when: 03 May 2022 | venue: Darling Square Library | cost: Free | address: Levels 1 and 2, The Exchange, 1 Little Pier Street, Haymarket NSW 2000 | tickets: https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/childs-play-playgrounds-in-sydney-in-the-20th-century-tickets-288293342147
published: 01 May 2022, 5 min read
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Providing playgrounds in the city was a uniquely 20th century phenomenon that reflected changing understandings of children and their place in urban life.
In this lunchtime conversation, historian Laila Ellmoos will look at how children occupied Sydney's urban spaces in the 20th century, with a focus on the introduction of supervised children's playgrounds in the inner city from the 1930s.
Supervised playgrounds were the product of a curious hybrid of town planning ideals, public health initiatives and philosophies around child development. Sydney Municipal Council established its first supervised playground at Moore Park in December 1932. The council's main aim in setting up these dedicated play areas was to get children off the streets, away from the very real dangers posed by cars and traffic. Structuring and controlling the time and space of urban-dwelling children, by providing supervised play in a delineated and enclosed playground area, was also hoped to provide moral uplift and guidance.
Laila Ellmoos is a professional historian who is passionate about communicating history to a wide range of audiences through exhibitions, talks and the written word. She is a historian at the City of Sydney and a long-standing member of the Professional Historians Association of NSW & ACT.
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Providing playgrounds in the city was a uniquely 20th century phenomenon that reflected changing understandings of children and their place in urban life.
In this lunchtime conversation, historian Laila Ellmoos will look at how children occupied Sydney's urban spaces in the 20th century, with a focus on the introduction of supervised children's playgrounds in the inner city from the 1930s.
Supervised playgrounds were the product of a curious hybrid of town planning ideals, public health initiatives and philosophies around child development. Sydney Municipal Council established its first supervised playground at Moore Park in December 1932. The council's main aim in setting up these dedicated play areas was to get children off the streets, away from the very real dangers posed by cars and traffic. Structuring and controlling the time and space of urban-dwelling children, by providing supervised play in a delineated and enclosed playground area, was also hoped to provide moral uplift and guidance.
Laila Ellmoos is a professional historian who is passionate about communicating history to a wide range of audiences through exhibitions, talks and the written word. She is a historian at the City of Sydney and a long-standing member of the Professional Historians Association of NSW & ACT.
Go see Child's Play: playgrounds in Sydney in the 20th century 2022.
Child's Play: playgrounds in Sydney in the 20th century 2022 is on 03 May 2022. The opening hours are: Tuesday 3 May from 1pm to 2pm. Conveniently located in Haymarket. Call 02 9265 9333 for details.
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