Showing posts with label Youth Organizations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Youth Organizations. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 4, 2021

Friday August 4, 1921. Secretary of Agriculture Henry Cantwell Wallace meets members of the Boys and Girls Club of Maryland.


There are two Henry Wallace's that are figures in American history, and they are father and son.

Henry Cantwell Wallace was Harding's Secretary of Agriculture, dying in office in 1924 at age 58.

His son would also go on to be a Secretary of Agriculture and then Franklin Roosevelt's Vice President.  He is much better known, in part due to his extreme left wing views.

The Boys and Girls Club dates its origin back to 1860.  Originally it was generally known as the Boys Club.  This leaves me wondering if this was two clubs, or if the Maryland organization had anticipated a coed club long before most of the country did.

Thursday, June 17, 2021

Friday June 17, 1921. Gatherings

On this day in 1921, the Hardings met with some Camp Fire Girls.



 

While it seems late in the season for, there were also graduations with honorary degrees.


A retired, from rebellion, Pancho Villa was photographed on his hacienda with some of his employees.


Friday, January 8, 2021

January 8, 1941. Death of Lord Baden-Powell, the founder of the Boy Scouts.


January 8, 1941 date stamped on reverse.

Lord Robert-Baden Powell, 1st Baron Baden Powell, died on this day in 1941 in Kenya.  He was 83 years old at the time.


Baden Powell was a British cavalryman who founded the international "Scouting Movement" and who lived to see it rise to enormous popularity during the "Muscular Christianity" era. Creation of the movement was a result of his experiences in the Boer War in which he admired the scouting skills of troops raised in the region and those recruited or otherwise from North America.  

First issue of Scouting for Boys, 1908.


At the time of the movements founding Baden Powell, the son of a professor who was also an Anglican Priest who died when he was three  years old, had already served a long and distinguished military career, but its for the creation of Scouting that he is principally remembered.  The movement became enormously successful almost immediately and from its inception until some time into the 1960s it was a very significant youth organization for boys.

Illustration by Baden Powell form the Wolf Cub Handbook, 1916.

Baden Powell was also instrumental in the formation of the companion groups for girls, but he likely would have been  horrified by later developments in Scouting, including the scandals associated with the Boy Scouts USA in later years and the co-ed nature of the Girl Scouts and the Boy Scouts today.  Indeed, there's a lot of say for his original vision of the organization over its current form which sought to bring bushcraft to youth who were losing it and which was an outwardly Christian organization.

Lady Olave Baden Powell, widow of Robert Baden Powell.

Married late in life, he left a widow 36 years his junior and three children, ages 8, 6 and 4.

The RAF bombed Naples.  Thai forces advanced against Vichy French forces near Siem Reap.

Other events in World War Two, including Canada's decision not to enlist Japanese Canadian citizens into its armed forces, can be read here:

Today in World War II History—January 8, 1941

And also here:

Day 496 January 8, 1941


On this day, this old building in Morristown, New Jersey, was photographed.


And more employees of banks and trust companies were as well.



Tuesday, September 8, 2020

September 8, 1920. The start of Air Mail


On this day in 1920, the U.S. Post Office inaugurated Air Mail in the United STates with early morning flights taking off from New Jersey and San Francisco, ultimately bound for the other location, and with distribution stops and refueling stops along the way.  Cheyenne was one of the cities on their flight path.


As the Cheyenne paper noted, unusually spelling it out, the reason for the numerous stops was that the Airco DH4 airplanes dedicated to the project didn't carry sufficient fuel not to make numerous stops.  The DH4 was a British designed World War One bomber which the US had ordered in sufficient numbers to make the United States the largest customer for the aircraft. After the war they were placed into mail service, which they'd continue to perform up until 1932.  Indeed, as late as that year the US seriously considered purchasing an updated variant.


On the same day an Italian crises continued as the Italian Regency of Carnaro, effectively declaring Fiume to be a city state, was proclaimed by Gabriele D'Annunzio, poet and wartime Italian army officer.  The move sought to formalize the Italian control over the city of mixed ethnicity but went beyond that in the formation of a proto fascist state.  It's independence would be more formalized the following year, but would be brief, as it followed a treaty with Italy that sought to incorporate it within the Kingdom of Italy. That effort lead to a brief war which Italy obviously won.

And this peaceful photograph was taken.

Y.M.C.A. Island & playground, Lynchburg Virginia.


Tuesday, May 26, 2020

May 26, 1920. Canning Clubs and hand rolled cigars.

A Canning Club Girl, May 26, 1920.

Girls Canning Clubs were a movement in the early 20th Century that was a reaction to a similar corn growing club for boys much in the same way that the Girl Scouts were a reaction to the Boy Scouts.  They started off as Tomato Clubs and evolved into general Canning Clubs, sometimes finding an expression in 4H.

I'm sure that canning is still done in 4H today and in recent years it seems to have undergone a bit of a revival.  My suspicion is that our current times will increase that trend.

Lee Ying, Washington D. C. Cigar maker.  May 26, 1920.

Lee Ying apparently operated his own shop and he didn't appear to be particularly pleased to be the subject of a newspaper photograph on May 26, 1920.  This probably was just another day at work for him.

Cigars, like canning, have enjoyed a bit of a revival recently.  Indeed, the things they're associated with have as well, two being whiskey and the concept, if not the actual practice, of leisure.

Friday, September 6, 2019

Early scouting uniform


We've discussed Boy Scout (and Girl Scout) uniforms here several times, even lamenting the change in the uniform over the decades.  What we didn't have at any point was a good photograph of any of the older uniforms.

So here's one.

