World War I changed sports, games
Wars change the course of history and, subtly or significantly, change human activities of sports and recreational games. This transformation comes about not only from war itself, but the training that soldiers bring back with them to civilian life and the cultural influences acquired from contact with allied nationalities that share encampments and joint military operations. By the late 19th century, the metaphor “war game” had entered strategic planning world-wide and helped shape a view of sports as a form of fighting and combat as a kind of deadly sport. Thus war has often been called the ultimate game: commanders use similar strategies to those of coaches and an analogous aura pervades competitions from the mundane to the monumental.
The world’s first global war, known then as the Great War and later as World War I, began in 1914. The United States joined the Allied Forces on April 6, 1917, against the major power of Germany and its aligned nations, and the American presence proved decisive in the Allied victory. The war formally ended with the signing of an armistice agreement on Nov. 11, 1919. During this war, approximately 3,000 men from Adams County served and 82 died, and the war’s effect on sports and games here — akin to the national trend — mirrored a more militant society that looked warily and pessimistically at the world. The United States’ post-war isolationism and its refusal to join the League of Nations, President Woodrow Wilson’s fervently promoted plan to maintain world peace and make the Great War the “war to end war,” dramatically proclaimed this bold new political stance.
War often involves prolonged waiting, and to pass the time soldiers regularly engage in playful activity. Great Britain and the United States were allied and sometimes encamped together, and during free time British soldiers often played the national game of football (known as soccer in this country) and popularized it among American GIs. Before WWI, a few regional U.S. teams played soccer, but soon after the war ended the sport gained widespread national acceptance and organizers formed the American Soccer League. Quincy Public Schools initiated a soccer program in the fall of 1920 for elementary school boys, and the Quincy Daily Herald praised it with military-like accolades, “Like the other game of football, soccer develops a manly character and sturdiness.”
Soldiers trained for the war by participating in the ancient sport of boxing, and the vast number of men introduced to it generated the first effort in the U.S. to legalize, organize and promote this sport. Captain Lewis Omer, of Clayton in Adams County and athletic director of Camp Grant near Rockford, where many Quincy soldiers trained, stated: “I believe that boxing is a sure cure for effeminacy and needs to be introduced into educational systems. It provides an opportunity to develop the physical and mental courage which personal combat gives.” Illinois legislators offered a bill in 1917 to legalize boxing in the state, and two years later the Quincy YMCA began holding boxing classes, especially for returning soldiers, at no cost and with no membership required. Although Illinois did not legalize boxing until 1926, the city of Quincy had no code against it and the South Side Boat Club, Armory, and Empire Theater began holding public matches as early as 1917.
Men also trained with wrestling, and during the war a local editorial highlighted this sport’s value in preparing soldiers. “Wrestling is needed to toughen and harden men for protective purposes in hand-to-hand encounters…the sport is necessary in developing muscles for trench fighting.” WWI spread wrestling’s appeal, and a few months after the war ended the Quincy YMCA formed a wrestling class. This sport proved so popular that the Empire Theater, North and South Side Boat Clubs, and Turner Hall began holding regular matches and a championship pairing between two of Quincy’s top wrestlers, Herman Heidbreder and John Demetral, drew a crowd of 500 people during Christmas week of 1920.
Even in Quincy with its rich German heritage, WWI swept anti-German sentiment over the town: from the Free Public Library banning German publications, to St. Francis Solanus Church’s Young Men’s Society parties, where the card game “skat” — with its ties to Deutschland — was switched to canasta. Games played by children also changed. A few months before the war began, H.G. Wells published a classic book titled “Little Wars,” which introduced young boys to war games with scaled figurines. This book and the war itself redefined the gaming industry; toy soldiers with guns became a part of American boys’ playthings and prepared them for “real fighting.”
During the Christmas season of 1917, a Quincy advertisement read: “In the toys, too, there is a distinct warlike atmosphere and soldiers, ships, and fortresses abound, while the soldier suits and equipment and toy guns ready for the Boche (an offensive term for Germans meaning “blockhead”) modeled after the short muzzled American gun will delight the hearts of the small boys.”
Children’s play not only changed, but the treatment of soldiers tormented by their war experience. Many soldiers who had been stunned by exploding bombs or terrorized by combat developed a condition known as “shell shock.” During WWI, officers usually dismissed this as a form of cowardice, but with the prevalence of shell shock among soldiers of all nations, some clinics and hospitals started treatment programs.
Conventional medical wisdom shunned recreational therapy, but the popularity of play in the military made games — as well as role-playing — an accepted, albeit minor, part of rehabilitation. Quincy’s Soldiers and Sailors Home, with its influx of returning war veterans, placed a billiard table in the basement of Lippincott Hall in 1921 and began using games in therapy.
The United States emerged as the world’s dominant military power after WWI, and this strength coupled with an escalating vigilance and isolation impacted the nation’s sports and games. Perhaps most participants and spectators in Quincy and elsewhere did not immediately discern this change as arising from the war, but nevertheless discovered it in the more cynical and aggressive tenor of the postwar period.
Joseph Newkirk is a local writer and photographer whose work has been widely published as a contributor to literary magazines, as a correspondent for Catholic Times, and for the past 23 years as a writer for the Library of Congress’ Veterans History Project. He is a member of the reorganized Quincy Bicycle Club and has logged more than 10,000 miles on bicycles.





