Robert Jones (also known as "Captain Jones") was an officer in the Royal Artillery of the British Army. [1] He is best known for writing and self-publishing The Art of Skating, the first book about figure skating, in 1772, which helped popularize the sport in Great Britain. He also authored a book about and popularising fireworks. The Art of Skating has been called "a milestone in the history of figure skating"; [2] it described basic techniques of skating, which was a recreational activity at the time, before the development of figure skating as a sport in the late 1800s. Jones was the first to recognise skating as an art form and advocated for the inclusion of women in the activity, as long as it was done for leisure.
Jones was tried for sodomy in 1772, accused of committing the act with a 12-year-old boy. [1] [3] He was sentenced to death, but allowed to go into exile. The court case was widely debated and discussed among politicians and in the popular press of the day and was compared to Oscar Wilde's case one hundred years later.
Robert Jones was a lieutenant in the Royal Artillery, but was commonly referred to as "Captain Jones" by the popular press and royal court in the late 1700s. [4] He was most likely associated with the macaronis, [5] the 18th-century English subculture of men who dressed, spoke, and behaved in an unusually sentimental and androgynous manner. Historian and LGBTQ scholar Rictor Norton, who called Jones "a popular character", [6] reported that Jones would attend masquerades dressed like the puppet character Mr Punch. [6]
In 1765, Jones popularised fireworks with the publication of A New Treatise on Artificial Fireworks, which was frequently reprinted. [7] An illustration, which was published in October 1772, may have been a "caricature of Jones as the popularizer of fireworks". [7]
In 1772, Jones wrote and self-published The Art of Skating, the earliest book about figure skating. The book went through several reprintings and revisions, "with minor changes made by unnamed persons", [8] and remained available until the mid-1800s. [6] [9] [10] Figure skating historian James R. Hines called it "a milestone in the history of figure skating". [11] [2] Jones described the basic techniques of skating, which was a recreational activity at the time, before the development of figure skating as a sport in the late 1800s. He also described five advanced figures that were skated at the time: these were "circular patterns which skaters trace on the ice" [12] that gave the sport of figure skating its name, with sketches and large colour plates of three of them. [4] [13] According to Hines, the colour plates demonstrate the conservative nature of skating at the time; the clothing the skaters in them wore were "elaborate and formal" [14] (coats with tails and top hats), and one of the figures Jones describes, the flying Mercury, was inspired by mythology and "represented a nod to neoclassicism". [14]
By the time Jones published The Art of Skating, skating on ice had already evolved into an art form with definable technique and a small repertoire of figures. Jones filled the need for a record of these figures and served as a starting point for understanding the rapid development of the sport that occurred in Britain during the 19th century and was the first time the technical foundation of skating was described. [4] [13]
Jones was the first to characterize skating as an art form, although as Hines put it, he defined it as "correct skating technique employed for a limited body of figures" [15] that could be taught to others. He covers the fundamentals of skating in the first part of the book, including the execution of inside and outside edges (which were "disdained" [16] [17] in England and Holland because critics thought that skaters executed them too often), running, and stopping. Once these fundamentals were learned and mastered, skaters could develop more advanced skills and the "more masterly parts of the art" of skating, including execution of figures. [9] The latter part of the book describes the following more advanced skating moves: backward skating, spread eagles, spirals, inside and outside circles, the "Serpentine Line" (repeated change of edges on one foot), the "Salutation" (two skaters joining their hands when passing each other), and what Jones called a "figure of a heart on one leg", which later became a principal component of the three-turn. [17] Jones' emphasis on arm positions, finishing each move, and the book's illustrations demonstrated that "the image skaters conveyed to onlookers was at least as important as accomplishing the moves". [18] Although Jones described backward skating, which he called "whimsical", he saw no need for it, although he admitted that skaters were experimenting with it and one of the figures he described, a heart-shaped design, required it. [8]
