Beginnings in London
The Young Men's
Christian Association was founded in London, England,
on June 6, 1844, in response to unhealthy social conditions
arising in the big cities at the end of the Industrial
Revolution (roughly 1750 to 1850). Growth of the railroads
and centralization of commerce and industry brought many
rural young men who needed jobs into cities like London.
They worked 10 to 12 hours a day, six days a week.
Far from home and
family, these young men often lived at the workplace.
They slept crowded into rooms over the company's shop,
a location thought to be safer than London's tenements
and streets. Outside the shop things were bad -- open
sewers, pickpockets, thugs, beggars, drunks, lovers for
hire and abandoned children running wild by the thousands.
George Williams
George
Williams, born on a farm in 1821, came to London 20 years
later as a sales assistant in a draper's shop, a forerunner
of today's department store. He and a group of fellow
drapers organized the first YMCA to substitute Bible study
and prayer for life on the streets. By 1851 there were
24 Ys in Great Britain, with a combined membership of
2,700. That same year the Y arrived in North America:
It was established in Montreal on November 25, and in
Boston on December 29.
The idea proved
popular everywhere. In 1853, the first YMCA for African
Americans was founded in Washington, D.C., by Anthony
Bowen, a freed slave. The next year the first international
convention was held in Paris. At the time there were 397
separate Ys in seven nations, with 30,369 members total.
The YMCA idea, which
began among evangelicals, was unusual because it crossed
the rigid lines that separated all the different churches
and social classes in England in those days. This openness
was a trait that would lead eventually to including in
YMCAs all men, women and children, regardless of race,
religion or nationality. Also, its target of meeting social
need in the community was dear from the start.
George Williams
was knighted by Queen Victoria in 1894 for his YMCA work
and buried in 1905 under the floor of St. Paul's Cathedral
among that nation's heroes and statesmen. A large stained
glass window in Westminster Abbey, complete with a red
triangle, is dedicated to YMCAs, to Sir George and to
Y work during the first World War.
Civil War times
In
the United States during the Civil War, Y membership shrunk
to one-third its size as members marched off to battle.
Fifteen of the remaining Northern Ys formed the U.S. Christian
Commission to assist the troops and prisoners of war.
It was endorsed by President Abraham Lincoln, and its
4,859 volunteers included the American poet Walt Whitman.
Among other accomplishments, it gave more than 1 million
Bibles to fighting men. It was the beginning of a commitment
to working with soldiers and sailors that continues to
this day through the Armed Services YMCAs.
Only 59 Ys were
left by war's end, but a rapid rebuilding followed, and
four years later there were 600 more. The focus was on
saving souls, with saloon and street corner preaching,
lists of Christian boarding houses, lectures, libraries
and meeting halls, most of them in rented quarters.
But seeds of future
change were there. In 1866, the influential New York YMCA
adopted a fourfold purpose: "The improvement of the spiritual,
mental, social and physical condition of young men."
In those early days,
YMCAs were run almost entirely by volunteers. There were
a handful of paid staff members before the Civil War who
kept the place clean, ran the library and served as corresponding
secretaries. But it wasn't until the 1880s, when YMCAs
began putting up buildings in large numbers, that most
associations thought they needed someone there full time.
Gyms and swimming
pools came in at that time, too, along with big auditoriums
and bowling alleys. Hotel-like rooms with bathrooms down
the hall, called dormitories or residences, were designed
into every new YMCA building, and would continue to be
until the late 1950s. Income from rented rooms was a great
source of funds for YMCA activities of all kinds. Residences
would make a major financial contribution to the movement
for the next century.
Ys took up boys
work and organized summer camps. They set up exercise
drills in classes -- forerunners of today's aerobics --
using wooden dumbbells, heavy medicine balls and so-called
Indian clubs, which resembled graceful, long-necked bowling
pins. Ys organized college students for social action,
literally invented the games of basketball and volleyball
and served the special needs of railroad men who had no
place to stay when the train reached the end of the line.
By the 1890s, the fourfold purpose was transformed into
the triangle of spirit, mind and body.
Moody and Mott
John
Mott (second from left), a leader of the YMCA movement
in America, received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1946. Mott's
award was in recognition for the YMCA's role in increasing
global understanding and for its humanitarian efforts.
Mott himself was a student of the YMCA movement, and he
was a major influence on the Y's missionary movement.
Through the influence of nationally known lay evangelists
Dwight L. Moody (1837-1899) and John Mott (1865-1955),
who dominated the movement in the last half of the 19th
and first half of the 20th centuries respectively, the
American YMCAs sent workers by the thousands overseas,
both as missionary -- like YMCA secretaries and as war
workers.
The first foreign
work secretaries, as they were called, reflected the huge
missionary outreach by Christian churches near the turn
of the century. But instead of churches, they organized
YMCAs that eventually were placed under local control.
Both Moody and Mott served for lengthy periods as paid
professional staff members of the YMCA movement. Both
maintained lifelong connections with it.
The U.S. entered
World War I in April 1917. Mott, on his own, involved
the YMCA movement in running the military canteens, called
post exchanges today, in the United States and in France.
Ys led fundraising campaigns that raised $235 million
for those YMCA operations and other wartime causes, and
hired 25,926 Y workers -- 5,145 of them women -- to run
the canteens.
It also took on
war relief for both refugees and prisoners of war on both
sides, and worked to ease the path of African American
soldiers returning to the segregated South. Y secretaries
from China supervised the Chinese laborers brought to
Europe to unload ships, dig trenches and clear the battlefields
after the war. Y.C. James Yen, a Yale graduate working
with YMCAs in France, developed a simple Chinese alphabet
of 100 characters that became a major weapon in wiping
out illiteracy in China. Funds left over from war work
helped in the 1920s to spur a Y building boom, outreach
to small towns and counties, work with returning black
troops and blossoming of YMCA trade schools and colleges.
Buddy can you spare
a dime?
The Great Depression
brought dramatic drops in Y income, some as high as 50
percent. A number of associations had taken up direct
relief of the poor beginning in 1928, as employment mounted
before the stock market crash of 1929. When direct relief
was taken over by the federal government in 1933, it released
YMCAs and other nonprofits from their welfare tasks.
Forced to reevaluate
themselves by hard times and by pressure from militant
student YMCAs, community Ys became aware of social problems
as never before and accelerated their partnerships with
other social welfare agencies. Programs and mission were
reviewed as well. Some results were joint community projects,
renewed emphasis on group work and more work through organized
classes and lectures. Ys were forced to prove to their
communities that both character-building agencies and
welfare agencies were needed, especially in times of stress.
Between 1929 and
1933, Bible class enrollment fell by 60 percent and residence
use was down, but exercise and educational classes were
both up, along with vocational training and camping.
