Burnley Grammar School

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Burnley Grammar School
Burnley Grammar School
Year: 1959
Views: 1,585,711
Item #: 1607
There's pleny of room in the modern-styled gymnasium for muscle developing, where the boys are supervised by Mr. R. Parry, the physical education instruction.
Source: Lancashire Life Magazine, December 1959

Comment by: MarkT on 27th March 2021 at 06:15

Fred, I think in reality I maybe ran the xc in light snow maybe twice and I don't recall any issues except with 30 odd boys running over the same bit off grass and the added wetness from the snow meant it got churned up real fast and a little more unstable underfoot however we learned to grip into the mud with our toes whereas if we wore plimsolls we'd have slipped and landed on our backsides.

Comment by: Alan on 27th March 2021 at 05:35

Greg - he would probably have been found sniffing them before he dropped them - seriously what was the practical point of him getting the boys to put the vests on, only to make them take it off almost immediately afterwards - so he could handle them. I bet he was a keen scoutmaster as well... If he insisted on these boys running barechested why not start off like that instead of engineering a private strip show?.

I hope all those men on the site who dream of a return to old fashioned values and the women who thought it was fun to see half naked boys watched the 3 documentaries this week on the BBC - "Footballs Darkest Secret", and realise how depraved some of those coaches were - two received lengthy prison sentences for sustained abuse over a number of years (they only went back to 1970) and both the police and the victims, now middle aged men, still scarred by their abuse, believe that both these "men" were guilty of far more offences than they were charged with, because too many victims were too embarrassed to come forward. Also, it is hard to believe that only two men were guilty of the indecencies they perpetrated - very many more were lucky not to be caught.

Comment by: spelvin on 26th March 2021 at 23:21

Danny C, it sounds like your drama assigned shirtless roles to boys because it gave him a buzz.

Comment by: Greg on 26th March 2021 at 22:50

Hi Simon, Personally I found
running stripped to the waist for cross country in winter was hard. We were lined up outside, told to strip off and one by one handed out vests to the teacher. After he'd dropped them inside we'd set off.

Comment by: LeedsLad on 26th March 2021 at 09:32

>>lost from the police force, sorry - service.

Ha ha! That made me chuckle. Unfortunately very true....

Comment by: Simon on 26th March 2021 at 07:52

At my grammar school we had to run barefoot and shirtless.

You just got cold and wet, in the UK it doesn’t get really, really cold. The worst part in fact was being stripped to the waist, as you got your bare back and hair soaked.

It was normal at the time for most schools to make boys do cross country in only their shorts, certainly all the other secondary school in my home time did this. The whole school had cross country once a week as a pe lesson, and everyone ran minus vests and plimsolls.

Comment by: Danny C on 25th March 2021 at 21:29

Charles, you said to me “I am not doubting your word but your last post does sound a little hard to believe”, so in half a sentence you managed to say you believed me and then instantly called me a liar effectively. Then said you found it “quite bizarre and intriguing”. Well you cannot just assume that just because you had one particular experience in your own school environment that it was mirrored much the same elsewhere, whenever your schooldays were. Mine were ‘81-’87. I’m happy to answer your questions regards being 40% barechested in drama classes.

Firstly, drama seemed to be taken quite seriously, and also it’s worth saying that our head of drama also stood in as a PE teacher sometimes when any regulars were absent, often doing football and rugby in particular. We had a fully kitted out dedicated drama studio building, almost a mini theatre, with stage and lights etc. My drama classes lasted all afternoon each Thursday. We used to have a lot of costume changes and this led to being undressed a lot and sometimes staying that way. Also a lot of our drama was very similar to an actual PE class at times, with music, movement and dance tasks, which boys were often told to lose the tops. None of us ever wore anything on our feet for drama either. I took part in about 10 stage productions over time, some in front of the rest of school, some in front of parents. In three of these aged 12 to 14 I was barechested on stage with other boys, either part of the time or the whole time. I did a production about children’s home Barnardos, playing a homeless kid, and was one of 8 boys shirtless for a period in the play as we had our dirty rags (my dad’s oversized old shirt) taken away for better clothes. I wanted the suited role that allowed me my blazer but didn’t get it and was told my role. Another time I did an environmental play and along with five boys was shirtless and bodypainted green as the five of us morphed into a tree with branches. Finally, and maybe the worst of all, we read Lord Of The Flies in English Literature and it was complemented by our year doing a stage version in drama too, which involved all boys in our class being shirtless almost the whole time with it. This was performed for parents one early evening too, much to my horror at the time. Avoidance would have caused me even more trouble. I did try on that last one but gave up and got on and endured it.

