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Go directly to the collection, Photographs from the Chicago Daily News, 1902-1933, in American Memory, or view a Summary of Resources related to the collection.

Sports in the Progressive Era

Crowd outside Wrigley Field
Crowds standing outside Wrigley Field at night, waiting
to enter the ballpark for a 1929 World Series game

Over 20,000 images in this collection are of sports and sporting events, reflecting the increased organization and popularity of sports during the Progressive Era. No sport was as popular as baseball, which had won the title of national pastime by 1911, when old-time baseball player and administrator, Albert Spalding, wrote:

"I claim that Base Ball owes its prestige as our National Game to the fact that as no other form of sport it is the exponent of American Courage, Confidence, Combativeness; American Dash, Discipline, Determination; American Energy, Eagerness, Enthusiasm; American Pluck, Persistency, Performance; American Spirit, Sagacity, Success; American Vim, Vigor, Virility.

Base Ball is the American Game par excellence because its playing demands Brain and Brawn, and American manhood supplies these ingredients in quantity sufficient to spread over the entire continent."

From America's National Game, by Albert Spalding, 1911.

Veltman
Baseball player, Veltman, White Sox, sliding
into third base on the field at Comiskey Park
Babe Ruth
Baseball player, Babe Ruth,
New York Yankees, sitting in
a dugout at Comiskey Park

Search on baseball for images of players and ball fields, including Chicago's famous Comiskey Park, home of the White Sox, and Wrigley Field, home of the Chicago Cubs. Players caught in black and white include such greats as Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig.

Football players on a playing field
Naperville High School-Northwestern University
football game, players bending over the line of
scrimmage, quarterback waiting for the snap

Although football was becoming a popular sport in the first decade of the twentieth century, there were so few teams that university squads often played against high school teams. Refer to the Special Presentation of Topics to Explore to learn more about the history of football. Search on football for photographs of over 2,000 players.

Janis jumping over the high jump bar
Woman athlete Lillian Janis mid-way to clearing
the bar in the high jump at track meet

Basketball was invented in 1891 as a way to Christianize young men. Search on basketball to see how the fledgling game developed over the next few decades. There are a number of pictures of other sports, including track and field, swimming, boxing, wrestling, gymnastics, Lacrosse, polo, and rowing. Search by sport.

Row of baseball players
Negro National League's Chicago American Giants
baseball team players standing on the field

A group photograph of the 1911 Negro National League's Chicago American Giants reveals the practice of segregation in sports during the Progressive Era. However, photographs documenting the existence of inter-racial teams as early as 1903 reflect the growing change that made way for Jackie Robinson's acceptance into the major league in 1947. Use the Subject Index headings beginning with African American to view numerous pictures of other African-American athletes.

Women standing in rows on a football field
Large group of girls of Wendell Phillips
High School, wearing dresses, standing
in rows and performing exercises

While African Americans were considered unsuitable for playing sports with caucasians, women were considered unsuitable for playing any sports at all — it was thought that they breathed differently from men. Aside from any physical limitation, women were discouraged from playing sports as late as the 1920s, due to the fear that competition would make them less feminine.

Girls wearing dresses running a race
African American girl crossing the finish line
ahead of four Caucasian girls during a
running race on the grass at an athletic field

At the same time, however, efforts to promote health through physical education led to women participating in more sports, beginning with non-competitive activities such as synchronized swimming, but eventually including tennis, baseball, basketball, and even football. Use the Subject Index headings beginning with Women, such as Women athletes and Women basketball players, to view photographs that reflect the growing presence and achievement of women in sports.

Men playing basketball in a gymnasium with spectators
Loyola University basketball game, players grappling
for a basketball on a basketball court in a gymnasium
Women in an empty gymnasium with a basketball
Central Turnverein basketball girls' players
Geneser, Kreikenbaum, Nieman, and
Meyer, posing as if playing basketball
Silbert, Grossman, and Kaplan
Swimmers Freda Silbert, Julia Grossman,
and Edith Kaplan sitting in front of a
light-colored backdrop in a room

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Last updated 01/17/2005