Lafayette College in Pennsylvania is accredited with the first known use of the huddle, in 1926. From the first College Football game to the 1890s, players discussed the plays away from the line of scrimmage in an unorganized way, much like college football itself was. From then to the 1920s, hand signals were used in the same form, but was ineffective, because the opposing team could easily learn plays. From then on, football became more popular, and so did the huddle, and teams stopped using signals and would instead communicate the play in the huddle.
Started with the University of Gallaudet (school for the deaf). Founded in 1864 located in Washington D.C.
Madame Curie, maybe? Radium.
a lady (maybe empress) was walking in her garden and discovered silk (sth. like that)
maybe sedimentary rock......
It was colonized by the naples and then was formed when the wealthy inhabitants of eastern Italy move in and started a larger colonization formed with Pompeii, then they they were bothe destroyed in 79AD after Mount Vesuvius erupted.
It was discovered or formed when Paul Hubbard, a deaf player who went to Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C. To avoid having the other team see his sign language between plays, he and his team huddled together to conceal the signs.
ummmm....maybe to keep warm????? I don't know!!!!!
Because once their was a game in high school football between a deaf school and a normal high school. When the deaf school were choosing their plays they were deaf so they had to communicate using hand language but the other team could see what plays they were doing. So then the huddle was formed to hide what teams plan to do.
Started with the University of Gallaudet (school for the deaf). Founded in 1864 located in Washington D.C.
A group of whales can be called a huddle.
It might of got discovered by the vikings ,maybe.
animals huddle together to keep warm in some situations
Franklin Huddle was born in 1943.
Huddle - software - was created in 2006.
David Huddle was born in 1942.
Jack Huddle was born in 1928.
Jack Huddle died in 1973.