You mentioned choice. We had little genuine choice. We could choose roles at times but the less popular ones got given out by our drama teacher. Counter to some of the obvious enthusiasm for embracing barechestedness in PE on here, not many boys seemed to opt enthusiastically for a drama role that involved not wearing a top while on our school stage with people gazing on. Not even the notably more confident ones. Interesting that eh. You could never simply choose not to take part. I’m afraid our drama teacher was somebody who actually said one day that he liked us to “explore ourselves through our bodies”. He also threw less confident types in at the deep end with relish.

I hope I’ve answered your questions okay Charles. I’d like to say something in reply to Louise too, regards so called “fun” and “banter”, which also relates quite strongly to my drama class too, which was always mixed gender but next time maybe, this is already quite long enough.

Comment by: Fred on 25th March 2021 at 20:18

To all those who were made to run shirtless or barefoot in the snows of winter, were there ever any instances of frostbite or hypothermia? If so, what was the faculty's reaction or response?

Comment by: Alan on 25th March 2021 at 15:26

Louise - you know as well as I do girls would never have been required to wear just their bras for PE, and if the situation HAD been reversed and a male had gushed about how it was "fun" to see half naked girls on a public forum, he would rightly be accused of being coarse and lewd. That in microcosm is the double standards that applied in the past - the "good old days" that so many on here dream about.

Comment by: Tom B on 25th March 2021 at 12:32

Well I am of the view that ditching the traditional police uniform in favour of a sports top and cap and no longer restricting recruitment to tall and capable men was probably a retrograde step. All part of the dumbing down, Peelian principles seem have been lost from the police force, sorry - service.

Comment by: Louise on 25th March 2021 at 10:55

Alan, I attended mixed middle and high schools where teams of vests vs skins or full PR groups were skins so it inevitable we'd see males exercise stripped to the waist, How could we avoid not witnessing this especially as we all followed the same timetable? And yes...it was fun to see who was stripped off. Good grief there weren't many girls objecting! We didn't tease anyone about their appearance when bare chested at any point. There was banter but it remained as that. I'm a 100% certain if we'd gone down to our bras at any time the same lads would not have objected either! As for your point about masculinity, of course stripping to the waist is exactly that and has been for centuries? I would not be astonished or surprised if Emma's son strips for boxing competitions because for one he'll undoubtedly sweat and 2 because he's become confident baring his chest in front of a crowd..

Comment by: Alan on 24th March 2021 at 20:04

John: I have said to the point of repletion on this site, that if a boy wishes to exercise without a shirt, then he should be perfectly entitled to do so, however, this should not be used as leveridge to make other boys conform to his (and perhaps the schools) desires.

Michael: I always find it interesting how ex-grammar school pupils seem to imagine that their schooldays turned them into paragons of industry and hard work, which apparently eluded the rest of us. . I have worked all my life, too, and I am self-employed today. I have never been unemployed, and didn't need the old school tie to see me through.

As for that nonsense about "bare chests equalling masculinity" , I'd suggest you write to your local chief constables and Army officers and get their men to go out barechested, as no doubt they would do their work that much better appearing so masculine. What a ludicrous excuse - you can hardly dignify it with the word argument

1950s attitudes have gone, and they are not coming back.
Finally I'd say to the woman who said how much "fun" she had looking at boys barechested at school, that schools are not there to pander to the adolescent fancies of pupils, male or female., and perhaps girls should have had an equally harsh school experience as well as the boys - I wonder how many of them would have found that "fun"?

Comment by: Tom B on 24th March 2021 at 15:35

Louise hits the nail on the head with the comment about masculinity. To suggest that those who don’t have the modern day Puritan values regarding modesty are not enlightened is unfair.

My comments come from my own experience and also some regret of not embracing the opportunities I could have taken.

Comment by: Michael on 24th March 2021 at 15:01

It's all very enlightened and 'hunky-dory' for children to be given choices, but if you give them too many choices some would elect not to attend school at all, or do very little work once there.

Without being too roseate about it, I think my old grammar school got the balance of choice/compulsion about right overall.

Allowed the benefit of hindsight, it is easy to say that mistakes were made. However, considering the prevailing attitudes of the time, chronic staff shortages and budget constraints, I am prepared to cut my old school a bit of slack.

Like many others, I left my school with lots of qualifications, a confident outlook and a committed work ethic. These advantages got me through university and served me well throughout my career.

So, my old school must have got some things right...

