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Designed for Play: List of figures

Designed for Play
List of figures
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table of contents
  1. Series page
  2. Title page
  3. Copyright
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. List of figures
  7. Preface
    1. Notes
  8. Introduction
    1. Playgrounds today
    2. Playing in the past
    3. Playground histories
    4. Childhood and the urban environment
    5. Overview
    6. Notes
  9. 1. Finding space for play: ‘playgrounds for poor children in populous places’
    1. Education and exercise in the mid-nineteenth century
    2. Childhood and urban anxieties in the late nineteenth century
    3. Notes
  10. 2. Competing playground visions: ‘a distinctly civilizing influence that gives much health and happiness’
    1. ‘Properly equipped playgrounds’ in the early twentieth century
    2. Charles Wicksteed, philanthropy and commerce
    3. Excitement and freedom in Wicksteed Park
    4. Notes
  11. 3. Playgrounds for the people: ‘a magnetic force to draw children away from the dangers and excitements of the streets’
    1. Playing fields and playgrounds in interwar Britain
    2. Safety and supervision
    3. Problems in the playground
    4. Designing the perfect play experience
    5. Notes
  12. 4. Orthodoxy and adventure: ‘playgrounds are often as bleak as barrack squares and just as boring’
    1. Orthodoxy consolidated: postwar planners and the playground
    2. Marjory Allen and the challenge of adventure
    3. Beyond the bombsite
    4. Reimagining the playground: artists and architects
    5. Notes
  13. 5. Playground scuffles: ‘it’s ours whatever they say’
    1. The power of play
    2. Campaigning and working for play
    3. Danger and decay
    4. Playground monsters
    5. Notes
  14. Conclusion
  15. References
    1. Primary Sources
    2. Secondary Sources
  16. Index

List of figures

Figure 1.1  Gymnasia and playground of the Home and Colonial Infant School, London, wood engraving, c.1840, Wellcome Collection. Public Domain Mark.

Figure 1.2  Giant’s stride, Bayliss Jones and Bayliss Ltd, 1912, National Archives, WORKS/16/1705.

Figure 1.3  Little Dorrit’s playground by H. Seppings Wright in the Illustrated London News, 8 February 1902, p. 208, © Illustrated London News Ltd / Mary Evans.

Figure 2.1  Regulation playground outfits, Spencer, Heath and George Ltd, no date, National Archives, WORKS/16/1705.

Figure 2.2  Gymnasia for parks, Bayliss Jones and Bayliss Ltd, 1912, National Archives, WORKS/16/1705.

Figure 2.3  Wooden slides, c.1920, Wicksteed Park Archive, PHO-1614-4.

Figure 2.4  Large swings, c.1920, Wicksteed Park Archive, PHO-1614-5.

Figure 3.1  Children’s traffic playground, Tottenham, 1938, © Daily Herald Archive / Science Museum Group.

Figure 3.2  Children playing in sandpits, Victoria Park, London, 1893, © London Metropolitan Archives (City of London), SC/PHL/02/1141/B2895.

Figure 4.1  Children’s playground, Caryl Garden Flats, Liverpool, by J.E. Marsh, 1940, RIBA Collections, RIBA14445.

Figure 4.2  Sketch Suggestions of Improvised Equipment for Children’s Play by R.B. Gooch, National Playing Fields Association, 1956, London Metropolitan Archives, CLC/011/MS22287.

Figure 4.3  Children’s playground, Churchill Gardens estate by J. Maltby, 1963, John Maltby / RIBA Collections, RIBA34960.

Figure 4.4  Experimental play equipment by LCC Architects Department, 1959, © London Metropolitan Archives (City of London), GLC/HG/HHM/12/S026A.

Figure 4.5  Brick slide on the Brunel estate, London, c.1974, Landscape Institute / Michael Brown, Museum of English Rural Life, AR BRO PH5/1/524B.

Figure 5.1  Open space with children’s play area, Basildon, by S. Lambert, 1967, Architectural Press Archive / RIBA Collections, RIBA63840.

Figure 5.2  Swinging in a derelict playground, Newcastle, by Nick Hedges, 1971, © nickhedgesphotography.co.uk.

Figure 5.3  Harrison Park, Edinburgh, by Robert Blomfield, 1960, © Robert Blomfield Photography.

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