I ran across this display recently which shows one of the older pattern Boy Scout uniforms.  I couldn't find my original thread on the topic, so I haven't linked it in, but this would be a post World War One, pre 1950s (maybe pre 1940s) uniform.

It's pretty closely patterened on the U.S. Army uniform of the period, and its not the light green color that came in around World War Two, so I think it predates that.  Of note its khaki colored at a time when most American soldiers wore a green uniform year around. 

A peculiarity is the shirt front.  It's button up all the way, but the external buttons mimic the pull over appearance of the Army shirt that was in use up until the uniforms were changed following World War One.  Pull over shirts are nice but they can be a pain and around that time the Army dispensed with them.  The Boy Scouts did too, but this pattern mimicked the appearance of the pull over.  Otherwise, it's actually a bit fancier, at least in regard to having expanding pockets (the Army pockets were simply enormous).

Also displayed here is a bugle, something that's well associated with the Scouts, and a display on their rifle program of the period.  I believe that they still retain one.

Saturday, June 8, 2019

The Aerodrome: Civil Air Patrol Cessna 182T, Natrona County International Airport

The Aerodrome: Civil Air Patrol Cessna 182T, Natrona County Inter...:

Civil Air Patrol Cessna 182T, Natrona County International Airport



This is a Cessna 182T that belongs to the Civil Air Patrol at the Natrona County International Airport.





To date, there's one other post on this blog about the Civil Air Patrol, featuring its aircraft from the 1940s, and noting:



The Civil Air Patrol is the official auxiliary of the United States Air Force.  Created during World War Two, it's original purpose was to harness the nations large fleet of small private aircraft for use in near shore anti submarine patrols.  The light aircraft, repainted in bright colors to allow for them to be easily spotted by other American aircraft, basically flew the Atlantic in patterns to look for surfaced submarines.  As submarines of that era operated on the surface routinely, this proved to be fairly effective and was greatly disruptive to the German naval effort off of the American coast. 
The CAP also flew some patrols along the Mexican border during the same period, although I've forgotten what the exact purpose of them was. Early in the war, there was quite a bit of concern about Mexico, given its problematic history during World War One, and given that the Mexican government was both radical and occasionally hostile to the United States. These fears abated fairly rapidly. 
The CAP still exists, with its post war mission having changed to search and rescue.  It also has a cadet branch that somewhat mirrors JrROTC.  Like JrROTC it has become considerably less martial over time, reflecting the views of boomer parents, who have generally wished, over time, to convert youthful organizations that were organized on military or quasi military lines into ones focusing on "citizenship" and "leadership"..




I didn't note in that earlier entry that eons ago, at the dawn of flight, I was a Civil Air Patrol cadet.  I did post a bit more about that here, on our companion blog:

I was in the Civil Air Patrol in the 1970s and at that time it was in fact very much like Air Force JrROTC.  Drill and Ceremony was a big deal with it, for example.  We wore Air Force uniforms and normally the fatigue version of that.  We focused on aircraft, of course, and on the CAP's mission of search and rescue.  Looking back it seems like I was in it for a long time, but in reality that simply reflects the concept of time possessed by youth.  I was in it while I was in junior high, three years. 
Looking back, and I can recall it only dimly, I probably thought when I joined it in 7th Grade, after learning about it at the junior high, of staying in it until I was in high school and could join JrROTC.  However, I enjoyed it in its own right.  For reasons I can't really recall, once I was of high school age I dropped my membership entirely.  Once I walked in the door of NCHS, I didn't walk back in the door of the CAP Wing's building here.  I couldn't tell you why, I just didn't. 
CAP still has a youth wing but I don't know anything about it.  It appears to be focused on aircraft still, of course, but also on "leadership", something a lot of youth organizations focus on.  If it resembles the old organization much, I wouldn't know.  It's still around, but how popular it is I don't know.  I don't know of any kids that I know being in it, but here the opposite is true as compared to the Scouts.  I'm often quite surprised by how many people I'll run into that were in the CAP as teens.  I know that two of my best friends were in it when was first in it, although they dropped out (just getting there was an ordeal for one who lived out in the country) and I know adults here and there that were.  Just the other day the Byzantine Catholic priest from the Catholic Stuff You Should Know podcast mentioned having been a CAP cadet.
One thing I'd note is, at least appearance wise, the CAP Cessna here is a much nicer looking aircraft that anything the CAP had locally when I was in it as a kid.  Indeed, for the most part the CAP simply relied upon the private aircraft the adult members had. 

Thursday, November 1, 2018

Countdown on the Great War, November 1, 1918. The Polish Ukranian War erupts, Prince Max polls his princely fellows, Allies continue to advance.

1.  Prince Maximilian of Baden wrote the various German princes to ask if they would accept the resignation of Kaiser Wilhelm II.

1.  French and American forces captured Buzancy and Le Chesne.

2.  The Serbian First Army took Belgrade.

3.  The Italian Navy attached Austro Hungarian ships at Pula, Croatia, in the last surface engagement of World War One.  The Austro Hungarian battleship SMS Viribus Unitis was sunk by Italian sabateurs during the engagement resulting in the loss of over 300 of her crew.

Polish youth organization fighting in the Lwow cemetary.

3.  Poles in Lemberg (Lviv, Lwow) rose up against the establishment of the West Ukrainian People's Republic in Galicia, igniting the Polish-Ukrainian War.

That this would occur at this point was emblematic of the mess that post war Europe would be.  The region surrounding Lemberg was in fact largely Ukrainian ethnically but the town itself was largely Polish.  The Austro Hungarians had moved Ukranian troops into the town late in the war and on this day Ukranian troops effected a coup against the Austrian government in the town and declared the region to be the West Ukrainian People's Republic, a name that had an obvious link to what was going on to the east in Russia.  Polish armed resistance broke out that very day, mostly via armed civilians (include Boy Scouts).

