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Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games - KS1

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Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games - KS1









A Teaching resource



Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Contents





01 Outreach Learning Session - Victorian Outdoor Toy and Games

02 Curriculum connections and Learning Outcomes

03 resources

Teachers Notes



Image Bank



Supporting Documents

rich and Poor Victorian Children

Girls and Boys

Materials Matter

Outdoor Games

Make your own Peg Doll

Make your own Paper Windmill





04 Glossary

05 Useful links









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Outreach Learning Session - Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games

INTrODUCTION

Learning Outcomes

Session length: 1 hour and 15 minutes

Suitable for: KS1 (Toys from the Past) and KS2 Through attending this session your children will

(Victorians) build on the following skills:

This session is adaptable to suit your age group

and classroom topic. • An increase in learning about children’s lives

Cost: See website for details. and lifestyles from the past.

• An improved understanding of how the past is

Learn all about Victorian outdoor toys and games different from the present.

and what life was like for a Victorian child in this • Improved enquiry when asking and answering

highly active learning session. questions about the past.

• Higher ability to identify different ways of life in

Your class will be given an introduction to the the past.

subject of Victorian outdoor toys and games, • Raised awareness of materials used in the past.

where they will learn about Victorian childhood,

the difference between rich and poor families,

handle real Victorian objects from the Herbert’s

collections and discover what the different toys

and games are that they will be playing with

during the activities.



Your class will then be split into 6 groups, with

each group taking it in turn to play with different

Victorian replica toys, including quoits, skittles,

hoop and stick and more, to experience first hand

what life was like for a Victorian child.



At the end of the group activities the whole class

will come together to play the Victorian group

game ‘Ball’.





Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Curriculum Connections and Learning Outcomes 02

A better understanding of chronology,

knowledge and understanding,

An increased understanding of historical enquiry and organisation and

number communication

Discuss the toys in this pack and

shape, space and measures their modern equivalents. Visit

Discuss why some families had An increased

Look at and describe the the Herbert to handle and explore ability to group

more money than others in the

shapes of toys more toys from the past and classify

Victorian times. How do you

think this affected the children? materials

and a better

understanding

Pupils could solve problems of forces and

such as ‘How many toys are History Sort toys into groups on the motion

made from wood, clay, metal or basis of their simple material

plastic?’ properties

Mathematics



Share and display what toys our

parents and grandparents played Toy Time Science

Discuss how the toys work. Do

with and record interviews with

Literacy they move? If so how?

relatives about toys and games

they enjoyed when they were

young

Design & Art

Discuss and create own stories Technology

involving toys



Book an outreach toy session to

Active participation explore the sensory qualities of Are any of the toys in this pack

in speaking, listening, materials the toys are made from decorated? Design your own

group discussion and through object handling

interaction

Increased ability in

developing ideas for An increased

composition knowledge and

understanding of

colours and textures

An increased knowledge and understanding Active participation in exploring

through working with materials and developing ideas

Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Teacher’s Notes 03

Why was it called the Victorian times? Playing Outdoors

- The Victorian times are named after Queen

- Playing outside has always been popular with

Victoria - she was queen from 1837 until 1901.

children.

- Britain changed a lot during the Victorian times.

- In the Victorian times it was safer to play outside

because cars had not been invented so the roads

- The railway was invented and the population

were much quieter.

doubled in size.

- Toys cost a lot of money, so children would make

- Some people got very rich because of factories,

up games to play outside, such as ‘Hide and Seek’

coal mining and transport, but a lot of people

and ‘Tag’.

stayed very poor and lived in horrible conditions.



Children in Victorian Times - Poor children had to play outside because their

homes were so small.

- Children had to be well behaved, respectful and

quiet - especially when they were with adults.



- What children’s lives were like depended on how

much money their parents had.



- Poor families could not afford to send their

children to school so they sent them to work

instead to earn extra money for the family.



- rich families treated their children like royalty,

giving them with expensive toys, gifts and nice

clothes.









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Imagebank 03

Tea Set



Girls from middle and upper class

families could afford expensive toys

like this tea set made out of china (a

type of porcelain).



