ARTICLE COMPARISON Write a 750-1000-word paper that summarizes each of the articles, places them within a broader theme or topic, and then compares and contrasts their conclusions and the evidence marshalled in support of these, combining both annotation and synthesis skills.· Exemplary papers will recognize that that scholarly research is the product of historical inquiry by scholars and include a discussion of the evidence presented by historians and the ways in which methods and evidence are used to support the conclusions drawn.· The two articles on which each assignment is based should be included in a reference list or bibliography (depending upon the referencing style used) at the end of the assignment, with direct quotations from each paper cited appropriately within the body of the paper.· In addition to formatting and referencing, marks will also be deducted for errors of syntax, grammar, and spelling.· Assignments should be in 12-point Times New Roman font, double-spaced, with all pages numbered, and the student’s name and student number appearing on the title page. Both title and reference pages are required.· The title of the assignment should be: Scholarly Article Comparison: Topic #2 · APA STYLEGOAL: To compare and contrast two scholarly articles on the history of physical activity, leisure, and sport, with the aim of demonstrating how historical knowledge is constructed by historians who gather and present evidence in support of particular conclusions.
ARTICLE COMPARISON Write a 750-1000-word paper that summarizes each of the articles, places them within a broader theme or topic, and then compares and contrasts their conclusions and the evidence ma
111 Playgrounds are ubiquitous children’s spaces in urban landscapes. They symbolize children’s presence and absence in cities around the world. The modern urban playground is a product of the playground movement originating in the American northeast, an early twentieth-century continuation of the child-saving movement. This movement sought to combine ideas of physical culture from Germany with ideas of moral education and was designed to assimilate immigrant children, elevate the character of poor children, and reform cities by altering the landscape with parks and open spaces (Howell 989). The playground movement was intertwined with the City Beautiful movement and with urban reform efforts that characterized urban planning in late nineteenth-century North America. Playgrounds became sites through which to materialize civic leaders’ progressive thinking about cities and to illustrate their care for children. As Viviana A. Zelizer has detailed, the child-saving movement placed a new-found value on children Abstract: This paper examines how adults used playgrounds to discipline children in early twentieth-century Toronto. Using a close reading of playground texts from the period, the argument supports and elaborates upon Elisabeth Young-Bruehl’s discussion of childism and Michel Foucault’s arguments about the control of activity and the art of distributions in the discipline of children. Adult reformers used time and space in order to produce particular gender identities and also to fulfill their own narcissistic needs. The Toronto case illustrates the depth of social power that often resides in seemingly benign urban spaces and the ways in which the prejudice against children can control their micromobilities and geographies. Keywords: playgrounds; childism; micromobilities; geographies of children Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Disciplining Children in Toronto Playgrounds in the Early Twentieth Century 227 112 as an image of the future (71). In contrast to earlier abuses of children emerging from industrial capitalism, philanthropists between the 1870s and the 1890s created numerous institutions that sought to provide services particularly for children: children’s courts, children’s hospitals, children’s correctional institutions, children’s labour laws, and mandatory schooling laws (Platt 102). The surge of interest in childhood led to the creation of much new knowledge about children’s development and particular ways to apply this knowledge. Playgrounds were not exempt from this new regime of knowledge. Playgrounds were not simply sites or places for play but were set up as municipal programs with specialist supervisors teaching physical and moral education (Cavallo 14).This article examines one example of the playground movement in Toronto in order to discuss how children’s bodies and their micromobilities helped to produce the space of the playground. I draw first on Elisabeth Young-Bruehl’s discussion of childism as a strand of the philanthropy of the Child Savers (282) in order to provide a theoretical framework for the paper. I use the distinction she makes between the Child Savers and the Progressives to find childism in a progressive movement. Finally, I use Michel Foucault’s discussion of discipline in space and time from Discipline and Punish in order to highlight the narcissistic childism diffused through technologies in the playground (141–47). Playground discipline in early twentieth-century Toronto employed surprisingly similar discourses to contemporary discussions of the need for regulation of children’s lives and spaces. By tying together these recurrences, I illustrate the childism that lies in many programs that espouse the protection of children. Child Savers, Progressives, and Childism In her 2012 book Childism: Confronting Prejudice against Children, Young-Bruehl argues that prejudice against children is pervasive in contemporary Western society (8). This belief leads to actions against children that range from child abuse and neglect to poor school systems to the over-prescription of drugs as a technique for creating students who are easy to teach alongside a range of everyday prejudicial acts that limit children’s full self-expression. Young-Bruehl’s observations emerge from her experience as a psychoanalyst who treats patients seeking relief from symptoms that spring from difficult childhoods, abusive families, and dysfunctional social systems. Young-Bruehl notes that the history of the field of child abuse and neglect has often resorted to victim blaming in its terminology (compare battered child syndrome to battering parent syndrome, for example) and argues for a new, overarching framework to highlight this prejudice and politicize it—childism. She describes her project like this: Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 113 Since the mid-twentieth century, social scientists have been exploring the many reasons why individual adults harm individual children, but they have not looked at the wider picture of how harm to children is rationalized, normalized. Prejudice against children is not the sole or the immediate cause of child maltreatment, but it is the conditio sine qua non, and we need to understand its various features if we wish to uncover the specific causes of maltreatment in any given instance. (6) Young-Bruehl argues that legacies of prejudice are borne in the life of the perpetrator of child abuse or neglect in narcissistic, obsessional, and hysterical forms, forms she understands in the terms of Freud’s basic categorization of neuroses (48–52). The narcissistic form of childism is self-oriented and ignores children, resulting often in the neglect of children’s physical, psychological, and emotional needs. The obsessional form of childism is eliminative, seeking to destroy children through various rules and punishments, usually physical abuse. The hysterical form of childism seeks to manipulate the behaviour of children and creates a splitting of the good child and the bad child, disallowing a range of behaviours, emotions, and experiences in children’s lives. The form of abuse in the hysterical neurotic form is often sexual, using children as an object for the gratification of an adult’s need for domination and control. Apart from categorizing her clients’ childisms through the several case histories in her book, Young- Bruehl also applies her schema to the Child Savers of the late nineteenth century in order to highlight the transhistorical nature of this kind of treatment and the psychical commonality that allows it to flourish (281–88). Following the lines of Foucault’s arguments about the hysterical woman and the onanistic child in The History of Sexuality, Young-Bruehl argues that the Child Savers created new categories of children upon whom they would confer particular treatments. The first category of child that they created, she suggests, was the destitute child of the obsessional form of childism. This child was eliminated by placing out, often sent away from the corrupting forces of the city by civic or philanthropic groups, thus removing the problem from view. Young-Bruehl argues that the narcissistic form of childism created the second category of the neglected child. This child was seen as wayward and in need of guidance and discipline in sweatshops and workhouses, also known euphemistically as Houses of Refuge. The third category of child was the delinquent, a child who defied the Child Savers’ middle-class values but who could be corrected with a series of laws and institutions like courts and jails. Young-Bruehl posits that the Progressives, child advocates of the 1890s to the 1920s who followed the Child Savers in their efforts to change the lives of urban children, were better equipped to help Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 114 children because of their life experiences and class position (288). In comparison to their earlier counterparts, these individuals were born largely after the Civil War; often, they were suffragettes from middle-class households, professionalized through the settlement house movement; and they typically were advocates of anti–child- labour laws. Child savers were often elite individuals whose advocacy for children emerged from the movement for the humane treatment of animals. By contrast, the Progressives were interested in childhood as a unique period in an individual’s development and in the psychological effects of the maltreatment of children. Their strategies for uplifting children were less abusive than those of their earlier counterparts: for example, there was no longer an interest in placing children on isolated farms as unpaid labourers. They took the position that they could best help children through education, legislation reform, and the creation of the foster care system. These reformers saw citizenship as a strategy for caretaking and poverty as a complex problem that was not based on genetic inferiority.There are indications, however, that the distinctions between the Child Savers and the Progressives posited by Young-Bruehl did not represent a complete break. Periodizations are often fuzzy, and, in this case, traces of previous forms of childism remain in the progressive era. In my reading of the history, the playground movement and its disciplining of children’s bodies can be seen as a lingering form of narcissistic childism. That is, the playground movement was a way to use children for the reformers’ own motives: while the obsessional form of elimination that was applied to the “destitute child” by the Child Savers was not applied by the Progressives, they retained the categories of “neglected” and “delinquent” children who could be taught, demonstrating their The type of discipline applied in the playground movement . . . points to a continued form of childism. Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 115 progressive understanding of social problems. The type of discipline applied in the playground movement—the particularities of the ways in which bodies were manipulated and identities were created and erased—points to a continued form of childism. It is necessary, I maintain, to examine histories in fine- grained detail in order to highlight how childism works at different levels, even in seemingly benign places like playgrounds. The Playground MovementCanadian research on playgrounds is sparse compared to the wealth of studies in the United States. 1 Scholars have attributed this omission to scant archival records, the absence of a national association like the Playgrounds Association of America, and the paucity of autobiographies of urban young people of this period in Canada. 2 Like other researchers in the field, I have turned to peripheral sources such as the records of private philanthropic organizations, the minutes of city councils, the records of boards of education and parks departments, diaries, scrapbooks, photographs, maps, and newspaper records to fill the gaps in the existing literature. 3 The stories that emerge from these records are of competing interests, where civic leaders in their attempt to please their constituents implement playgrounds that eventually are taken over by play and recreation workers who are entrenched in municipal government. In the Toronto case, the Parks Department and the Board of Education were important actors in the playground movement, but, similarly to other cities, the tasks of publicity and propaganda were left to a group of citizens interested in promoting playgrounds. J. J. Kelso, the first Superintendent of Neglected and Dependent Children for the province of Ontario from 1893 to 1907, approached the Toronto Board of Education in the late 1890s with a proposal for a playground in the centre of the city. Kelso, in his role of children’s advocate, had visited several cities at the leading edge of playground building in the United States and had encountered influential actors involved in the movement at various charities and at commons conventions, settlement houses, and other social institutions (Jones and Rutman 116). In November 1906, he printed five hundred copies of his first treatise on the need for playgrounds, Supervised Playgrounds: One of the Greatest Needs in Toronto To-day. The text of this small booklet was taken from a letter he had written to the Globe in which he outlined why playgrounds were important in the Toronto Centre district of St. John’s Ward, one of the poorest areas of the city. The pamphlet was illustrated with images of playgrounds, probably from Manhattan, lent to him by the American Institute of Social Service. Kelso’s ultimate question was “How would [a supervised playground] look in Toronto?” (12). Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 116 Kelso’s position in the Department of Neglected and Dependent Children and his training as a journalist were important in his organization of a Toronto Playgrounds Association. He cites his experience helping to support his family as a messenger boy in Toronto as one of the reasons that he was interested in the playground movement: to give other children the carefree childhood he did not have. Because old play places were increasingly regulated by rules about private property, a carefree childhood depended, in his view, on creating spatial changes to the urban form. Kelso detailed his views about children and his relationship to them in his diaries; he saw children as friends and took their hardships personally. In 1906, Kelso wrote on a regular basis to the Toronto Board of Control, the purse keepers of the city, and received replies indicating that the playgrounds matter would be referred to the Board of Education. Like many of the American reformers, Kelso had hoped that the city would play an important role in providing municipal playgrounds with tax funds so that playgrounds could be distributed equitably across the areas where they were most needed. At schools and halls throughout 1907 and 1908, Kelso gave illustrated speeches with lantern-slide projections to promote the virtues of playgrounds. Agitation from the Local Council of Women and University Women’s Club, alongside Kelso’s recommendations and popular opinion about the importance of playgrounds, encouraged the city to send a representative to the first congress of the Playground Association of America, held in Chicago in June 1907 (Board of Control). Mayor Coatsworth and the Board of Control chose Alderman J. W. Bengough to represent the city and to return with information on playground work in the United States. On his return, Bengough called for the city “to take the necessary steps to secure land for adequate parks and playgrounds in every ward of the city, and next to secure the adoption of a financial scheme by which their equipment and maintenance will be assured” (Kelso, “Play”). In 1908, the Toronto School Board opened the first five supervised playgrounds in Canada (Reeves). These supervised playgrounds were located at Elizabeth Street School, Niagara Street School, Borden Street School, Park School, and Queen Alexandra School (labels 1–5 in fig. 1). According to the School Board Annual Reports, programs were held from 8:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. in July and August with the exception of the Elizabeth Street School, which held programming only in the mornings (Board of Education). Each of these playgrounds had four to five supervisors, mainly teachers and principals, with an annual cost of $1,313.66 in materials and salaries. The average attendance at each playground was over 284 children in the summer season (Board of Education). The playgrounds were spread over the developed areas of the city, and most were equipped with some Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 117 Figure 1: Map of Playgrounds in Toronto and their Founding Organizations, 1915. Sources: GEORIA Project, Shoreline, Toronto Streets, Toronto Boundaries, CTAP 144612-4, 487, 196. ARBET, 1905-1918. four playgrounds with asterisks could not be located. Cartography by Ann Marie F. Murnaghan. Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 118 ID Name Year F ounding Organization 1 Elizabeth Street Sc hool /Hester How 1905 Pri vate 2 Niagar a School 1908 TBE 3 Borden School 1908 TBE 4 P ark School 1908 TBE 5 Queen Alexandra 1908 TBE 6 St. Andrew’s Square 1909 TP A 7 J esse Ketchum 1909 TBE 8 Y ork School 1909 TBE 9 V ictoria Street Crèche 1909 TBE 10 Argyle Street/Osler 1910 TP A 11 Broc k Avenue/ McCormick 1911 TP A 12 McCaul School 1911 TBE 13 Rose School 1911 TBE 14 Cherry Street/Sac kville Street/Canadian Northern 1911 TP A 15 Rosedale 1911 Pri vate 16 Ho ward School 1912 TBE 17 Exhibition 1912 TP A 18 Regent Street/O’Neill 1912 TP A 19 Ri verdale High School 1912 TBE 20 Str athcona School 1912 TBE 21 Carlton 1913 TP A 22 Earlscourt 1913 TP A 23 Essex Street School 1913 TBE 24 Bo y’s Home 1913 Pri vate 25 Girls home 1913 Pri vate 26 Leslie Grove 1913 TP A 27 Gerr ard Street East* 1913 City 28 Annette School 1914 TBE Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 119 29 Baird Park 1914 City 30 F ern Avenue School 1914 TBE 31 W illowvale Park 1914 City 32 Sacred Heart 1914 Pri vate 33 J oseph Workman 1914 TBE 34 Manning Avenue 1914 TBE 35 Ri verdale Park 1914 City 36 W ithrow Park 1914 City 37 K ew Gardens 1914 City 38 East Toronto* 1914 City 39 Norw ood Road Park 1914 City 40 Ogden School 1914 TBE 41 Roden School 1914 TBE 42 Morse Street 1915 City 43 Pyne School* 1915 TBE 44 W estern Avenue 1915 TBE 45 W est End Crèche 1916 TBE 46 King East* 1916 City 47 W inchester Street School 1917 TBE 48 P erth Avenue 1914 City 49 Moss Park 1915 City Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 120 form of apparatus, such as swings, slides, teeters (see-saws), and sand piles, which were a popular amusement especially with younger children. It was the structures and the supervision that differentiated these playgrounds from the play spaces that had been common in the city for decades. In the existing spaces, activities took place on fields with turf and often involved games and sports with set rules and teams, usually of men and boys, such as cricket, lacrosse, and baseball. Playgrounds, in contrast, were sites for the particular teaching of citizenship through physical training in calisthenics, military-style exercises, and sports such as basketball and baseball as well as activities such as crafts, theatre performances, dancing, singing, and concerts.The Board of Education continued to promote playground activities, expanding the programming to seventeen more schools over the next decade. The Toronto Playground Association not only advocated for playgrounds through its own fundraising and lectures but also, on occasion, opened playgrounds funded by benefactors, such as Member of Parliament Edmund Osler’s Playground in 1910 and Heiress Mary Virginia McCormick’s Playground in 1911. By 1913, the Toronto Parks Department had begun to take responsibility for municipal recreation in playgrounds and opened a playground on Gerrard Street East, followed by ten more in the two years that followed. The playground movement in Toronto created a massive shift in the urban landscape and in children’s recreational programming in a short period of time. The movement began with one playground in 1905 but expanded to nearly fifty playgrounds over the next ten years. This marks the most profound shift in public space for children in the history of the city. Disciplining Children in Toronto Playgrounds Playgrounds were much more than places in which children could play. They were seen as places to instruct children in values of citizenship and national identity. The playground workers were specialized and professionalized: many had taken university classes on the topic—for example, the University of Toronto Department of Social Service held classes in playground work—and many playground workers had been educated in the United States. The spaces of playgrounds were likewise specialized and professionalized, constructed in order to organize children in place and to show them where they belonged. Children were disciplined, that is, made to perform in particular ways in the playground, first through control of what they did and second through control of where they did it. I draw here on Foucault’s framework in Discipline and Punish, in which Foucault describes schools, factories, and prisons in order to highlight common tactics of discipline and the ways in which this form of control is similar both to military Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 121 training and to forced labour in its meticulous attention to time and to the micromobilities of bodies. Control of ActivityThe timetable is, in Foucault’s words, “an old inheritance”; its application in the playground was integral to demarcating the rhythm of the day (Discipline 149). Routines and schedules were published regularly in newspapers. The organization of time in these tables points to the importance of the new conception of play as something that was taught. Not only were broad outlines of daily activities laid out, but also smaller actions were prescribed: these constitute what Foucault called the temporal elaboration of the act. Foucault highlights the way in which marching instructions given to soldiers regulated their movement as a population through time and space by a precisely defined step. By being taught something as small as a step, a group of individuals begin to move in sync with one another, and this synchronous movement helps to create the feeling of unity. It is not surprising that military drills historically preceded the playground activities in the history of physical activity in Toronto schools. This regulation of activity also extended to games that were played in the playground or to forming lines to wait for a turn on playground apparatus. These particular spatial behaviours called attention to the body and enforced a shift from one’s own natural timing of behaviour. Foucault also set out the correlation of the body and the gesture that moved individual bodies in “correct” ways. Foucault uses the example of handwriting as the gesture whereby groups could be instructed en masse to undertake a collective movement that becomes repeatable without thought. Dances and sports were similarly thought to be naturalized through repetition (Melvin 90). The body-object articulation highlights how a thing is connected to the person, such as a soldier and a rifle or a child and a ball. Together, the object and the individual perform differently in space than they would without one another. The final control of activity is the notion of exhaustive use that shifts action from a negative concept of non-idleness to a positive concept of productivity. Speed is a virtue in this new mode, and maximal utility and efficiency are sought. From the factory to one’s everyday life, a productive citizen is created through labour or activity. This final premise is revealed in the rationale of the playground movement, which thought that children’s idleness would lead to immoral behaviour and the decline of the nation. In Toronto, the city playgrounds were originally supervised every day except for Sunday, from 9:00 in the morning until 8:30 at night in the summer (Kelso, “Play”). In order to organize the use of space in the playground, play workers employed timetables that dictated the length of time each activity should take. These schedules involved more than simply separating Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 122 the day into morning and afternoon sessions, as was often the case in the early Toronto school playground schedules published in newspapers. Schedules regulated time first by activity, as is evident in this excerpt from the most important playground text, American Playgrounds: Their Construction, Equipment, Maintenance and Utility:1.00 to 1.30.—The assembly, consisting of marching, singing, the salute to the flag, and a short talk by the principal. 1.30 to 2.30.—Organized w ork in the kindergarten and gymnastics. 2.30 to 3.00.—Organized pla y, including indoor and outdoor games which may be played in limited space. 3.00 to 4.00.—Military and gymnastic drills, folk dances, and apparatus work for the older children, and occupation work for the younger. 4.00 to 4.45.—Organized games, basketball, gymnastic and kindergarten games. 4.45 to 5.15.—Athletics and the acti vities of the Good Citizens’ Club. 5.15 to 5.30.—Dismissal, including mar ching and singing. (Mero 112) The activities are as telling as the time allotted to each: the day opened and closed with marching and singing, important linkages with military traditions. Different tasks are assigned to older and younger children, with muscular fitness, rules, and practised activities important for older children and learning to pay attention and focus on a task (often crafting or sand play) important for younger children. The incorporation of dancing, apparatus work, games, and sports marked the characteristics of a good playground because these activities utilized the skills of time and body management together. Performance, however, was an integral element of all these acts: children were seen as objects on display in the playground. Their actions were illustrative of their place in the nation. The temporal elaboration of the act did not stop at intervals of fifteen to sixty minutes, with some advocates breaking up time even further in their precise instructions. For example, an exercise routine for children in an outdoor gymnasium in New York is broken into activities of a few minutes: Children line up according to height; done in 2 or 3 minutes. Simple mar ching; 5 minutes. Breathing exer cises, to be done at end of march, while walking or at halt, in line, after the marching; 2 minutes. Exer cises using arms; 3 minutes. Exer cises using trunk; 3 minutes. Exer cises using legs; 2 minutes. All-round exer cise using all muscles, such as Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 123 lunging, imitation throwing, ground exercises; 5 minutes. Exer cise using arms principally; 3 minutes. Breathing with arm exer cises; 2 minutes. F inal marching, ending with dismissal; 2 minutes. (Mero 113–14) Performance and appearance are also shown to be important elements to this program: children will line up according to height, activities will be completed synchronously, and exercise of the various parts of the body will provide a balanced physique. Disciplining the actions of young people created impressive spectacles for playground festivals, where adults filled the playgrounds and observed the activities of the charges. The discourses of the playground were tied to activities; playgrounds were not simply empty spaces in which to put children. In Foucault’s example of the prison, exhaustive use was enforced through hierarchized surveillance that created a system of supervision where individuals regulated themselves. In the playground, this was enacted through the use of playground workers, organized as a hierarchy of supervisors, assistants, and those in training. A passage from a 1909 Toronto newspaper article about playgrounds reads as an exemplification of Foucault’s assertions about the use of time: A curfew law, compelling children to return to their homes at a certain hour, is a feeble device. What is wanted is not prohibition, but guidance and inspiration. Why is the child on the street? Why is it necessary to drive him home? What will he do when he gets home? These are questions that should be considered by all those who are desirous of improving the quality of Canadian Citizenship. (Kelso, “Play”) The idleness of children’s time outside the playground is not seen as the source of the problem, that is, the curfew law is not an effective tactic for controlling children. A negative prohibition on place and time were not effective either. The construction of citizenship required supervision, guidance, inspiration, and