What was the most popular form of entertainment in the first half of the 19th century?

Today, motion pictures are a popular entertainment -- screened in theaters, at home, even in cars and airplanes. Yet the devices and techniques for making movies are barely over a century old. What did Americans do for entertainment before filmmaking technology existed?

What was the most popular form of entertainment in the first half of the 19th century?
Library of Congress

The Piano Craze
Before recorded music existed, playing music and singing were marks of accomplishment for young women, especially after the 1820s, as more Americans prospered and could aspire to luxuries like parlor pianos. The nation's first great songwriter, Stephen Foster, wrote popular "high culture" songs for proper young ladies — his "Beautiful Dreamer" is an example. He also wrote minstrel songs, to appeal to a different audience.

Touring Minstrels
Minstrel shows were a popular working class entertainment in the decades before the Civil War. White performers with blackened faces sang and danced in skits that presented caricatures of slaves. The audiences participated actively and the atmosphere could get rowdy. Performing companies of minstrels toured around the country.

Shows for Families
The popular theatrical shows of the 1850s and 1860s were often lewd, and designed for a male audience. The shows presented a variety of entertainment: dancing girls, comics, singers and musicians. In an effort to attract bigger audiences, performers and managers adapted their material for families. By keeping ticket prices low and the jokes clean, business owners drew in huge crowds. The new shows became known as Vaudeville.

All-in-One Entertainment
In Vaudeville's heyday, from the 1880s to the 1920s, Americans made it their favorite form of entertainment. Defined by its blend of cultural traditions, the genre with the French name incorporated minstrelsy, Yiddish theater, and the English music hall (a Victorian version of the variety show). Performers of all kinds toured the country in troupes, putting on shows in big cities and small towns. A typical performance included 12 or more acts ranging from comedy to circus. Vaudevillians were well-rounded performers with an impressive repertoire of skills that included juggling, acrobatics, singing, dancing, and magic.

Bad Reputation
Members of traveling Vaudeville troupes might spend months, even years on the road, making only enough money to get by. With transient lifestyles and unusual skills, actors were looked upon with suspicion and grudging admiration. Many families went into to acting to pay their bills, including the Gish and Smith families. Charlotte Smith, Mary Pickford's mother, disdained the theater's reputation, but allowed Mary to go on stage. It was the only way to support the family.

A Broadway Legend
Broadway theater was the pinnacle of entertainment for the wealthy -- and the career ambition of every actor. David Belasco worked his way through the ranks of stage manager and playwright to become one of Broadway's elite producers. Belasco's career began when he was hired to manage the Madison Square Theater in 1882. He also co-wrote hit plays with Henry C. De Mille. He would later mentor De Mille's sons, William C. and Cecil B., in playwriting and the art of drama. Belasco was known for the physical and emotional tests he would force upon his actors: he would strike an actor to provoke a reaction, and in fits of rage over a performance, he would tear his watch off and smash it with his heel. Often his displays were calculated: he was known to wear a fake watch. Some of his productions were "The Girl I Left Behind Me" (1893), "Heart of Maryland" (1895), "Zaza" (1899), and "Madame Butterfly" (1900).

The Great White Way
Broadway's exclusive shows catered to the upper classes, with matinee tickets costing as much as $2.50 in 1908 (around $50 in today's dollars). Theaters were full of plush, velvet seats and ornate architecture. In the early 1900s, Thomas Edison's practical system of electricity transformed the gas-lit theaters. The first electric marquee illuminated Times Square in 1903 and soon every theater was advertising in bright lights, giving Broadway its nickname: the Great White Way. And another Edison invention, the motion picture camera, was about to create its own transformation of American entertainment.

The period from 1894 to 1915 was one in which workers in the United States began to have more leisure time than their predecessors. One reason for this was that industrial employers began to decrease working hours and institute a Saturday half-day holiday, which gave workers more free time for leisure activities. (Other types of workplaces would soon follow suit.) Vacations began to be regularly offered to workers, although they were usually unpaid ones. The monotony of specialized industrial work and the crowding of urban expansion also created a desire in the worker to have leisure time away from his or her job and away from the bustle of the city. The Progressive movement was another factor which contributed to the increased value of leisure time for workers, as their health and well-being received more attention. Yet another factor was the installation of electric lighting in the city streets, which made nighttime leisure activities less dangerous for both sexes.

What was the most popular form of entertainment in the first half of the 19th century?
What was the most popular form of entertainment in the first half of the 19th century?
What was the most popular form of entertainment in the first half of the 19th century?
Babies Rolling Eggs

People responded to this increased allowance of free time by attending a variety of leisure activities both within and away from the city. New types of amusements that people of all classes and both sexes could attend came into existence and quickly spread across the country.

Urban Entertainment

Within cities, people attended vaudeville shows, which would feature a multitude of acts. Shows often ran continuously so that theatergoers could come and go as they pleased. Vaudeville shows crossed economic and ethnic boundaries, as many different social groups would mix in the audience. Other popular shows of the time included circuses and Wild West shows, the most famous of the latter being William F. "Buffalo Bill" Cody's.