These tea sets often looked a lot like

tea sets used by adults.



Little girls would have tea parties

with their friends and their other toys

where they could use their tea sets.









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Imagebank 03

Victorian Doll



Dolls were very expensive in the

Victorian times, but they were

popular because Queen Victoria had

a huge collection of dolls that she

had been collecting since she was a

little girl.



Dolls were expensive because:



- Their face, hands and sometimes

feet were made from china.

- They had real human hair that had

to be carefully sewn onto the head.

- Their clothes were made from nice

fabrics.

- They had been hand painted by a

skilled toy maker.



Today dolls are cheaper to make in

factories using plastic.









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Imagebank 03

Leather Football



The Victorians played team sports to

build confidence and working

together with your friends.



Footballs were originally made from

pig’s bladders that had been blown

up by the mouth with air, but in 1851

a man called richard Lincoln created

a round ball made from leather, like

the one you can see in this picture.



These were very expensive to make

so poor children still had to use a

pig’s bladder if they wanted a game

of football, which they could get

from the local butcher’s shop.









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Imagebank 03

Tea Set



Marbles were a popular toy during the

Victorian times and were enjoyed by

both rich and poor girls and boys.



There are lots of games that can be

played with marbles. One includes

drawing a circle on the ground and

the players have to try and knock

each others marbles out of the circle

by flicking their own marbles at them.

This game is called ringer.









Codd Bottle



Codd style bottles have a glass marble trapped inside. The marble helped

to keep drinks like cola and lemonade fizzy.



Poor children in the Victorian times would collect the codd bottles and

smash them so they could get the marble from inside.







Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Imagebank 03

Yo-yo



The earliest known yo-yo dates back

to 500BC and is made up of a piece

of string attached to a round spool,

usually made from wood.



This was a toy played with by boys in

the Victorian times.



With a lot of practice different tricks

and moves can be done.









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Imagebank 03

Diablo



The diabolo is a toy that uses two

sticks, attached to a long piece

of string to throw and move the

wooden spool around.



The aim of the game is to throw the

spool up in the air and then try to

catch it again in the middle of the

string.



It became popular in Britain just

before the Victorian times started.



It would mostly have been played

with by boys.









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Imagebank 03

Whip and Top



The whip and top is a wooden cone

shaped object and a stick with a

piece of string or leather attached to

it.



The aim of the game is to wrap the

string, known as the whip, around

the wooden top and then pull it

away quickly to make it spin around.



You can use the whip to keep the top

spinning for longer by whipping it.









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Imagebank 03

Skipping rope



Like today the skipping rope was a

popular toy played with by young

girls.



In the Victorian times, girls from rich

families had fancy skipping ropes

with carved handles made from

expensive wood.



Poorer children would make do with

an old washing line or piece of rope

without the handles.



Sometimes they had handles made

from old bobbins from the textile

factories, like the one you can see in

this picture.









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Imagebank 03

Skittles



The Victorians enjoyed playing

games that were challenging., like

skittles.



Skittles were popular because

they helped to develop hand-eye

coordination.



Children would play against each

other to try and knock down the

skittles. The person who knocks

down the most wins.









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Imagebank 03

Quoits



This is a game that involves

throwing rings over wooden poles.



Each pole is worth a certain amount

of points.



The winner of the game is the person

who scores the most points.









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Imagebank 03

Hobby Horse



Toy horses were popular in the Victorian

times.



Before the car was invented horses were

used a lot for travelling around.



rich Victorian children would have had a

rocking horse in their nursery room, but

they were very expensive.



Hobby horses were cheaper to make.



Sometimes the bottom of the pole had a

small wheel attached to make it more fun

to ride around on.



These were popular toys for having races

around the garden or streets with friends.









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Imagebank 03

Hoop and Stick



This was a popular children’s game

played outdoors, where a large hoop

is rolled along the ground using a

stick to move it along.



The aim of the game was to keep the

hoop rolling for as long as possible.



richer children could afford shop

bought hoop and sticks that were

made from metal.



Poorer children could use a wooden

hoop and stick, or even a bicycle rim.