A typical Y program
of the day was the Leisure Time League in Minneapolis.
It drew thousands to that YMCA in 1932 to "unite unemployed
young men who desire to maintain their physical and mental
vigor and wish to train themselves for greater usefulness
and service to themselves and the community," reported
the association. The program offered a wide range of free
services such as medical assistance, physical programs,
school classes on a dozen subjects and recreation. As
conditions improved even slightly, they went back to work.
A few were left behind -- in most cases, those considered
unemployable. The YMCA offered them vocational training.
The idea spread
widely and YMCAs discovered they could survive handily
if they served a large number of people and had low building
payments. In fact, the Chicago Y was able to organize
a new South Shore branch in the depths of the Depression.
Wartime challenges
During World War
II, the National Council of YMCAs (now the YMCA of the
USA) joined with Ys around the world to assist prisoners
of war in 36 nations. It also helped form the United Service
Organization (USO), which ran drop-in centers for servicepeople
and sent performers abroad to entertain the troops. Ys
worked with displaced persons and refugees as well, and
sent both workers and money abroad after the war to help
rebuild damaged YMCA buildings.
After more than
two decades of study and trial YMCA youth secretaries
in 1944 agreed to put a national seal of approval on what
was already widespread in the movement to focus their
energies on four programs that involved work in small
groups. They became known as the "four fronts" or "four
platforms" of Youth Work: a father-son program called
Y-Indian Guides, and three boy's clubs -- Gra-Y for those
in grade school, Junior Hi-Y and Hi-Y. (There would eventually
be all-female and coed models as well.)
Times of change
At the close of
the war, the Ys had changed. Sixty-two percent were admitting
women, and other barriers began to fall one after the
other, with families the new emphasis, and all races and
religions included at all levels of the organization.
The rapidly expanding suburbs drew the Ys with them, sometimes
abandoning the old residences and downtown buildings that
no longer were efficient or necessary.
In 1958, the U.S.
and Canadian YMCAs launched Buildings for Brotherhood
in which the two nations raised $55 million which was
matched by $6 million overseas. The result was 98 Y buildings
renovated, improved or built new in 32 countries.
In what could be
called the Great Disillusion of 1965-1975, the nation
was rocked by turmoil that included the Vietnam War, urban
noting, the forced resignation of a U.S. president, the
outbreak of widespread drug abuse among the middle class,
assassination of major political leaders, and a loss of
confidence in institutions.
The Ys, in response,
were challenged by National General Secretary James Bunting
to change their ways. He said the choice was "either to
keep learning or to become 20th-century Pharisees clinging
to forms and theories that were once valid expressions
of the best that was known, but that today are outdated
and irrelevant."
With national YMCA
support and federal aid, new outreach efforts were taken
up by community Ys in 150 cities. The Ys poured their
own money and talent into outreach as well. Outreach programs
were not new to the organization, but the size and scope
involved were new.
The four-fronts
youth programs withered for lack of attention, dying out
entirely in many major centers, but holding fast in YMCA
camping and in parts of the Midwest and much of the South.
When federal aid dried up, money troubles began to reappear,
as Ys struggled to keep faith with those they were helping.
An even more insidious
problem was in the mix. Long schooled in conciliation,
Y people found themselves being confronted aggressively
both at home and abroad. It was particularly hard to deal
with and discouraging. Beginning in 1970 the fraternal
secretaries serving YMCAs overseas were being called home.
Some buildings in U.S. cities were shuttered and residences
dosed for lack of clientele and insufficient funds for
proper maintenance. Y leaders were urged to become more
businesslike in both their appearance and their operations,
a topic raised by Y boards since the 1920s.
Trends
After
1975, the old physical programming featured by YMCAs for
a century began to perk up as interest in healthy lifestyles
increased nationwide. By 1980, pressure for up-to-date
buildings and equipment brought on a boom in construction
that lasted through the decade.
Child care for working
parents, an extension of what YMCAs had done informally
for years, came with a rush in 1983 and quickly joined
health and fitness, camping, and residences as a major
source of YMCA income.
Character Development
and Asset-Based Approach
During
the 1980s and '90s, the ideas of "values clarification"
were slowly replaced by ideas of "character." The moral
upbringing of children had been considered the sole domain
of the family, and enabling the child to discover his
or her own ethical system was the goal. But by the mid
to late '80s, this was seen as contributing to a morally
bankrupt society, in which there is no notion of virtue
(or of vice), just different points of view. The ideas
of character development and civic virtues became central,
with Bennet's The Book of Virtues hitting the best-seller
lists and organizations such as Character Counts! being
born. "Preach what you practice" became as much a part
of the ideal of youth development as "practice what you
preach," and "it takes a village" replaced "it's the family's
job to develop morals."
The YMCA movement
had been involved in character development from the beginning,
but in an implicit and practical focus rather than an
explicit one. (George Williams stated this perfectly in
his response to how he would respond to a young man who
said that he had lost his belief in Jesus, by saying that
his first act would be to see that the young man had dinner.)
The YMCA movement studied the issue and emerged with four
"core values" -- caring, honesty, respect and responsibility
-- and promptly began to incorporate these in all programming
in an explicit and conscious way.
During the '90s,
a tremendous change occurred in the field of youth development.
Previously, the focus had been on the "deficit model,"
in other words, what went wrong with the youth who got
into trouble, and how could they be corrected. But the
same way that prevention and development of health, rather
than just the cure of disease pervaded the medical world,
youth workers and academics started to look at what contributes
to healthy development and prevents problems -- an "assets
model." The YMCA of the USA collaborated with The Search
Institute on studying this issue in depth and coming up
with practical results.
The research showed
30 (later increased to 40) developmental assets that positively
correlated with pro-social and healthy behaviors in youth,
and negatively correlated with anti-social and unhealthy
behaviors. The more assets a youth has, the more likely
he or she is to behave well, the less likely to engage
in risky behaviors. This not only provided a "road map"
for Ys to follow in creating healthy kids, families and
communities, but also was an inherent proof of the effectiveness
of youth programs.
It also showed a
wider focus than had been thought possible. It doesn't
matter if a program consists of sports, music, a teen
center, mentoring or aerobics, or if it's aimed at reducing
teen pregnancy, smoking or crime. If it provides one or
more of the developmental assets, it will reduce the overall
risk of any kind of negative behavior, and raise the likelihood
of positive behavior.
Highlights and
Accomplishments of the YMCA Movement in America
Ys have been so
integral to their communities that organizations have
been founded at meetings at YMCAs without being part of
Y programs. The Gideons organization famous for putting
Bibles in hotel rooms was started at a YMCA, but without
Y staff or volunteer involvement. So we say that the Gideons
was founded at a Y, but not that a Y started Gideons.
