
Summer camps are returning to their elitist roots
Tribune News Service
'What are we going to do with the kids this summer?' More than halfway through July, some iteration of that question continues to be raised in homes across the nation as harried parents scramble to keep their kids occupied in the post-school-year months. Vacation can only go so far. And while some parents may deliberately let their kids 'rot' — basically, sit around and get bored — most opt for some version of a time-honoured tradition: summer camp.
We live in a world of constant, relentless change, but summer camp is one of those rituals that has survived, largely intact, for over a century. That's because our conviction that children should have time to 'unplug,' make new friends, learn a skill or simply reconnect with nature is nothing new — which is not the same as saying it's always been that way.
In fact, for much of the nation's history, most kids spent their summers working in the fields and factories with their parents. Times change, though, and so did ideas about childrearing, ushering in what one historian has described as the 'invention of childhood.'
Instead of viewing their offspring as little adults, a growing number of middle- and upper-class moms and dads came to see childhood as a special, vulnerable stage of life — one that called for structured activities that would nurture desired traits.
By the late 19th century, a growing number of these bourgeois parents became anxious about what urban affluence and rapid technological change were doing to their children. They worried, wrote historian Leslie Paris, 'that something vital had been lost in the transition: a familiarity with the natural world, a slower pace, a rootedness in the land.'
For some reformers, this nostalgia for an agrarian past informed growing fears that a rising generation of boys, deprived of a connection to nature, would never grow up to become real men.
A Dartmouth College student named Ernest B. Balch was among those who feared the worst. Rowing one fine day on New Hampshire's Squam Lake, he hit upon an idea: Why not bring boys to the great outdoors and teach them self-reliance? This would address the anxiety that 'America was getting soft,' as he later put it.
In 1881, he bought an island on Squam Lake and opened Camp Chocorua, named after a nearby mountain. Kids spent their days hiking, swimming and canoeing. Other like-minded reformers opened their own camps in remote areas, primarily in New England or the Adirondacks.
The early private camps were limited in their influence because they catered to White, affluent Protestant families in the urban northeast. However, that changed with the rise of camps run by national organisations, such as the Boy Scouts and the Young Men's Christian Association or YMCA. These options, which helped make summer camp more accessible, promoted a 'muscular Christianity' that combined religious devotion with a love of nature.
Still, it was all about boys. It wasn't long before some critics asked: What about girls? Progressive, college-educated women — proto-feminists — began questioning why boys had a monopoly on summer camp. Why wouldn't girls need nature, too? Holt founded what may have been the first summer camp for girls in 1901; a decade later, hundreds of such programs had been established to meet growing demand. A brochure from one of the early ones, Camp Idlewood in the Hudson River Valley, gives us a glimpse of the typical messaging. It declared: 'We aim to develop superb womanhood, to give to girls a perfect body, complete symmetrical physical development, a strong physical organism, to make their bodies fitting temples for their souls.'
By the 1930s, somewhere between five and seven thousand camps operated throughout the US, hosting an estimated two million campers a year. They catered to different groups — Jews, working-class kids and Catholics. Black children, though, had very few options, save for a handful of segregated private camps in the South and a scattering of options run by the YMCA and YWCA. Integration would only occur well into the postwar era.
Even as they kept out minority groups, many summer programmes modeled themselves on an idealised vision of one group of color in particular: Native Americans. For example, Camp Ticonderoga in the Adirondack Mountains assigned campers to one of three 'tribes,' but the tone-deaf stereotyping didn't stop there. Each 'Indian Village,' declared the camp's brochure, 'gives the boy the much-needed opportunity to express his inherent savagery. Just to be free, to run, to climb, to shout and yell like a wild Indian on a warpath!'
