More about "1950s playground equipment food"
47 DANGEROUS OLD PLAYGROUNDS THAT OUR GREAT-GRANDPARENTS …
From clickamericana.com
Last updated Apr 22, 2023
- A homemade slide (1918) Apart from sliding down the cellar door, a slide made of a plank is about as low-tech (and as low-speed) as you could get. HOPE YOU DON’T HAVE A FEAR OF HEIGHTS.
- Rings for swings and poles to climb (1905) On the girls’ playground, Harriet Island, St. Paul, Minnesota, the girls had to swing high. Really high. And climb up.
- “You want us to do what?!” Six years or so after the photo above, chain ladders had been added to the playground mix. Here are some girls getting fit at Pelham Bay Park in the Bronx, way back in June 1911.
- The kids used to get really high. These photo from the early 1900s — showing a bunch of kids playing on sprawling steel pole playground equipment at Pittsburgh Pennsylvania’s Mount Washington Park — pretty much epitomize the risky business of play just over a hundred years ago.
- Strings attached. Here is what they were up — way up — to back in 1900-1910 at Trinity Play Park in Dallas, Texas. There’s a version of this photo going around the internet, tagged with the suggestion that the kid on the far left is falling… but he’s not.
- A metal maze. Here’s how one of these playgrounds looked minus the kids. It sort of looks like a minimalist Ikea version of a play structure. ALSO SEE: Vintage Erector Sets were toys that made toys: See old sets & find out their history.
- It’s only a 20-foot drop… (1912) Very similar to the catalog page above, this huge, sprawling metal structure is part of the Hiawatha Playground in Seattle.
- Like what you’d get if you bought a ridiculously cheap playground slide on Craigslist. The first thing that caught our eye in the photos up there is this thing: parallel poles pretending to be a slide.
- Who designed these things?! This was created so kids could have nice, safe fun?
- Hope you like splinters, too. Now here’s the same kind of old-school structure as shown above, but at this old playground in Boston, it was made out of wood.
10 PIECES OF PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT THAT NEARLY KILLED ... - MENTAL …
From mentalfloss.com
Author Cory Graff
- Barrel-of-Fun. “A mechanical greased pig” is how Hill Standard’s Barrel-of-Fun was described in 1922. The barrel was built to be anchored in a slab of concrete, and kids were encouraged to dive over the top of the 140-pound steel cask or attempt to hug its smooth surface and spin themselves silly.
- Log Swing. This playground contraption, built by Everwear Manufacturing Company, looked reminiscent of a teeter totter—except it had the unique ability to leap forward (or backward) and whack its unsuspecting victims.
- Giant Strides. Everwear puzzlingly touted this gem as the “Seven League Boot” of the 1930s playground. Kids were meant to latch onto one of the lines of rope attached to the spinning wheel-like contraption atop the pole.
- Teeter Ladder. Monkey bars and seesaws are both on their way out of most American playgrounds because they're seen as too perilous by concerned doctors and traumatized parents.
- Racer Slides. Today, playgrounds have lumpy, plastic, short-barreled slides—but it wasn't always this way. As late as the 1990s, kids could climb a 30-foot metal slide and really get some speed, not to mention some burns as they sped along that sun-roasted metal [PDF].
- Gymnasium. Narragansett Machine Company’s 1922 Gymnasium Outfit encouraged youngsters to climb to an apex of over 14 feet, according to the catalog. If Isaac Newton had been around to do some quick gravitational calculations, he would have discovered kids falling from the top would be doing about 20 mph by the time they hit the pavement below.
- Merry-Go-Round. Before metal merry-go-rounds was Everwear's wooden model, a “portable,” 1500-pound oak monster that all but guaranteed wicked splinters.
- Jungle Gym. Lawyers and regulators have all but killed the traditional Jungle Gym, a piece of playground equipment that was tall and unforgiving of mistakes.
- Ocean Wave. The “undulating and wavelike motion” of this playground attraction gleefully brought seasickness ashore. The Ocean Wave was an old favorite by the time General Playground offered this version for $195 in 1940.
- Poised Safety Swing. Everwear’s jaw-dropping contraption avoids all the anguish of smashing to earth by being set up in a pool, lakefront, or at the beach.
THE PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT FROM YOUR CHILDHOOD THAT’S DEEMED …
From startsat60.com
Author Jocelyn NickelsEstimated Reading Time 3 mins
FUN CAME FIRST: A BRIEF HISTORY OF PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT
From goric.com
HOW WE CAME TO PLAY: THE HISTORY OF PLAYGROUNDS
From savingplaces.org
COMMERCIAL PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT - BCI BURKE …
From bciburke.com
THE HISTORY OF PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT | MIRACLE …
From miracle-recreation.com
WHEN PLAYGROUNDS WERE DEADLY - FLASHBAK
From flashbak.com
THE DANGEROUS PLAYGROUNDS OF THE PAST THROUGH VINTAGE …
From rarehistoricalphotos.com
VINTAGE PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT (WITH FUN PICTURES)
From jenx67.com
SWINGS AND ROUNDABOUTS: SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST IN THE OLD …
From startsat60.com
Author Bob Byrne
BACKYARD PLAYGROUND SETS | COSTCO
From costco.com
THE EVOLUTION OF NORTH AMERICAN PLAYGROUNDS FROM 1900 TO THE …
From continuingeducation.bnpmedia.com
OUTDOOR PLAY | THIS N' THAT AMISH OUTLET
From thisnthatamishoutlet.com
CHILDREN PLAYGROUND 1960S STOCK PHOTOS AND IMAGES - ALAMY
From alamy.com
1950S PLAYGROUND HI-RES STOCK PHOTOGRAPHY AND IMAGES - ALAMY
From alamy.com
CHILDREN PLAYGROUND 1950S STOCK PHOTOS AND IMAGES
From alamy.com
4,383 VINTAGE PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT PREMIUM HIGH RES PHOTOS
From gettyimages.com
OLD BUST HEAD BREWING COMPANY - TRIPADVISOR
From tripadvisor.com
10 TYPES OF CRAZY OLD PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT (AND SOME MODERN …
From parknplaydesign.com
MAINTENANCE & REPAIR | PEPSI-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY OF CENTRAL VA
From pepsicva.com
30 OF THE MOST POPULAR RECIPES OF THE 1950S
From allrecipes.com
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