The incident resulted in the Polish Ukrainian War as the two very closely related peoples, separated by relatively slight linguistic differences but definite religious differences, fought out what their borders would be.  Lwow was under seige until November 21, but ultimately the Ukrainians withdrew but surrounded it.  The war would end with Lwow and Galicia solidly within Polish territory, which meant that Poland not only took in a largely Polish city but also took in a Ukrainian surrounding population.  Following World War Two Poland's eastern and western borders were massively redrawn and the city today, as well as the surrounded parts of Galicia, are within Ukraine.

4. The Banat Republic was formed within what is now Romania but which was then part of Austro Hungaria.

5. The Polish Scouting and Guiding Association was established. . . right in the midst of the Great War, an odd thought.

Friday, September 21, 2018

American Service Organizations During the Great War

Some time ago we published this photo:

Gov. C. E. Milliken addressing new soldiers at Y.M.C.A. Hut 24, Fort Devons, Massachusetts. August 5, 1918.

And we've certainly posted a lot of photographs of members of the American Red Cross in Europe during WWI as well.

What was going on with service organizations anyhow? Well, quite a lot.  Almost too  much, quite frankly, to report on accurately.

And, moreover, why did this occur?

First of all, let's look at what did occur, although our report will frankly be incomplete.

And let's start with the American Red Cross.

American Red Cross

It should be evident from the numerous photographs of the American Red Cross in action during World War One that it played a huge role in the war.  Indeed, while not readily evident from what we have posted here, it played a gigantic role that extended to both sides of the war, with individual national Red Cross organizations playing a different role in different countries.  In the case of the Allies, the American Red Cross's role was large and partisan prior to the United States entering the war, and its medical establishment was so well developed that the American Army simply partially absorbed it in place, personnel and all.

How on earth did that occur?

The American Red Cross was founded in 1881 by American nurse, Clara Barton.  She had seen the International Red Cross in operation in the Franco Prussian War and was impressed with its humanitarian mission.

Clara Barton in 1904.

The Swiss based International Red Cross was a young organization when Barton first encountered it, existing only since 1863. It's origin has specifically been war, when its primary inspiration, Henri Dunat, had witnesses Italian casualties in the the Italian wars of unification suffering on the battlefield without attention.  His efforts resulted in the International Committee of the Red Cross, to provide relief to the victims of war of any nation, and it exists to this day.

The originator of the International Committee of the Red Cross, Henri Dunat.

Indeed, the ICRC provided nursing services to all the combatants during the First World War and continues on to this present day as a humanitarian organization.  Barton was inspired by her observations of the ICRC during the Franco Prussian War, as noted, and came back to the United States and lead the effort to form the ARC.

The American Red Cross was just one of the many Red Cross organizations that contributed nurses, hospitals and doctors to the warring nations.  It arrived in Europe well before any American soldiers did in that role.  It's important to note, however, that its services were provided to Allied nations in that context.  In later wars the ICRC tends to be associated with neutrality, and this should be how it was regarded in World War One, but it's also the case that during World War One the American Red Cross rapidly became an Allied deal.

As an "Allied deal", as I've put it, it provided a lot of emergency services that went far beyond the battlefield.  Much of what it did was of the classic Red Cross type of thing, but far beyond that.  It ran hospitals and distributed food and the like all over France and Italy.  But as the war progressed, what it came to do, while in keeping with its traditional role, became what we'd have to regard as partisan.

 Interior of operating room. American Red Cross Evacuation Hospital No. 110, Coincy, France

The Red Cross came to provide an ambulance and hospital service that existed very much in a military support role.  Red Cross ambulance drivers, all male, wore military uniforms and many, but not all, of the men who volunteered for that duty saw it as volunteering for a type of military service prior to the United States having entered the war.  Indeed, Ernest Hemingway's famous "military service" was actually Red Cross service as an ambulance driver in Italy, a role in which he was wounded.

A uniformed Red Cross ambulance driver, Ernest Hemingway.  In this uniform Hemingway's appearance would have been very close to that of an officer in an Allied army, even though he was not an officer nor even a soldier.

When the U.S. entered the war the line between the American Red Cross as a humanitarian organization and the American Red Cross as a auxiliary of the medical corps of the U.S. Army became highly blurred and then actually, to an extent, ceased to exist altogether.  Given the delay in building up the U.S. military going towards the war, there was no earthly way that the services could build a medical corps of sufficient size to handle the vastly expanded military.  The American Red Cross, however, was there in place, and in fact, in France and Italy. So they were partially incorporated into the Army.

 American Red Cross Advance Dressing Station. Major Franciscolin, 109th Inf. 28th Division in charge, assisted by Lt. Powell Leighton, A.R.C. attached to the 28th Div. Near St. Gilles, France. Aug. 15, 1918

But only partially.  Male members of the Red Cross were given the option of entering the Army in their existing roles at a rank assigned to them by the Army, and by and large they did.  They didn't have to, however, and some chose not to.  Nurses remained outside of the Army and stayed in their existing roles in what were now Army medical facilities.

Having said that, however, that only addresses the medical support roles taken on by the American Red Cross during the war.  Other roles also existed.  Simply providing comfort, often in the form of canteens or mobile canteens (i.e., coffee and donuts) was a role that, while not exactly major, was often fondly remembered post war.  Back in the U.S., the Red Cross undertook a serviceman and family support role that would be of the type that would be undertaken by the United Service Organizations (USO) during World War Two and beyond.  