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Gulf Today
2 days ago
- Gulf Today
Summer camps are returning to their elitist roots
Stephen Mihm, Tribune News Service 'What are we going to do with the kids this summer?' More than halfway through July, some iteration of that question continues to be raised in homes across the nation as harried parents scramble to keep their kids occupied in the post-school-year months. Vacation can only go so far. And while some parents may deliberately let their kids 'rot' — basically, sit around and get bored — most opt for some version of a time-honoured tradition: summer camp. We live in a world of constant, relentless change, but summer camp is one of those rituals that has survived, largely intact, for over a century. That's because our conviction that children should have time to 'unplug,' make new friends, learn a skill or simply reconnect with nature is nothing new — which is not the same as saying it's always been that way. In fact, for much of the nation's history, most kids spent their summers working in the fields and factories with their parents. Times change, though, and so did ideas about childrearing, ushering in what one historian has described as the 'invention of childhood.' Instead of viewing their offspring as little adults, a growing number of middle- and upper-class moms and dads came to see childhood as a special, vulnerable stage of life — one that called for structured activities that would nurture desired traits. By the late 19th century, a growing number of these bourgeois parents became anxious about what urban affluence and rapid technological change were doing to their children. They worried, wrote historian Leslie Paris, 'that something vital had been lost in the transition: a familiarity with the natural world, a slower pace, a rootedness in the land.' For some reformers, this nostalgia for an agrarian past informed growing fears that a rising generation of boys, deprived of a connection to nature, would never grow up to become real men. A Dartmouth College student named Ernest B. Balch was among those who feared the worst. Rowing one fine day on New Hampshire's Squam Lake, he hit upon an idea: Why not bring boys to the great outdoors and teach them self-reliance? This would address the anxiety that 'America was getting soft,' as he later put it. In 1881, he bought an island on Squam Lake and opened Camp Chocorua, named after a nearby mountain. Kids spent their days hiking, swimming and canoeing. Other like-minded reformers opened their own camps in remote areas, primarily in New England or the Adirondacks. The early private camps were limited in their influence because they catered to White, affluent Protestant families in the urban northeast. However, that changed with the rise of camps run by national organisations, such as the Boy Scouts and the Young Men's Christian Association or YMCA. These options, which helped make summer camp more accessible, promoted a 'muscular Christianity' that combined religious devotion with a love of nature. Still, it was all about boys. It wasn't long before some critics asked: What about girls? Progressive, college-educated women — proto-feminists — began questioning why boys had a monopoly on summer camp. Why wouldn't girls need nature, too? Holt founded what may have been the first summer camp for girls in 1901; a decade later, hundreds of such programs had been established to meet growing demand. A brochure from one of the early ones, Camp Idlewood in the Hudson River Valley, gives us a glimpse of the typical messaging. It declared: 'We aim to develop superb womanhood, to give to girls a perfect body, complete symmetrical physical development, a strong physical organism, to make their bodies fitting temples for their souls.' By the 1930s, somewhere between five and seven thousand camps operated throughout the US, hosting an estimated two million campers a year. They catered to different groups — Jews, working-class kids and Catholics. Black children, though, had very few options, save for a handful of segregated private camps in the South and a scattering of options run by the YMCA and YWCA. Integration would only occur well into the postwar era. Even as they kept out minority groups, many summer programmes modeled themselves on an idealised vision of one group of color in particular: Native Americans. For example, Camp Ticonderoga in the Adirondack Mountains assigned campers to one of three 'tribes,' but the tone-deaf stereotyping didn't stop there. Each 'Indian Village,' declared the camp's brochure, 'gives the boy the much-needed opportunity to express his inherent savagery. Just to be free, to run, to climb, to shout and yell like a wild Indian on a warpath!'


