GAMES & TOYS – 1900’s

Sports - The 1900's

Photograph Courtesy of Mission Community Archives

At the dawn of the 20th century, Canadian sports remained firmly rooted in amateur traditions. While this amateur ethic continued to underpin much athletic participation, growing urbanization and industrialization created new opportunities for sports development. In cities with sufficient public interest, professional sports emerged as viable commercial enterprises, transforming athletic competitions into major spectator attractions. This evolution of Canadian sports reached beyond domestic boundaries, as opportunities for international competition expanded significantly. It gained momentum in the 1930s with radio’s growing popularity, particularly in sports broadcasting. Radio coverage, especially of hockey, played a crucial role in boosting attendance at sporting events and creating a national sports culture.

By the 1950s, recreation had evolved into a significant business sector, with hunting alone generating more than 6 million dollars in annual revenue for the BC Government. This was surpassed in 1956 by fishing, which netted the province 15 million dollars in revenue that year. The diversity of sporting activities expanded significantly during this period. Summer sports flourished, including baseball, tennis, swimming, rugby, soccer, lacrosse, and grass hockey. Winter brought its own variety with basketball, skating, curling, ice hockey, badminton, and square dancing. The popularity of outdoor recreation was evident in provincial park attendance, with over 1.5 million people visiting more than 106 provincial parks in 1956. This surge in outdoor activities was facilitated by improved roads and transportation, allowing unprecedented access to natural attractions like lakes, waterfalls, and mountains.

Prior to the 1960s, women’s participation in sports faced significant limitations. However, two powerful forces converged to transform the landscape of athletics and recreation: the growing women’s movement and rapid urbanization. As cities expanded, civic leaders recognized the crucial need for healthy activities and exercise opportunities for their growing populations. Simultaneously, the women’s movement emerged as a catalyst for change, challenging traditional gender restrictions not only in sports but across all aspects of society. This convergence of social and demographic changes fundamentally altered both the accessibility and character of Canadian sports and recreation.

The major socioeconomic transformations of Western society that emerged after the 16th Century laid the foundation for how sports and leisure activities shape identity and define behavior today. Specific economic mechanisms, including television rights, sponsorships, advertising and promotion, have become fundamental drivers in transforming sporting spectacles into the essential building blocks of mass culture. The modern sports experience reaches audiences through radio, television, and the internet, enabling individuals to achieve a powerful sense of both personal and community identity through shared experiences. This massive demand for entertainment, and the professionalization of sport, represents the latest evolution in a centuries-long development of sports culture and community engagement.