By the second half of
Queen Victoria's reign, most people earned more money and worked shorter
hours than ever before. This meant that for the first time, ordinary people
had enough spare time to enjoy sports and other pastimes,and to go to the
seaside for holidays.
Nursery Toys
The
younger children of well off families had lots of beautiful toys in their
nurseries. The favourite was the rocking horse which was made from wood
and painted brightly.
Girls also enjoyed playing
with their dolls' houses, furniture for these could be bought and changed
with times and fashions. Victorian dolls were probably the most beautiful
ones made. Their heads and shoulders were made of wax or china with bodies
made of stuffed calico or wood. Most dolls were dressed as adults with
beautiful clothes made from satin, taffeta or lace. A poor girl would
long for a doll like this which she would only see in shop windows, She
would never be able to afford one but might have a rag doll instead.
Boys would play with
their tin or lead soldiers. Later in the century as the railways developed
across the country clockwork trains became popular.
Older children
Often older children
would play with toy theatres. The plays they would perform would take up
a lot of their time and money. First they had to buy a stage which would
be made of wood and cardboard with a row of tin footlights with oil burning
wicks along the front. Sheets of characters and scenes would cost a penny
plain and two pence ready coloured.
Girls might
spend their spare time sewing. They practised their stitches by embroidering
letters of the alphabet, texts or complex pictures within a fancy border.
These pieces of embroidery were called samplers.
Reading
was a popular pastime, many books written during the victorian era are
still enjoyed today.
Outdoor games
These changed with the
seasons, children played with hoops, balls or tops. They also played marbles
or alleys.
Sport became
extremely popular in Victorian times. Traditional sports like football,
cricket and boxing had been played for centuries but now they were given
proper rules for the first time. The first Football Association (FA) Cup
was played in 1871. This was when many football clubs were set up, ones
like Aston Villa and Everton were set up by churches to attract more people
to come to church. Others like Arsenal were set up by employers. Football
was meant to keep people healthy and to encourage a sense of fair play.
It wasn't that successful and free kicks (1877) and penalty kicks (1891)
had to be brought in to clamp down on foul play.
English
and Australian teams played their first cricket Test Match in England in
1880. W.G. Grace was among the players. The organised matches drew large
crowds and watching sport became a hobby.
Croquet & Lawn
Tennis
Croquet was introduced
in England in 1856 and was probably brought to America in the early 1860’s.
It was considered particularly suitable for women since it required considerable
skills but not too much strength or technique. (Victorians believed women
were deficient in both!). Although croquet was never a popular men’s game,
it had both social and economic advantages: men and women could play together,
and it required little equipment and no special clothing.
Lawn tennis was another popular sport for middle-class women. At first proper tennis omvolved patting the ball back and forth, without keeping score, but, players were soon caught up in the competitive spirit of the game, finding it an excellent method of exercise and a useful mental and physical outlet. More active than croquet or archery tennis also appealed to men. By the 1880’s it had become the rage in fashionable summer resorts, and magazines devoted space to the proper clothes to wear while playing.
Cycling
This became very popular.
The safety bicycle was brought out in 1885 and was the cheapest way to
travel. People who lived in town would ride out into the countryside on
their bicycles.