Gulf Today
21-07-2025
- Gulf Today
Camp Mystic girls raise thousands for Texas flood aid
Coco Grieshaber, an 8-year-old Camp Mystic alumna, threaded beads into a homemade bracelet at her dining room table, sharing memories of the Texas summer camp that she left four days before flooding devastated the area on Fourth of July weekend. She chose pink and green beads, while her 11-year-old sister Max, another Camp Mystic alumna who attended the camp in prior years, chose various shades of purple for the bracelets they were selling to raise money for a camp staffer who was impacted by the flood, according to the Tribune News Service. A pile of finished bracelets that read 'Mystic' were scattered in between them, the word book-ended by beads with crosses or hearts. Outside their home in Fort Worth's Tanglewood neighborhood, a 'Praying for Mystic' yard sign quotes a Bible verse: the book of John, chapter one, verse five. 'The light shines in the darkness, and the darkness has not overcome it.' Coco and Max are among several Fort Worth children with connections to Camp Mystic who are making and selling homemade jewelry to raise money for the Christian summer camp for girls in Central Texas, which is still reeling from the loss of 27 campers and counselors. Gov. Greg Abbott said this week 101 people remain missing statewide, and 131 people have been pronounced dead, mostly in the Kerr County area, where the Guadalupe River rose by more than 25 feet in the middle of the night. Coco first sold 50 bracelets through a lemonade stand last week with her friends and fellow campers Audrey and Elizabeth Hernandez, who are 8-year-old twins, she said. They sold more than $3,000 worth of bracelets in one day, selling them for as much as buyers were willing to give, in addition to lemonade, cookies and painted crosses. They've continued to get requests through word of mouth, raising an additional $1,500 in the past week. Candace Hernandez, Audrey and Elizabeth's mother, said her twin daughters have been making bracelets this week in Maui during a family vacation, as other travelers noticed the girls making them by the pool and put orders in. There have been at least 30 bracelets sold on the second largest island in the Hawaiian archipelago. 'I'm so proud of them for doing what 8-year-olds can do, and coming up with an idea and putting it all together and putting it into motion to do something good to help,' Candace Hernandez said. 'Our hearts ache for those parents that didn't get to be reunited with their daughters, and our faith reassures us that they are safe in heaven with Jesus.' The funds are being donated to Cassie Wilson, a former camper turned camp employee whose home was damaged and car was lost to the flood and who is grieving the loss of loved ones, according to Coco and Max's mother, Kayt Grieshaber. 'Most of us know her as the photographer who brings us so much joy of our girls at camp,' Kayt Grieshaber said. 'We all looked daily for photos of our girls. Cassie was our communication line, our way of checking in on if it was a happy smile or homesick smile or living-their-best-life smile. Took this for granted but forever thankful.' Kayt Grieshaber said the flood has hit close to home, especially with picking up her youngest daughter Coco a few days before it happened. Coco was at the Cypress Lake part of the camp, which is referred to as 'new camp,' while the Guadalupe River part of the camp is referred to as 'old camp.' 'You hate to have those things go through your head, but just what if? And you know, it could have been her. She was at Cypress Lake and wasn't at Guadalupe River, but just the magic of the camp and seeing the images of it just being destroyed, it's heartbreaking,' she said. 'It just makes you sick to your stomach.' Coco Grieshaber said she wants the impacted families to know that God is watching over them during this difficult time. 'God is right beside them, and people are praying,' said Coco, who attended Camp Mystic for the first time this year with Audrey and Elizabeth.