The ARC also retained a humanitarian relief role that went far beyond the areas where the US military operated, attempting to provide humanitarian relief in the Middle East, Asia and Russia.  

In the end, it's difficult to actually define what the American Red Cross did during the war, as it was so vast in nature.  Some of it very closely mirrored what it does today.  Some of it anticipated the USO of later wars.  Some of it was in the nature of direct medical support to the Allied war effort.  It's role proved key in many ways to that effort, and its hard to imagine an Allied war effort without it.

The role of the American Red Cross was mirrored by the Red Cross organizations of other nations.  The International Committee of the Red Cross occupied a cross border humanitarian role much like it would during World War Two, not taking any sides in the war and attempting to provide relief where it could.  The German Red Cross trained nurses for the German military.  British and Canadian Red Cross organizations filled a role much like that of that of the American Red Cross and were augmented by national nursing organizations that were outside of the Red Cross but much like it.

Which takes us to the YMCA.

The Young Men's Christian Association and the Young Women's Christian Association.

The YMCA?

YMCA "girl" depicted in a common YMCA role during the war, providing coffee and reading materials to the soldier, something that the YMCA did to a vast degree during World War One.

Yes, the Young Mans Christian Association..

The YMCA, contrary to the way people commonly imagine it, is actually a religion.  A branch of the Protestant Christian religions, the YMCA and its companion the YWCA came up during the Muscular Christianity movement we've discussed elsewhere.  It's history actually dates back to 1844 when it was founded in London, England, "to provide low-cost housing in a safe Christian environment for rural young men and women journeying to the cities."  This concern was not without a foundation as the mass influx of rural youth into European industrial cities did indeed exhibit a major corrupting aspect to it.*

Given the lack of service organizations that aided and supported soldiers prior to World War Two, it shouldn't surprise us, even though it tends to, that the YMCA started filling this role fairly early. There are some instances in the United States of it taking this role as early as the Civil War, but it really commenced them in a dedicated fashion during the Spanish American War.  So it should be no surprise that it stepped up to the plate again during World War One.

During the Great War the YMCA took up its service organization role in spades, occupying a role that again would be occupied by the USO during World War Two.  Like the Red Cross, it provided aid and comfort to soldiers serving in the war in the form of what we'd regard as canteens.  It also undertook to provide entertainment, assistance with writing letters (in an era in which the literacy rates were not as high as they'd later be.

YWCA poster urging young women to work in the factories and fields during the war.

The YMCA also took a direct role in recruiting women for war work during the Great War, associating itself with Womens' Land Armies in the agricultural sector and in recruiting women to industrial work.  In this, it somewhat ironically was in the situation of encouraging the very type of thing that it originally was formed to address, in that the Land Armies and the industrial work took young women out of their homes and into urban environments.

The YMCA and the YWCA were Protestant organizations, of course.  Given that, it's not surprising that we'd find the major Catholic organization in the US also involved in the war effort, that being the Knights of Columbus.

The Knights of Columbus



Or maybe it is surprising.  It cannot be fairly stated that there is a religious element to World War One.  All the warring nations in Europe were Christian nations. And confessionaly we would find that there were Protestant and Catholic nations on both sides, more or less.  The United Kingdom, at that time comprised of England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland, and therefore was the home of two of two official Protestant faiths and one large unofficial Catholic one.  Germany was likewise split between Lutheran based Protestantism (it's somewhat more complicated than might be imagined in that area) and Catholicism, although Protestantism was heavily favored by the German crown.  The Austrian Empire, on the other hand, was nearly uniformly Catholic save for some regions that were Orthodox.  Italy was uniformly Catholic.  France was a Catholic country in culture and in faith although the French governments had been aggressively secular for a long time.  Imperial Russia was officially Orthodox but it had, on its western fringes, a large Catholic population.  The United States had no official religion at all, but had a majority Protestant population with a large Catholic minority (and of course minorities in additional Orthodox and Jewish populations).

The Knights of Columbus taking convalescing wounded on a tour of Washington, D.C.

Nonetheless, and particularly for countries like the United States and Canada (and the United Kingdom), confessional differences were very real and there was a real concern that minority Catholic soldiers in the US (and Canadian) armies would not have support facilities that reflected their faith.  The Knights of Columbus stepped up to the plate.

Indeed, the Knights were active prior to the United States entering the war.  They'd become involved early due to the concern noted above for Canadian soldiers.  This followed with the organization organizing support facilities for Catholic National Guardsmen who were mobilized to serve on the Mexican border during the Punitive Expedition.  So the organization had a head start for the American involvement in the Great War.


The role played by the Knights was similar to that played by the YMCA and the Red Cross in terms of rear area support.

The National Civil Federation

The National Civil Federation was a business organization that was founded in 1900 as a business organization dedicated towards working to resolve labor disputes.  Gigantic labor disputes have become so rare in the United States over the years that we've forgotten they even existed in the form that they once did. We've seen some of that story here, but suffice it to say they could be quite extreme in comparison to what we've seen for the past several decades.

 

The National Civil Foundation and the American Red Cross together formed the wartime National League for Women's Service which contributed the Women's Motor Corps to the war effort.  Perhaps the Women's Motor Corps is what it is best remembered for in the Great War context.

The WMC wasn't the only thing the National Civil Foundation did during the Great War, however.  It also operated domestic support facilities for soldiers.

Youth Organizations

The Boy Scouts and the Girl Scouts rather obviously contributed to the war effort through various efforts, including patriotic displays.  Both organizations, which we've discussed before, had martial origins in addition to being party of the Muscular Christianity movement.  That martial origin was particularly evident with the Boys Scouts which, as earlier noted, had a heavily military appearance at the time.