It would be impossible
to list all of the individuals and organizations contributing
to this document. We received information from sources
ranging from trade associations to university professors
to current and retired YMCA employees. The only things
they had in common were a deep respect for Y traditions,
a love for what the YMCA stands for and a desire to help.
Special recognition must go to the staff of the YMCA of
the USA Archives. Their efforts and irreplaceable resources
provided needed details when no one else knew where to
look.
The reason to look
at what YMCAs did in the past is to inspire today's YMCA
staff and volunteers to serve their communities with the
same concern, dedication and courage. They may not make
a list of firsts, but they will keep YMCAs foremost with
their accomplishments.
Everybody plays,
everybody wins-sports at YMCAs
Millions
of people have been introduced to sports at YMCAs. Many
of the sports people play were introduced at YMCAs, too.
Volleyball was invented
at the Holyoke (Mass.) YMCA in 1895, by William Morgan,
an instructor at the Y who felt that basketball was too
strenuous for businessmen. Morgan blended elements of
basketball, tennis and handball into the game and called
it mintonette. The name "volleyball" was first used in
1896 during an exhibition at the International YMCA Training
School in Springfield, Mass., to better describe how the
ball went back and forth over the net. In 1922, YMCAs
held their first national championship in the game. This
became the U.S. Open in 1924, when non-YMCA teams were
permitted to compete.
Racquetball was
invented in 1950 at the Greenwich (Conn.) YMCA by Joe
Sobek, a member who couldn't find other squash players
of his caliber and who did not care for handball. He tried
paddleball and platform tennis and came up with the idea
of using a strung racquet similar to a platform tennis
paddle (not a sawed-off tennis racquet, as some say) to
allow a greater variety of shots. After drawing up rules
for the game, Sobek went to nearby Ys for approval by
other players, and at the same time formed them into the
Paddle Rackets Association to promote the sport. The original
balls Sobek used were half blue and half red. When he
needed replacements, Sobek asked Spalding, the original
manufacturer, to make the balls all blue, so they wouldn't
mark the Y's courts.
Softball was given
its name by motion of Walter Hakanson of the Denver YMCA
in 1926 at a meeting of the Colorado Amateur Softball
Association (CASA), itself a result of YMCA staff efforts.
Softball had been played for many years prior to 1926,
under such names as kittenball, softball and even sissyball.
In 1926, however, the YMCA state secretary, Homer Hoisington,
noticed both the sport's popularity and its need for standardized
rules. After a gathering of interested parties, the CASA
was formed and Hakanson moved to settle on the name softball
for the game. The motion carried, and the name softball
became accepted nationwide. Shortly thereafter, the Denver
YMCA adopted a declaration of principles for softball,
adhering to noncommercialized recreation open to all ages
and races and demanding good sportsmanship. When the Amateur
Softball Association of America was formed in 1933, the
Denver YMCA team represented Colorado in its first national
tournament, held in Chicago.
Professional football
began at a YMCA. In 1895, in Latrobe, Pa., John Brailer
was paid $10 plus expenses by the local YMCA to replace
the injured quarterback on their team. Years later, however,
Pudge Heffelfinger claimed that he was secretly paid to
play for the Allegheny Athletic Association in 1892. The
NFL elected to go with Pudge's version of events.
Yes,
it was at the International YMCA Training School that
in December 1891, James Naismith invented the game of
basketball, doing so at the demand of Luther Gulick, the
director of the school. Gulick needed a game to occupy
a class of incorrigibles -- 18 future YMCA directors who,
more interested in rugby and football, didn't care for
leapfrog, tumbling and other activities they were forced
to do during the winter. Gulick, obviously out of patience
with the group, gave Naismith two weeks to come up with
a game to occupy them.
Naismith decided
that the new game had to be physically active and simple
to understand. It could not be rough, so no contact could
be allowed. The ball could be passed but not carried.
Goals at each end of the court would lend a degree of
difficulty and give skill and science a role. Elevating
the goal would eliminate rushes that could injure players,
a problem in football and rugby.
Introducing the
game of basketball at the next gym class (Naismith did
meet Gulick's deadline), Naismith posted 13 rules on the
wall and taught the game to the incorrigibles. The men
loved it and proceeded to introduce basketball to their
home towns over Christmas break. Naismith's invention
spread like wildfire.
Not only was basketball
invented by a YMCA institution, but the game's first professional
team came from a Y. The Trenton (N.J.) YMCA had fielded
a basketball team since 1892 and in 1896 its team claimed
to be the national champions after beating various other
YMCA and college teams. The team then severed its ties
with the Y. It played the 1896-97 season out of a local
Masonic temple, charging for admission and keeping the
proceeds.
No idle hands --
YMCA programs
YMCAs run programs
of all types, from activities for older adults to Zen
aerobics. Some of the biggest are camping, swimming and
child care. Here are some stories of their development.
Camping has been
a part of YMCA programming for more than a century. The
claim for a YMCA first in camping, however, must be worded
carefully, since the YMCA did not invent camping in 1885,
and Sumner Dudley did not lead the first YMCA camping
program. What YMCAs can claim is having founded the first
continuously used camp. The first school camp was started
in 1861 by William Gunn, and Gunn camps became well known.
A camp for weakly boys was organized in 1876 by Dr. Joseph
Trimble Rothrock. The first church camp for boys was started
in 1880, and in 1881 the first private camp to meet special
educational needs was established. None of these camps
was a YMCA camp, and none of them operates today.
YMCAs became involved
in camping in the 1860s, with the earliest reference being
that of the Vermont Y's boy's missionary (who would now
be the youth director) taking a group of boys to Lake
Champlain for a summer encampment. In 1881, the Brooklyn
(N.Y.) YMCA reported taking 30 boys on a camping out.
Many other YMCAs had camp experiences for youth as well,
and in 1882 national records started recording camping
programs under outings and excursions.
The oldest camp,
now known as Camp Dudley, began in 1886 on Lake Champlain,
NY Sumner Dudley, long active in both the New York and
New Jersey YMCA movements, was asked in 1884 to take young
honor YMCA members camping. In 1885 he took seven boys
for a week's encampment at Orange Lake, NJ The next year
Dudley moved the site to Twin Islands, Lake Wawayanda,
NJ Ultimately, the camp settled on Lake Champlain, NY,
in 1908. Dudley referred to the first camp as Camp Baldhead.
After Dudley's death in 1897, the camp was renamed Camp
Dudley.
The Ragger Society,
the forerunner of today's Rags and Leather Program, was
started in 1914 at Camp Loma Mar in California. It started
because a camp director wanted to award athletic ability.