motivation by the ideal supervisor, and the ideal supervisor was a Canadian with a strong (moral) character who could encourage a fit body to create a fit mind (Valverde 27). While the disciplinary activity of controlling children’s play is educational, it nevertheless replaces children’s ability to play games and spend their time as they choose. While the Child Savers may have intentionally put children to work in Houses of Refuge (effectively sweatshops), the Progressives put children to work in playgrounds. Undoubtedly, children did have more freedom in the playground than in a factory, but this was a controlled freedom. Children’s Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 124 attendance at the playground could never be regulated as it could be at a House of Refuge with locked doors, but the playground did not provide children with access to open spaces in which they could express their individuality through their choice of play. Ordering the playground spaces helped supervisors with their work: time was ordered through timetables, time was regulated through the synchronized movement of bodies, rules were established for the correct movements of bodies, and bodies and objects were articulated to enforce correct movements. Since particular activities had dedicated spaces, individuals were ordered by activity and location. Not only did this allow for the spectacle of an ordered, rationalized public space, but also it allowed for a division of users and the creation of playground identities. Art of DistributionsFoucault describes how space disciplines through the example of Jeremy Bentham’s panopticon prison design (Discipline 201). This design allowed prison guards a full view of all prison cells from a central position in a circular building without being visible to the prisoners. Since this perspective allowed for constant surveillance, Bentham believed that inmates would behave as if someone was always watching them, even though it was not possible for the guards to watch all of the inmates at once. Scholars have discussed how playgrounds employ similar regimes of control in their ordering; that is, playgrounds imply supervision of all when only some children are, in fact, being watched at a particular time (Gagen 603; Blackford 236). Foucault called the panopticon “a marvellous machine which, whatever use one may wish to put it to, produces homogeneous effects of power” (Discipline 202). The panopticon, as an architectural and spatial form, thus acts as a machine: it does work. The panopticon produces changes evenly across Discipline in space is employed by four techniques: enclosure, partitioning, functional sites, and hierarchizing . . . . Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 125 spaces, mainly that people will regulate their own behaviour and fall in line.Foucault’s consideration of more minute forms of spatial discipline through what he terms “the art of distributions” is of particular interest for an analysis of playgrounds (Discipline 141). Discipline in space is employed by four techniques: enclosure, partitioning, functional sites, and hierarchizing (Discipline 141–49). Enclosure, from Foucault’s examples of eighteenth- century France, was visible in the cells of prisons and in the ordering of desks in early schools. In Toronto playgrounds, enclosures were created through the fences that separated playgrounds from their local area, constructing a boundary between the playground and the non-playground. Partitioning, in Foucault’s terms, refers to the breaking up of spaces inside an enclosure: this was also visible in the fences and other markers that created spaces inside the playground, such as the paving of courts and the sodding of fields for sports. Functional sites, in Foucault’s words, are “useful space[s]” that direct a particular type of activity (Discipline 144); in the example of playgrounds, this is created through apparatuses and through the enforcement of permitted and prohibited types of play activity. The final technique for the disciplining of space described by Foucault, hierarchizing, was the ranking of spaces using categories. Such hierarchizing appeared in the playground through the creation of specific spaces for children depending on their age, their gender, and their size, where more challenging apparatuses were designated for a more skilled user, often a male above the age of twelve or fourteen. According to a news report of the time, the St. Andrew’s Square (Toronto’s sixth playground in fig. 1) had grounds that were divided into two parts, the easterly half being devoted to the girls and very small boys, and the westerly half to larger boys. A wire fence encloses the whole ground, and girls and larger boys are separated by a wire fence. . . . The grounds and equipment have been donated by the city. The boys’ section of the ground is equipped with parallel bars, teeters, giant stride or maypole, trapeze, swinging rings and rope ladders. The girls’ section is provided with swings, giant stride or maypole, sand courts, teeters, basket ball, and a slide resembling a chute, the last-named being the most popular attraction on the ground, so far as the small tots are concerned. (Kelso, “Play”) In this passage, almost all of the techniques of the art of distributions are visible: the wire fence encloses the whole ground and acts as separation inside the playground. The sites are ordered hierarchically by gender and size, which delineates different activities through particular equipment, that is, there are various functional sites. The boys’ section with parallel Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 126 bars and trapeze, swinging rings and rope ladders is designed for the physical culture ideals of the time, which understood gymnastics as good training for boys to become fit soldiers. The section for girls (and younger children) contains the sand court, basketball, and a slide. These activities were seen as less vigorous, more social and cooperative, and thus more suited to the gender norms for women of the time.Fences were hotly debated in the literature on playgrounds: some authors like Dr. Henry S. Curtis, director of the New York City playgrounds and secretary- treasurer of the Playground Association of America, argued that the fences were important to keep children inside. Others, like Joseph Lee, philanthropist and vice-president of the Playground Association of America, argued that fences made the playground like a jail or a school, both of which were unsuitable places for children’s recreation. In the United States, many northern playgrounds had fences while those in the south did not. In Toronto, most playgrounds had high exterior fences to keep children in and the undesirable playground users out. Unfenced grounds were seen as suitable when space was limited, but without a fence, the tempting street would lure children out of the playground and into spaces where they did not belong. The fence also kept out other dangers, according to Curtis: “There are occasional mad dogs and runaway horses in the cities. If the children are in a fenced yard they are safe, while there is always danger otherwise” (15). Fences served as the bounds to the playground and seemed to draw children to them from inside the playground and adults to them from the street (see fig. 2). These fenced edges, most often built of wire, allowed visibility at the same time as they contained and delineated the spaces where the rules of the playground applied. Entry to the space implied a contract where a child was “either playing by the rules or be[ing] shut out by his playmates or by those in charge” (Gulick 247). Fences also dictated where one entered and left the site as Maria, a woman’s columnist, noted in the Toronto Globe: “Yesterday afternoon, when starting to visit the grounds, I was not quite sure of the location, but following the lead of some children from afar off I could discern groups of all-sized children entering the enclosure” (Kelso, “Play”). In her observation, Maria makes clear that the playground is visible from the outside, that it can be found through observing the children entering it, and that children’s enclosure highlights the possibility of surveillance. The sense of enclosure was important in the disciplining of children in the playground as it defined the spatial boundaries inside which play activities would be regulated. Climbing playground fences or otherwise gaining entry outside the hours of supervision was considered a grave transgression by the playground reformers. One of the major explanations for this behaviour in the period was “the play instinct,” the natural desire for play that existed in all humans (American 159). In Toronto, Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 127 protocol indicated that the gates of the city playgrounds be locked after supervisors ended their shifts, yet Samuel Dillon Mills, former mining engineer and chairman of the Toronto Playground Association’s location committee, described seeing adults using the playground apparatus one evening after hours, an infringement that he reported to the Parks Department (54).Fences were also used to partition the playground itself, marking sections of the playground for certain users and uses. As already noted, partitions were commonly made between the areas for boys and girls and between the areas for older and younger boys. Despite the fact that the playgrounds were labelled on the basis of sex, their primary division was by age and then by sex, since the youngest children were seen as having little need for differentiation in activity: both sexes were offered kindergarten games and crafts alike. Older girls were often encouraged to help out on the younger children’s playgrounds, which is why there was no space for older girls (those aged twelve to fourteen). Most articles about playground facilities note the presence of a fence around the area, its type, and often its cost. Short fences seemed to be effective boundaries to differentiate the space and to regulate it. The fence acted practically to keep spectators out of the field of play and the balls inside the basketball and baseball areas (see fig. 2). In figure 2, there are so many spectators (a mixture of adults and children) lining the fences on this unusual day of the playground festival that they become the boundary that one sees from afar. Figure 2: Crowds and Apparatus at Elizabeth Street Playground, 21 August 1913. Used with permission from The City of Toronto Archives, Series 372, Subseries 52, Item 72. Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 128 These disciplinary techniques implied that the reformers knew more about play than the children they aimed to teach. One of the more direct statements of this perspective comes from Michael V. O’Shea, an education professor at the University of Wisconsin, in his exhortation in a playground education manual: Organized play is much more necessary in American life today than it was fifty years ago, when the majority of the young lived in the country. The city tends to repress play activities. Students of this matter are finding that play is dying out among boys and girls beyond the age of six or seven. The old traditional games suited for the country cannot be well played under city conditions, and the young do not readily devise new ones which can be carried on under the changed conditions. As a consequence, it is probable that the boys and girls who are growing up in the cities need to receive definite suggestions regarding the best way to play interesting and developing games. (vi) His rationale is that children need to be taught to play because they do not remember old country games and they cannot create new ones. Creating adult urban play experts becomes the narcissistic solution. Children are thus manipulated to serve the needs of adults, performing activities that are easy to supervise and control, in places that are designed to create citizens with clear gender (and classed and raced) identities. Conclusion Toronto playgrounds at the turn of the twentieth century were sites for the adult discipline of children. The logics and actions of the playground movement can be seen as a form of narcissistic childism, where children are controlled by adults’ disciplining of them in time and space. Foucault’s detailed descriptions of the techniques of discipline in the factory, school, and prison have important parallels in the playground. Seeing these parallels highlights the ways in which regimes of control are durable across time and space. The disciplinary mechanisms in summer programs for children offered by the state in the public spaces of the city were detailed and specialized. Play workers were trained in techniques to strengthen children’s bodies, instill co-operation, and create healthy future citizens. Children were on display in their actions; they were visible although enclosed inside fences, doing activities in unison, with their actions often organized to the minute. The location of playground sites in schoolyards, former parks, and “slum” areas attests to the importance of the playground as marking out public spaces for children in cities. These spaces were outside, and fenced from, the generationally diverse sites of the streets, factories, homes, and parks in which children would have played. Creating and maintaining specific sites for children was one way to control them, and the disciplining that occurred inside these sites was further opportunity to exercise such control. Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 129 In the contemporary period, the provision of services for children’s recreation has become increasingly privatized and commercialized by indoor, for-profit play spaces (McKendrick, Bradford, and Fielder 102). These spaces are promoted as safe places for children to play, in which their activities are also watched (and even recorded on video) by a hierarchy of parents and paid workers in the name of child protection. Creative play and the imaginative use of toys and facilities are more challenging for young people under these increasingly numerous watching eyes. As these spaces become the norm for children’s play, public sites decline in popularity, and often in condition, as fewer adults are invested in their use and maintenance. Numerous discourses pervade the turn from public space: for example, the stranger-danger narrative describes the erroneous perspective that large numbers of mysterious adults are looking to abduct and abuse children in public space, although research indicates that the majority of abuse comes from adults who are already known to children. Similarly, children’s knowledges and capacities to navigate their own neighbourhoods and streets are denied as their trips to school are increasingly chauffeured by adults. Short errands, playing with friends, and other tasks that are within young children’s capacities are thus limited because of this lack of knowledge and familiarity. Thus, in contemporary Western societies, children are rarely seen in public spaces unless they are accompanied by adults. Playground sites are still common in most urban spaces, but they are often not seen in the positive light that they were a hundred years ago when playground openings made the front page of newspapers and the president of the United States was also the president of the Playground Association of America. That said, there are new movements to make more creative playgrounds, often invoking natural metaphors and using natural materials, attempting to connect children “back to nature” (Shillington and Murnaghan 8). These sites may hold promise for a new relationship between children and adults, or they may be another indication of a childist relationship. Only time will tell. In her research on childism, Young-Bruehl used examples from her psychoanalytic patients to theorize prejudice. To be sure, her foray into history was a brief section of the text, broadly narrated and by no means complete, but it was helpful in provoking an argument about a change in paradigm. While maintaining that the progressives were still childist, I see the activism of the Progressive era as more progressive than that of the Child Savers. The Progressives’ understandings of the roots of poverty and the importance of education in improving young people’s situations were both important shifts from earlier models of charity. This article offers an alternative to a teleological reading of history and suggests the usefulness of reading a social movement from a de- centred position: that of the young people in whose name the projects were undertaken. Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 130 American, Sadie. “The Movement for Small Playgrounds.” American Journal of Sociology 4.2 (1898): 159–70. JSTOR. Web. 17 Feb. 2008. Andrew, Caroline, Jean Harvey, and Don Dawson. “Evolution of Local State Activity: Recreation Policy in Toronto.” Leisure Studies 13.1 (1994): 1–16. Print. Blackford, Holly. “Playground Panopticism: Ring-around-the- Children, a Pocketful of Women.” Childhood 11.2 (2004): 227–49. Sage Publications. Web. 23 July 2008. Board of Control Communications. 1909. Box 143971, series 183, City of Toronto Archives. Print. Board of Education for the City of Toronto. Annual Reports, Including School Inspector’s Reports. Toronto: Toronto School Board, 1909. Print. Cavallo, Dominick. Muscles and Morals: Organized Playgrounds and Urban Reform, 1880–1920. Philadelphia: U of Pennsylvania P, 1981. Print. Curtis, Henry. The Reorganized School Playground. Washington: Government Printing Office, 1913. Internet Archive. Web. 20 June 2016. Dickason, Jerry G. “The Origin of the Playground: The Role of the Boston Women’s Clubs, 1885–1890.” Leisure Sciences 6.1 (1983): 83–89. Print. Dillon Mills, Samuel. Notebooks. 1912. Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library, University of Toronto. Print. Foucault, Michel. Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. Trans. Alan Sheridan. 1975. New York: Vintage, 1995. Print. —. The History of Sexuality, Vol. 1: An Introduction. Trans. Robert Hurley. 1976. New York: Vintage, 1990. Print. Gagen, Elizabeth A. “An Example to Us All: Child Development and Identity Construction in Early 20th-Century Playgrounds.” Environment and Planning A 32.4 (2000): 599–616. Sage Works Cited Notes 1 For examples of American scholarship, see Cavallo; Dickason; Gagen; Goodman; Hardy; Hardy and Ingham; Howell; Kadzielski; Macleod; Marsden; McArthur; Melvin; Nasaw; Wassong. 2 For examples of Canadian scholarship, see Andrew, Harvey, and Dawson; Markham; McFarland; Murnaghan; Schmidt; Wall; Wilson. 3 In the broader research project from which this article was gleaned, I consulted over sixty linear feet of primary and published materials from the Local and National Councils of Women, the Toronto Civic Guild, Toronto City Council minutes, the Toronto Board of Education archives, and the Toronto Parks Department archives (including photographs), J. J. Kelso’s Archival Fonds (including scrapbooks), Samuel Dillon Mills’s Papers (including diaries), as well as various maps and newspaper records from the Globe and the Toronto Star. In the context of this article, most of these sources were used to create the map in fig. 1. Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 131 Publications. Web. 20 June 2016. Goodman, Carey. Choosing Sides: Playground and Street Life on the Lower East Side. New York: Schocken, 1979. Print. Gulick, Luther H. The Philosophy of Play. New York: Association P, 1920. Print. Hardy, Stephen. “‘Parks for the People’: Reforming the Boston Park System, 1870–1915.” Journal of Sport History 7.3 (1980): 5–23. Print. Hardy, Stephen, and Alan G. Ingham. “Games, Structures, and Agency: Historians on the American Play Movement.” Journal of Social History 17.2 (1983): 285–301. Print. Howell, Ocean. “Play Pays: Urban Land Politics and Playgrounds in the United States, 1900–1930.” Journal of Urban History 34.6 (2008): 961–94. Print. Jones, Alan, and Leonard Rutman. In the Children’s Aid: J. J. Kelso and Child Welfare in Ontario. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 1980. Print. Kadzielski, Mark A. “‘As a Flower Needs Sunshine”: The Origins of Organized Children’s Recreation in Philadelphia, 1886–1911.” Journal of Sport History 4.2 (1977): 169–88. Print. Kelso, John Joseph. “Play and Playground.” 1906–18. R5352-468-9-E, J. J. Kelso Fonds, Library and Archives Canada. Print. —. Supervised Playgrounds: One of the Greatest Needs in Toronto To-day. Toronto: N.p., 1906. Print. Macleod, David. Building Character in the American Boy: The Boy Scouts, YMCA, and Their Forerunners, 1870-–1920. Madison: U of Wisconsin P, 2004. Print. Markham, Susan E. “The Impact of Prairie and Maritime Reformers and Boosters on the Development of Parks and Playgrounds, 1880–1930.” Loisir et société / Society and Leisure 14.1 (1991): 219–33. Print. Marsden, Ken Gerald. “Philanthropy and the Boston Playground Movement, 1885–1907.” Social Service Review 35.1 (1961): 48–58. Print. McArthur, Benjamin. “The Chicago Playground Movement: A Neglected Feature of Social Justice.” Social Service Review 49.3 (1975): 376–95. Print. McFarland, Elsie Marie. The Development of Public Recreation in Canada. Ottawa: Canadian Parks/Recreation Association, 1970. Print. McKendrick, John H., Michael G. Bradford, and Anna V. Fielder. “Time for a Party? Making Sense of the Commercialisation of Leisure Space for Children.” Children’s Geographies: Playing, Living, Learning. Ed. Sarah L. Holloway and Gill Valentine. London: Routledge, 2000. 100–16. Print. Melvin, Patricia Mooney. “Building Muscles and Civics: Folk Dancing, Ethnic Diversity and the Playground Association of America.” American Studies 24.1 (1983): 89–99. Print. Mero, Everett B. “Playground Programs and Methods.” American Playgrounds: Their Construction, Equipment, Maintenance and Utility. Ed. Everett B. Mero. Boston: American Gymnasia Company, 1908. 112–17. Internet Archive. Web. 3 Mar. 2008. Murnaghan, Ann Marie F. “Spaces of Nature, Places for Children: The Playground Movement at the Turn of the Twentieth Century in Toronto, Canada.” Diss. York U, 2010. Print. Nasaw, David. Children of the City: At Work and at Play. New York: Oxford UP, 1985. Print. O’Shea, Michael V. Introduction. Play: Comprising Games for the Kindergarten, Playground, Schoolroom and College; How to Coach and Play Girl’s Basket-Ball, Etc. Ed. Angell Emmett Dunn. New York: Little, 1910. i–vii. Internet Archive. Web. 5 Feb. 2008. Platt, Anthony M. The Child Savers: The Invention of Delinquency. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1977. Print. Reeves, Wayne. Playing by the Rules: Organized Children’s Leisure in Toronto, 1897–1934. Toronto: City of Toronto, 1998. Print. Schmidt, Sarah. Domesticating Parks and Mastering Playgrounds: Sexuality, Power and Place in Montréal, 1870–1930. M.A. thesis, Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan 132 Ann Marie F. Murnaghan, Ph.D., is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies at Ryerson University. She has written widely on social and cultural geographies, immigration and settlement, and issues related to children and nature. She recently co-edited the volume Children, Nature, Cities (Routledge, 2016). She is working on projects related to the effects of museums in children’s lives. McGill U, 1996. Print. Shillington, Laura J., and Ann Marie F. Murnaghan. Introduction. Children, Nature, Cities. Ed. Ann Marie F. Murnaghan and Laura J. Shillington. New York: Routledge, 2016. 1–15. Print. Valverde, Mariana. The Age of Light, Soap, and Water: Moral Reform in English Canada, 1885–1925. Toronto: U of Toronto P, 2008. Print. Wall, George. “Outdoor Recreation and the Canadian Identity.” Recreational Land Use: Perspectives on Its Evolution in Canada. Ed. Geoffrey Wall and John S. Marsh. Ottawa: Carleton UP, 1982. 418–34. Print. Wassong, Stephan. “The German Influence on the Development of the US Playgrounds Movement.” Sport in History 28.2 (2008): 313–28. Taylor & Francis Online. Web. 6 Feb. 2008. Wilson, E. Laird. The Montreal Parks and Playgrounds Association. M.S.W. thesis, McGill U, 1953. Print. Young-Bruehl, Elisabeth. Childism: Confronting Prejudice against Children. New Haven: Yale UP, 2012. Print. Zelizer, Viviana A. Pricing the Priceless Child: The Changing Social Value of Children. New York: Basic, 1985. Print. Jeunesse: Young People, Texts, Cultures 8.1 (2016) Ann Marie F. Murnaghan
ARTICLE COMPARISON Write a 750-1000-word paper that summarizes each of the articles, places them within a broader theme or topic, and then compares and contrasts their conclusions and the evidence ma
Copyright © The Ontario Historical Society, 2011 Ce document est protégé par la loi sur le droit d’auteur. L’utilisation des services d’Érudit (y compris la reproduction) est assujettie à sa politique d’utilisation que vous pouvez consulter en ligne. https://apropos.erudit.org/fr/usagers/politique-dutilisation/ Cet article est diffusé et préservé par Érudit. Érudit est un consortium interuniversitaire sans but lucratif composé de l’Université de Montréal, l’Université Laval et l’Université du Québec à Montréal. Il a pour mission la promotion et la valorisation de la recherche. https://www.erudit.org/fr/ Document généré le 30 jan. 2021 18:19 Ontario History Supervised Places to Play Social reform, citizenship, and femininity at municipal playgrounds in London, Ontario, 1900-1942 Carly Adams Volume 103, numéro 1, spring 2011 URI : https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1065481ar DOI : https://doi.org/10.7202/1065481ar Aller au sommaire du numéro Éditeur(s) The Ontario Historical Society ISSN 0030-2953 (imprimé) 2371-4654 (numérique) Découvrir la revue Citer cet article Adams, C. (2011). Supervised Places to Play: Social reform, citizenship, and femininity at municipal playgrounds in London, Ontario, 1900-1942. Ontario History , 103 (1), 60–80. https://doi.org/10.7202/1065481ar Résumé de l’article Au début du XXe siècle, des campagnes furent menées pour l’établissement de lieux destinés plus particulièrement aux loisirs des enfants, parcs urbains et aires de jeux surveillés. À partir des souvenirs recueillis auprès d’adultes ayant utilisés autrefois ces aires de jeux, cet article étudie les problèmes posés par leur établissement, et notamment leur utilisation par les jeunes filles et jeunes femmes, ces lieux leur offrant l’opportunité d’apprendre et de pratiquer différents sports. Les implications aussi bien sociales que morales de ces initiatives menées en vue du développement d’aires de loisirs, et les conséquences de l’aide sociale municipale sur la vie de ces jeunes filles et femmes, sont également étudiées dans cet article. 0 ONTARIO HISTORY A s Cynthia Comacchio suggests, the first half of the twentieth century saw the rise of super- vised and structured leisure for youth through organizations such as the Young Women’s Christian Associations, the Boy Scouts and the Girl Guides. 1 Supervised municipal playgrounds also exemplified this flourishing drive towards structured adult-approved places to play. In early twentieth-century Canada, community playground initiatives came as a response to increasing industrialization, urban expansion, and growing commercial dis – tractions, which prompted middle-class social reformers to campaign for urban parks and supervised playgrounds to provide children with appropriate places for leisure activities. The National Coun -cil of Women of Canada (NCWC) and the affiliated local councils, such as the London, Ontario, local council, seeking to protect children from the evils of idle – ness, played a foundational role in the development and establishment of su – pervised playgrounds across the nation. In London, playgrounds were for – mally established in 1920. These were supervised public spaces where partici – pants aged eight to sixteen could explore the benefits and enjoyment of moving their bodies. Pat Morden, in her study of the history of London’s parks and rivers, provides a brief overview of the history of the city’s playground movement, using the Public Utilities Commission Annual Reports as the basis for her information. 2 These reports, while useful, tend to fo – S upervised P laces to P lay 1 Cynthia, Comacchio, The Dominion of Youth: Adolescence and the Making of Modern Canada, 1920-1950 (Waterloo, Ont.: Wilfred Laurier university Press, 2006), 190. 2 Pat Morden, Putting Down Roots: A History of London’s Parks and River (St. Catharines: Stone – house Publications, 1988). Social reform, citizenship, and femininity at municipal playgrounds in London, Ontario, 1900-1942 by Carly Adams Ontario History / Volume CIII, No. 1 / Spring 2011 1 playgrounds n london cus on the participation of boys. Building on Morden’s study, and drawing on adult memories of participating in playgrounds in London, this study explores the issues and complexities of estab – lishing the playground program in that city and, more specifi- cally, the opportunities provided for girls and young women to learn and play sport. Drawing on Richard Gruneau and David Whitson’s claim that ‘communi- ty’ was the level at which society was really experienced, I con – sider the implications of social and moral reform initiatives on leisure spaces, and the impact of the delivery of social welfare at the municipal level on the lives of female participants. 