The Great American Bash was invented by
Dusty Rhodes, a prominent wrestler of the
National Wrestling Alliance (NWA), who became a wrestler and booker of the NWA's
Jim Crockett Promotions (JCP). The first Great American Bash event was held by JCP on July 6, 1985, in
Charlotte, North Carolina at the
American Legion Memorial Stadium. In 1986 and 1987, The Great American Bash was held as a series of events. It was broadcast on
closed-circuit television until the
1988 event, when it began broadcasting on
pay-per-view (PPV). In November that year, JCP was purchased by
Turner Broadcasting System and JCP was rebranded as
World Championship Wrestling (WCW). WCW continued to produce The Great American Bash under the NWA banner until WCW seceded from the NWA in January 1991. As such, the
1991 event was the first Great American Bash produced by WCW alone. After the
1992 event, WCW did not hold the PPV again until
1995. It then continued annually until 2000. as in March 2001, WCW was purchased by the
World Wrestling Federation (WWF), which was renamed to World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) in May 2002. After a four-year hiatus, the event was revived by WWE in 2004. To coincide with the
brand extension, where the promotion divided its roster into brands where wrestlers were exclusively assigned to perform, the
2004 event was held exclusively for the
SmackDown! brand. It continued to be held exclusively for SmackDown! in
2005 and
2006. Following
WrestleMania 23 in April 2007, brand-exclusive PPVs were discontinued, thus the events from 2007 to 2009 featured the
Raw, SmackDown!, and
ECW brands. In 2009, the event was renamed as
The Bash. In April 2011, WWE ceased using its full name with the WWE abbreviation becoming an
orphaned initialism. The company then revived The Great American Bash once in July 2012 under the event's original full name, but it was held as a
television special, airing as a
special episode of
SmackDown. After another eight years, WWE again revived the event, this time for their
developmental brand,
NXT, as a two-part
special episode of
NXT. The event was scheduled to again be held as a special episode of
NXT in 2021, but reduced to one night, thus becoming an annual event for NXT. In 2023, the event was broadcast via
livestreaming, marking the first Great American Bash to air on WWE's livestreaming platforms,
Peacock in the United States and the
WWE Network in most international markets. It returned to being a television special of
NXT in 2024, but as a two-night event for the first time since 2020. ==Events==