N.F.L.|Virginia McCaskey, Owner and Pillar of the Chicago Bears, Dies at 102
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/06/sports/football/virginia-mccaskey-dead.html
You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.
The daughter of the Bears founder and football pioneer George Halas, she took the reins beginning in 1983, after the death of her brother, George Jr.
![A close-up photo of her smiling while sitting outdoors. She has collar-length gray hair and wears oval sunglasses.](https://static01.nyt.com/images/2025/02/06/multimedia/06McCaskey-01-hmjf/06McCaskey-01-hmjf-articleLarge.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp&disable=upscale)
Feb. 6, 2025Updated 2:03 p.m. ET
Virginia Halas McCaskey, the longtime owner of the Chicago Bears and the daughter of George Halas Sr., who created the team and was one of the founding fathers of the N.F.L., died on Thursday. She was 102 and had spent her entire life around the team going back to the 1920s.
The Bears, who announced her death on their website, did not list a cause or specify where she died.
Mrs. McCaskey attended nearly every Bears game for decades. She witnessed eight of the Bears’ nine league titles (their first championship was in 1921, before she was born and when the team was named the Staleys), as well as its only Super Bowl championship, in January 1986.
She met many of the dozens of Bears players who were inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame, a list that includes Red Grange, Bronko Nagurski, Dick Butkus and Walter Payton, as well as her father, who died in 1983.
Mrs. McCaskey never took her front row seat to N.F.L. history for granted.
“All the opportunities I’ve had, all the privileges I’ve had, all the miracles I’ve watched — I’m just very grateful,” she said in “A Lifetime of Sundays,” a 2019 documentary celebrating the N.F.L.’s 100th anniversary. “I can’t think of a better life.”
While she occupied the owner’s suite during games, she rooted like an everyday fan. In 2003, at the first game in the newly remodeled Soldier Field in Chicago, Mrs. McCaskey sat with the former N.F.L. commissioner Paul Tagliabue as the Bears lost to their archrivals, the Green Bay Packers.