3 This case study of the history of the play – ground movement in London explores the degree of influence the local council of the NCWC had in encouraging the munici – pal government to take up the agenda of the playground movement and looks at the initiatives that were made to establish supervised playgrounds. Al – though, as Nancy Bouchier surmises, no Canadian city is representative of other urban areas, a province, or the nation as a whole, the focus on London enhances our understandings of social reform ini – tiatives on urban recreation through the specific local context. 4 This study draws on data collected during a larger study of women’s sport experiences as children and young adults in London from 1920 to 1950. As part of the larger project, oral histories of twen – ty-two women were collected. Fourteen of these women participated in munici- pal playgrounds in London during the Abstract In early 20 th century Canada, middle-class social re – formers campaigned for urban parks and supervised playgrounds to provide children with appropriate places for leisure activities. Drawing on adult memories of par – ticipating in playgrounds in London, Ontario, this study explores the issues and complexities of establishing the playground program in London and, more specifically, the opportunities provided for girls and young women to learn and play sport. I consider the implications of social and moral reform initiatives on leisure spaces, and the impact of the delivery of social welfare at the municipal level on the lives of female participants. Résumé: Au début du XXe siècle, des campagnes furent menées pour l’établissement de lieux destinés plus particulièrement aux loisirs des enfants, parcs urbains et aires de jeux surveillés. À partir des souvenirs recueillis auprès d’adultes ayant utilisés autrefois ces aires de jeux, cet article étudie les problèmes posés par leur établissement, et notamment leur utilisation par les jeunes filles et jeunes femmes, ces lieux leur offrant l’opportunité d’apprendre et de pratiquer différents sports. Les implications aussi bien sociales que morales de ces initiatives menées en vue du développement d’aires de loisirs, et les conséquences de l’aide sociale municipale sur la vie de ces jeunes filles et femmes, sont également étudiées dans cet article. 3 See Richard Gruneau and David Whitson, Hockey Night in Canada: Sport, Identities, and Cultural Politics (Toronto: Garamond Press, 1993). 4 See Nancy B. Bouchier, For the Love of the Game (Montreal & Kingston: McGill-Queen’s Univer – sity Press, 2003), 7. 2 ONTARIO HISTORY 1930s, attending eight different parks among them. All of the women inter- viewed were Caucasian and born in or around London. Most of them attrib – uted their family’s socio-economic status during the time they participated in play – grounds as working-class although some identified themselves as middle-class. Their remembrances offer valuable and rare details about participating in play – ground activities during this time period. As Neil Sutherland suggests, “…if we are ever going to get ‘inside’ childhood expe – riences, then we must ask adults to recall how they thought about, felt, and ex – perienced their growing up.” 5 The com – plexities of these experiences shape how we come to understand and theorize the intersections of sport and community in the past. While these interviewees cannot speak for all children and young adults who participated in the playgrounds in London during the period under inves – tigation, the use of oral histories in this project is based on the idea that signifi – cant historical information can be de – rived from people talking about their experiences. As Paul Thompson suggests, remembrances from women who attend – ed the playgrounds as children will serve as a link between the personal experienc – es of the participant and the wider social history of which they were a part. 6 For the female participants, organ – ized play was experienced as what Mona Gleason calls “significant arbitrators of experience.” 7 During an era when girls and women in rural and smaller urban Canadian localities had limited access to organized physical activities, playground programs offered acceptable spaces to run, jump, and throw. Playgrounds pro – vided hundreds of girls and young wom – en a space to explore recreational activi – ties, while building lasting friendships and learning new physical skills—experi – ences that for many young women set the groundwork for decades of involvement in sport. For many of the children and young adults, the playgrounds were step – ping-stones to city and industrial sports leagues. Before turning to their stories, I will set the context for their participa – tion by looking at the establishment of the playgrounds in London, and at the community groups involved. Social Reform, The NCWC and the Playground Initiative T he emergence of recreational activi – ties for youth was part of a broader social and moral reform movement that gained momentum in Canada by the turn of the twentieth century. By 1900, influ – enced by social and moral reform schemes in the United States and Britain, a large number of urban middle- and upper-class Canadians were engrossed in social and moral reformation, intent on building foundations for “personal regeneration” 5 Neil Sutherland, Growing Up: Childhood in English Canada from the Great War to the Age of Televi – sion (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1997), 13. 6 See Paul Thompson, The Voice of the Past: Oral History (New York: Oxford University Press, 2000), 25-81.7 Mona Gleason, “Embodied Negotiations: Children’s Bodies and Historical Change in Canada, 1930-1960,” Journal of Canadian Studies 34 (1999), 113. playgrounds n london and “scientific urban reform” to secure a future of prosperity. 8 In Canada, increas – ing urban industrialization and immigra – tion, compounded by the prevalence of disease and unhealthy social conditions among the poor and working classes liv – ing in cities, prompted the emergence of social organizations intent on curing the evils of the nation and transforming Canadian society. Prior to 1918, most reform organizations, such as the Moral and Social Reform Council of Canada, 9 the Women’s Christian Temperance Un – ion, the NCWC, and the Salvation Army were voluntary bodies that operated out – side of state control. 10 Many of these or – ganizations consisted mostly of middle- and upper-class women with spare time and a penchant for involvement in social causes. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, much of the thrust of social reform “focused on the child, for he [sic] formed the nucleus of family life and the elimination of his difficulties was seen to be particularly susceptible to women’s specialized talents.” 11 Xiabei Chen sug – gests that this focus on the child was part of a citizenship project, in that “children were thought of as future citizens to be rescued.” 12 The playground initiative was part of this aspiration to shape children, specifically boys and young men, into proper citizens. 13 The NCWC and its affiliated re – gional councils played a foundational role in the establishment of playgrounds and supervised programs across the coun – try, through the securing of school play – grounds during the summer months and lobbying for municipal government ini – tiatives and interventions. 14 Infused with the language of domesticity and mother – hood, the NCWC embraced maternalist rhetoric and ideologies that, by the twen – tieth century, had emerged among wom – en and social reform groups in Canada. 15 In 1901, at the eighth annual meeting of the NCWC held in London, Ontario, a 8 See Mariana Valverde, The Age of Light, Soap, and Water: Moral Reform in English Canada, 1885- 1925 (Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1991), 16-17. See also, Ramsay Cook, The Regenerators: Social Criticism in Late Victorian English Canada (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1985). 9 This organization changed its name to the Social Service Council of Canada in 1912. 10 Valverde, Age of Light, 51.11 T. R . Morrison, “Their Proper Sphere: Feminism, the Family, and Child-centred Social Reform in Ontario 1875-1900,” Ontario History 68 (1976), 52. 12 Xiaobei Chen, Child Saving in Toronto, 1880s-1920s (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2005), 15. The term citizenship throughout this paper focuses on the “obligations and duties of the citizen to their wider community.” See Jennie Munday, “Gendered citizenship,” Sociolog y Compass 3 (2009), 250. 13 Citizenship and welfare state democracy was a focus of post-World War II recreation in Ontario as well. For more on this period, the intersections of gender and the politics of recreation and the changes that occurred, see Shirley Tillotson, The Public at Play (Toronto: The University of Toronto Press, 2000). 14 See Rosa L. Shaw, Proud Heritage: A History of the National Council of Women of Canada (To- ronto: Ryerson Press, 1957), 93; Elsie M. McFarland, The Development of Public Recreation in Canada (Ottawa: Canadian Parks/Recreation Association, 1970), 19. 15 For more on the maternalist ideologies that infused many women’s organizations of this period see Jane Ursel, Private Lives, Public Policy (Toronto: Women’s Press, 1992), 72. Molly Ladd-Taylor, “Toward Defining Maternalism in US History,” Journal of Women’s History 5 (1993), 10. Linda Kealy, A Not Unrea- sonable Claim (Toronto: The Women’s Press, 1979). ONTARIO HISTORY resolution was introduced and passed en- dorsing playground initiatives: Whereas the agitation for Vacation Schools and Playgrounds where children may find organized recreation having become so widespread that it is now known as the Playground Movement, and whereas the establishment of such Vacation Schools and Playgrounds is acknowledged by educators and philanthropists to be desired in every community, and whereas the necessity for such schools and playgrounds to improve the condition of children in the cities of Canada is obvious, therefore be it resolved that this National Council for Women of Canada declare themselves in favour of the establish – ment of Vacation Schools and Playgrounds and pledge themselves to do all in their power to promote their organization. 16 This resolution was the result of an ap – peal by Mabel Peters of Westhill, New Brunswick, encouraging the Council to consider supervised playgrounds and rec – reational spaces for children during the summer school break as a viable project. Focused on reform and protecting chil – dren from the evils of idleness during the summer months, Peters argued that in order for reform initiatives to be suc – cessful they must target children: “Train the child correctly and the adult will not need reformation.” 17 The agenda of the Committee on Supervised Playgrounds for Children was carried out through local councils of women, extensions of the national body. Following the 1902 meeting , Peters sent a letter to all of the local councils across the country explaining the importance of the new committee and the role of the local councils. 18 She urged the local councils to appoint a specialized committee to assist in this work and a convener who would sit on the National Committee. By 1903, she had received replies from Ottawa, To – ronto, Charlottetown, Brandon, Vernon, and Nelson. 19 By 1910, there were stable supervised playground programs in many major urban cities throughout the coun – try including : Montreal, Toronto, Ot – tawa, Winnipeg , Regina, and Halifax. 20 Ursel suggests that the purpose of the reform movement was to push the State into a more active interventionist role. 21 16 National Council of Women of Canada, Report of the 8th Annual Meeting, May 1901, London, Ontario (Ottawa: Taylor and Clarke, 1901), 152. 17 Ibid, 152-55. This is from a paper written by Mabel Peters, a member of the Saint John Local Council requesting a motion be passed that the National Council of Women include the establishment of Vacation Schools and Playgrounds on their agenda. Peters provided evidence to show that such a move – ment would improve the condition of children through examples from the Vacation School and Play – ground Movement in the United States and Europe. The Movement in the United States began in 1878, with the first Vacation school established in Boston in 1885. By 1900, there were Vacation Schools in Cambridge, Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and Chicago. Excerpts from this paper can be found in the Council’s annual report. 18 At the inaugural meeting in 1893, seven local councils were organized: Toronto, Hamilton, Mon – treal, Ottawa, London, Winnipeg , and Quebec. 19 National Council of Women of Canada, Report of the 10th Annual Meeting, May 1903, Toronto, Ontario (Toronto: Geo, Parker, Oxford Press, 1903), 68-69. In Peters’ report to Council in 1903, she once again makes reference to the situation in the United States indicating that by 1903 playgrounds had been established in over seventeen cities. She reports that in Canada little progress had been made by 1903. 20 Elsie M. McFarlane, The Development of Public Recreation in Canada (Ottawa: Canadian Parks/ playgrounds n london The NCWC managed operations strict – ly on a volunteer basis; ultimately they wanted municipalities to take over both the organizational and financial respon – sibilities of the playgrounds. 22 Indeed, Shaw suggests that by 1911, “the idea [for supervised playgrounds] had been accepted so extensively that the purpose was almost accomplished for Canada. That purpose was educating public opin – ion and enlisting the support of munici – pal authorities.” 23 While progress was slow, by 1920 a comprehensive legislative framework was in place in dozens of cit – ies across the country, including London, with provisions for supervised playground programs. By this time most supervised playground programs received operating grants from their local municipalities. 24 The Formation of Supervised Places to Play in London B y the 1920s, London was taking the form of a modern city. Surrounded by thriving agriculture and with a growing population that had reached 69,742 by 1929, London was the commercial centre of Southwestern Ontario. 25 Urban plan – ning and municipal reform were central in city activities. 26 In the early twentieth century, the establishment of playgrounds in London came as a result of the broader social reform movement and, more specif – ically, the efforts of local reform-minded organizations such as the London branch of the NCWC, that sought to protect children from the evils of idleness and en – vironmental vices that their members felt plagued urban life at the turn of the cen – tury, by providing supervised playground spaces and summer activities. 27 The local council in London had a considerable degree of influence in en – couraging the municipal government to take up the agenda of the playground movement. The London Local Council of Women was established in 1894. 