Other camp leaders objected, noting that a boy with physical
disabilities would then never be able to win. They settled
on a program of personal counseling and seeking God's
will for oneself. The hymn, I Would Be True, written in
1917 by Howard A. Walker, was inspired by the program's
creed. Walker himself later went to India and performed
YMCA work there.
Swimming
and aquatics have long been associated with the YMCA,
and tens of millions of people across the country learned
how to swim at the YMCA. It was not always this way, however,
and for many years swimming was seen as a distraction
from legitimate physical development.
The first reported
YMCA swimming bath was built at the Brooklyn (NY) Central
YMCA in 1885. By the end of the year, it was reported
that 17 Ys had pools. Pools then bore scant resemblance
to the pools of today: The Brooklyn Central pool was 14'
x 45' and 5' deep. Early pools, in addition to being small,
had no filters or recirculation systems. The water in
the pool just got dirtier and dirtier until the pool was
drained and cleaned, which some Ys did on a weekly basis.
No wonder the medical community saw them as a threat to
health.
Two developments
helped change YMCA staff attitudes towards pools. The
first was the development of mass swim lessons in 1906
by George Corsan at the Detroit YMCA. What Corsan did
was to teach swimming strokes on land, starting with the
crawl stroke first, as a confidence builder. Prior to
Corsan's methods, strokes were only taught in the pool
and the crawl was not taught until later. Corsan also
came up with the ideas of the learn-to-swim campaign and
using bronze buttons as rewards for swimming proficiency.
He gave a button to boys who swam 50 feet. Corsan's learn-to-swim
campaigns resulted in 1909 in the first campaign to teach
every boy in the United States and Canada how to swim.
Perhaps
Corsan's land drills for swimming came about as a result
of how swimming had been taught. Early YMCA staff viewed
swimming as a distraction from the real job of physical
development, which meant exercise and gymnastics. Boys
in San Francisco, for example, could not use the pool
until after they had passed a proficiency test in gymnastics.
In the 1890s, swimming was taught by using a rope and
pulley system.
The second development
was the use of filtration systems for keeping the water
clean. Ray L. Rayburn, a founder of what was the Building
Bureau (now BFS), came up with the ideas of building pools
with roll-out rims and water recirculation systems. Recirculation
meant that the water could be filtered and impurities
removed. The first roll-out rim was installed in 1909
in the Kansas City, Mo., pool. In 1910, a filtration system
was added to the Kansas City pool. No more would pools
be considered health menaces.
The combination
of these developments, Corsan's mass teaching techniques
and Rayburn's filtration systems, came together to popularize
swimming and swim instruction at YMCAs. In 1932 there
were more than 1 million swimmers a year at YMCAs. In
1956, the national learn-to-swim campaigns became Learn
to Swim Month. In 1984, it was reported that YMCAs collectively
were the largest operator of swimming pools in the world.
It is hard to overestimate
the effect the YMCA movement has had on swimming and aquatics
in general. A Springfield College student, George Goss,
wrote the first American book on lifesaving in 1913 as
a thesis. It was a YMCA national board member (then the
YMCA International Committee), William Ball, who in the
early 1900s encouraged the Red Cross to include lifesaving
instruction in its disaster and wartime services programs.
The first mobile swimming pool was invented at the Eastern
Union (NJ) Y in 1961, enabling the Y to take instruction
and swimming programs to people who could not go to the
Y. The YMCA Swimming and Lifesaving Manual, published
in 1919, was one of the earliest works on the subject.
The Council for National Cooperation in Aquatics, formed
in 1951, was created as a result of the efforts of the
YMCA. A group of 20 national agencies, the Council was
organized to expand cooperation in the field of aquatics.
Even the military
used YMCA swim instruction techniques. In World War I,
the Army used mass land drills to teach doughboys. In
1943, Dr. Thomas K. Cureton, chairman of the YMCA National
Aquatic Committee, published Warfare Aquatics, which was
widely used by the armed forces (and YMCAs!) during the
conflict and after.
The term "bodybuilding"
was first used in 1881 by Robert Roberts, a member of
the staff at the Boston YMCA. He also developed the exercise
classes that led to today's fitness workouts.
Group
child care was not started at a YMCA, but Ys moved swiftly
to meet the needs of a changed and changing society. Rosie
the Riveter went back home after World War II, but her
daughter left and didn't look back. Today's YMCA movement
is the largest not-for-profit provider of child care,
and is larger than any for-profit chain in the country.
No one could have
predicted that in the beginning. The origins of group
child care are obscure and we will probably never know
who had the first group care program. A strong possibility,
however, is that group care grew out of gang prevention
and teen intervention programs in the 1960s. The Chicago
YMCA had a strong youth outreach program in the 1960s
(Ys had been working with youth gangs in one way or another
since the 1880s). Workers noticed, however, that youths
attending the program often brought their younger siblings
along because they were providing care while their parents
worked. Child care was organized so that the older kids
could attend these programs without concern or distraction.
Another
impetus for group child care at the Y came from John Root,
general secretary (today he would be CEO) of the Chicago
YMCA. Root had returned from a trip to the Soviet Union,
where he had observed firsthand the extensive child care
programs offered by the government and how the availability
of child care benefited both children and their families.
Root was determined to have YMCAs do as much in America.
The idea quickly
spread to other cities. In the 1990s, about half a million
children received care at a YMCA each year. In 1996, child
care became the movement's second largest source of revenue,
after membership dues.
The American way
-- YMCAs' influence on society
Many times YMCAs
influenced society simply by coming up with creative solutions
to their own problems, such as a need for trained YMCA
employees. These solutions then spread throughout our
society because they met the needs of others. Often YMCAs
set themselves up as models long before others even knew
there was a problem. Here are some examples of how YMCAs
shaped the development of social institutions in America.
Many
of the practices of colleges and universities in America,
in fact, several colleges and universities themselves,
can be traced back to YMCA involvement in higher education.
Ys in the 19th and early 20th centuries placed much more
emphasis on formal and informal classes and teaching than
they do now. This stemmed in part from the fact that free
public education was not so widespread as it is today.
That meant that there were large numbers of working teens
who needed classes and instruction if they were to avoid
the traps and pitfalls that George Williams so keenly
observed in London decades earlier. YMCA classes and instruction
also stemmed from the need for properly trained staff
to run local Ys and carry on its programs.
The first institution
of higher learning organized by the YMCA national organization
was the School for Christian Workers in Springfield, Mass.
Later known as the International YMCA Training School
and finally as Springfield College, the School was to
train Y workers in all aspects of business and management.
Previously, academic training for YMCA employees was mostly
summer institutes and training sessions, the first being
held in 1884 at Lake Geneva, Wis. These were insufficient,
though, and at least since 1876 there had been calls for
Ys in large metropolitan areas to set up training schools.
