Nudist History Timeline
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Nudist Timeline |
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circa 1890 |
Naked People (Nackende Menschen) by Heinrich Pudor, under the pseudonym of Heinrich Scham was probably the first book on nudism to be published. Written in Germany during the 1890s, it predates even Richard Ungewitter's Die Nacktheit. The English translation was published in 1894, and has seemingly been lost. Now, resurrected by Reason Books, Naked People's renewed availability will place it as an immediate collector's item, appropriate for any serious library. Naked People itself is aphoristic and poetic, but its pleading for a naked and open lifestyle is both continual and undeniable. |
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circa 1900 |
A return to nude public bathing was pioneered in Germany by a group of young weekend hikers called Wandervögel (migratory birds). They hiked around the countryside and skinny-dipped where conditions allowed. A second German group contributed to naturism; it was the Naturheilbewegung (Natural Healing Movement) which promoted the idea that the sun's rays had healing properties if they were enjoyed in the nude. German sociologist Heinrigh Pudor is regarded as the " father of nudism. " He wrote a book "The Cult of the Nude" promoting naturism. This was at a time when the word "cult" had not taken on the negative meanings that it has today. |
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1903 |
The first nudist resort was opened by Paul Zimmerman near Hamburg, Germany. |
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circa 1905 |
The British nudist organization English Gymnosophist Society was formed. |
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1929 |
Kurt Barthel founded the American League for Physical Culture . Members Reverend Ilsley (Uncle Danny) Boone, and family are recognized as the first leading family of nudism in America. The Nudist, founded by Reverend Ilsley Boone, was America's first nudist magazine. Notice the alarming censorship of male genitalia. It was later retitled Sunshine & Health. Both magazines espoused hardy nudism. |
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1930s |
On one particularly hot summer, thousands of men on Long Island NY disobeyed the law and went topless. The law was changed in 1936 to decriminalize toplessness among men. Clark Gable, when he took off his shirt in IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT (1934) -- revealed bare skin beneath, rather than an undershirt. Sales of undershirts reportedly dropped significantly, and nudists credit him with liberating the male torso. |
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1935 |
Zorro Nudist Colony opens as an exhibition at San Diego’s Balboa Park for the California Pacific International Exposition. (See Travel Naturally, issue #50.) |
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1940s |
The Comstock Law, an omnibus anti-obscenity law was used to suppress nudist magazines in the US. |
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1950s: |
Police raids on nudist groups became less frequent. One of the last occurred in Michigan in 1956. A Christian radio evangelist had campaigned to close down the Sunshine Gardens Nudist Resort . After a series of court battles, the Michigan Supreme Court ruled that naturists had a right to practice nudism within private resorts. |
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1958 |
The US Supreme Court ruled that naturist magazines were not obscene under that law. |
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1974 |
San Diego City Council designates "swim-suit optional" zone at Black's Beach (rescinded in 1977). |
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1986 |
Burning Man Festival — First event on Baker Beach in San Francisco. 1990 - Burnin Man moved to Black Rock Desert, Nevada - 100 participants attend desert burning - Height of Man: 40 feet. |
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2000 |
September 21, 2000 — A new nationwide poll commissioned by the Naturist Education Foundation (NEF) and conducted by the independent Roper-Starch organization indicates that Americans overwhelmingly approve of nude sunbathing on beaches set aside for that purpose. In the scientific sampling conducted by Roper, 80 percent of those polled said they believed people who enjoy nude sunbathing should be able to do so without interference from officials as long as they do so at a beach that is accepted for that purpose. The approval rating for nude beaches is up from the 72% that was registered in a poll with identical questions taken by Gallup in 1983. |
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2002 |
July 2002 A New Tradition Hits Pamplona, Spain |