28 The Council made its first attempts to – ward educating the municipality about Recreation Association, 1970), 20. 21 Jane Ursel, Private Lives, Public Policy (Toronto: Women’s Press, 1992), 71.22 This was also the case in the United States. Playgrounds were established by small women-led com – mittees such as the women’s philanthropic organization, the Playgrounds Committee, in Cambridge MA. See Elizabeth A Gagen, “An example to us all: Child Development and identity construction in early 20th-century playgrounds,” Environment and Planning A 32 (2000), 606 and Suzanne M. Spencer-Wood, “Turn of the Century Women’s Organizations, Urban Design, and the Origin of the American Playground Movement,” Landscape Journal 13 (1994), 125-38. 23 Shaw, Proud Heritage, 93-94. 24 Ibid, 94-95.25 For more on the history of London see Frederick H. Armstrong , The Forest City: An Illustrated History of London, Ontario (Windsor Publications, 1986) and Orlo Miller, A Century of Western Ontario (Toronto: Ryerson Press, 1949). 26 Armstrong , Forest City, 163.27 For information on the playground movement in London and the provision for public bathing, see Rob – ert S. Kossuth, “Dangerous Waters: Victorian Decorum, Swimmer Safety, and the Establishment of Public Bath – ing Facilities in London (Canada),” The International Journal of the History of Sport 22 (2005), 796-815. 28 For more information on the London Local Council and Harriet Ann Boomer see, Joan Kennedy, ONTARIO HISTORY the value of establishing supervised play- grounds in the early 1900s. As a result, the London city council, specifically the mayor, supported this initiative, although progress was slow. Peters, in her report at the annual meeting of the NCWC in 1904, recounts that the mayor, Sir Adam Beck, recommended the establishment of playgrounds to the city council. 29 Beck encouraged council to procure land for recreational use stating : I feel satisfied that London will find…that playgrounds for children will prove to be one of the strongest factors in the development and up-building of not only the physical strength of the children, but their morals, and will prove a means of keeping them away from vices which before were almost a part of their lives. It must, of necessity, be a gradual work. If one such playground, fully equipped, could be opened as a dem – onstration of the great benefit and blessing it would be to the children, especially those whose parents are not able to provide for them amusements at the command of the well-to-do. 30 However, despite the mayor’s vocal sup – port of the project, municipal monies were not invested in the initiative for al – most two decades. 31 In 1919, the Social Service Council petitioned the London city council for the development of su – pervised children’s playgrounds. 32 The city council, following a public plebiscite, approved the request, placing control over this venture under the Public Utili – ties Commission (PUC)—the rationale being that playgrounds fell under the au – thority of public parks, and parks were the responsibility of the PUC. 33 With a $10,000 operating grant from the City, and the establishment of a Playground Department within the PUC, the first 1989, The London Local Council of Women and Harriet Ann Boomer, Master’s Thesis, The University of Western Ontario. 29 National Council of Women of Canada, Report of the 11th Annual Meeting 1904, Winnipeg , Manitoba (London: C.P. Heal, 1904), 63. 30 London City Council, 20th Meeting Council Proceedings 1904 (London, Ontario, 1904), 192. This speech was also printed verbatim in The Free Press (London). See Playgrounds For City Children,” The Free Press, 17 August 1904, 6. 31 For information on the development of the municipal parks system in London see Robert S. Kos – suth, “Spaces and Places to Play: The Formation of a Municipal Parks System in London, Ontario, 1867- 1914,” Ontario History 97 (2005), 160-90. There is evidence that initiatives took place throughout the early 1900s but none of these resulted in a playground program. For example, in 1903, the Local Council of Women’s Committee on Playgrounds petitioned the Civic Improvement Society, a non-governmental group, to incorporate playgrounds in their work. See National Council of Women of Canada, Report of the 12th Annual Meeting 1905, Charlottetown, P.E.I (Toronto: W.S. Johnston & Co, 1905), 100. Pat Morden suggests that, by 1904, the Civic Improvement Society took up this suggestion and petitioned owners of vacant land to allow children to play on it. Morden also suggests that a Playground Association, funded by private donations existed in the city from 1908 to 1912 and provided opportunities for youth in swim – ming and skating. See Morden, Putting Down Roots, 49. 32 E. V. Buchanan, London Water Supply: A History, (London, Ontario: London Public Utilities Commission, 1968), 7. See also National Council of Women of Canada, 1921 Yearbook, (Ottawa: 1921), 156. The Social Service Council was the London branch of the organization formally known until 1912 as the Moral and Social Reform Council of Canada. 33 “Playgrounds To Be Under Parks,” The Free Press, 2 January 1920, 4. playgrounds n london playgrounds of the season opened on 23 June 1920. 34 Based on the PUC reports through – out the 1920s, the playground program in London expanded rapidly and received considerable support from the munici – pality. In the inaugural year, 764 boys and 646 girls attended the playgrounds regularly. 35 By the end of the 1921 season, there were eight playgrounds in opera – tion and the total visits of boys and girls from the end of June until the end of Au – gust reached 99,511. 36 The playgrounds were located in all areas of the city with no particular emphasis on one region over another (see Map 1). Playground advocates hoped government-run play – grounds would offer children of poorer means something to do during the sum – mer months. The playgrounds were open to children of all backgrounds and socio- economic means. Activities such as pic – nics, hikes, crafts, swimming , track and field events, basketball, baseball, tennis, and various other schoolyard games com – prised the program. In his 1923 annual report, E.V. Buchanan, general manager of the PUC, assessed the success of the playground initiative, stating , “London has as good a playground system in pro – portion to its size as any city in Canada. The playgrounds are now an established fact and past the experimental stage, and no doubt the City Council will see its way clear to increase the appropriation in the future.” 37 By 1926, the Playgrounds De – partment operated fourteen playgrounds, and employed a staff of thirty-five super – visors and lifeguards. 38 Female and male supervisors offered activities for children aged eight to sixteen from morning until dusk during the summer months. Protection, Citizenship and Community Through Play I rene Brownlie, born in 1925 in Lon – don, Ontario, remembers with clarity going to the Kensington Park playground on the corner of Oxford and Wharncliffe streets in London for the first time. It was the morning of 1 July 1933 on the west side of the city. Other kids on the street where Irene lived decided they were go – 34 See 42nd Annual Report (London: Public Utilities Commission, 1920), 68; Buchanan, 7. Three playgrounds operated for the summer, including Thames Park, Queen’s Park, and Burkett’s Flats, with six appointed supervisors, one male and one female for each playground: Olive Wood, Muriel and Edna Lan – caster, Robert Arnett, Malcolm Campbell, and W. Mace. During these first years of operation, Major G. Mel Brock, Director of Athletics of Western University, supervised the Playground Department. 35 Public Utilities Commission, 1920, 68.36 43rd Annual Report, (London: Public Utilities Commission, 1921), 80. The eight playgrounds in operation by this time were: Alexandra School at Colbourne and York Streets; Birkett’s Flat’s, Chelsea Green; Bottrill’s Field, Wharncliffe Road and Oxford Street; Lord Roberts School, Princess Avenue; Queen’s Park, East London; Riverview School, Wharncliffe Road South; Tecumseh Avenue School, Te – cumseh Avenue; and Thames Park, Ridout Street South. 37 45th Annual Report (London, Ontario: Public Utilities Commission, 1923), 64.38 48th Annual Report (London, Ontario: Public Utilities Commission, 1926), 76. Extending pro – grams into the winter months—for boys at least—a combined playground-public schools hockey league was also established in 1926. ONTARIO HISTORY ing to the playground so, after gaining permission from her mother, Irene joined her neighbourhood friends and went to see what the excitement was about. These programs were the focus of Irene’s sum- mer vacation for eight years of her life from age 8 to 15. She remembers the anticipation each year as the start of the playground season drew near: “I could hardly wait for the parks to open in the summer. And it was great…July the 1st was the opening day and you could hard – ly wait to go down and meet your super – visor.” 40 She recalls, “I loved every minute of it.”41 Shirley Fickling remembers first attending Gibbons Park in South Lon – don on Dundas Street in 1937 when she was 12 years old. She has fond memories of learning to play baseball and tennis and playing records on the big Victrola on rainy afternoons with other children and the female supervisor. Supervisors organized the activities, taught new sport skills, and took care of the children while they were at the park. Reflecting on this time in her life, Shirley recalls: I remember I’d get up in the morning , my mom would say to me ‘Now, you know we’d have…breakfast now, when the dishes are done and…you make your bed and you do all MAP 1: London, Ontario, 1936. A: Victoria Park; B: Tecumseh Park; C: Thames Park; D: Gibbons Park; E: Queen’s Park; F: The Public Utilities Commission. Courtesy of the Regional Collection, the University of West – ern Ontario. 39 39 I have added the circles and numbers for identification purposes. These are not a part of the original map.40 Author’s interview with Irene (Wedderburn) Brownlie and Audrey Robertson, 12 December 2004, London, Ontario, notes in possession of author. 41 Brownlie and Robertson interview. these things and then you can go to the play- ground.’ Well I’m telling you, you never saw anything get done so fast in all your life! 42 Irene and Shirley were part of a group of girls and boys who flocked to city parks each summer to participate in organized playground programs. These reminis- cences suggest that during the first half of the twentieth century playgrounds of – fered children social spaces to play where physical movement and abilities were explored and developed. Joining munici – pal playgrounds was a life-defining ex – perience for many women like Irene and Shirley. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, girls, women, boys, and men learned to relate to one an – other, negotiated social spaces, struggled for authority and power, and celebrated lifestyle and community values through sport and recreational practices. The ex – periences of females and males in sport were appreciably different, in terms of access to rewards, opportunities to par – ticipate, and the cultural norms associ – ated with physical activity itself. In this sense, sport reproduced a gender order through which specific femininities and masculinities were learned, appreciated, celebrated, and criticized. 43 M. Ann Hall suggests that sport in Canada has been viewed by many as a “masculinising project,” where boys learn to be men. 44 In the United States following the First World War, female physical edu – cators took a collective stance on the female athletic programs at schools and colleges in the United States. A similar though less widespread movement also emerged in Canada influenced by events across the border. In 1923, the Women’s Division of the National Amateur Ath – letic Federation of America hosted a con – ference, where the decision was made to “…end all organized league competition for girls and women in favour of rec- reational sports programs.” 45 In Canada, some physical educators supported the notions of their American colleagues while others appear to have been scepti – cal. In both countries, there was a move – ment to end strenuous sport for women, and a push for mass participation in non- competitive activities. The rationale be – hind this movement was that “strenuous, highly competitive athletics undermined women biologically and socially.” 46 playgrounds n london 42 Author’s interview with Shirley (Youde) Fickling , 28 April 2005, London, Ontario, notes in pos – session of author. 43 R . W. Connell, Gender and Power (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1987), 134-39.44 M. Ann Hall, The Girl and the Game (Peterborough, ON: Broadview Press, 2002), 1. For more on the history of women’s sport and recreation practices in Canada see Bruce Kidd, The Struggle for Canadian Sport (Toronto, ON: University of Toronto Press, 1996), 94-145 and Helen Lenskyj, Out of Bounds (To – ronto, ON: The Women’s Press, 1986). For an American perspective see Susan K. Cahn, Coming on Strong (New York: The Free Press, 1994). 45 H. Gurney, “Major Influences on the Development of High School Girls’ Sport in Ontario” In Her Story in Sport , ed. R . Howell (New York, NY: Leisure Press. 1982), 276. 46 S. Twin, Out of the Bleachers: Writings on Women and Sport (Old Westbury, NY: The Feminist Press, 1979), xxvii. Physical educators endorsed the notion of ‘play days’ whereby regional schools came together for a day of athletic games. The focus of these games was not on winning but on physical fitness, 0 ONTARIO HISTORY By the 1930s many girls and women were actively involved in recreational and competitive sport; yet, common beliefs pervaded about appropriate activities for young girls such as those espoused by the Women’s Division of the National Ama – teur Athletic Federation of America that girls and women should not subject their bodies to strenuous activities. Helen Brulotte provides an example from this study. Born in November 1923, Helen recalls having trouble getting permission from her mother to attend the Queen’s Park playground. She wouldn’t let me go play ball. She didn’t think girls should play ball. Then it just hap – pened one time. She used to let us go swim – ming , once a week to the Thames, because there was no swimming pool out east then…. We’d go for the whole afternoon and we’d get kind of tired of swimming , so I went out, there were kids playing ball. So I started playing and the supervisor, she said where do you live? And I told her, out east London. And she said would you play ball for Queen’s Park, and I said no I don’t go over there. She said well you could go over there, you can play ball, go and play for them. So I come over and told my mother and she says you’re not going over there to play ball, girls don’t play ball. And I said well they must, the su – pervisor told me you know. So luckily I had this older brother of mine. Peter says Mom for heaven’s sake let her go. So she did. 47 Activities such as swimming were appro – priate, but Helen’s mother did not think girls should play sports such as baseball. Many people felt that softball and other strenuous sports was not an appropriate use of leisure time for young girls. Victo – rian notions of the body and the gender order have had a lasting effect on girls’ and women’s participation in recreation, leisure, and sport. Gagen, in her study of early-twentieth- century playgrounds in the United States, suggests that boys’ playground activities focused on team games and competitions in an effort to teach characteristics that would prepare them for manhood and their future roles as active citizens. 