The need for a formal
school was also felt in the Midwest, with a YMCA Training
School housed in the downtown Chicago YMCA opening in
1890 with five students. It ultimately became George Williams
College, after merging with the Western Secretarial Institute,
a summer training school in Lake Geneva, Wis., in 1892.
A century later, George Williams College became part of
Aurora University, in Aurora, Ill.
The idea that large
metropolitan associations should have classrooms for teen
education and staff training was put into practice in
San Francisco and Boston in the 1880s and 1890s. What
is now Northeastern University in Boston started as informal
law courses in 1897 with the founding of the Evening Institute
of the Boston YMCA. Formal classes started in 1898, under
the name of the Evening School of Law of the Boston YMCA.
The school added additional subject areas and became Northeastern
College in 1916. Later expansion led to its becoming Northeastern
University in 1922. The Evening Institute of the Boston
YMCA was also the birthplace of student work study, a
concept familiar to students receiving financial aid at
almost every college or university in the country.
The origins of Golden
Gate University in San Francisco are similar. The San
Francisco Y was founded in 1853, one of 13 YMCAs operating
in North America at the time. In 1881, the YMCA Night
School was established, a name it kept until 1895, when
it became the YMCA Evening College. The Evening College
formed a YMCA Law School in 1910, becoming Golden Gate
College in 1923.
Many YMCAs had cooperative
agreements with some of the most prestigious institutions
of higher learning in America, many starting in the 1920s
and 1930s. Some of the more notable institutions include
Oberlin College (America's first coeducational school),
Yale Divinity School, Whittier College, Columbia University
and Union Theological Seminary. The Southern YMCA College
and Graduate School was founded in Nashville, Tenn., in
1919, with the help of Vanderbilt University, Peabody
College for Teachers, and Scarritt College for Christian
Workers. It closed in 1936, with many of its programs
going to the Blue Ridge Assembly. In Chicago, Roosevelt
University was founded in 1945 as a result of a split
within the existing Central YMCA College.
The YMCA movement
played a large role in the development of higher education.
By 1916, there were approximately 83,000 students taking
more than 200 YMCA courses. In 1946, approximately 130,000
students were taking courses through Ys. In all there
were 20 YMCA colleges in 1950, ranging from Fenn College
in Cleveland to Springfield College. Beginning in the
1930s, as the colleges became freestanding institutions
of higher learning and not just training centers for YMCA
staff, it made sense for them to break free of the YMCA
movement altogether. In 1997, only Springfield College
and the George Williams College of Aurora (Ill.) University
retain close ties with the movement.
Another aspect of
YMCA involvement in higher education was the work of student
YMCAs at many colleges and universities. The first recorded
student Ys opened in 1856 at Cumberland University in
Tennessee and at Milton Academy (now College). Students,
of course, must have been active in informal YMCA bodies
before then. Student Ys offered counseling and services
to students on an ecumenical basis, an approach that heavily
influenced and ultimately changed the way church and college
staff conducted their own campus outreach programs. Student
work was so important to the movement that in 1922, the
movement authorized the organization of a national student
council, complete with its own statement of purpose.
Certification of
staff with respect to general training is a YMCA development,
growing out of the need for education that led to establishing
YMCA schools in the 19th century. In 1922, a plan for
voluntary certification to be a YMCA secretary (today's
director) was drawn up.
YMCAs were also
among the first to develop systems of certification for
staff in teaching programs. In part, this can be traced
to the publication by Association Press of manuals and
materials for use by staff in teaching courses. In 1938
a national plan was developed for certifying aquatic directors
and instructors. In 1959, certification was offered in
skin and scuba diving. In 1996, more than 54,000 people
were certified in various subjects or as trainers of trainers.
The YMCA organized
a Retirement Fund for employees in 1922, with about 1,000
Ys and 4,000 staff participating. The first official steps
to organizing the fund began in 1913. Prior to that, churches
and welfare organizations, if they made any provision
for the future at all, had widows and orphans plans. The
Y's retirement plan was a first for any major welfare
organization and probably the first for any such nonchurch
association.
When the fund became
operational in 1922, it began with an endowment of $4
million, including a $1 million conditional gift (in the
form of a challenge grant) from John D. Rockefeller Jr.
(who had been active in the student Y at Brown University).
Around that time, the Gamble family, of Proctor &
Gamble fame, gave the fund a large block of stock.
Successful investments
allowed it to survive the stock market crash of 1929,
and in 1934 the fund corpus had grown to $15 million.
The initial retirement age was 60. The fact that YMCAs
organized one of the earliest retirement funds should
be seen in perspective. YMCA staff had worked in other
ways to improve working conditions. YMCAs had been active
in labor's campaigns to shorten the work week since 1885.
The Nobel Peace
Prize awarded for pioneering work in peace making was
jointly awarded in 1946 to John R. Mott, a leader of the
YMCA movement in America, and to Emily Greene Balch. Mott's
award was in recognition for the role the YMCA had played
in increasing global understanding and for its humanitarian
efforts. Mott himself was a product of the student YMCA
movement and he was a major influence on the Y's missionary
movement. In 1993, the Jerusalem International YMCA, the
only Y owned by the YMCA of the USA, was nominated for
the Nobel Peace Prize for its work for promoting peace
in the Middle East.
Residences at YMCAs
play a vital part in both the movement and in American
society. Staying in a YMCA room has been mentioned in
song and literature, and the list of people who stayed
at Y residences range from Dave Thomas, the founder of
Wendy's restaurants, to Charlie Rich, the country music
star and black revolutionary Malcolm Little, later known
as Malcolm X.
Dormitories were
seen as giving young men a place of refuge from the evils
of the world. In 1898, Young Men's Era, a Y publication,
declared that dorms were more in keeping with the YMCA
mission than other moneymaking devices. The first known
Y dormitory was noted in 1867, when the Chicago YMCA had
a 42-room dormitory in Farwell Hall. Intended for young
men who could not afford more ample accommodations, it
was, in the words of Dwight L. Moody, to be a Christian
home for the stranger young men coming to this city. Farwell
Hall burned down shortly thereafter.
It was 20 years
before the second dormitory was built at a YMCA, this
time in Milwaukee in 1887. In the meantime, though, several
YMCAs maintained emergency dormitories for the unemployed.
The Harrisburg (Pa.) YMCA opened a Y dormitory in 1877
in a renovated hotel.
By 1910, 281 Ys
had about 9,000 rooms available, and in 1916 the Chicago
YMCA Hotel opened with 1,821 rooms. By 1922 Ys had approximately
55,000 rooms and in 1940 there were about 100,000 rooms
at YMCAs. No hotel chain had more rooms.