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Supporting Documents 03

rICH AND POOr CHILDrEN



The kind of lifestyle a Victorian child had depended on how much money

their family had. The Victorians were seperated into 3 main groups:



- Upper Class = very rich

- Middle Class = fairly rich

- Working Class = poor





Upper Class



This group of people had a lot of money and included very important

people, such as Lords, Ladies and Dukes. They could afford large houses and

employed lots of servants. Their children enjoyed the best food, education,

clothes and toys. Boys were often sent away to boarding schools, while the

girls were taught at home.



Middle Class



The middle classes had enough money to live comfortably but they could

not afford all the luxuries that the upper classes had. This group of people

included teachers, shopkeepers and farmers who would live in nice houses Working Class

and have between 1 and 5 servants. Their children would go to a local school

that had to be paid for or would be taught at home by their mother. They Children from working class families had very little because their

had nice clothes, good food, toys and a small holiday in the summer to the parents were too poor. Any money they had was spent on food and

seaside. their house. Children would wear second hand clothes that were in bad

condition and went to work instead of school. Shoes were so expensive

that many children ran around with bare feet. A lot of children became

orphans and ended up living on the streets (see the above picture).







Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Supporting Documents 03

GIrLS AND BOYS



Using the pictures of toys from the image bank put them into 3 groups. One for girls, one for boys and one for both in the boxes below.



Write down the name of the toys you think would be played with by girls, boys or both. Why do you think some toys were played with by boys and others

by girls?





Girls Boys Both



Doll Yo-yo Marbles









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Supporting Documents 03

MATErIALS MATTEr



Using the pictures of toys from the image bank put them into 3 groups. One for wood, one for china and one for other in the boxes below.



Write down the name of the toys you think are made from wood, china or other materials. Why do you think these materials were used?







Wood China Other









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Supporting Documents 03

OUTDOOr GAMES

Over the next 3 pages you will find examples of traditional

Victorian outdoor games. Try these games out with your class for

them to experience life as a Victorian child.



Blind Man’s Bluff



One child is selected to be blindfolded so that he/she cannot see

and is placed in the middle of the room/playground.



All the other children gather around him/her and say the

following rhyme:



Children ask: “How many horses has your Father got?”.



The blindfolded child replies with: “Three!”



Children ask: “What colours are they?”



Blindfolded child: “Black, white and grey!”



Children: “Turn around three times and catch who you may!”



The blindfolded child is then turned around three times (the

teacher might be best to do this) and then he/she has to try and

catch one of the other children.



All the other children have to avoid being caught, but if they are

that child becomes the next person to be blindfolded.









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Supporting Documents 03

OUTDOOr GAMES

Mulberry Bush



The children form into a ring and holding hands they run around

in a circle singing:



“Here we go round the mulberry bush,

The mulberry bush, the mulberry bush;

Here we go round the mulberry bush

On a cold and frosty morning.”



They then let go of each others hands and pretend to wash their

hands, standing in place this time singing:



“This is the way we wash our hands,

Wash our hands, wash our hands;

This is the way we wash our hands

On a cold and frosty morning.”



repeat the first verse (mulberry bush), followed by (using

appropriate actions):



“This is the way we wash our face,

Wash our face, wash our face;

This is the way we wash our face

On a cold and frosty morning.”



reapeat first verse. This can then be followed by any rhymes of

their own invention.









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Supporting Documents 03

OUTDOOr GAMES

Tom Fiddler’s Ground



One part of the playground (or whatever area you are playing in)

is marked off as ‘Tom Fiddler’s Ground’ - it is usually best to draw

a line with chalk or mark it off with a rope. In this area one child is

selected to be Tom Fiddler. He/she is only allowed to stay in this

area and cannot cross the line at any time.



In Tom Fiddler’s ground objects should be scattered around that

the rest of the class must try and retrieve (small bean bags are

good for this).



The rest of the class have to try and cross over to Tom Fiddler’s

ground and collect the objects, whilst singing “Here I am on Tom

Fiddler’s ground, picking up gold and silver!”



The child who is playing Tom has to try and catch the ‘thief’, but

only when they are on his ground.