48 In contrast, playground activities attempted to instill in girls characteristics appropriate for their future social role, “to care, protect, and keep home.” 49 According to Gagen, girls’ activities at playgrounds in Cam – bridge, MA, consisted of industrial work health, and cooperation. Hult indicates that the notion of ‘play days’ in the scholastic setting lasted for approximately ten years, when it was replaced by ‘sport days’ whereby women competed on school teams against other schools; a winner was declared but not celebrated, and coaching was not provided to the athletes. See J.S Hult, “The Story of Women’s Athletics: Manipulating a Dream 1890-1985,” In Women and Sport: Interdisiplinary Perspectives, eds. M. Costa and S. R . Guthrie (Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics, 1994), 90. The adoption of play days and sport days was widespread in the United States but limited to specific areas in Canada. Between 1933 and 1934, Toronto and district schools withdrew from interschool competition. Of the 200 schools in Ontario at this time, it is estimated that 25 withdrew their women’s programs from interschool competitions. See Gurney, “Major Influences,” 478. These philosophical no – tions of appropriate sport for women impacted all realms of women’s sport well into the 1930s. 47 Author’s interview with Helen (Gorman) Brulotte, 11 April 2005, London, Ontario, notes in pos – session of author. 48 Gagen, “An example to us all,” 607.49 Ibid., 610. 1 playgrounds n london including basic sewing skills, knitting and crafts, and drills that focused on dance, song, and games. 50 In London, while there was a similar emphasis on activities that prepared girls and boys for their future so – cial roles, sport and physical activities were also an important part of their playground experience. The playground philosophy for girls was to train them for their future social role as wives and mothers and part of this philosophy included promoting phys – ical activities that would strengthen their bodies. City playgrounds offered compet – itive sport opportunities for girls includ – ing baseball and track and field. As early as 1921, a playground baseball league was organized with eight girls’ teams and eight boys’ teams. Figure 1 is a photograph of a girls’ softball game in 1921. The crowds in the background suggest that the girls’ games were popular among playground participants and attracted a fair number of spectators. Indeed, the women in this study attribute learning sport skills to the playgrounds and their sport competitions hold a central place in their recollections. In her interview, Irene Brownlie recalls be – ing taught new sport skills, such as how to do the running broad jump and high jump and how to play baseball, by male and fe – male supervisors. Looking back on her life, she fondly remembers the playground as the place she learned to run, jump, and throw and use her body in new ways. Although both boys and girls par – ticipated in the same sport competi – tions, embedded in the structure of playground activities was the idea of sex segregation—an ideolog y that has permeated sport since its inception. Jennifer Hargreaves suggests that most separatist philosophies were a reaction to dominant ideas about the biologi – cal and psychological predispositions of males and females. 52 Shirley Fickling re – calls, “the girls had their own teams and Figure 1: Girls’ softball game 1921. Public Utilities Commission, 44th Annual Report (London, Ontario, 1922), 3. 51 50 Ibid., 611.51 This is one of the few pictures I have gathered that shows girls or women actively competing in sport. The majority of the photographs I have collected through the larger project are posed shots of play – ers or teams. 52 See Jennifer Hargreaves, Sporting Females: Critical Issues in the History and Sociolog y of Women’s 2 ONTARIO HISTORY the boys had their own teams.” 53 This was a naturalized part of the playground program. Reports from the early-twen – tieth-century playground movement in London suggest that there were differ – ing objectives in terms of opportunities provided for boys and girls. For boys, the playground was a place to protect them from the ‘problems’ of society and so – cial delinquency and prepare them for a ‘proper’ life as productive workers and providers. In contrast, the playgrounds were social spaces where the decency of girls was protected from the presumed ‘evils’ of society, thereby preparing them for life as wives and mothers. Highlight – ing these differing objectives, Buchanan reported in the 1930 Christmas Edition of The Echo newspaper: “The man who has played football for the team, and in the proper team spirit, when a boy, is not likely to take advantage of a fellow work – er, and the woman who has indulged in games in the proper spirit when a girl will undoubtedly create the right atmosphere in the home in which she is mistress.” 54 There is no mention of women as work – ers, although by this time, young single women were increasingly finding paid employment opportunities in the city. 55 One of the goals of the municipal playground in London was to protect children from what social reformers called the ‘evils of idleness’ that they felt plagued urban life during this period. In justifying the expenditure of the time and money on the provision of play – ground programs for children, Gerald Goodman, Chief Male Supervisor of Playgrounds wrote: There is no doubt that we are succeeding in our endeavour to create in children the proper spirit of play. To lay the foundation for a full and splendid manhood or wom – anhood is our first consideration. We are trying to make their play so educational and interesting that they have no time or desire for mischief-making or vandalism. The fact that since the opening of the St. Julien Playground not a single juvenile court case is reported from this district, is significant, and this alone is worth considerable [sic] to the citizens of London. 56 This goal and rationale for the play – ground, as a place to instil certain ‘appro – priate’ behaviours and characteristics in children, still existed well into the 1920s and 30s, buoyed by the blatant emphasis on moral reform and crime prevention among the lower classes. In the rheto – ric of social and moral reform, in 1930 Buchanan wrote: The playground movement may be looked at from a sound business point of view. Any community to prosper must have citizens Sports (London: Routledge, 1994), 30. For an argument against discrimination between sexes in sport, see Torbjorn Tannsjo, “Against Sexual Discrimination in Sports,” in Values in Sport, ed. Claudio Tamburrini and Torbjorn Tannsjo (New York: Taylor and Francis, 2000), 101-16. 53 Author’s interview with Shirley (Youde) Fickling , 26 April 2006, London, Ontario, notes in pos – session of author. 54 Buchanan, The Christmas Echo, 10. 55 See, Veronia Strong-Boag , “The Girl of the New Day: Canadian Working Women in the 1920s,” Labour 4 (1979): 131-164. 56 49th Annual Report (London, Ontario: Public Utilities Commission, 1927), 74. playgrounds n london who are sound not only in body but in char – acter. To care for the sick and feeble and to contend with the criminal or delinquent are the most costly charges on a community to- day. It costs us $439.00 to support a boy for a year in one of our reformatories, and this is just about the annual cost of one of the smaller playgrounds where hundreds of chil – dren play and are kept out of mischief. The less that is spent on recreation and health the more must be spent on charities and correc- tion…Habits formed on the playground will most probably be retained in later life. 57 The life-lessons learned through play – ground programs deeply impacted par – ticipants’ behaviours as young women. Audrey Robertson, born in 1929 and a participant at the Thames Park play – ground in the late 1930s recalls, “I feel that if I hadn’t got into the sports, or the playgrounds and that, that I don’t know where I would have ended up…. It really saved my life in that sense.” 58 She attributes the playgrounds with steering her away from the ‘evils’ of society and to – wards more socially-defined, respectable activities. Born in 1928, Irene Brownlie’s sister Doreen Bugler, a playground par – ticipant in the mid 1930s, reflects: I do think that playing sports gives you a certain dedication to life. I think you know people are depending on you and you feel you should stand up as much as you can, do whatever you can to make it right for the team. I think that all the kids that ever played sports all turned out to be good par – ents and good workers. 59 Faye Rennie, born in 1923 and a play – ground participant at Thames Park in the early 1930s suggests, “It was something to do. We had no money…. and I can hon – estly say that out of the baseball group I think there was only one girl that got pregnant. What I mean is, we were too busy and I think it was good for young people.” 60 The support of the supervised playground initiative suggests that sport and organized physical activity were perceived to foster ‘appropriate’ public behaviour in both boys and girls. While the playground program provided varied opportunities for physical activities and sport, the program’s overall emphasis was on social skills, activities that reflected the future roles of Canadian children and taught them essential life lessons. Lon – don’s municipal playground programs focused on creating and moulding par – ticular kinds of citizens and the underly – ing philosophies were deeply entrenched in gendered notions of citizenship. 61 Another goal of the municipal play – ground was to produce ‘good’ citizens 57 E.V. Buchanan, “Supervised Playgrounds in London,” The Christmas Echo, December 1930, 10. 58 Brownlie and Robertson interview.59 Author’s interview with Doreen (Wedderburn) Bugler, 25 April 2005, London, Ontario, notes in possession of author. 60 Author’s interview with Yvonne (Wright) Travers and Faye (Wright) Rennie, London, Ontario 26 April 2005, London, Ontario, notes in possession of author. 61 Focusing on the post-war period, Tillotson suggests that gender is connected to citizenship through public recreation services that are offered. She argues that if “citizenship practices can be shaped through recreation services, and if these (like private leisure pursuits) are structured on gendered lines, ONTARIO HISTORY by creating a sense of community and loyalty among the participants. For boys, playground leaders hoped that this would translate to national loyalty and an un- derstanding of the duties of citizenship. Elizabeth Gagen argues that “[t]o inspire a sense of belonging that could be trans – ferred to national loyalty, each boy had to feel allegiance to the playground as a ter – ritory and to his fellow members.” 62 For girls this focused on being good citizens and mothers. Loyalty and community, for both boys and girls, was developed through the individual playgrounds. In London, one strateg y for instilling allegiance to the park among the par – ticipants was the designation of colours. Irene Brownlie recalls: What they would do, each park had a colour, Kensington Park was purple, Gibbons was blue, different colours, and they would give you one yard of material, and you took it home and gave it to your mother, and she had to make you shorts, and she also had to keep a piece about three inches wide, to go across from shoulder to waist, like the Ol – ympics. And you were also to make a big flag with a big white “K” [for Kensington Park] on it. Every park had a flag and they would march everybody in the group around Te – cumseh Park, and then if you won an event you got up on the podium with your flag…. It was great. And of course the parents all came out and cheered you on you know. 63 This system of colours allowed partici- pants to recognize each other and devel – op loyalties and feel a sense of belonging to the playground they attended. Encouraging allegiance and foster – ing a sense of belonging was also accom – plished through sport competitions. Par – ticipants were encouraged to compete for their playground in various sporting events in both team and individual sport activities. On Friday evenings, the play – ground program offered weekly contests at Thames Park where children, boys and girls, from all of the parks gathered for competition. 64 The women in this study vividly remember these weekly contests. Irene Brownlie recalls: So they used to have track meets in August every Friday and they would hold them at Thames Park. And all the supervisors from the different playgrounds, and I think there was about eight at that time, they would go through the grounds and grab on to anybody that could run and jump and show them how to do these things. Like how to do their start, cause they always shot the gun, they didn’t say 1,2,3 go, they shot the gun and scared you to death, but anyway, they showed you how to do your start, then they would take you over and show you how to do running broad jump, they showed us how to do high jump, and then they would show you how to participate in a relay. 65 Reflecting on the weekly track and field then citizenship cannot escape being marked by gender. See Tillotson, Public at Play, 7. For more on gen- dered citizenship, see also, Munday, “Gendered citizenship,” 249-66. 62 Gagen, “An example to us all,” 608.63 Brownlie and Robertson interview. Gibbons Park was located on the Thames River at the corner of Victoria and Talbot streets. Kenzington Park was located in West London near The Forks of the Thames River. 64 Each Saturday The Free Press reported the results of the weekend meets. For example, see “Play – ground Sports,” The Free Press, 31 July 1920, 10. 