And a star to steer
by -- organizations influenced by YMCAs
The influence of
YMCAs on others extends far beyond individuals in their
programs. Here are some organizations that drew on YMCA
experience or assistance during their formative years.
The Camp Fire Girls
(now Camp Fire Boys and Girls) were founded in 1910 through
the joint efforts of Luther Gulick, M.D., and his wife,
Charlotte. Gulick was already well known for his work
in the YMCA, his understanding of the whole person leading
to his design of the YMCA's inverted triangle, one side
each for spirit, mind and body. Busy with his existing
commitments, Gulick did not want to take on the task of
forming another organization. He did, however, advise
others on the organization of the Thetford Girls, the
forerunner of the Camp Fire Girls. Charlotte by then had
become interested in the Thetford Girls and was inspired
to name their first camp, at Sebago Lake, Maine, Camp
WoHeLo, from the first two letters of the words Work,
Health and Love. She saw them as forming an upright triangle,
which she pictured superimposed over the Y's symbol to
make a star.
YMCA staff members
played a key role in the development of the Boy Scouts
of America. After Lord S.S. Baden-Powell and others started
Scouting in 1907 in Britain, it spread to America, and
many YMCAs here had Boy Scout programs around the turn
of the century. YMCA and Scout leaders realized that Scouting
in the United States needed to be a separate movement,
but that it would benefit from YMCA nurturing, too.
Soon it was decided
by the Boy Scouts that they needed their own national
organization, and in June, 1910, a temporary national
headquarters for the Boy Scouts was housed in a YMCA office
in New York City. The first National Council office of
the Boy Scouts of America was opened in New York City
in 1911.
Ties to the YMCA
continued for some time after 1910. That year, Lord Baden-Powell
and others held the first training conference for Scout
leaders, the Scout Master's Training School, at the Silver
Bay Association, which was well known for hosting retreats
and meetings for the leaders of the YMCA movement (the
YWCA and other organizations also used Silver Bay for
similar purposes). These Scout Master's Training Schools
continued for some years.
In 1985, on the
occasion of their 75th anniversary, a plaque first given
in 1947 was rededicated at Silver Bay by the Boy Scouts
of America, in honor of its role in founding of Scouting
in the United States.
The United Service
Organizations, better known as the USO, was created in
October 1940, as a joint effort by the YMCA, YWCA, National
Catholic Community Service, National Jewish Welfare Board,
Traveler's Aid Association and the Salvation Army. These
organizations, like the YMCA, had long histories of helping
servicemen and noncombatants in the nation's wars, but
the scale of mobilization needed as America prepared for
World War II was far beyond the scope of any one organization.
The only way to deal effectively with the needs of the
hundreds of thousands of young men being drafted was to
combine and coordinate efforts. In January, 1941, USO
leaders met with President Roosevelt and various military
leaders. In settling a dispute between which areas of
the USO's activities would be controlled by the military
and which by the civilians, Roosevelt ordered that the
private organizations would handle the recreation services
and the government would put up the buildings and put
the USO name on the outside.
The Peace Corps,
founded in 1961 by order of President Kennedy, was patterned
after the YMCA's program of World Service Workers, which
had started in the 1880s. The student Ys of that era included
as members John Mott and Robert Wilder, who founded the
Student Volunteer Movement in 1888. The volunteers pledged
themselves to overseas missionary work after graduation
from college. The YMCA was given the opportunity to organize
the Corps, but turned it down due to the burden of its
other activities.
Association Press,
first established in 1907 as the YMCA Press, was created
as the publishing arm of the YMCA movement, producing
technical works, Bible study courses and other works suitable
for building character and leadership skills, and was
a pioneer in publishing books on sex education. It was
also the leading publisher of evangelistic materials used
by YMCAs, including the popular everyday life series of
devotionals written by Harry Emerson Fosdick between 1910
and 1920. Association Press also printed the text first
used by Dale Carnegie in teaching public speaking: Public
Speaking, a Practical Course for Business Men. The name
Association Press was given in 1911, and it was closed
and sold in the late 1970s after many years of declining
book sales.
Many people confuse
the Association Press with the current YMCA Press in Paris,
France, also known as the Paris Press. The Paris Press
does in fact have a U.S. YMCA connection. It was started
in Prague in 1920 by Julius Hecker, a World Service Worker,
who wanted to publish works in Russian for those fleeing
the revolution and the civil war. Since many books didn't
fit in with Communist ideology, they couldn't be printed
under Communist rule. Hecker's efforts helped the refugees
sustain their culture and community in the face of great
upheaval. One of the most important works put out by the
Paris Press was the Russian edition of Alexander Solzhenitsyn's
The Gulag Archipelago.
That they may all
be one -- diversity in the YMCA
YMCAs have interpreted their Christian mission in a practical
way, including in their programs and outreach missions
many groups excluded by others at the time. For example,
long before the phrase cultural diversity was used, YMCAs
were at work in the Great Plains with both the U.S. Cavalry
and the Sioux Indians.
U.S. Indian Ys first
started in 1879, with the founding of a YMCA by Thomas
Wakeman, a Dakota Indian, in Flandreau, S.D. The Dakota
Indian associations were formally received into the state
organization in 1885. By 1886 there were 10 Indian associations
with a total of 156 members. By 1898 there were about
40 Indian associations, including several student YMCAs.
The student department's interest in Indian work was fueled
by James A. Garvie's presentation to the convention of
1886: Garvie, a Sioux, had translated the model college
constitution of a student Y into the Sioux language.
The first Y employee
hired to do Indian work full time was Charles Eastman,
MD, a Sioux hired in 1895. Prior to that, however, the
Kansas state association had engaged a native Indian missionary
to work among his own people. In 1920 Indian efforts were
overseen by the student department. By 1926 the number
of Indian YMCAs was too small to include separately in
the annual report. The General Convention of Sioux YMCAs
in Dupree, SD, and the Mission Valley YMCA Family Center
in Ronan, Mont., are the last YMCAs on reservations.
U.S. YMCAs serving Asians were first established in San
Francisco to serve the large Chinese population there
in 1875, although the YMCA in Portland, Ore., had opened
a mission school and engaged a Chinese man to distribute
religious tracts five years earlier. The Chinese were
subjected to violent racism at this time, as witnessed
by the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. The secretaries
of these Chinese Ys were natives of China who converted
to Christianity. A Japanese YMCA was founded in San Francisco
in 1917.