If ‘Tom’ manages to catch a ‘thief’ that child then becomes the

new Tom Fiddler and the game begins again.









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Supporting Documents 03

MAKE YOUr OWN PEG DOLL

Poorer children had very few toys, if any, and those that they did Instructions:

have were often home made.

1. First paint or draw a face onto the top of your peg.

Little girls loved to have dolls to play with, just like today, but

Victorian dolls were very expensive. A peg doll was a good 2. Using scraps of fabric, wraparound the bottom of the peg

alternative for a poor child because it used scrap materials that (where the legs are) to make a skirt and secure in place using a

they would have around their homes. little bit of glue.



To make a peg doll you will need: 3. using a piece of thin ribbon or wool tie it around the top of the

skirt to make sure it is held in place.

- A dolly peg

- scraps of material 4. Wrap wool around the top of the peg to make a top for your

- ribbon or wool doll.

- scissors

- glue 5. Now she’s dressed use extra wool to make hair.

- paint or thin line felt tip pens (for adding a face to the peg)

Extra: You can also make a boy peg doll by wrapping wool around

the individual prongs of the peg to make it look like trousers.



See the pictures on the next page for inspiration.









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Supporting Documents 03

MAKE YOUr OWN PEG DOLL









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Supporting Documents 03

MAKE YOUr OWN PAPEr WINDMILL

Poorer children had very few toys, if any, and those that they did Instructions:

have were often home made.

1. role your A4 card into a tube, length ways around 2-3cm in

Victorian children loved toys that had the power to move, which circumference.

these toys can when you blow on them or leave them outside in

the wind. 2. First cut out the square template from the following page.



To make a paper windmill you will need: 3. Cut down the dotted lines, making sure to leave the 1cm gap

from the centre dot.

- A4 card

- coloured paper/card 4. Fold the dotted top corners down to the centre and hold in

- split pin place. You should have four corners gathered into the middle

- small bead (with a whole big enough to slid onto the split pin) and be able to see your windmill taking shape.



5. This next bit can be a bit tricky so you may need some help

from a friend. Carefully place the pin through the centre of the

windmill, making sure it keeps all four pieces of folded down

paper in place.



6. Now add your bead onto the back of the pin and stick into

your cardboard tube, folding down the ends on the pin to stop

it from coming out.



7. Your windmill is now complete and should easily spin around

when blown.



Extra: To extend this activity use recycled newspaper like the

Victorian working class children would have done or why not

enlarge th template and make a huge paper windmill.





Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Supporting Documents 03

MAKE YOUr OWN PEG DOLL









Template for Paper Windmill









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Glossary 04

Victorian: refers to anyone or anything that

belonged to the time of Queen Victoria’s reign

over Britain between 1837 and 1901.



Industrial revolution: This refers to the rapid

growth of industry during the 1800s.



Servant: The term used to describe anyone who

is employed to work in a household as a servant

of some kind.



Etiquette: This refers to the rules that people

must follow for good manners and behaviour

when interacting with other people.



Social Class: People are placed into groups of

upper class, middle class and lower or working

class. Whatever group people fall into is know

as their ‘social class’. This was of particular

importance in past times.



Great Exhibition: Queen Victoria’s husband, Prince

Albert, put together a very large exhibition In

London in 1851 for people from around the world

to display their new inventions that helped to

make the Industrial revolution such a ig success.

This was called the Great Exhibition.







Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning

Herbert Learning

Victorian Outdoor Toys and Games: KS1 Useful Links 05



If you are interested in finding out more Websites:

detailed information about the Victorian era

and Victorian toys and games take a look at • Information about Victorian Toys and Games

these links. http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/primaryhistory/victorian_britian/toys_and_games/



• Museum of Childhood

http://www.vam.ac.uk/moc/childrens_lives/entertainment/index.html





Books:

• Kate Greenaway’s Book of Games

by Kate Greenaway



• Victorian Toys

by Mandy ross



• Victorian Children

by Brenda Williams









Herbert Art Gallery & Museum. Coventry

www.theherbert.org/learning



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