Comment by: John on 24th March 2021 at 14:17

Alan
Society may have become more ‘enlightened’ and that enlightenment needs to extend to children being given choices and not have rules imposed upon them. Some lads may prefer to exercise shirtless and should be allowed that choice and not be made to wear shirts or vests.

Comment by: Alan on 24th March 2021 at 05:27

Louise, you wrote "I understood why the teachers made them go bare and it was fun to see them bare chested"

With all due respect, the school was not there to provide you with "fun" at other people's expense.

I think you, and other posters here who have roseate memories of the habits of previous generations are whistling in the wind if you think those days will ever return, because society has, thankfully, got more enlightened.

Comment by: Greg on 23rd March 2021 at 21:03

Go Emma and Louise! Your views on exercising bare chested are refreshing and welcome. Emma, hope your youngest continues to box bare chested after lockdown. He's a real credit.

Comment by: Louise on 23rd March 2021 at 16:07

Hey Emma, Obviously being stripped to the waist is as masculine as you get. I can only speak for myself here but watching boys exercise without a top was normal at my middle and high school. I understood why the teachers made them go bare and it was fun to see them bare chested and how they were getting on with the class Being raised on a farm it wasn't unusual to see my brothers and the farmhands working in a shed or barn during clipping and harvest or any point in between, they'd all strip down and seeing them sweat was part of the nature of the work. It's scary that something so sensible and practical worries people today when there's more important things around.

Comment by: Charles on 22nd March 2021 at 18:41

Danny C (17th March): I am not doubting your word but your last post does sound a little hard to believe, as well as being quite bizarre and intriguing. Why on earth did you spend “almost half” of your Drama lessons with no shirt on? PE yes, I can understand – that was the norm for boys in most schools for quite a period of time, but a lesson like Drama? In our Drama lessons, no matter who we were supposed to be, we all just played along in our uniforms – parts really weren’t taken that seriously. What roles did you take on, who decided you should play those parts, and who decided that they must be acted out shirtless? How many others were the same in these classes?

Also, surely performing in a school production would have been a voluntary matter? What roles needed you to be shirtless in a school play, and did you not have a choice as to whether you played a particular character or not?

Comment by: Tom B on 22nd March 2021 at 16:44

I understand the reasoning for it and will join anybody in condemning the unsavoury actions that a small minority of adults in positions of trust have carried out.

I still believe it is sad that such modesty is now a requirement.

Comment by: Alan on 22nd March 2021 at 04:09

Tom B: No it is not a sad "sign of the times" that the government doesn't want communual showers, and do want privacy for boys (and girls). They are just facing up to the harsh reality of modern day life. It is acknowledged, at last, that all P.E. teachers are not as pure as the driven snow. There are three films being transmitted on BBC1 this week, highlighting the appalling abuse young apprentice footballers went through at the hands of dirty minded "coaches". These are not one off cases but disgusting practices that went on for years. There are cases of young female gymnasts being fiddled about with by coaches

Also Tom why do boys have to be naked "ro bond"?, You can bond on a field trip or in a band, and you certainly don't have to be stark naked to do that. Boys who are friendly with each other will "bond" anyway, and for boys who are, or feel different in any way, they will still endure bullying, and "bonding" has nothing whatsoever to do with that. I have bonded with many people over the years but I didn't need to see them naked to do that.

Comment by: Tom B on 21st March 2021 at 22:38

I do feel kit should be fairly minimal to match the level of exercise. Shorts and a vest or just shorts should be sufficient for strength and fitness training and team wear for sports. Branded school tracksuits shouldn’t really be necessary and are just a way for the suppliers to bump up the cost.

There have obviously been terrible cases of abuse which have led to concerns over safeguarding. It is a shame that this has led to a change in attitudes towards modesty.

I do believe it is good for boys, maybe even essential, for them to bond with one another in the locker room environment. I read elsewhere that government guidance was now against communal showers for new school and sports changing facilities. It is a sad sign of the times.

Comment by: Emma on 21st March 2021 at 17:32

Why are lads so bothered about stripping off to the waist and showing a bare chest? We respected watching them show their bare chests, sweat on a daily basis and saw boys turn into young men. I really wonder what is best. My 2 boys (10+11) could do with having a traditional PE/Games lesson. There's very little left for boys to express themselves. My youngest was doing boxing before lockdown and when competing always opted to strip off and fight bare chested without any input from either his dad or I. It's left him more than confident in showing his upper body to audiences. Come on boys let's be sensible over such things.

