Abstract
During the Progressive Era, the playground movement ushered in a period of extensive park and playground building in cities across the country. Playground advocates emphasized how organized play reduced juvenile delinquency, and that green space made cities aesthetically pleasing. Bay Area cities created playground commissions, hosted conferences, and initiated projects to improve the city landscape. Finding themselves excluded, the small but active Black middle-class fought to gain access to these public spaces while also investing in their own institutions. With the eruption of World War I, the rhetoric around recreation shifted from juvenile delinquency to cultural pluralism, creating opportunities for Black Americans to demand full citizenship.
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