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The Quiet Years: the 1930s-1950s (continued)

Tug-of-war contest, ca. 1958In the 1940s, women's athletics went underground at Wisconsin. Most written accounts of the subject skip from the 1920s or 1930s directly to the 1960s—because nearly all information, images, and reports regarding the topic disappear. Insofar as yearbooks are a reliable indicator of student interest, it appears that women's sports dipped in popularity from the 1930s through the 1950s.

In the 1920s, women's athletics had commanded their own section of the Badger yearbook with narrative Broom hockey game, ca. 1950summaries for each sport, highlights from championship games, lists of scores, rosters for every squad, and individual treatment of stand-out athletes—up to a high of 22 pages in 1924. By the late 1930s, women's sports consisted of, typically, a 2-page spread (compare that to the roughly 45 pages devoted to men's sports). Throughout the next two decades, only the WAA and the Physical Education Club were pictured, usually sharing a single page; the existence of other clubs and activities are mentioned in passing, if at all.

Vibrant images of women engaged in physical activity, so common in the 1920s yearbooks, Rifle and pistol club, 1964are nowhere to be found during this time period. What coverage the WAA and its clubs received during this time period consists of group shots of formally posed women with ankles firmly crossed. In the 1942 Badger, for example, the sum total of evidence that women engaged in physical activity consists of the following: one posed photograph of ten members of the WAA, one nervous-looking woman holding a golf bag on the steps of Langdon Hall, and the Carnival Queen on skis. Obviously, women did not stop playing sports altogether during these decades, but it appears that their activities became more recreational and less organized. Social constraints may have again been an influence; it is true that during these decades, the Badger Beauties received far more press than women athletes.

UW-Madison cheerleaders, 1956Previously established sports continued in intramural form, but few developments arose during these decades. One of the only new sports for women developed in the 1950s was cheerleading. Previously a male-only activity, women were admitted for a three-year "trial period." When the trial period was over in 1954, women were again banned from the sport, sparking a short-lived controversy on campus. Women rejoined the squad in 1956.

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