Yes if you are looking for money just ask them I am sure they will give something or you can try asking the Brewers.
go to e Green Bay packers game
15,000 each
If this question can be answered, the Packers were orignally called the Indians, for part of the 1919 season after the Indian Meat Packing Company in Green Bay that put up the money for equipment and uniforms. Later in the same season Lambeau (an employee of the meat packing company) called his team the Packers. It has been the Packers ever since.
they make $1,000,000 a year squat
Hospitals get money from the patients, they get donation.
the Atlanta Falcons he was drafted 33rd overall
In 1919, Curley Lambeau asked his employer, the Indian Packing Company, for money to buy uniforms. They gave him $500 on the condition that the team be named after the company. Lambeau named the team the 'Packers'.
No, George Halas did not loan the Packers money - the Packers actually loaned George Halas money. The Packers were in serious financial trouble after the 1922 season and were saved by making the ownership of the franchise public, an effort led by Andrew Turnbull. In 1932, when George Halas was having financial difficulty meeting the Bears payroll (during the Depression), Halas borrowed money from his mother, his mother in law and ($1,500) from the Packers. In 1956, with the Packers facing the threat of NFL relocation unless city residents approved a new football stadium (now Lambeau Field), Halas spoke forcefully at a rally to encourage local Green Bay voters to approve public funding for reconstruction of their football field. The referendum measure passed, and some give Halas at least some credit for promoting it for the Packers.
The Indian Meat Packing Company payed for the team's uniforms and athletic field when they were originally established in 1919.
No. They got the name packers from a meat packaging company that donated money to them when the NFL was starting.
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An organization that was not made to make money.