J. C. Leyendecker poster noting the Boy Scout's support of the Third Liberty Loan.

Some of this would repeat during World War Two, but not nearly to the extent that had been seen in World War One.  The Red Cross was of course highly active.  Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts reprized their earlier role.  But by World War Two the Army itself was prepared to take on the medical role that had fallen to the Red Cross and much of the home front support came from a new organization, the United Service Organization, which still exists.

It's interesting in that its a missed part of the Great War in a way.  World War Two, particularly in the United States, grossly overshadows the story of World War One so the huge civilian mobilization that the first war had seen has largely been lost in the mists.  But it says something about the war itself.  There were those who avoided it, to be sure, but the extent to which the civilian population self mobilized is truly remarkable.

___________________________________________________________________________________

*This strays way off topic, but the corrosive influence of large cities had long been noted and indeed was observed to be a primary facdtor in the destruction of democracies by Thomas Jefferson, who felt that large cities always gave rise to mobs and always ended up destroying democracies.  Indeed, in his writings he felt that the American democracy would ultimately fall prey to that fate and that it could only be staved off so long as most Americans were Yeomen Farmers.

The same factors noted by the founders of the YMCA and the YWCA lead to the formation of a
German Catholic organization with the same (male) focus, but whose name I unfortunately cannot now recall.  It also lead to a vareitiy of movements that sought to address or even redirect the forcdes that were in play.

Monday, July 30, 2018

So, having babbled about Boy Scout uniforms, perhaps I should address the Girl Scouts as well.


 Extremely serious looking Girl Scout with semiphore flags, 1920.

And indeed, I just sort of recently did^:

We've discussed Boy Scout uniforms and caps. . . so we should take a look at the Girl Scouts. "“Activities at the Girl Scouts Camp, Central Valley, New York. Line of the Girl Scouts waiting their turn to get their wash basins full of water at the water pipes.” July 21, 1918.


But I don't know much about them.

Girls Scouts on July 21, 1918.  Note the semi military uniforms, which pretty closely reflect the uniforms adopted by female auxiliaries of various types providing service during the Great War.
  (Note, I think the photograph above might include both Girl Scouts and Camp Fire Girls.  I'm not sure, but now that I know a little more about these uniforms, I think that's likely the case.  About this time the organizations attempted to merge).
Except there's few hats in evidence.  Indeed, only one.

Is that a sailor's Dixie Cap?
The problem is that I don't know anything about female costume.

Now, let me first note that I'm not trying to use a dismissive term in referring to female dress as "costume".  I'm using the term in the larger sense, as in clothing and fashion.  And, in regards to that, I don't know anything about female fashions at all, other than that a lot of them are really darned weird.

Indeed, for that reason, I've rarely strayed into the topic.  My most notable example of doing it was in regards to an item that was developed from a Reddit topic on "100 Years Ago" , that started off:

Women and Trousers. No big historical deal, or the triumph of the harpies in trousers?

 
 This overalls wearing lass, whom is portrayed an industrial giant (take that, Rosie the Riveter) is wearing overalls, albeit one of the baggiest pairs of overalls ever.  She's also wearing a canvass cap to cover her hair, with hair styles being voluminous at the time.  She doesn't look very happy, we might note.
From Reddit's 100 Years Ago Today Subreddit:

Munich Authorities Put Ban On Bloomers

Military Aroused Because Women Have Been Wearing Them To Church

So reported the New York Times.

A review of the article reveals that Bavarian authorities were appalled by women taking up trousers, which they'd done as they were working in male roles given World War One.  Perhaps they were feeling like Rooster Cogburn in True Grit by that time of the war:
And that very long post from last February goes on from there.

Women are over half of the American population and while I'm not completely certain, I think they were in the period of time this blog focuses on as well. Knowing that off hand is a little difficult as there are varying factors at play in regards to human mortality that impact that statistic.  Prior to the mid 19th Century, for example, men tended to outnumber women as death during childbirth was extremely  high.  In the 18th Century it was enormously common for men to be married two or three times during their lifetime simply for that reason.  Men of means quite often tended to marry women near their own ages and then marry progressively younger spouses as their first ones died in that fashion where as by the last 19th Century things had changed so much that in the same demographic remarrying due to that was regarded as somewhat shameful.  Having said that, starting in the mid 19th Century industrial deaths, nearly all male, started to ramp up so much due to industrialization that the rate of households headed by a single female became approximately as common as they are today, simply due to that.

All of which has nothing to do with clothing.

Or maybe it does.  I'm not sure.

But it does mean that not addressing female clothing is ignoring at least half of the population, a pretty big historical omission.

Adding to our problem, however, is the fact that female clothing evolved at an amazing rapid rate.  It's simply incredible.  In comparison, male clothing evolved hardly at all.  On this topic, I recently posted an item on the same subreddit asking the question of why women's clothing had evolved so quickly between World War One and World War Two.  A knowledgeable poster came back and noted that my time frame observations were simply incorrect.  Women's clothing was evolving extremely rapidly prior to World War One and just kept on evolving.

And Girl Scouts uniforms are part of that, or reflect it. . . but maybe less than we might suppose.

Indeed, because that is the case, and because its just part of a bigger story, I likely should discuss women's clothing first.

But I'm not going to.

Okay, so let's take a look at Girl Scout uniforms . . and in so doing, let's take a look first at the Girl Scouts.

The Girl Scouts date, more or less, to March 12, 1912 when they were first founded by Juliette Gordon Low.

Juliette Gordon Low not dressed in a Scouting uniform and bearing no resemblance to Lord Baden Powell.

