The Yard (adventure playground)

The Yard (also called 'Young Yardville' or 'Yardville') was the first adventure playground established in the United States. It was opened in Minneapolis, Minnesota, in 1949, to give children "their own spot of earth and plenty of tools and materials for digging, building and creating as they see fit."[1][2]

The Yard
TypeAdventure playground
Nearest cityMinneapolis
Coordinates45.030470°N 93.241690°W / 45.030470; -93.241690
Created1949
Closedc. 1950

History

McCall’s Magazine, together with the United Way and several local organizations, sponsored the construction of the playground in 1949.[3] President Harry Truman visited the site in 1949.[4][5] It was popular with children and police: "'Since President Truman visited The Yard last fall, we haven't had a call out that way,' says Juvenile Officer Virgil Lenens of the Minneapolis Police Department. 'It used to be a headache, with the kids breaking street lamps and picking up stuff from houses under construction to build their shacks along the railroad tracks.'"[6]

The Yard was equipped with tools for digging and building, second-hand lumber, bricks, tiling, paint, nails, an old railroad boxcar and the body of a milk truck.[4][1]

gollark: Not letting you do things because of (possible) *emotional* harm to other people is very problematic.
gollark: That seems like kind of a stretch.
gollark: Ethically, I don't think other people have the right to stop someone from deciding what stuff they can do with their own body/life/whatever.
gollark: You can't just tell people to not be "insane" or whatever, and it's their body/life/whatever.
gollark: What should be legally allowed or whatever and what you *should do* are different things.

References

  1. Ward, Colin (1961). Adventure Playground: A Parable of Anarchy. Freedom Press.
  2. Scott, James C. (2012). Two Cheers for Anarchism. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-15529-6.
  3. Wilson, Reilly Bergin (2017). "A BRIEF HISTORY OF ADVENTURE PLAYGROUNDS". Play:groundNYC. New York. Retrieved November 29, 2018.
  4. Steller, Chris (July 25, 2014). "When 'The Yard' was Minnesota's most radical park". MinnPost. Minneapolis. Retrieved November 29, 2018.
  5. "Adventure Playground" (PDF). Freedom: The Anarchist Weekly. London. September 6, 1958.
  6. Robbins, Florence Greenhoe (1955). The sociology of play, recreation, and leisure time. W.C. Brown Co. p. 334-339.
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