Multimedia Storytelling — January 30, 2015
[…] *http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2012/12/28/the-manly-origins-of-cheerleading/ […]
Adam’s Fun Facts: Male Cheerleaders, “Sudbury School”, Stop Signs First Color & More « MIX 105.1 — March 11, 2015
[…] 2. Cheerleading was an all-male sport when it started in the mid-1800s and stayed that way until World War One, when men went off to battle and women filled in. (The Society Pages) […]
QCMS: 5 Random Facts — March 11, 2015
[…] / The Society Pages / Wikipedia / Wikipedia / New York […]
History of the Heels | Godsloveandlaw's Blog — December 11, 2015
[…] tainted their power as a status symbol for men. (This, by the way, is exactly what happened withcheerleading, originally exclusively for men). With the Enlightenment, which emphasized rationality (i.e., practical footwear), everyone quit […]
Cheerleading: Really a sport? | caitlinshae — March 20, 2016
[…] from where it began. Its beginnings are closely linked to American Football, and originally was a males only club. The cheering of footballers has drastically changed to what is competitive cheerleading […]
Cheerleading: Is really a sport? – My Melbourne News — March 22, 2016
[…] from where it began. Its beginnings are closely linked to American Football, and originally was a males only club. The cheering of footballers has drastically changed to what is competitive […]
10 Gender Stereotypes That Used To Be Different - Viral News Buzz On The Web — August 24, 2016
[…] Photo credit: thesocietypages.org […]
熱き青春!アニメにもなっている男子チアリーディングの魅力って? | WAO! English BEAT特設ブログ BEAT板 — September 6, 2016
[…] 出典:The Manly Origins of Cheerleading – The Society Pages […]
5 Gender Stereotype That Were The Opposite Not Very Long Ago — March 2, 2017
[…] you read that right – cheerleading was originally a guy thing! This article says, up until the world wars, men cheerleaders was the norm and was considered that the reputation of […]
Cheerleading originally used to be a male sport. And back then, it actually used to be difficult & physically demanding. Then as always, women stole it for themselves because they couldn’t think of something original on their own. by gods_bones — June 15, 2018
[…] Pictures and comments at the source: https://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2012/12/28/the-manly-origins-of-cheerleading/ […]
10 Masculine Things that are now Considered Feminine and Vice-Versa — August 3, 2018
[…] In the subsequent years, it was women who continued to be the major part of cheerleading. The reputation of cheerleaders changed, and it came to be stereotyped as being feminine. (1, 2) […]
Stereotypes v. Reality – Gone with the Wind — September 20, 2018
[…] and throw us in the air for almost two hours every day. The guys on our cheer team are some of the manliest and strongest guys I […]
I’m One of the World’s Top Male Synchronized Swimmers - MEL Magazine — November 23, 2018
[…] men leave certain domains once women successfully integrate into them (and which happened in cheerleading and flight […]
Marilynric — January 23, 2019
I am glad that I found this site!
Football Fans & Rainbow Bridges - Wisdom Nuggets and Nothing Burgers — September 5, 2019
[…] Cheerleaders. Yep, hate to bust your balls but in the beginning cheerleading was an all-men’s sport. No half shirts, no mini skirts, no big boobs or big hair. Just Harry and Dick (and their hairy dicks-n-balls). […]
10 things to know about Kyle Tanguay, the Eagles' first male cheerleader in 35 years - Philadelphia Insurance Group — September 8, 2019
[…] an all-male sport. When the stunt acts were introduced in the 1800s as entertainment during games, females were banned from the squads. That continued up until the world wars, when holes left by the draft afforded women many new […]
5. poschodie Rozhľadne - Rovnosť pohlaví - Skauti myslia globálne — December 10, 2019
[…] ako muži. Máte naopak zvláštne pocity z predstavy mužov, ktorí robia roztlieskavanie? Pritom cheerleading začínal ako mužský šport, dlhé roky zakazovaný ženám, pre príliš chlapskú povahu. Keďže roztlieskavanie bolo […]
#5 – Claudia Molina — March 2, 2020
[…] Credit: The Society Pages […]
Blog #1: How Does Socialization Affect Cheerleading? – Courtney Sharkey's Gender Blog — October 18, 2020
[…] https://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2012/12/28/the-manly-origins-of-cheerleading/ […]
Male fan of the Eagles: Meet Philly native James Leggett | 711web — October 11, 2021
[…] sport. When stunts became entertainment during sporting events in the 19th century, Women are banned from teams. This practice continued until the World Wars, when most of the able young men were conscripted […]
The Straight Men Who Want Nothing to Do With Women — January 27, 2022
[…] latter half of the 1800s and the early 1900s, cheerleading was seen as a decidedly manly pursuit, “ranking hardly second to that of having been a quarterback.” In fact, cheerleading helped launch the political careers of Dwight D. Eisenhower, Franklin […]
RANDOM TIDS & BITS- Tue 4/12/22- WAXX — April 12, 2022
[…] all-male sport when it started in the mid-1800s . . . and stayed that way until World War One, when men went off to battle and women filled […]
John Smith — September 11, 2024
Wow, it give me new information about cheerleader