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Harold T. Friermood Papers

 Collection — Boxes: All Boxes
Identifier: MS-516

Collection Scope and Contents

This bulk of this collection has documents relating to all phases of Dr. Friermood’s Business Men’s Club (BMC) Study. The other materials, located in Series 2, include materials from his undergraduate work, Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) documents, and publications about Jewish and African American membership. The materials in Series 1 include preliminary development of questionnaires and research methods, the raw collected data, ample supplemental materials (primarily brochures and other publications from YMCAs in the United States), rough drafts, the final dissertation, and subsequent publications about establishing YMCA Health Service and Business Men’s Club (BMC). Many of these documents include suggestions and critiques from academic advisors and leaders in the Young Men’s Christian Association community. The series is broken into five sub-series: preliminary work, data collection and research, sample and supplemental materials, development of business men’s club standards, and dissertation drafts and final product. Of particular note are letters and publications from the National Jewish Welfare Board (Box 8, Folder 13) and New York University’s “Report of Completed Doctoral Study” (Box 10, Folder 1), which covers the purpose of Friermood’s study, sub-problems, source of data and techniques used in data collection, organization and treatment of data, and findings.

Dates

  • Creation: 1923-1957
  • Creation: Majority of material found within 1943-1954

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Unrestricted except in cases where materials are too fragile to be handled. Access is at the discretion of the College Archivist in these cases.

Conditions Governing Use

Rights status not fully evaluated.

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Biographical / Historical

Dr. Harold T. Friermood was born in La Junta, Colorado on September 14, 1902. He is best known for his involvement with the Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) and his contributions to physical education (specifically volleyball and swimming). For his involvement and support of Volleyball, including bringing Volleyball to the Olympics in 1964, he is sometimes referred to as the “Grandfather of Volleyball.” In 1921, he enrolled in Association College (better known as George Williams College) at the behest of one of his YMCA associates. Fascinated by the work of physical education pioneers Robert Roberts and Luther Halsey Gulick, and motivated by his professors Dean Foss and James Andresen, he ultimately graduated with a BA in 1925. He continued his education with another BA from the University of Chicago (1929), an MS from the University of Wisconsin (1939), and Ed.D. from New York University (1954). Friermood held a multitude of noteworthy positions. From 1943 through 1968, he served as the National Director of Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Sports for the National Board of YMCAs in the United States. Additionally, he served as Executive Director of the Council for National Cooperation in Aquatics (CNCA) from 1968 to 1975. Friermood also served as the 2nd president of the United States Volleyball Association (1952-1955) and was a member of the United States Olympic Committee (1944 to 1985). In addition, he was elected to the YMCA Hall of Fame in 1988, the Volleyball Hall of Fame in 1965, and was the first recipient of the US Volleyball Association’s Frier Award (named after him) in 1965.

Despite the variety of Dr. Friermood’s academic work, almost the entirety of this collection is comprised of documents relating to his New York University doctoral dissertation, titled “Health Clubs in the YMCA with respect to current status and development of operating standards.” The documents include large charts with the raw data from over one hundred and seventy YMCAs, multiple dissertation drafts, floor plans and brochures from numerous YMCAs, surveys, and letters. The study came from a proposal to the National YMCA Physical Education Committee for national affiliation of Business Men’s Clubs (BMC). The committee stated that before addressing this proposal, they wanted an extensive study completed.

Preparation for the study began in 1946, during which time the Business Men’s Club Study Steering Committee sent a letter to all Young Men’s Christian Associations (YMCA) in the United States requesting basic information on all types of Business Men’s Clubs or Health Clubs. A letter from the National Council of the Young Men’s Christian Association describes the study’s purpose as follows:

“At this particular time many people are looking for discerning answers to questions relating to YMCA Business Men’s clubs. What equipment – what space – what program – what fees – whom to serve – shall health service be provided – do clubs of the BMC type provide a needed service? The National YMCA Physical Education Committee has been authorized by the National Board to undertake a study to obtain essential information relative to Business Men’s Clubs. A preliminary investigation has been made during the last three years. A steering committee was named last January, and with the help of 100 people, has developed plans and procedures. The purpose of this study is to determine the extent and status of so-called health clubs, ‘Y’ athletic clubs, or business men’s clubs in the United States; what constitute the standards for current practices; and what adjustments may be necessary to raise the level of operation and performance.”

After submitting his thesis in 1954, Dr. Friermood spent the following year completing a manuscript about the operation of the YMCA’s Individual Health Services and Business Men’s Clubs (copies of which are in this collection). He completed this publication sometime during the summer of 1955.