Comment by: Tom B on 18th March 2021 at 13:17

As I’ve said before it’s the content of PE that interests me more than the kit, though I do have a view on that.

The comment about Ping Pong is brings this home. For me, my regret about my time at school is that there was no focus in PE lessons.

Particularly for boys (sexist I know) I believe PE should be based on strength and conditioning along with nutrition and time spent on flexibility for growing bodies. Sports should then be secondary with pupils encouraged to take part but given access to a greater range.

The Physical Education (strength and conditioning) could then be tailored to individuals chosen direction.

Comment by: John on 18th March 2021 at 00:13

Danny C,
Your regime does seem to have been extreme and doesn’t make sense. I can’t see why you had to be shirtless to do drama. We were always allowed pumps indoors and outdoors football boots for soccer or trainers for running. I was once made to play shirts vs skins soccer with snow on the ground which seemed strange making us do that. Myself and my friends had no issue with doing all indoor PE as a skin, we preferred it to being made to wear a shirt or a vest.

Comment by: Sam on 17th March 2021 at 23:37

I suppose with Dan's call for a mandatory skins rule, at least it'd be the same kit for every boy. The system we did of half in vests, half in skins, always seemed unfair because new teams were chosen each time. After being one of the boys picked to take his vest off for the first three PE lessons of term, I made the mistake of complaining about it. Of course my unsympathetic teacher promptly put me on skins for the rest of the term! I learned to keep my mouth shut in future but I still think we should all have worn the same kit for PE, whatever that might be.

Comment by: Danny C on 17th March 2021 at 22:40

I must respectfully and politely take to task the reply to my fellow namesake Dan from both John and Rob here, as somebody like me who actually went to a school that had permanently barechested indoors PE classes for every single boy at all ages throughout school, even in sixth form, where it was a requirement of staying on that you continued with physical education. Barechested outside more than half the time too by the way. Three lessons each week, so a lot of PE and a lot of time being a so called "skin". Plus nothing ever allowed on our feet inside either.
I will easily dispute the claims of John and Rob, although accept they had no issue themselves. The fact is that I know many boys my age, some of whom I am still in touch with from the 80's, who were never happy or fully reconciled to constant barechested PE and the mandatory nature of it, and who given a chance would have worn a top, either a t-shirt or vest. Dan mentions that all boys should be shirtless in the gym. But we didn't just do gymnastics in our gym, we did far more. I did badminton and also table tennis sometimes - barechested and barefoot. Tell me why I needed to do games of ping pong in nothing but shorts? What did being shirtless achieve with that? Same with nothing on our feet, what purpose did that serve? The thing is that we did so much that did not require us to be completely stripped down to just a mere pair of shorts. Yet it was irrelevant what we did. It was barechested regardless, just because we were inside, even on the squash courts.
Yes, you kind of get used to it. I always prefer to say I began to tolerate it. Same as many others I knew. I can recall it all very well. This absolute myth that all boys soon got used to such mandated ways in PE needs to be called out. They did not! I know this for absolute fact, and having spoken just recently to a couple of old classmate friends all these years later about these things when we reminisced. For large parts of the year, except winter outside, within 20 minutes of arriving in school for 9am on three mornings each week I was shirtless as they were my first lesson. For almost six years.
I also endured, or tolerated, almost half my drama classes being shirtless too, on top of three days PE each week. So on four out of five days some weeks I ended up barechested in school for a decent length of time. I even ended up on the school stage three times over six years doing a production to the rest of school or parents that involved wearing no top. I had no choice in that either.
Interesting and hypocritical how all the PE teachers were content to stand around and take part in vigorous lesson activity while wearing their own tops while barking orders at their stripped bare pupils like me, presumably those tops got quite sweaty after 3 or 4 classes per day too. Should they not have at least been an example to us boy pupils and dressed accordingly as well?

Comment by: John on 17th March 2021 at 19:06

Dan, I wholeheartedly agree with you. Initially I felt a bit self conscious doing PE barechested but after a few weeks I thought nothing of it. No way would I have wanted to return to the shorts and shirt PE kit rule, doing PE topless was way better than having a hot and sweaty vest or t shirt stuck to your back.

Comment by: Rob on 17th March 2021 at 16:23

Totally agree Dan. We were worked hard and very soon running with sweat and glad we were only wearing shorts which we were glad to get out of and into the showers afterwards.

Comment by: Dan on 17th March 2021 at 14:52

Greg, I'd go one step further and say mandatory skins for all. They're supposed to be boys and boys do not need either shirts or vests in the gym.