During Jones' time, skating was viewed as a recreational activity suitable only for men, but he saw no reason for the exclusion of women, writing that doing so was "the effect of prejudice and confined ideas", although he humorously said that skating allowed a woman to "indulge in a tête-à-tête with an acquaintance without provoking the jealousy of her husband with any prejudice to her repetition". [18] Unlike later writers, Jones did not discuss the skating that women were doing separately, perhaps, as Hines suggests, because he viewed the skating of figures as a sport and therefore unsuitable for women. As a social activity, however, he viewed skating as part of the "long and established tradition of fun and courtship on the ice”, [14] even though women during the 18th century were attempting the same figures as men. [14] As Kestbaum states, "The participation of women in skating was thus conceived in terms of potential social advantages for innocent interaction between the sexes". [18]
Jones also provided guidance on skate design in The Art of Skating. At the time, blades were attached to skaters' shoes with strings, straps, and clips. Jones' design was one of the first to firmly attach blades to the heels of shoes with screws. This attachment method made the blades a part of the shoes and prevented skaters from having to retie the blades and from the blades from falling off the shoes. [6] He also recommended that skaters tie their skates at both the instep and heel, and warned against overtightening straps that would cause poor circulation and prevent their strings and straps stretching and breaking. He recommended the use of curved blades with less than two inches touching the ice. This design reduced friction and allowed for sharper turns. He also called for increased blade height, which allowed for deeper edges. [19] [20]
In July 1772, Jones was convicted in the Old Bailey for sodomy against a boy named Francis Henry Hay, who was under thirteen years of age. [1] [21] Jones was found guilty based solely on the basis of the alleged victim's accusation, and that there was no medical evidence or corroboration of Hay's testimony in court. [5] Jones was sentenced to death, [1] but was held in Newgate Prison, and a month after his scheduled execution, King George III pardoned him on the condition that he go into exile (transportation). [note 1] This leniency was met with criticism from both the press and public. The legal arguments made supporting Jones' pardon, which were discussed in several newspapers, revolved around Hay's consent and the fact that he was Jones' only accuser. [6] [23] Scholar Frances H. I. Henry claimed that Jones had the support of the British aristocracy, including Henry Howard, 12th Earl of Suffolk and one of the government's secretaries of state, and Chief Justice Lord Mansfield, who believed that Jones was found guilty based on insufficient evidence. [24] A newspaper reported in June 1773 that Jones was living in Lyon in the South of France. [6]
Jones' trial caused a stir in the press and from politicians including John Wilkes, who viewed the pardon as an example of government corruption because defendants like Jones, who had supporters within the government, were pardoned, but poor defendants often were not. [5] The trial and pardon were discussed and debated in the popular press of the day, and summaries of the trial proceedings were reprinted in newspapers. The case resulted in the publication of a pamphlet entitled The State of the Case of Captain Jones, and the scandal was referred to in poetry and satires of the day. The Art of Skating was published during the trial, which most likely contributed to its sales. [4] [6] [23]
Jones' case was the most widely discussed and reported case on homosexuality until Oscar Wilde's case one hundred years later. [23] The newspapers of the time debated, largely due to Jones' notoriety, his guilt or innocence, even though there were other scandals about sodomy occurring at about the same time. [6] [23] Norton reported that the debate about the case ranged from advocating Christianity's intolerance of homosexuality to the defence of homosexual men "who were deemed to have an inborn propensity". [23] The trial triggered public debate about sodomy, effeminacy, otherness, and what it meant to be English. [5]
Figure skating is a sport in which individuals, pairs, or groups perform on figure skates on ice. It was the first winter sport to be included in the Olympic Games, with its introduction occurring at the 1908 Olympics in London. The Olympic disciplines are men's singles, women's singles, pair skating, and ice dance; the four individual disciplines are also combined into a team event, which was first included in the Winter Olympics in 2014. The non-Olympic disciplines include synchronized skating, Theater on Ice, and four skating. From intermediate through senior-level competition, skaters generally perform two programs, which, depending on the discipline, may include spins, jumps, moves in the field, lifts, throw jumps, death spirals, and other elements or moves.
Ice dance is a discipline of figure skating that historically draws from ballroom dancing. It joined the World Figure Skating Championships in 1952, and became a Winter Olympic Games medal sport in 1976. According to the International Skating Union (ISU), the governing body of figure skating, an ice dance team consists of one woman and one man.
