First Chautauquas In 1874,
Methodist Episcopal minister
John Heyl Vincent and businessman
Lewis Miller organized the
New York Chautauqua Assembly at a campsite on the shores of
Chautauqua Lake in the
state of New York. Two years earlier, Vincent, editor of the
Sunday School Journal, had begun to train
Sunday school teachers in an outdoor
summer school format. The gatherings grew in popularity. The organization Vincent and Miller founded later became known as the
Chautauqua Institution. Many other independent Chautauquas were developed in a similar manner. The educational
summer camp format proved popular for families and was widely copied by several Chautauquas. Within a decade, "Chautauqua assemblies" (or simply "Chautauquas"), named for the location in New York, sprang up in various North American locations. The Chautauqua movement beginning in the 1870s may be regarded as a successor to the
Lyceum movement from the 1840s. As the Chautauquas began to compete for the best performers and lecturers,
lyceum bureaus assisted with bookings. Today, Lakeside Chautauqua and the Chautauqua Institution, the two largest Chautauquas, still draw thousands each summer season.
Independent Chautauquas Independent Chautauquas (or "daughter Chautauquas") operated at permanent facilities, usually fashioned after the Chautauqua Institute in New York, or at rented venues such as in an
amusement park. Such Chautauquas were generally built in an attractive semirural location a short distance outside an established town with good
rail service. At the Chautauqua movement's height in the 1920s, several hundred of these existed, but their numbers have since dwindled.
Circuit Chautauquas "Circuit Chautauquas" (or colloquially, "Tent Chautauquas") were an itinerant manifestation of the Chautauqua movement founded by Keith Vawter (a Redpath Lyceum Bureau manager) and Roy Ellison in 1904. Vawter and Ellison were unsuccessful in their initial attempts to commercialize Chautauqua, but by 1907 they had found a great success in their adaptation of the concept. The program was presented in tents pitched "on a well-drained field near town". After several days, the Chautauqua would fold its tents and move on. The method of organizing a series of touring Chautauquas is attributed to Vawter. Among early Redpath comedians was
Boob Brasfield. Reactions to tent Chautauquas were mixed. In
We Called it Culture, Victoria and Robert Case write of the new itinerant Chautauqua: The credit–or blame–for devising the Frankenstein mechanism which was both to exalt and to destroy Chautauqua, the tent circuit, must be given to two youths of similar temperament, imagination, and a common purpose. That purpose, bluntly, was to "make a million". Frank Gunsaulus attacked Vawter: "You're ruining a splendid movement," Gunsaulus roared at Keith Vawter, whom he met at a railroad junction. "You're cheapening Chautauqua, breaking it down, replacing it with something what will have neither dignity nor permanence." In Vawter's scheme, each performer or group appeared on a particular day of the program. "First-day" talent would move on to other Chautauquas, followed by the "second-day" performers, and so on, throughout the touring season. By the mid-1920s, when circuit Chautauquas were at their peak, they appeared in over 10,000 communities to audiences of more than 45 million; by about 1940 they had run their course. ==
The Chautauquan==