YMCAs in the African
American community have a long and varied history. The
first YMCA for blacks was founded in 1853 by Anthony Bowen,
a freed slave, in Washington, D.C. It was the first nonchurch
black institution in America, predating Lincoln University
in Oxford, Pa., by a year. In 1888, William Hunton became
the first full-time black secretary in the YMCA movement,
and in 1900, the first conference of black secretaries
was held. In 1896 there were 60 active black Ys, 41 of
which were student Ys at colleges (the first black student
YMCA was formed in 1869 at Howard University, Washington,
D.C.). By 1924, there were 160 black Ys with 28,000 members.
Twenty-five black
YMCAs were built in 23 cities (there were three in New
York City) as a result of a challenge grant program announced
by Julius Rosenwald in 1910. Rosenwald promised $25,000
toward the construction of YMCAs in black communities
if the community raised $75,000 over a five-year period.
Adjusting for inflation, Rosenwald's grants would total
about $10 million today. The effect of these Rosenwald
Ys was keenly felt in the 1950s and '60s: YMCAs, being
integral parts of the black community, played important
roles in the struggle for civil rights.
YMCAs and Y leaders
also played important roles in the fight for civil rights.
In 1932, the student YMCAs voted to not hold meetings
in states with Jim Crow laws. Eugene E. Barnett, head
of the national YMCA organization during the 1940s, was
a strong advocate of integrating YMCAs and full civil
rights for minorities.
While YMCAs provided
proud firsts on racial matters in the 19th and early 20th
centuries, they also provided some sad lasts later on.
In the 1960s, some 300 YMCAs were still racially segregated,
and a few left the movement rather than comply with the
national organization's directive to integrate.
The YMCA also had
a role in the creation of modern black historigraphy.
Carter G. Woodson, Ph.D., a historian and the second African
American to receive a doctorate in history from Harvard
University, stayed at the Wabash Area YMCA in Chicago
when he visited the city during the 1910s. During that
era, formal and informal segregation limited blacks to
only certain areas of the city. As a result, the Wabash
Area Y became a major institution in serving the black
neighborhood known as Bronzeville. It was there that Dr.
Woodson and three friends met in 1915 to found the Association
for the Study of Negro Life and History. The men felt
that if whites learned more about blacks, race relations
would improve. The association, and Dr. Woodson's later
scholarship, were important vehicles in establishing the
study of African American history as an accepted academic
pursuit at all major colleges and universities. Dr. Woodson
was also a practical man in addition to being a scholar:
he knew that demonstrating the talents and accomplishments
of blacks in America would help increase white regard
for blacks. In 1926 he organized the first Negro History
Week, held in Washington, D.C. In the 1960s it grew into
Black History Month and is now celebrated throughout the
country.
In the 1970s, Bronzeville
ran down, the Wabash YMCA was closed and the building
nearly torn down. Now the neighborhood is improving and
the building is on the National Register of Historic Places.
The early history
of women in the YMCA is not well documented, although
it is believed that the first female member of a YMCA
joined in Brooklyn, NY, in the late 1850s. This is based
on a statement by one observer in 1869 that Brooklyn had
had women as members for half of its existence. The Brooklyn
YMCA was founded in 1853. There were several female members,
at least unofficially, by the 1860s. The Albany (NY) convention
of 1866 went so far as to refuse to seat several women
delegates, holding that representation at the convention
had to be based on male membership. Ellen Brown, who was
not only the first female employee of a YMCA, but also
the first boy's work secretary in the movement, was hired
in 1886. By 1946, women accounted for 12 percent of the
membership.
This is not to say
that women were not active in YMCAs before the 1860s.
Almost immediately after the founding of the YMCA in the
United States in 1851, women taught classes, raised funds
and functioned as a ladies aid society would in a church.
These committees of women were largely informal, and official
Ladies Auxiliaries were not formed until the 1880s. There
is record of lady members using YMCA gyms in 1881.
Wherever the soldier
goes -- YMCAs and the military
George Stuart, founder
of the Philadelphia YMCA and head of the Y's efforts in
the Civil War, said that there is a good deal of religion
in a warm shirt and a good beefsteak. YMCAs, to meet the
needs of those in the armed forces, responded with care,
imagination and skill. Here is an overview of the YMCA
and the military.
YMCAs and the military
have enjoyed a relationship that predates the Civil War.
YMCAs have always sought out young men to assist, and
the fact that men went into the military simply meant
that the YMCA followed them there. Before the Civil War,
there is record that the Portsmouth (Va.) YMCA supplied
a library in 1856 to a Navy port and later held meetings
aboard a training ship. In 1859, the Boston YMCA made
similar efforts.
Ys first participated
in American wars with the May, 1861, formation of the
Army Committee by the New York Association during the
Civil War. Several YMCAs, notably the New York and Chicago
associations, raised troops, including New York's 176th,
the Ironsides Regiment. In Chicago, it was reported that
the Chicago YMCA raised five companies of troops and could
have raised five more.
The New York Association's
Army Committee and similar efforts by several other Ys
were merged into the Christian Commission, responsible
for directing Union YMCAs' relief efforts. The Christian
Commission oversaw approximately 4,850 volunteers, one
of the most famous of whom was the poet Walt Whitman,
who served as a nurse. Through the Christian Commission,
YMCAs supported hospitals and supplied nurses and aides
to tens of thousands of casualties and prisoners of war
throughout the hostilities, on both sides of the conflict.
YMCAs were also active in distributing tracts and Bibles
throughout the Union and the Confederacy. The Chicago
Y held devotional services for the soldiers and later
helped maintain a home for men in transit, the sick and
the wounded.
Not only did YMCAs
help raise military units, but military units started
YMCAs. Southern units were more active than Northern ones
in this regard, and about 30 such Ys left records. The
federal POW camp at Johnson's Island, Ohio, organized
a YMCA, its chief functions being looking after the prison
hospital and holding weekly lecture meetings. In the winter
of 1863-64, the YMCA of one Mississippi brigade organized
a one-day-a-week fast among its members and sent the saved
rations to the poor in Richmond.
The Civil War generally
devastated YMCA membership in both the North and South.
The work of the YMCA during the war, however, made it
popular with the troops, and the movement recovered swiftly.
In the period between
the Civil War and the Spanish-American War, YMCA work
with the military consisted mainly of providing a regimental
writing tent for the men during the summer and holding
Bible studies. Annapolis had a functioning YMCA among
the midshipmen by 1879, and West Point reported a cadet
branch in 1885. Finally, a YMCA was given permanent quarters
in Fort Monroe, Va., in 1889. Things got onto a more official
footing when the 1895 YMCA Convention authorized greater
efforts. Little was done before the Spanish-American War
to implement this directive.
The
outbreak of war with Spain saw a repeat of YMCA efforts
during the Civil War. Ys raised military units and followed
the flag to the Philippines and Cuba, attending to the
needs of servicemen, prisoners of war and noncombatants.