Mrs. Low was a Southerner, but with Chicago roots oddly enough, of a patrician background and had the values associated with that class.  Born in 1860, she was born into the Civil War and grew up, therefore, mostly in the post war American South.  She was highly educated and attended the University of Oxford in the United Kingdom, where she met her husband Gordon.  Their marriage was not happy, but was sort of a characteristically English one, in which her husband depleted his assets with hunting trips and gambling. By 1900 they were basically on the outs and were in the process of obtaining a divorce, when he died in 1905.

Low, much later, with two Girl Guides

Low descended from pioneer stock in part and had outdoor interests.  More than that, however, she had met and been influenced by Lord Baden Powell. We've already dealt with Powell in various posts about the Boy Scouts, so we'll forget that here, but it's interesting to note that at the very first, while the Boy Scouts were devoted to the manly, Christian, upbringing of boys, they didn't actually at first exclude girls  It's just that their activities were not thought of as terribly feminine and camping, as a female pursuit, was not common.  Still, there was enough interest on the part of girls (and presumably their parents) that a 1909 Boy Scout publication complained a bit on social restrictions imposed on girls and it made at least camping difficult for them, when it noted; "If a girl is not allowed to run, or even hurry, to swim, ride a bike, or raise her arms above her head, how can she become a Scout?"

How indeed?

In spite of this girls did register with the very early British Boy Scouts at first, making our earlier comments regarding the all male Boy Scouts slightly, although only slightly, suspect.  This came to an end in 1909 however when British newspaper commentary scandalized it.  Lord Baden Powell therefore asked his sister, Agnes Baden-Powell, to form the companion organization for girls, which  was formed as the Girl Guides.*   The focus of the organization can, in some ways, be illustrated by an early book by the Baden Powells regarding them.

The Handbook for Girl Guides with its obvious British Empire focus. The uniform the Guide is depicted as wearing was in fact the one they wore and which some American Girl Scouts wore for a long time.

Okay, at this point, a lot of this probably is starting to sound painfully familiar, and that's because I've covered part of it before, although only briefly and not really in depth. Nonetheless, rather than repeat what I wrote earlier, I'm just going to link back into it here:









The Scouts, both Girl and Boy, had competition right from the onset.  Sure proof that Lord Baden Powell had tapped into something is provided by the fact that copycat organizations sprung up right away.  Most of these  organizations rose and fell pretty quickly, and most of them were pretty much copies of the Scouts but without the large organization backing it up and the all that went with it. So its' not too surprising that they didn't last all that long.  Some were a little more militaristic than the Scouts, particularly early on, and emphasized things like shooting, although that was an aspect of the Scouts as well.  I won't, therefore, dwell much with them.  I will note, however, that oddly enough the Boy Scouts itself competed a bit against it self in this area when, in 1912, it organized the Sea Scouts, a youth organization that was focused on the sea and seafaring skills, but which very clearly modeled itself on the Navy in uniform and early appearance, showing how close to being a quasi private military training organization the Scouts really were.

Taking this forward the Scouts remained really strong for a really long time.  I don't know what percentage of American youth belonged to the Boy Scouts, the Girl Scouts, etc., but it seems to have been a fairly large percentage.  As recently as the 1950s it seems to me that there was sort of an assumption that boys and girls became Scouts.  Even as recently as the 1970s quite a few were, although I was only a Boy Scout myself for a few months (so few that I usually say I was never a Scout, too few to really count).

Well there I guess you have the organizations early days.  And to some extent, depending upon where you are, all of these organizations are still around. There aren't Girl Guides in the US, but there are elsewhere. And the Camp Fire Girls are still around.

What you've perhaps also noticed is that the clothing designated for these organizations was. . well odd.

 Girl Scouts building a fire while camping in 1912.  Quite obviously, whatever the official uniform was, these girls were dressed up in a fashion resembling Indians, and had their hair braided for the same reason.

Indeed, in looking at photos of early Girl Scouts what becomes clear is that whatever the uniform was supposed to be, more often than not somebody decided to have no uniform at all (understandable) or to dress them up like Indians, which fit into a certain cultural thing going on at the time, but which is strange.

 Very early Girl Scouts before their uniforms had really become fully standardized, learning to shoot.

Officially, at the very first, English Girl Guides wore a uniform that was militaristic in nature and based on the Boy Scouts, but with a skirt. The depicting on the book inserted above gives a really good illustration of that.  The campaign hat yielded nearly immediately, however, to a different pattern, but it was still there.  It always featured a skirt of some sort, however.

 Early Girl Scout learning archery in the standard early uniform but wearing a Montana Peak type campaign hat.

Now, we already, as noted above, have a long post on women and trousers.  I'm not going to go back and redo all that here, but I'll note just from the onset that it isn't true that women didn't wear trouser at all up until some point in the mid 20th Century.  That's baloney.  But it is the case that in most cultures they didn't until starting in the late 19th Century.  I went into that there.

 Girl Scouts working in a garden, probably during World War One.  Most of these girls have the early pattern campaign hat.  Gardening was emphasized in American society during the Great War and both Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts actively took it up.

Trousers are obviously better for camping, and I'd argue that they're better for everything, so it is odd to us to today to see camping girls wearing skirts.  Indeed, in a modern context, it'd be completely absurd.  But it wasn't so much the case at the time, and if you view the photographs we've put of women in service and quasi service during World War One, you'll find the exact some thing.  Indeed, what you'll also find is that this is the point in time, the early 20th Century and late 19th Century, when trousers started coming in for women.  Indeed, the Great War played a role in that, but due to factory work, not due to wartime field service.  So again, you'd think that Girl Scout uniforms wouldn't have been so darned impractical looking. . . to our eyes.