Gulf Today
19-05-2025
- Gulf Today
‘Chicken lady' faces legal trouble as birds come flocking in
Kyeland Jackson, Tribune News Service Chicken owners from across the Twin Cities have been known to dump fowl on Miranda Meyer's St. Paul doorstep in the middle of the night. Outside her house on Hatch Avenue — yes, St. Paul's 'chicken lady' lives on Hatch Avenue — neighbours stop and watch the birds strut toward feed scattered near Meyer's black hearse. Hens like Sweet Pea, found half-frozen in a bush, ruffle their feathers in a white coop. Meyer's rooster, Jimothy Dean Scrambles, perches on a fence and crows. Minneapolis animal control officials call Meyer, 32, to rehome abandoned chickens. But in her home city, St. Paul animal control has issued citations against her flock, exposing her to legal trouble even as she pursues work she considers to be within her rights as a tribal member. Meyer is worried that the fowl troubles will worsen this year. 'We're taking hundreds of birds every summer, and it's only getting bigger and bigger,' Meyer said. 'There's so many people who are going into this blind thinking, 'I just want free eggs.'' Meyer started work in what she called the 'the death industry' at 15. After more than a decade of cleaning crime scenes and preparing burials, dealing with death and silence weighed on her. 'It makes you feel not human because then you can't connect with other people,' Meyer said. But Meyer always felt she could connect with animals, and she said the Standing Rock protests a few years ago inspired a change. Meyer is a member of the Ojibwe tribe whose name, Ikwe Niibawi Wiiji Migizi Miigwan, means 'woman who stands with eagle feather.' She said the protests made her think about sustainability, prompting her to adopt three chickens. She quickly found she had a knack for working with the birds. The goal of the operation she runs from her single-family house, the Balsam Lake Bachelor Flock and Poultry Rehab, is to rehabilitate and return chickens and roosters to owners who pay her what they can afford. The rehab runs through her properties in St. Paul and Balsam Lake, Wis., and she said the goal is to help chicken owners and people who cannot afford eggs, meat and high veterinary bills. When she can't rehabilitate roosters, Meyer drives them to Balsam Lake and releases them on her 40-acre property, or slaughters them to bring meat to neighbours and reservations. Hmong farmers give Meyer leftover vegetables as chicken feed in return for eggs, fertiliser and meat. She donates dozens of fertilised eggs to St. Paul school teachers, who hatch them in class and return the chicks to her. The Minneapolis Police Department and Minneapolis Animal Care and Control began phoning for help with chickens abandoned in cemeteries, parking garages and on the tarmac at Minneapolis–St. Paul International Airport. Meyer said that up to 20 hens and two roosters now stay with her. But at a peak last year, she said she was accepting 30 roosters a week. That ran her afoul of St. Paul Animal Services, which ticketed Meyer last October and again in March for having a rooster and no permit to own chickens. Roosters are prohibited in St. Paul, and a rooster permit in Minneapolis costs $110. Meyer disputes the need for a permit, arguing that the work is within her rights as an Ojibwe tribal member with federal protections. For St. Paul resident Va Xiong and others, chickens are crucial for religious ceremonies addressing birth, life and death. Xiong, 42, started raising chickens for the first time this year to provide for his family and their ceremonies. Many Hmong people who emigrated to Minnesota brought cultural practices involving chickens. Xiong explined that the birds are considered guides for spirits of the deceased, wards against sickness and vital nutritional support for women giving birth. Many still believe in those customs but turned from tradition to adjust to city laws, returning chickens to farms after ceremonies instead of sacrificing them. But Xiong said St. Paul's restrictions forced him to raise fowl outside the city limits, and he believes residents are being ticketed while holding chickens for similar practices. 'That is why a lot of the Hmong community and Asian communities have these chickens in the city limits, and the city is making it tough for these Asian communities to hold chickens,' Xiong said. He said the permit process can take months. St. Paul Animal Services Manager Molly Lunaris said most applications are approved the same day, but the department is working to streamline the process through an online application that could be available within a year. Lunaris said rules considered burdensome by some exist for the city's health, safety and livability. 'We regularly seek staff and resident input to assess whether our ordinances are current, efficient, and effective, and work to implement changes when necessary,' Lunaris said in a statement. She said the agency is working to move away from criminal citations in favor of administrative actions. Lunaris added that the agency has not seized any birds claimed to be used for religious purposes and would consult with the City Attorney's Office before doing so. Scores of Minnesotans are turning to co-ops and community-supported agriculture shares to save money on eggs. Many more are turning to backyard chicken coops.