What was the most popular form of entertainment in the first half of the 19th century?
[Claremont Theatre, N.Y.]

Motion pictures also served as entertainment during leisure time for urban audiences. Initially the movies were novelties in kinetoscope viewers, until they became acts in their own right on the vaudeville stage. As motion pictures became longer, they moved into storefront Nickelodeon theaters and then into even larger theaters.

Further Afield

Outdoor activities remained popular as people attended celebratory parades and county fairs, the latter featuring agricultural products, machinery, competitions, and rides.

What was the most popular form of entertainment in the first half of the 19th century?
A Glimpse of the San Diego Exposition

Some people wished to go further afield on their vacations and leave the city. Many with limited budgets went to the countryside or the beaches. Towards the latter part of the nineteenth century, resorts opened in the outskirts of cities, such as the beach area of Asbury Park in New Jersey, which was founded in 1870. Amusement parks opened in places like Coney Island, New York, founded in 1897, offering rides, fun houses, scenes from foreign life, and the latest technological breakthroughs, such as motion pictures. National parks were created by the federal government to preserve nature and many began to tour these areas on vacation. One such example was Yellowstone Park where people camped or stayed at the hotels built there in the late 1880s.

World's fairs and expositions held in different U.S. cities offered Americans a chance to "tour the world" in one place. The fairs celebrated progress and featured exhibits of science and technology, foreign villages, shows, rides and vendors. The first major one was the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition in 1876, which was followed by fairs in Chicago (1893), Atlanta (1895), Nashville (1897), Omaha (1898), Buffalo (1901), and St. Louis (1904).

Sports

After the Civil War, the popularity of sports as leisure activities grew as people began to see the importance of exercise to health. While initially only the wealthy could partake of most sporting events, the opening of publicly available gymnasiums, courts, and fields allowed the working and middle classes to participate also. Athletic clubs such as the New York Athletic Club were organized and the YMCAs began to institute sports programs. These programs mostly focused on track and field events, instituted by communities of Scottish and English descent, and gymnastics, heavily influenced by German athletics. Gymnasiums, which featured exercises using Indian clubs, wooden rings, and dumbbells, were opened in many Eastern cities.

What was the most popular form of entertainment in the first half of the 19th century?
Basket Ball, Missouri Valley College

Although men performed the majority of sports activities at this time, opportunities for women, too appeared as the nineteenth century ended. Sports in which women participated included canoeing, rowing, and walking, although by the turn of the century schools began to offer even more sports activities for females, such as gymnastics and basketball.

What was the most popular form of entertainment in the first half of the 19th century?
Canoeing on the Charles River, Boston, Mass.

Spectator sports became popular as people flocked to see boxing rounds and different types of races. Although boxing was initially frowned on because of the violence and gambling associated with it, by the 1890s the Marquis of Queensberry's code was adopted, imposing limits on the game which made the sport somewhat safer. Its adoption in athletic clubs, YMCAs, and colleges by the early twentieth century brought boxing a measure of respectability.

Horse racing had always been supported by the wealthy and gamblers; by the end of the nineteenth century, people of all classes attended races. Although yacht races were also initially more popular for the wealthy, the America's Cup series of racing, begun in 1870, increased the sport's appeal. Other types of races which were popular included rowing, sailing, auto boat, and automobile races, the last category beginning in the 1890s.

What was the most popular form of entertainment in the first half of the 19th century?
International Contest for the Heavyweight Championship-Squires vs. Burns

Sports which involved teamwork, such as baseball, basketball, and football, became wildly popular with Americans, who enjoyed the games both as participants and spectators. Baseball had its origins in the English games of rounders and cricket and started as an adult game in New York during the 1840s. By the 1850s, the sport rapidly spread to many parts of the country as teams were formed from all classes and ages of society. Baseball rapidly became more organized as it became America's favorite sport.

Derived from the English game of rugby, American football was started in 1879 with rules instituted by Walter Camp, player and coach at Yale University.

Basketball derived from the need for an indoor sport during the winter months. James Nasmith, an instructor at the YMCA Training School at Springfield, Massachusetts, devised the game in 1891. Soon YMCAs and colleges around the country began playing it. The game was adapted for women at schools around the country with differing rules in the 1890s, until in 1899 a standard set of rules for women were adopted.

What was the most popular form of entertainment in the first half of the 19th century?
Princeton and Yale Football Game

Other sporting activities which people performed during this time included roller skating, bicycling, swimming, ice skating, sleighing, hunting, and fishing.

First invented in 1863, roller skating became a fad in the 1880s. Improved skates revived the trend by the turn of the century, making it fashionable for the middle classes and also for women.

Bicycling became popular in the 1880s, and the introduction of safer bicycles the following decade increased interest in the sport.

Swimming rapidly became more popular in the latter part of the century as women were increasingly allowed to swim in mixed company. Swimming began to be seen as an acceptable sport for women.

What was the most popular form of entertainment in the first half of the 19th century?
What was the most popular form of entertainment in the first half of the 19th century?
The Roller Skate Craze

In the latter part of the nineteenth century, urban men in the East sought the outdoors for their sports activities, indulging in hunting and fishing. Anglers' clubs abounded as the sport of fishing grew in popularity.

