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TWO
FRANKLIN LETTER GIRLS. By Mary Ann Balch, Member and
Volunteer with the Rainier Valley Historical Society.
The
female high school athletes are closing out basketball
season and looking toward the track and softball teams
gearing up for spring. As we see our children of today
in their slick name brand uniforms and state of the
art engineered shoes we may consider the cost of progress,
at least the cost in our wallets. In days past uniforms
were sensible, a sign of the times. Female athletes
were to reflect the modesty of their sex while getting
their exercise in sporting events. In the years from
1917-1921 the girls at Franklin High School were proud
to display their school spirit, posing here in front
of the building in their athletic uniforms. These two
are wearing the sensible long black stockings which
were the style of the time and also required. The stockings
may have been warm, but look at the outfit! The regulation
outfit was a square neck belted blouse attached to a
pair of bloomers designed to camouflage the shapely
figure of the young athlete. Running down the court
would have been a something less than a swoosh, but
these women were every bit as dedicated to their sport
as our women of today.
Girls
played basketball, indoor baseball and volleyball. After
the game the girls would undoubtedly redo their ever
popular hair buns, back combed as much as mother would
allow, and look for the popular boy who drove a flivver
and could deliver them home by way of the lake route.
The flivver was a cheap automobile, with side curtains
that fluttered in the breeze on warm spring days. Youngsters
not able to ride with friends in the flivver would possibly
travel by way of the jitney. These private cars functioned
as busses, offering riders a lift for five cents. These
entrepreneurs posed strong competition for the slower,
mundane streetcars which provided mass transit for the
rest of the crowd. Charlotte Widrig, shown here on the
right with her friend and fellow athlete Virginia Ulurich,
was not allowed to ride the jitney, go horseback riding
or canoeing. Evidently her mother classed these as dangerous
and therefore forbidden activities.
Other
events recalled by Charlotte include an influenza epidemic
which caused the school to be closed for 28 days, nearly
one-sixth of the school year. After school reopened
"flu masks" were required on public transportation.
She remembers a incident when a burly shipyard worker
was ejected from his seat and from the streetcar for
not wearing his mask. The other unscheduled holiday
was an afternoon to remember. Aviation was the new technology
of the day, and an formation of 16 airplanes was performing
a flight demonstration over Seattle. Teachers, eager
to let their classes see history in the making allowed
students to be dismissed to the roof of the school,
in order to get a perfect view. The ability to congregate
on the roof impressed the students as much as the demonstration
did. The thunderous roar of the planes overhead seemed
a novelty then. Only dreamers in the crowd would venture
to think that they themselves could ride in or pilot
such a contraption. This event foreshadowed the neighborhood's
welcome for the jet pilots of the Blue Angels in years
to come. Youth of today recall the thunder of the jets
much in the same way Charlotte described the demonstration
of her day. History really is similar to today if we
can pause long enough to attempt to find connections
and listen to the stories of the past.
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