 A Washington D. C. Girl Scout troop gardening during World War One.  One of these Scouts has departed from the uniform and is wearing a campaign hat.

More than a little of that was just cultural, and indeed all of these female youth organizations are a bit of an oddity for that reason as women and camping just wasn't a thing, and for real reasons.  Without going into it in huge detail, camping fits into a male role that's on the hunting/fighting/fighting sliding scale that's embedded deep in the male genetic code and which Lord Baden Powell was trying to foster in a Christian sense.  This is not to say, rather obviously, that women don't like to camp.  Anyhow, as the article on women in trousers explores, women didn't usually wear trousers that much until this point in time, and it came on kind of slowly.

 Girl Scouts selling war bonds with Alice (Roosevelt) Longworth, 1917.  All the women's clothing in this photograph was set to be rapidly obsolete.

One thing that I didn't address there (as I'm not an expert on the topic and it didn't occur to me), however, and I'm not going to really address here either particularly in this context, is that women's undergarments and related stuff evolved a lot in this period of time as well and in a fashion that allowed women to wear pants every day.  Enough said about that, but that's an aspect of this that is simply forgotten entirely. Female clothing featured fairly long skirts for a long time not because it was keeping women down, but because of various concerns that relate to biology and decency.  Enough said on that.

 Camping Girl Scouts, 1919.

But women's clothing was evolving in this period with lightening speed.  Oddly, Girl Scout uniforms really didn't.  It's weird.

 Girl Scout in full uniform with outdoor gear in the 1920s.  Here too this Scout has retained the M1911 type campaign hat.

Thankfully they did get over the Indian maiden thing, which was really silly.  The first official uniform looked a lot like that of the English Girl Guides, and featured a homemade dark blue blouse and skirt with sateen ties, felt campaign hats, and long black stockings.  Ties were had entered women's clothing at the time and were pretty popular, although I'll note that they are one horrific item of male clothing that women were able to dump and not be afflicted with.  It's interesting to note that the uniform was homemade, which shows right from the onset how the focus of the organization was different and at that time domestic.

Girl Scout leaders wore a different, not homemade, uniform of dark khaki, serge, or twill with a tailored shirt and a silk tie in a four-in-hand knot. Their uniform included a trefoil pin worn just below the knot of the tie which signified the Girl Scouts Promise: "To serve God and your country, to help people at all times, and to live by the Girl Scout law"^^^ which showed the focus of the organization and which leaned heavily on the focus of the Boy Scouts.

Girl Scouts marching in a Memorial Day parade, 1944.

Changing more rapidly than the Boy Scouts, but always with a seeming domestic focus, in the economically stretched 1930s the Girl Scouts introduced a very simple one piece cotton dress in light green. This introduced their distinctive color and also reflected a very real fashion change in female clothing.  Simple dresses were now pretty common whereas in the 1910s and 1920s they were a bit more complicated and included more fabric.  They also introduced the green beret which they've kept ever since.  A Girl Scout of the 1930s would be pretty recognizable as a Girl Scout now, in fact, as the common mental preception of them was fixed at about that time.  This changed again in the 1940s and a yellow tie was added, with the introduction of uniform that was a bit more elaborate and which I suspect was due to the poverty of the Great Depression being introduced. Also at this time a seperate unfiorm was created for hte junior organization, the Brownies, but I'm going to omit that discussion as, juast as with the Cub Scouts, I find it too dull.

 Girl Scouts learning to knit, 1942.

Still the interesting thing here is that during the 1930s women's trouser really were coming in and very common.  A lot of that is due to the introuction of much more practical undergarments I'm not going to discuss, but by the 1930s women were frequently wearing work and dress trousers.  It's really strange that an organizaton that theoretically had an outdoor focus didn't go to them, or even have an official issue of them, but that tells you a lot.  At the same point in time in which the Boy Scouts were abandoning their World War One Army type unform in favor of a World War Two type Army uniofrm, the Girl Scouts were sticking with dresses.  The focus remained domestic.

 Girl Scouts setting table, 1931.

And so it was in the 1950s and 60s as well.  In the 50s a loose big green one piece dress was introduced and a version of it stuck through the 60s. The big green sash for merit badges came in. The beret stuck around.  In the 70s, 80s and 90s this all remained true and versions of the earlier uniforms were around always with a green skirt of some sort and a sash.  But by that time, as with the Boy Scouts, the practice had evolved to let girls wear just one item and that meant that they could wear something more practical.  It wasn't until the 2000s, however, that there were official trousers.

Girl Scouts picking up trash in the Potomac, 1970s.  I think this is likely a pretty good example of how Girl Scouts really dressed when outdoors, at least since the 1950s.

So, in posting all of this, as weird as it may sound, I realized that, well. . .  I don't really know what the Girl Scouts are about.  I don't know what they've ever been about.

I do know what the Boy Scouts are about because, . . . well maybe because I'm a guy and I was in the Boy Scouts for about 3.5 seconds and I'm otherwise just much more familiar with them.  The Boy Scouts, even though I was never one of them for any appreciable amount of time, seem sort of an obvious organization to me, in context.  As a mirror image of the Boy Scouts, the Girl Scouts strike me that way too, but they obviously actually aren't a mirror image of the Boy Scouts.

They did, sort of, start off that way. And the early photos of them I posted above really show that.  But what about their texts?