The experiences
of the YMCA movement showed that helping servicemen would
require full-time resources, and in September, 1898, an
Armed Services department was established. In 1902, Congress
authorized the erection of permanent YMCA facilities on
military bases, and in 1903, special training was available
for secretaries heading Army and Navy Ys.
By 1914 there were
31 military YMCAs and 180 traveling libraries. Almost
a quarter of a million men stayed in their dormitories.
The YMCA had an extensive presence in the military during
the period before World War I.
Almost 26,000 YMCA
staff and volunteers performed YMCA work during the first
World War, some of it years before America entered the
war. American secretaries, under the sponsorship of the
World Alliance in Geneva, were sent to Europe at the beginning
of the war to care for prisoners held by both sides. While
firm figures are not available, it is safe to say that
YMCA efforts directly helped hundreds of thousands of
POWs, and indirectly helped most of the 4 million POWs
of that war.
With
its more than 1,500 canteens and post exchanges, the YMCA
fed and entertained more troops during World War I than
did any other welfare organization, including the Knights
of Columbus and the Salvation Army. It was common for
Catholics and Jews to use Y buildings for religious services.
In all, the YMCA performed more than 90 percent of the
welfare work of the time, mostly in the form of running
canteens and post exchanges. The canteens and post exchanges
the YMCA ran in France were released from minimum price
laws in effect in America, its history and reputation
being sufficient guarantees against abuse.
The Y's efforts
during WWI even inspired music. One song about the Y was
written by Irving Berlin, who was stationed at Fort Yaphank
in 1918. Berlin wrote I Can Always Find A Little Sunshine
in the Y.M.C.A., which was performed in a revue he wrote
titled Yip, Yip, Yaphank. Another, The Meaning of YMCA
(You Must Come Across), written by Ed Rose and Abe Olman
in 1918, had the lyric: They've done their bit and more.
To help us win the war....The Y is right there on the
firing line.
World War II saw
a continuation of YMCA services for the military and displaced
persons. The scale of the YMCA's efforts during WWII is
seen not only in its USO work, but also in the number
of prisoners of war assisted through YMCA efforts. It
is believed that between 1939 and 1945, YMCAs worked with,
or supplied the bulk of the financing for working with,
some 6 million POWs in more than 36 countries.
YMCAs also worked
with the 10 internment camps set up in 1942 to hold the
110,000 Japanese Americans held during the war. The bulk
of the Y's work consisted of clubs and camping for boys
in the camps. In the words of David M. Tatsuno, an internee
and former member of the Japanese Y in San Francisco:
The Y never forgot us. Tatsuno smuggled an eight millimeter
movie camera into the Topaz, Utah, internment camp, where
he took some extremely rare footage of daily life in the
camp. Tatsuno's film was recently given to the Library
of Congress. It is one of only two amateur films in the
Library's collection. The other is Abraham Zapruder's
film of President Kennedy's assassination.
I'll meet you at
the Y-organizations started at YMCAs
YMCAs have long
been places where things happened. Here are some of the
organizations and events that first took place at a YMCA.
Toastmasters International
was invented in 1903 as an older youth public speaking
program by Ralph C. Smedley, education director of the
Bloomington (Ill.) YMCA. Smedley realized that older boys
visiting the Y needed training in communication skills.
He arrived at the name The Toastmasters Club because meetings
resembled a series of banquet toasts. At each YMCA Smedley
transferred to, he would start a new club. Viewed as a
personal idiosyncrasy of Smedley by other YMCA secretaries,
the Toastmasters Clubs he started were by and large not
successful until he began working at the Santa Ana (Calif.)
YMCA. After the first Toastmasters Club meeting there
on October 22, 1924, the idea took hold and spread, and
a federation of Toastmasters Clubs was soon created. The
federation of clubs incorporated in 1932, and by 1941
Toastmasters needed Smedley's full attention, so he resigned
from the YMCA to devote himself to his creation.
The
Negro National League, the first black baseball league
to last a full season, was formed at a meeting at the
Paseo YMCA in Kansas City, Mo., in 1920.
Gideons International
was formed on July 1, 1899, at the YMCA in Janesville,
Wis., by three men (Nicholson, Hill and Knights) who had
come up with the idea a few months earlier. The Gideons
were a group of Christian commercial travelers who were
to evangelize as they went around the country on business.
To that end, Gideons would leave Bibles in the rooms in
which they had stayed. While their meeting was at the
YMCA, they were not Y staff or volunteers or members.
Nor were they taking part in a YMCA program.
Jazzercise, a famous
aerobic exercise program for women, was started in 1969
in Evanston, Ill., by a dancer, Judi Missett. Missett
began teaching Jazzercise® in 1972 at the La Jolla, (Cal.)
YMCA. Jacki Sorensen, by the way, who is frequently but
erroneously associated with Jazzercise®, has no connection
with the YMCA. She has popularized aerobic exercise, however,
and YMCAs have benefited greatly from her efforts in the
field.
Father's Day in
its present form was created at a meeting at the Spokane,
Wash., YMCA in 1909 by Louise Smart Dodd. The Y and the
Spokane Minister's Alliance swiftly endorsed the idea
and helped it spread, holding the first Father's Day celebration
on June 10, 1910. President Wilson officially recognized
Father's Day in 1916, President Coolidge recommended it
in 1924, and in 1971 President Nixon and Congress issued
proclamations and endorsements of Father's Day as a national
tradition.
Some lists of YMCA
firsts state that Warner Sallman painted Head of Christ
in the reading room of the Central YMCA in Chicago in
1940. Unfortunately, there's no evidence to support that
claim. According to Valparaiso University's Art Department,
Sallman made a charcoal sketch of Head of Christ at his
studio at 5412 North Spaulding, Chicago, in 1924 as cover
art for a magazine called The Covenant. In 1940 he was
asked to create a color version and created the oil painting
that has been reproduced approximately 500 million times,
making it one of the most popular works of art in history.
The oil version was probably created at his studio.
The idea that Sallman
originally painted Head of Christ in a YMCA probably got
started as a result of Sallman's chalk talks. Sallman,
a devout Christian, held some 500 chalk talks, many at
YMCAs, where he would make a charcoal sketch of Head of
Christ while giving a testimonial about Jesus. At the
conclusion of his talk he would give the sketch to the
Y or other organization sponsoring the session. Sallman
did make additional oil paintings of Head of Christ, some
of which may have been made in YMCAs during talks, or
on commission. At least one YMCA has confirmed that, in
1949, Sallman countersigned an oil copy of Head of Christ
which is still at the YMCA. Sallman himself related that
he had made the original 1924 charcoal sketch in his studio
one night.
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