With the generous support of the Friends of Mills at Staatsburgh, our site has hosted a research intern from Bard College this summer. Celka Rice, a literature major at Bard, has researched various aspects of 1920s fashion, helping Staatsburgh explore the possibility of presenting accurate costumed interpretation during the 100th anniversary of the Roaring ‘20s. Although Celka’s interdisciplinary studies cover a broad background which include history, anthropology, art history, classics, and photography, the internship called upon another of her diverse interests: her expertise in vintage clothing and fashion history. For her summer project, Celka has researched retail sources for reproduction and vintage clothing, and has written three blogs on fascinating 1920s fashion topics. This essay, the second, explores sporting attire in the 1920s.
Gladys Mills Phipps, daughter of Ruth & Ogden Mills, frequently played golf and even won tournaments! Photo: International News Service, circa 1910s |
the pleasures that go with existence in woodlands or at watersides are more and more within the reach of the many… Open air and an open-air life, fishing, shooting, sailing, boating, swimming, riding, playing tennis golf, and any other game that the fancy of the day endorses are as dear to the simplest as they are to the most sophisticated and equally enjoyed. Yet, such people do not love the country as country. One has only to see the awful havoc they make in beautiful places to know this. They love just what they can get out of being in it and no more.
Of course this shift in sports culture brought about a shift in sportswear. In particular, popular styles worn by female golfers, tennis players, and swimmers were essential in bringing the realms of men’s and women’s fashion closer together. This often simply meant that what had typically been termed menswear was adapted in order to create womenswear (rarely did the reverse occur), but there were also cases in which entirely new ideas of femininity (most notably that of the flapper) emerged.
Champion golfer Edith Cummings (1899-1984) in 1923. |
Suzanne Lenglen (1899-1938) leaps through the air during a tennis match in 1922. |
Lenglen and Helen Wills shaking hands at "The Match of the Century" in 1926. |
René Lacoste sporting his still popular polo shirt. Photo: https://www.heddels.com/2019/04/history-polo-shirt-rene-lacoste-ralph-lauren/ |
Even as many more citizens during the 1920s found it easier than ever before to reach the golf links or the tennis court, so too the beach resort became a more popular destination spot, accessible by not only train, but also car. Swimming and yachting grew exponentially in popularity, both bringing closer together the realms of men’s and women’s fashion. Women, whose typical swimwear had previously been more along the lines of a dress than anything else, began in the 1920s to wear the sorts of suits that men had always worn, consisting of wool jersey tanks worn over shorts. This shift received tacit acceptance from the establishment; the editors at Vogue in 1925 wrote that:
Many who must perforce stay on land criticize the abbreviated—yet comfortable and safe—bathing suits which the younger generation affect. Let these remember, however, that young people have never been so generally at home in the water as they are now, and that both health and safety demand a general knowledge of swimming… But this is not to say that, however smart be the suit or wearer, to parade scantily covered through suburban streets, or to lie about on the sands, smoking and daringly postured, is not reprehensible. Bathing suits are essentially for the water, not for the air.
These suits were repurposed with an entirely different aim by Gabrielle “Coco” Chanel, founder of the Chanel label, who designed the costumes for a Ballet Russes production titled Le Tren Bleu. This performance featured Russian ballerinas dancing in knitted swimsuits, unisex except in their coloring (the female dancers wore pink, the male blue).
Costumes that Coco Chanel designed for Le Tren Bleu, c. 1924 |
Chanel yachting pants |
“Sports clothes,” wrote M. E. Brooke, a reporter for Tatler Magazine, in 1928 “have been developed to such an extent that they may go to lunch at the fashionable restaurants; as a matter of fact they are often worn until the hour of cocktail.” And indeed by the end of the decade, the styles popularized by golfers, tennis players, and resort-goers had been largely integrated into the canon of style. Many associated with this shift, including Chanel, boasted of having freed the body (and particularly the female body) from the constraints of an older era. And it is true that by this time whalebone corsets were largely a thing of the past, but they had been replaced by equally restrictive regimes of bodily regulation: diet, exercise, and softer, elasticized corsets designed to flatten curves instead of accenting them (advertised as “foundation garments” in order to avoid the at-that-point taboo term “corset”). Writing again on the newfound national passion for sports, the 1925 editors of Vogue remind their reader that:
"...while many of us come comparatively new to some sports, the love of them is spreading very fast and with it, thank goodness, a proper admiration for the fine, well-developed human body which may some day be fit to carry a fine, well-developed human mind. Nothing can be better for a nation than open-air athletics, and, the more we sprout golf clubs and tennis clubs, boating and swimming clubs, the better for us.”
In the early 20th century, the American government, and governments around the world, became particularly fascinated by ensuring that the body politic was made up of so-called “healthy bodies,” an using an adjective which was increasingly measurable and moralizable in relatively new units such as the calorie. The clothes popular during the era reflected this shift, but they also shaped it, by shaping the bodies out of which it was formed.
Sources:
From the Staatsburgh Library and Archives:
Photography of Barbara Phipps playing tennis, Palm Beach FL, 1928
Social Usage: Manners and Customs of the Twentieth Century, Helen L. Roberts, G.P. Putnam’s Sons and The Knickerbocker Press, New York and London, 1913 (228, 388)
The Complete Book of Etiquette with Social forms for All Ages and Occasions, Hallie Erminie, Rives, John C, Winston Co., Great Britain, 1926, 45, 287
Vogue’s Book of Etiquette, Editors of Vogue, Conde Nast Publications, New York, 1925
Bikes & Trikes of Long Ago, John E. Duncan, Americana Review, 1975
Fifty Years of Popular Mechanics: 1902-1952, Multiple Authors, Simon and Schuster, New York
The World in Vogue, Edited by Brian Holmes, Katherine Tweed, Jessica Davies and Alexander Liberman, The Viking Press, New York, 1963
Harper’s Bazaar: #54 Jan-Dec 1919
Leisure and Entertainment in America, Donna R. Braden, Henry Ford Museum & Greenfield Village, Dearborn, Michigan
From the Bard College Stevenson Library:
The Automobile and American Life, John Heitmann, McFarland & Company Inc., Jefferson
From the Victoria and Albert Museum Archives:
Costumes for Le Tren Bleu, designed by Coco Chanel, Paris, 1924
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