65 Brownlie and Robertson interview. playgrounds n london meets between the playgrounds, Do – reen Bugler, recalls: I remember get- ting ready for the… track meets on a Friday night… we couldn’t have anything too heavy because we’d have to run and jump. So I always remember a nice ham sandwich and tomato juice…. [W ]e walked, even when we lived down on Oxford street there and we used to walk across the Oxford street bridge and… right along the break water, all the way down to Labatt Park. 66 These weekly meets developed a healthy sense of competition among the vari – ous playgrounds in the city and gave the participants something to look forward to and train for throughout the week. At the end of August, to conclude the summer programs and showcase their abilities and new skills, all of the chil – dren from the various playgrounds, both boys and girls, joined together at Tecum – seh Park for the year-end track and field meet. Figure 2 shows a group of young girls lining up for the opening ceremony at the end of the year track and field meet at Tecumseh Park. Each participant is wearing the required shorts in their des – ignated colour and the matching band across their chest. Helen Brulotte recalls how important this event was at the end of the summer: “they ran it really like an Olympics. Oh gosh. It was just really, to be a part of it was great. And then before it started they always had the big parade around… all the kids paraded around… we used to have to practice that days and days on end.” 67 As Gagen suggests, the development of children could be moni – tored and promoted through this public display of play and competition during the weekly and end of the summer ath – letic contests. 68 In London, the physical abilities of both boys and girls were pub – lically displayed in this way. 69 The Depression had a significant im – Figure 2: End of the year track and field meet at Tecumseh Park. Pub- lic Utilities Commission, 46th Annual Report (London, Ontario, 1924), 57. 66 Bugler interview.67 Author’s interview with Helen (Gorman) Brulotte, Pat (Gorman) Belliveau, and Audrey Robert – son, 11 April 2005, Dorchester, Ontario, notes in possession of author. 68 Gagen, “An example to us all,” 606.69 Early American leaders in the parks and recreation movement urged that playground activities of girls over the age of eight should be hidden from public view. For example, in 1911 Kennard Beulah ar – ONTARIO HISTORY pact on people’s lives not only in terms of work but also their leisure time, and the resources available for the provision of recreation and sport activities. While those who had lost their jobs as a result of this global economic crisis faced new bur- dens associated with “enforced leisure,” opportunities for sport and recreation diminished in the city. 70 The economic downturn in London during the Depres – sion influenced the London playground programs in two important ways. First, program resources decreased, and, sec – ond, unemployed individuals between the ages of seventeen and twenty flocked to the playground area; yet, there were no, formally organized, activities for indi – viduals in this age group. Although play – ground programs attempted to curtail services in a way that would least affect the participants—for example by closing the smaller playgrounds with the lowest participation numbers—ultimately, the economic crisis necessitated budget re- ductions of “non-essential” expenditures. Through budget cuts the playgrounds in London survived the Depression years, albeit in a reduced form. The 1930s marked a decrease in the resources dedi – cated to the playground initiative, similar to many other publicly funded services during the era . By the end of the 1920s, the emphasis of the NCWC and the lo -cal councils was no longer on establishing playgrounds and creating opportunities for recreation across the country, as the “pioneer period for organized recreation had passed.” 71 The emphasis shifted from securing and lobbying for playground facilities and programs to ensuring the quality of the leadership, organization, and services provided. 72 By 1933 only seven playgrounds were open for seasonal activities, a drop from fourteen in the previous year. The play – grounds not operated were those with smaller attendance records. As Goodman explained: “Strict economy was necessary to operate this number of playgrounds with the funds available, and the program was considerably curtailed.” 73 The bulk of the program reductions tended to be the social and cultural activities first, such as the handicraft work, and athletic badge testing work, while the emphasis was on retaining a full sports program. This de – crease in playground programs reflected the general decline in social service of – ferings in Canada. The Depression era strained the available financial reservoirs in all areas of society with funds being re – located to essential services. There was a gradual shift away from children to concern over youth and young adults and their leisure time. In terms of social and moral reform, the PUC play – gues that there were three dangers for girls that needed to be guarded against and kept from public view : overexertion, self-exploitation, and self-consciousness. See Kennard Beulah, “Playground Activities for Girls between nine and fourteen,” American Physical Education Review, XVI (1911), 513-14. 70 Susan Forbes, “Gendering Corporate Welfare Practices: Female Sports and Recreation at Eaton’s During the Depression,” Rethinking History 5 (2001), 66. 71 National Council of Women of Canada, 1930 Yearbook (Ottawa, ON, 1930), 101.72 Ibid., 102.73 55th Annual Report (London, Ontario: Public Utilities Commission, 1933), 62. playgrounds n london ground reports indicate a growing concern over the idleness of individuals between the ages of seventeen and twenty and sug – gest that recreational services were desper – ately needed during this period to provide amusement and entertainment during a time of decreasing industrial production and increasing unemployment. Certainly, by the 1930s, the leisure time of young adults between the ages of seventeen and twenty had become a new issue of con – cern for the Playground Department. In 1932, Goodman recommended that for the 1933 season the Playground Depart – ment should “attempt to secure a small appropriation for organized activity” for boys aged seventeen to twenty. 74 How – ever, there was no recommendation made for programs for girls in this age group. By 1933, little had been done to remedy the situation, and it remained a primary con – cern for Goodman: Each year the problem of dealing with girls and boys between the ages of 17 and 20 becomes more acute. The playgrounds are crowded with boys and girls of this age and something must be done to occupy the time and minds of this group. Leagues should be formed and additional equipment provided, as the situation is become [sic] serious. This age group cannot find employment and congregate on the playgrounds all day and evening…. I would urge that the age limit on the playgrounds be raised or these youths be taken care of separately. 75 By 1936, there were adult men’s leagues for baseball and soccer in the city. 76 How – ever, while offering recreational activities for boys and men over the age of sixteen, these leagues posed a problem for the city’s recreation program. The men’s leagues used the recreational spaces designed as part of playground areas and, thus, inter – fered with scheduled playground activi- ties and drew the youngsters’ attention away from the playground activities. No effort was made for women over the age of sixteen in terms of municipally or – ganized recreation during this period. For women, apart from working as play – ground supervisors, there were few sport – ing opportunities organized by the city. Using public money for women’s sport was apparently not seen as an appropri- ate use of municipal resources. In search of alternatives, many women turned to industrial sport opportunities. Yet, by the mid 1930s, as company resources for the promotion and sponsorship of sport teams were no longer feasible, the indus – trial sporting opportunities for working women disappeared as well. 77 It was not until 1942 that the city developed softball and basketball leagues for young women over the age of 16. 78 74 54th Annual Report (London, Ontario: Public Utilities Commission 1932), 62.75 55th Annual Report (London, Ontario: Public Utilities Commission, 1933), 63.76 See 56th Annual Report (London, Ontario: Public Utilities Commission, 1934), 60; 57th Annual Report (London, Ontario: Public Utilities Commission, 1935), 58. 77 See “Girls Get Busy On Civic Holiday,” The Free Press, 3 August 1935, 16. There is no mention of organized women’s softball in the city from 1936 until 1942. See, 64th Annual Report (London, Ontario: Public Utilties Commission, 1942), 38. For more information on industrial softball opportunities in Lon – don, Ontario see Carly Adams, “I just felt like I belonged to them”: Women’s Industrial Softball, London, Ontario 1923-1935,” Journal of Sport History, (forthcoming Spring 2011). 78 For more information on city softball teams for women in London post-1942, see Carly Adams, ONTARIO HISTORY In 1942, as an extension of the play- ground softball leagues, the London Girls’ Major Softball League was creat – ed. Helen Brulotte recalls the creation of the league : “Most of us were coming up to sixteen or so and there was no place, cause you only went to the play – grounds until you were sixteen. And he [Bill Farquharson] figured there were a lot of good ball players around. So that was when he started the four-wards league.” 79 Open to girls and women aged thirteen to twenty-one across the city, the league played its games at La -batt Park. 80 As an alternative source of revenue for the park, the women’s league was welcomed as a fruitful replacement to circumvent the effects of the Second World War that led to the diminish – ment of the men’s leagues. The inaugu – ral league consisted of four teams, each one representing a ward of the city : The Shamrocks from the Southeast, The Cardinals from the Northwest, the Ea – gles in the South, and the Royals in the East. Many of the women inter viewed for this study went on to play for one of these city teams. Figure 3: Maypole Dance, circa 1920, PUC Collection, The University of Western Ontario Archives, RC42067. “Softball and the Female Community: Pauline Perron, Pro Ball Player, Outsider, 1926-1951,” Journal of Sport History, 33 (2006), 323-43. 79 Brulotte, Belliveau, and Robertson interview.80 Originally called Tecumseh Park, the Labatt family rescued the baseball grounds from financial difficulty in 1936, renaming it and donating it to the city along with a $10,000 cheque for improvements. See Morden, Putting Down Roots, 47-49. playgrounds n london Final Thoughts T he London playgrounds were es – tablished as a result of the broader result of the broader social reform movement of the early twentieth century. The efforts of lo – cal reform-minded organizations such as the London branch of the NCWC, that sought to protect children from the evils of idleness and environmental vices that their members felt plagued urban life at the turn of the century, success – fully convinced the London municipal government to take up the playground initiative. But throughout the 1920s and 1930s city playgrounds were more than protective spaces for children during the summer months. For the girls and young women involved, the playground offered a place to develop lasting friendship that, for many, became life-long. Doreen Bugler recalls the importance of these friendships: you were growing up with the children and you were competing year after year. And you made some really good friends. Especially when you got involved in something like the relays. You had to have three other kids that could run as fast as you could [laughter] and we used to practice that over and over be – cause you didn’t want to make a slip with the baton. That was fun. 81 Shirley Fickling attributes learning to play ball to “going to the parks.” 82 For many women, learning to play softball and other sports at the playgrounds led to decades of sport involvement. Pri- marily through playground programs girls and women were first exposed to organized sports once only accessible to males. 83 Mona Gleason suggests that in adult memories of growing up, “the body is remembered as the site through which acceptable self-identities and the priorities of the larger social order were mediated and negotiated.” 84 Women like Shirley who spent their summers at Lon – don playgrounds under the care of City- paid supervisors remember sport and competitive recreational opportunities as an important part of their self-iden – tities as children and young adults. The municipal playground was an important space for girls and young women, a place to play where exploring the movement of their bodies, and testing the boundaries of physical abilities was appropriate and acceptable. On the playgrounds girls and young women were also forced to negotiate philosophies that meant to shape chil – dren into ‘proper’ young women and men—philosophies that were deeply 81 Bugler interview.82 Fickling interview. 83 It is important here to recognize the agency of these children in the development of their play – ground experiences. Gagen suggests that previous work on playgrounds, specifically within the American context, “has presented the movement as something created by adults for children, and in doing so has reduced children to passive historical characters who respond to or acted within an imposed framework. Gagen suggests that it is important to acknowledge “children’s contribution to the production of space,” See Elizabeth Gagen, “Too Good to be True: Representing Children’s Agency in the Archives of Play – ground Reform,” Historical Geography, 29 (2001), 53-55. 84 Gleason, “Embodied Negotiations,” 112. 0 ONTARIO HISTORY embedded in gendered notions of citi- zenship. Through playground program – ming , girls and young women learned about gender segregation—that boys and girls should not compete against one an – other in sport—and to move their bod – ies in gender-appropriate ways. They also learned about what were considered so – cially appropriate activities for boys and girls and what sociologist Jennie Munday calls “citizenship as duty.” 85 They learned 85 Munday, “Gendered citizenship,” 251.86 Taken from, Sherna Berger Gluck and Daphne Patai, Women’s Words: The Feminist Practice of Oral History (New York: Routledge, 1991). about loyalty to their playground com – munity and by extension to the state and most importantly expectations for ‘good’ citizenship. The oral histories of women’s experiences as children at municipal play – grounds offer insight into Ontario’s past beyond archival documents and meeting minutes, and place women’s experiences and “women’s words” central to our un – derstanding of the municipal playground movement in Canada. 86
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