Figure skating jumps are an element of three competitive figure skating disciplines: men's singles, women's singles, and pair skating – but not ice dancing. Jumping in figure skating is "relatively recent". They were originally individual compulsory figures, and sometimes special figures; many jumps were named after the skaters who invented them or from the figures from which they were developed. It was not until the early part of the 20th century, well after the establishment of organized skating competitions, when jumps with the potential of being completed with multiple revolutions were invented and when jumps were formally categorized. In the 1920s Austrian skaters began to perform the first double jumps in practice. Skaters experimented with jumps, and by the end of the period, the modern repertoire of jumps had been developed. Jumps did not have a major role in free skating programs during international competitions until the 1930s. During the post-war period and into the 1950s and early 1960s, triple jumps became more common for both male and female skaters, and a full repertoire of two-revolution jumps had been fully developed. In the 1980s men were expected to complete four or five difficult triple jumps, and women had to perform the easier triples. By the 1990s, after compulsory figures were removed from competitions, multi-revolution jumps became more important in figure skating.
Spins are an element in figure skating in which the skater rotates, centered on a single point on the ice, while holding one or more body positions. They are performed by all disciplines of the sport, single skating, pair skating, and ice dance, and are a required element in most figure skating competitions. As The New York Times says, "While jumps look like sport, spins look more like art. While jumps provide the suspense, spins provide the scenery, but there is so much more to the scenery than most viewers have time or means to grasp". According to world champion and figure skating commentator Scott Hamilton, spins are often used "as breathing points or transitions to bigger things".
Molly house or molly-house was a term used in 18th- and 19th-century Britain for a meeting place for homosexual men and gender-nonconforming people. The meeting places were generally taverns, public houses, coffeehouses or even private rooms where patrons could either socialise or meet possible sexual partners.
Peggy Gale Fleming is an American former figure skater. She is the 1968 Winter Olympic Champion in the ladies' singles, being the only American gold medalist at these Games, and a three-time World Champion (1966–1968) in the same event. Fleming has been a television commentator in figure skating for over 20 years, including at several Winter Olympic Games.
Compulsory figures or school figures were formerly a segment of figure skating, and gave the sport its name. They are the "circular patterns which skaters trace on the ice to demonstrate skill in placing clean turns evenly on round circles". For approximately the first 50 years of figure skating as a sport, until 1947, compulsory figures made up 60 percent of the total score at most competitions around the world. These figures continued to dominate the sport, although they steadily declined in importance, until the International Skating Union (ISU) voted to discontinue them as a part of competitions in 1990. Learning and training in compulsory figures instilled discipline and control; some in the figure skating community considered them necessary to teach skaters basic skills. Skaters would train for hours to learn and execute them well, and competing and judging figures would often take up to eight hours during competitions.
Richard Totten Button is an American former figure skater and skating analyst. He was a two-time Olympic champion and five-time consecutive World champion (1948–1952). He was also the only non-European man to have become European champion. Button is credited as having been the first skater to successfully land the double Axel jump in competition in 1948, as well as the first triple jump of any kind – a triple loop – in 1952. He also invented the flying camel spin, which was originally known as the "Button camel". He "brought increased athleticism" to figure skating in the years following World War II.
The Salchow jump is an edge jump in figure skating. It was named after its inventor, Ulrich Salchow, in 1909. The Salchow is accomplished with a takeoff from the back inside edge of one foot and a landing on the back outside edge of the opposite foot. It is "usually the first jump that skaters learn to double, and the first or second to triple". Timing is critical because both the takeoff and landing must be on the backward edge. A Salchow is deemed cheated if the skate blade starts to turn forward before the takeoff, or if it has not turned completely backward when the skater lands back on the ice.
Special figures were a component of figure skating in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Like compulsory figures, special figures involved tracing patterns on the ice with the blade of one ice skate. This required the skater to display significant balance and control while skating on one foot.