Winter sports, such as sleighing and ice skating, also gained in popularity in the mid-nineteenth century.

The films in this collection offer ample evidence of many of the activities mentioned. Film audiences of the time would have been amused to see other people or themselves on the screen, out enjoying their leisure time. For today's viewer, these films are historical documents of how Americans spent their leisure moments a hundred years ago, and how activities which are still enjoyed today began.

What was the most popular form of entertainment in the first half of the 19th century?
What was the most popular form of entertainment in the first half of the 19th century?
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What was the most popular form of entertainment in the first half of the 19th century?
Boys Diving, Honolulu

[Sources for essay: see Selected Bibliography.]

NOTE: Film titles used in this presentation are the original production titles, which may include archaic or incorrect spellings.

Topics for Leisure

Amusement parks

  • Children in the Surf, Coney Island
  • Rube and Mandy at Coney Island
  • Shooting the Chutes
  • Shooting the Chutes, Luna Park, Coney Island

Autmobile Racing

  • Automobile Race for the Vanderbilt Cup

Ballooning

  • Society Ballooning, Pittsfield, Mass.

Baseball

  • The Ball Game

Basketball

  • Basket Ball, Missouri Valley College

Boxing

  • Corbett and Courtney Before the Kinetograph
  • Leonard-Cushing Fight
  • International Contest for the Heavyweight Championship-Squires vs. Burns

Boat Racing

  • Auto Boat Race on the Hudson
  • Boat Race
  • "Columbia" Winning the Cup

Canoeing

  • Canoeing on the Charles River, Boston, Mass.

County Fairs

  • Rube Couple at County Fair

Egg Rolling

  • Babies Rolling Eggs
  • Tossing Eggs

Expositions *

  • Asia in America, St. Louis Exposition
  • Circular Panorama of Electric Tower
  • Esquimax Game of Snap-the-Whip
  • Esquimax Leap-Frog
  • Esquimax Village
  • A Glimpse of the San Diego Exposition
  • Horse Parade at the Pan-American Exposition
  • Japanese Village
  • Midway of Charleston Exposition
  • Opening Ceremonies, St. Louis Exposition
  • Opening, Pan-American Exposition
  • Pan-American Exposition by Night
  • Panorama of Esplanade by Night
  • Panoramic View of Charleston Exposition
  • Panoramic View of Electric Tower from a Balloon
  • Parade of Floats, St. Louis Exposition
  • Sham Battle at the Pan-American Exposition
  • Spanish Dancers at the Pan-American Exposition
  • A Trip Around the Pan-American Exposition

*For more information on the Pan-American Exposition, go to The Last Days of a President: Films of McKinley and the Pan-American Exposition, 1901.

Fishing

  • Bass Fishing
  • Brook Trout Fishing

Football

  • Chicago-Michigan Foot ball Game
  • Princeton and Yale Football Game

Hockey

  • Hockey Match on the Ice

Horse Racing

  • The Brooklyn Handicap-1904
  • Free-for-all Race at Charter Oak Park
  • Racing at Sheepshead Bay

Ice Skating

  • Skating on Lake, Central Park

Movie Theaters

  • [Claremont Theatre, N.Y.]

Parades

  • Annual Baby Parade, 1904, Asbury Park, N.J.
  • Annual Parade, New York Fire Department
  • Atlantic City Floral Parade
  • Buffalo Police on Parade
  • [Labor Day Parade]
  • Parade of Floats, St. Louis Exposition
  • Procession of Floats
  • St. Patrick's Day Parade, Lowell, Mass.

Resort holidays

  • [Easter Sunday, Atlantic City Boardwalk]

Roller skating

  • The Roller Skate Craze

Sleighing

  • Sleighing Scene

Swimming

  • Bathing at Atlantic City
  • Boys Diving, Honolulu
  • Children in the Surf, Coney Island
  • Kanakas Diving for Money, No.2
  • Lurline Baths
  • Sutro Baths
  • Sutro Baths, no.1
  • Swimming Pool, Palm Beach
  • Women of the Ghetto Bathing

Touring national parks

  • Coaches arriving at Mammoth Hot Springs
  • Tourists Going Round Yellowstone Park

Wild West shows

  • Buffalo Bill's Wild West Parade

Wrestling

  • Wrestling at the New York Athletic Club
Over the course of the nineteenth-century, drama became the most popular form of entertainment in America.

What forms of entertainment came up in nineteenth century?

Libraries, art galleries and museums were new types of entertainment brought about through the utilisation of state money. Music halls and cinema theatres too became immensely popular with the lower classes.
Melodramas, light comedies, operas, Shakespeare and classic English drama, pantomimes, translations of French farces and, from the 1860s, French operettas, continued to be popular, together with Victorian burlesque.

What people did for fun in the 19th century?

What sort of things might you do to have fun and be entertained? Theatre Halls were numerous and performances were regularly given by theatre troupes, ventriloquists, hypnotists, poets, comedians, choirs and orchestras. Circuses came to town and set up in parks and public places.