| Chicago Bears Team History
  The 
                  Chicago Bears are one of only two charter members of the National 
                  Football League still in existence. Their 1,000-game history 
                  started in Decatur, Ill. in 1920 when the Staley Starch Company 
                  decided to sponsor a football team. Then on September 17, 1920, 
                  the Staleys, with George Halas as their representative, joined 
                  the American Professional Football Association, which was renamed 
                  the National Football League in 1922. The franchise fee was 
                  $100. 
 In 1921, the Staley Starch Company gave Halas the team, $5,000 
                  and permission to move the team to Chicago if he would agree 
                  to keep the Staleys name for a year. The Staleys won the 1921 
                  league championship. A year later, the team was renamed the 
                  Chicago Bears.
 
 From the very start, the Bears were one of pro football's most 
                  successful and innovative franchises. They were the first to 
                  buy a player from another team -- $100 for Ed Healey from Rock 
                  Island in 1922. The Bears signed the fabled collegiate all-America, 
                  Red Grange, in 1925 and then showcased him before the first 
                  huge pro football crowds.
 
 In 1932, they defeated the Portsmouth Spartans 9-0 to win the 
                  championship in the first NFL game to be played indoors. The 
                  next year, they inaugurated the NFL championship series by defeating 
                  the New York Giants, 23-21.
 
 The Bears kicked off the 1940s with four straight NFL championship 
                  appearances. The Bears won three, including the famous 73-0 
                  annihilation of the Washington Redskins in 1940. Despite winning 
                  nearly 60 percent of their games in the 1950s, the Bears did 
                  not win an NFL title and made only one playoff appearance. They 
                  finally broke a 17-year championship drought with a 14-10 win 
                  over the New York Giants in 1963.
 
 Almost all of the successes on and off the field for the Bears 
                  in the 64-year period between 1920 and 1983 can be attributed 
                  to George (Papa Bear) Halas, who served the Bears as an owner, 
                  player, coach, general manager, traveling secretary, and in 
                  virtually every other capacity imaginable. Halas split his 40-year 
                  coaching into four 10-year segments. When he retired after the 
                  1967 season, he ranked as the all-time leader in coaching victories 
                  with 324, a record that stood for 27 years.
 
 Halas died on October 31, 1983, but the Bears tradition is carried 
                  on today by grandson Michael McCaskey, who served as club president 
                  and chief executive officer and is now Chairman of the Board. 
                  In its first 74 years, the team compiled a 586-384-42 overall 
                  record. Chicago qualified for the playoffs 21 times, won 19 
                  division titles, eight NFL championships and Super Bowl XX.
 
 The Bears also have the proud distinction of listing the most 
                  long-time team members as Pro Football Hall of Fame enshrinees. 
                  Such names as Red Grange, Bronko Nagurski, Sid Luckman, Dick 
                  Butkus, Gale Sayers, Walter Payton, Bulldog Turner, Danny Fortmann 
                  and Halas himself are true legends not only of the Bears, but 
                  of pro football itself.
 
 For their first 51 seasons in Chicago, the Bears played in Wrigley 
                  Field, the famous home of the Chicago Cubs baseball team. Since 
                  1971, with the exception of one season in 2002 during the stadium's 
                  renovation, they have played in Soldier Field in downtown Chicago.
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