Well, let's see what Load Baden Powell had to say in their 1919 manual:

"How did Scouting come to be used by girls?" That is what I have been asked. Well, it was this way. In the beginning I had used Scouting—that is, wood craft, handiness, and cheery helpfulness—as a means for training young soldiers when they first joined the army, to help them become handy, capable men and able to hold their own with anyone instead of being mere drilled machines.
You have read about the Wars in your country against the Red Indians, of the gallantry of your soldiers against the cunning of the Red Man, and what is more, of the pluck of your women on those dangerous frontiers.
Well, we have had much the same sort of thing in South Africa. Over and over again I have seen there the wonderful bravery and resourcefulness of the women when the tribes of Zulu or Matabeles have been out on the war path against the white settlers.
In the Boer war a number of women volunteered to help my forces as nurses or otherwise; they were full of pluck and energy, but unfortunately they had never been trained to do anything, and so with all the good-will in the world they were of no use. I could not help feeling how splendid it would be if one could only train them in peace time in the same way one trained the young soldiers—that is, through Scoutcraft.
I afterwards took to training boys in that way, but I had not been long at it before the girls came along, and offered to do the very thing I had hoped for, they wanted to take up Scouting also.
They did not merely want to be imitators of the boys; they wanted a line of their own.
So I gave them a smart blue uniform and the names of "Guides" and my sister wrote an outline of the scheme. The name Guide appealed to the British girls because the pick of our frontier forces in India is the Corps of Guides. The term cavalry or infantry hardly describes it since it is composed of all-round handy men ready to take on any job in the campaigning line and do it well.
Then too, a woman who can be a good and helpful comrade to her brother or husband or son along the path of life is really a guide to him.
The name Guide therefore just describes the members of our sisterhood who besides being handy and ready for any kind of duty are also a jolly happy family and likely to be good, cheery comrades to their mankind.
The coming of the Great War gave the Girl Guides their opportunity, and they quickly showed the value of their training by undertaking a variety of duties which made them valuable to their country in her time of need.
My wife, Lady Baden-Powell, was elected by the members to be the Chief Guide, and under her the movement has gone ahead at an amazing pace, spreading to most foreign countries.
It is thanks to Mrs. Juliette Low, of Savannah, that the movement was successfully started in America, and though the name Girl Scouts has there been used it is all part of the same sisterhood, working to the same ends and living up to the same Laws and Promise.
If all the branches continue to work together and become better acquainted with each other as they continue to become bigger it will mean not only a grand step for the sisterhood, but what is more important it will be a real help toward making the new League of Nations a living force.
How can that be? In this way:
If the women of the different nations are to a large extent members of the same society and therefore in close touch and sympathy with each other, although belonging to different countries, they will make the League a real bond not merely between the Governments, but between the Peoples themselves and they will see to it that it means Peace and that we have no more of War.
Not quite the same as the Boy Scouts, and indeed, sort of set focused against it in a way.

Well, the old post on their original merit badges shows a subtle difference.  Consider:

GIRL SCOUT PROFICIENCY TESTS AND SPECIAL MEDALS




I. Introduction to Proficiency Tests.
II. Proficiency Tests:

 *** Subjects marked thus are specially recommended for First Class Scouts or girls at least sixteen years old.

 **** Subjects marked thus are for Scouts eighteen years and over.
At least as of 1919, their manual had a focus on domestic things, but it also had one on woodcraft. That seems to me to sort of define it.  It was a mirror image of the Boy Scouts, without the implied martial air, and with a focus on domestic life that reflected social views regarding a woman's role in the world.  It wasn't sexist in that fashion, and indeed in some ways the concept of women outdoorsmen doing such things as hunting and fishing, etc., was fairly radical.

Over time, I think, it continued to have that focus and I think it still does today.  Maybe its because I know less about it, but it seems to me that it's managed to stay truer to itself somehow.  Which may be why when the Boy Scouts recently opened their doors to girls, the Girl Scouts sort of laughed under their breath and replied that they were the organization for girls.   They always were.
_________________________________________________________________________________

^FWIW, an early post on this blog which featured Girl Scout merit badges was hugely popular at the time and was one of the most popular posts on the blog for a long time.  So we haven't completely ignored the topic.

^^Okay, I realize that this was a different time, but having girls dress this way for an outdoor activity is and was darned near criminal.  Particularly for girls in a boat.  This is crazy.

*The sort of strange Englishness of the early Scouts, male and female, is epitomized by the Baden Powell family. We've dealt with Lord Baden Powell before, but it's interesting to note in this context that he did not marry until he was 55 years old, to a woman who was 23.  There's been widespread speculation about his being a homosexual, but it seems largely unwarranted and the marriage genuine.  Nonetheless a marriage that late in life to somebody so much younger is a bit unusual.  They had three children.

Agnes Baden Powell had been engaged early in life but never married.

They were both children of the  Reverend Baden Powell, the Savilian Professor of Geometry at the University of Oxford, and an Anglican clergyman.  Typical of the era, and illustrative of a point raised above regarding female mortality, the Reverand Baden Powell was married three times and had fourteen children, only nine of whom lived to adulthood.  His first wife died after the childless couple had been married fifteen years.  He had children by his next two wives, the second of which died after seven years of marriage.  His third wife outlived him.

^^^At least in 1919, the Girl Scout Law was:
 LAWS
IA Girl Scout's Honor is to be Trusted
IIA Girl Scout is Loyal
IIIA Girl Scout's Duty is to be Useful and to Help Others
IVA Girl Scout is a Friend to All and a Sister to every other Girl Scout
VA Girl Scout is Courteous
VIA Girl Scout is a Friend to Animals
VIIA Girl Scout obeys Orders
VIIIA Girl Scout is Cheerful
IXA Girl Scout is Thrifty
XA Girl Scout is Clean in Thought, Word and Deed