What eight million women want eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 194 pages of information about What eight million women want.

What eight million women want eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 194 pages of information about What eight million women want.

The next summer the Civic Club invested six hundred dollars in playgrounds.  Two schoolyards were fitted up in Pittsburg and two in Allegheny.  After that, every summer, the work was extended.  More money each year was voted, and additional playgrounds were established.  In the summer of 1899, three years after the first experiment, Pittsburg children had nine playgrounds and Allegheny children had three, all gifts of the women.  By another year the committee was handling thousands of dollars and managing an enterprise of considerable magnitude.  Also their work was attracting the admiration of other club women, who asked for an opportunity to co-operate.  In 1900 practically all the clubs of the two cities united, and formed a joint committee of the Women’s Clubs of Pittsburg and vicinity to take charge of playgrounds.

[Illustration:  Carpenter shop, vacation school, Pittsburgh.  Established by club women and for years supported by them.]

All this time the work was entirely in the hands of the club women, who bought the apparatus, organized the games, employed the trained supervisors, and supplied from their own membership the volunteer workers, without whom the enterprise would have been a failure from the start.  The Board of Education co-operated to the extent of lending schoolyards.  Finally the Board of Education decided to vote an annual contribution of money.

In 1902 the city of Pittsburg woke up and gave the women fifteen hundred dollars, with which they established one more playground and a recreation park.  The original one hundred and twenty-five dollars had now expanded to nearly eight thousand dollars, and Pittsburg and Allegheny children were not only playing in a dozen schoolyards, but they were attending vacation schools, under expert instructors in manual training, cooking, sewing, art-crafts.  Several recreation centers, all-the-year-round playgrounds, have been added since then.  For Pittsburg has adopted the women’s point of view in the matter of playgrounds.  This year the city voted fifty thousand, three hundred and fifty dollars, and the Board of Education appropriated ten thousand dollars for the vacation schools.

In Detroit it was the Twentieth Century Club that began the playground agitation.  Mrs. Clara B. Arthur, some ten years ago, read a paper before the Department of Philanthropy and Reform, and following it the chairman of the meeting appointed a committee to consider the possibility of playgrounds for Detroit children.  The committee visited the Board of Education, explained the need of playgrounds, and asked that the Board conduct one trial playground in a schoolyard, during the approaching vacation.  The Board declined.  The boards of education in most cities declined at first.

The club did not give up.  It talked playgrounds to the other clubs, until all the organizations of women were interested.  Within a year or two Detroit had a Council of Women, with a committee on playgrounds.  The committee went to the Common Council this time and asked permission to erect a pavilion and establish a playground on a piece of city land.  This was a great, bare, neglected spot, the site of an abandoned reservoir which had been of no use to anybody for twenty years.  The place had the advantage of being in a very forlorn neighborhood where many children swarmed.

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What eight million women want from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.