Pair skating is a figure skating discipline defined by the International Skating Union (ISU) as "the skating of two persons in unison who perform their movements in such harmony with each other as to give the impression of genuine Pair Skating as compared with independent Single Skating". The ISU also states that a pairs team consists of "one Woman and one Man". Pair skating, along with men's and women's single skating, has been an Olympic discipline since figure skating, the oldest Winter Olympic sport, was introduced at the 1908 Summer Olympics in London. The ISU World Figure Skating Championships introduced pair skating in 1908.
The camel spin is one of the three basic figure skating spin positions. British figure skater Cecilia Colledge was the first to perform it. The camel spin, for the first ten years after it was created, was performed mostly by women, although American skater Dick Button performed the first forward camel spin, a variation of the camel spin, and made it a regular part of the repertoire performed by male skaters. The camel spin is executed on one foot, and is an adaptation of the ballet pose the arabesque to the ice. When the camel spin is executed well, the stretch of the skater's body creates a slight arch or straight line. Skaters increase the difficulty of camel spins in a variety of ways.
Jackson Haines (1838–1875) was an American figure skater and roller skater who is regarded as the father of modern figure skating.
The history of figure skating stretches back to prehistoric times. Primitive ice skates appear in the archaeological record from about 3000 BC. Edges were added by the Dutch in the 13th and 14th century. International figure skating competitions began appearing in the late 19th century; in 1891, the European Championships were inaugurated in Hamburg, Germany, and in 1896, the first World Championship were held in Saint Petersburg, Russian Empire. At the 1908 Summer Olympics in London, England, figure skating became the first winter sport to be included in the Olympics.
Single skating is a discipline of figure skating in which male and female skaters compete individually. Men's singles and women's singles are governed by the International Skating Union (ISU). Figure skating is the oldest winter sport contested at the Olympics, with men's and women's single skating appearing as two of the four figure skating events at the London Games in 1908.
The 6.0 system of judging figure skating was developed during the early days of the sport, when early international competitions consisted of only compulsory figures. Skaters performed each figure three times on each foot, for a total of six, which as writer Ellyn Kestnbaum states, "gave rise to the system of awarding marks based on a standard of 6.0 as perfection". It was used in competitive figure skating until 2004, when it was replaced by the ISU Judging System in international competitions, as a result of the 2002 Winter Olympics figure skating scandal. British ice dancers Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean earned the most overall 6.0s in ice dance, Midori Ito from Japan has the most 6.0s in single skating, and Irina Rodnina from Russia, with two different partners, has the most 6.0s in pair skating.
The Fortune of War was a pub in Smithfield, London, on the junction of Giltspur Street and Cock Lane. The location, originally known as 'Pie Corner', is where a statue of the Golden Boy of Pye Corner marks the place where the Great Fire of London stopped. The statue was initially built in the front of the pub.
The upright spin is one of the three basic figure skating spin positions. The International Skating Union (ISU), the governing body of figure skating, defines an upright spin as a spin with "any position with the skating leg extended or slightly bent which is not a camel position". It was invented by British figure skater Cecilia Colledge. Variations of the upright spin include the layback spin, the Biellmann spin, the full layback, the split, the back upright spin, the forward upright spin, the scratchspin, and the sideways leaning spin.
The demise and revival of compulsory figures occurred, respectively, in 1990, when the International Skating Union (ISU) removed compulsory figures from international single skating competitions, and beginning in 2015, when the first competition focusing entirely on figures took place. Compulsory figures, which is defined as the "circular patterns which skaters trace on the ice to demonstrate skill in placing clean turns evenly on round circles", dominated figure skating for the first 50 years of the sport, although they progressively declined in importance. Skaters would train for hours to learn and execute them well, and competing and judging figures would often take up to eight hours during competitions. Judging scandals and the broadcasts of figure skating on television have been cited as the reason for the decline of figures. The U.S. was the last country to include figures in their competitions, until 1999. The elimination of figures resulted in the increase of focus on the free skating segment and in the domination of younger girls in the sport. Most skaters stopped training with figures, although many coaches continued to teach figures and skaters continued to practice them because figures taught basic skating skills and gave skaters an advantage in developing alignment, core strength, body control, and discipline.