Extent

5.75 Linear Feet (14 boxes)

Language of Materials

English

Metadata Rights Declarations

Abstract

Dr. Harold T. Friermood was born in La Junta, Colorado on September 14, 1902 and died in South Hadley, Massachusetts on March 2, 1999. He is best known for his involvement with the Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) and his contributions to physical education (specifically volleyball and swimming). Dr. Friermood is sometimes referred to as the “Grandfather of Volleyball” for his involvement and support of the sport. He was elected to the Volleyball Hall of Fame in 1986 and the YMCA Hall of Fame in 1988. Nearly all of this collection is comprised of documents relating to Dr. Friermood’s New York University doctoral dissertation, titled “Health Clubs in the YMCA with respect to current status and development of operating standards.” The documents include large charts with the raw data, multiple dissertation drafts, floor plans and brochures from numerous Young Men’s Christian Associations, surveys, and letters. The remaining materials—mostly magazine essays and pamphlets—primarily focus on African American and Jewish membership in the Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA).

Arrangement

The collection is organized into two series. The first series contains five sub-series and the second series contains no sub-series.

- Series 1: YMCA Business Men’s Club Study, c. 1923-1957 (bulk: 1943-1954), a) Preliminary Work, c. 1943-1947, b) Data Collection and Research, c. 1946-1947, c. Sample and Supplemental Materials, c. 1923-1957, d) Development of Business Men’s Club Standards, c. 1947-1951 (bulk: 1948-1950), e) Dissertation Drafts and Final Product, c. 1946-1954 (bulk: 1950-1954)

- Series 2: Miscellaneous

Custodial History

There is no acquisition note and nothing within the collection that indicates where the materials came from or when they were donated.

The collection came into the archives with all materials relating to the Business Men’s Club (BMC) study separated from the miscellaneous documents. Processing was begun by an unknown person who rehoused all the materials in archival boxes. When processing began again, the materials were rehoused in archival folders. Paperclips were removed (with the exception of some oversized graphs), but paper clipped materials were kept together with folded piece of archival paper. When duplicates existed, three copies were left and all others were discarded. Blank sheets of graph paper were discarded. Folders that contained too many materials were divided into multiple smaller folders; the division is indicated in the Folder List (e.g. 1 of 2, 3 of 4, etc.), on the physical folder, and in the Arrangement sections of the sub-series. Unless otherwise specified, the folders’ internal organizations were not altered. Some of the oversized graphs were trimmed to fit the folders, but no information was removed. The Business Men’s Club (BMC) sub-series were created based on the original order to make locating specific materials easier.

The following items were pulled from the original collection: one Springfield College Scrapbook (possibly created by Harry W. Merrill, class of 1903, although this has not been confirmed), a printing block with an image of the class of 1903, and a large folder with materials from the Springfield College basketball and alumni tour of Ireland in the 1990s. The scrapbook was placed with the other scrapbooks, the basketball materials were added to the Springfield College Basketball Team Papers, and the printing block was added to the Springfield College MARCOM Collection. While these were found with the collection and may have been donated by Friermood, it is more likely that they were accidentally placed with his materials.

Digitized Materials

Browse digitized materials from this collection. This collection is partially digitized.

Related Materials: Records Within Springfield College Collections

  1. Alberto Regina Papers 1919-1948, Archives and Special Collections
  2. The YMCA Hall of Fame Papers, Archives and Special Collections
  3. Harold T. Friermood Collection, American Alliance for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and Dance (AAHPERD) Archives, Springfield College, Springfield, Massachusetts: https://springfield.as.atlas-sys.com/repositories/2/resources/456.
  4. Health and physical education notes. Harold T. Friermood & the National Council of the Young Men's Christian Associations of the United States of America. 1943-1969. Springfield College Archives and Special Collections, Rare Book Collection: https://springfieldcollege.on.worldcat.org/oclc/38873640.

Publications

  1. Friermood, Elisabeth Hamilton. Frier and Elisabeth, Sportsman and Storyteller. New York: Vantage Press, 1979.
  2. Friermood, Harold T. Health and Physical Education Notes. New York: National Council of the Young Men’s Christian Association of America, 1943-1969.
  3. Friermood, Harold T. Health Clubs in the YMCA with respect to current status and development of operating standards (1954).
  4. Friermood, Harold T. New YMCA Aquatic Workbook: Guide to Creative Administration of the National YMCA Aquatic Program. New York: Association Press for National YMCA Aquatic Committee, 1958.
  5. Friermood, Harold T. and Charles E. Silvia. Manual of lifesaving and water safety instruction. New York: Association Press, 1949.
  6. Friermood, Harold T. and J. Wesley McVicar. Basic physical education in the YMCA, for use in all Canadian and United States associations. New York: Association Press, 1962.
  7. George, Madeline. “The YMCA Puts Christianity into Practice,” Listen: A Journal of Better Living. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico, 1953, fourth quarter.
Title
Harold T. Friermood Papers
Status
Completed
Author
Emily Graham
Date
1923-1957
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Revision Statements

  • 2023-02: Transferring information from the original Word document to ArchivesSpace.

Repository Details

Part of the Springfield College Archives and Special Collections Repository

Contact:
Springfield College
Judd Gymnasia
263 Alden Street
Springfield Massachusetts 01109 U.S.A. US
413-748-3309