In 1572, the Dutch used ice skates during their revolt against Spain in Amsterdam. While the Spanish wore clogs with spikes to travel over the frozen sea during battles, the Dutch fought on bladed skates, which allowed them to defeat their enemy. In 1713, bladed ice skates were used for the first time in North America. The next step in the development of ice skating came in 1744, when the first ice skating association in the world was formed, the
Edinburgh Skating Club. The first instructional book concerning ice skating was published in London in 1772. The book, written by a British artillery lieutenant,
Robert Jones, describes basic figure skating forms such as circles and figure eights. The book was written solely for men, as women did not normally ice skate in the late 18th century. It was with the publication of this manual that ice skating split into its two main disciplines,
speed skating and figure skating. In 1813, Jean Garcin published the first book about ice skating in France, entitled
Le vrai pattineur (
The True Skater). Garcin was the first to place equal importance on skating backward to skating forward, necessary for the quickly increasing figures developed during the 19th century. He also emphasized artistry over athleticism and related skating to ballet. He was a member of the Gilets Rouge (or Red Waistcoats), a French skating fraternity. In 1830, the London Skating Club was formed; as of 2011, it was the oldest skating club still in existence. The first skating club in North America was founded in St. John, New Brunswick, in 1833. In 1849, the Philadelphia Skating Club was formed; its name was changed to the
Philadelphia Skating Club and Humane Society in 1861. The club was one of the first members of the U.S. Figure Skating Association (now known as
U.S. Figure Skating) and continues to exist today. By the last 25 years of the 19th century, skating became a rapidly growing and popular sport in Canada, with clubs being founded in many cities and competitions occurring frequently within and between them. In 1888, the Amateur Skating Association, which oversaw figure skating and speed skating in Canada, was formed in
Montreal. Eventually, the name of the Canadian federation was changed to
Skate Canada in 2000. George Anderson, who was the second major British writer about figure skating and president of the skating club in Glasgow for many years, wrote
The Art of Skating in 1852, under the pseudonym Cyclos. At the time of the book's publication, it included a section about skating in England and Scotland during the time. A second edition was published in 1868, under Anderson's name but without the historical section, which had taken up half of the previous edition. Edward F. Gill wrote ''The Skater's Manual'', the first book about skating written in North America, in 1863. In the winter of 1858–59, a skating pond opened in New York's Central Park, re-igniting interest in the activity.
Sex segregation at ponds disappeared early on and skating became "one of the only activities that single men and women could do together unchaperoned." Additional skating ponds opened in Brooklyn, Hoboken, Jersey City, and Staten Island as the activity grew in popularity. The
Skating Club of New York was founded in 1863.
Jackson Haines, an American, was the first skater to incorporate ballet and dance movements into his skating, as opposed to focusing on tracing patterns on the ice. He also invented the
sit spin and developed a shorter, curved blade for figure skating that allowed for easier turns. Haines was also the first to wear blades that were permanently attached to the boot. He won the first Championships of America held in
Troy, New York in 1864. For a time, the stiff and rigid British figure skating forms dominated in America, trumping Haines's more artistic way of skating. Haines instead attempted to spread his innovations in ice skating style in Europe, gaining success in such countries as Sweden and Austria. His style was still opposed by both his American colleagues as well as skaters from
Victorian England, who continued to advocate a stiffer and more restrained style of skating. Haines continued to add new dance elements to his routines, and astounded a crowd in
Vienna in the winter of 1868. Haines's performance led to the establishment of the Vienna School, which continued to develop Haines's artistic style. Although Haines himself died at the age of 35 in 1875 from the effects of
tuberculosis, his influence lived on. His students at the Vienna School established the
International Skating Union in 1892, the first international ice skating organization, and one of the oldest sports associations still in existence. It was founded in
Scheveningen, in the Netherlands, but is now based in
Lausanne, Switzerland. The Union created the first codified set of figure skating rules. The Vienna Skating Club was formed in 1867; according to Hines, it was still in existence in 2011. Figure skating historian Nigel Brown said this about the development of figure skating in the late 1800s: "To the Viennese, skating meant primarily something to see, to the English it was something to do". For writer Ellyn Kestnbaum, not only does this distinction applies to the difference between spectator and participatory sports, it "also points to skating's perennial status as both sport and performing art". The first time the new sport was called "figure skating" was by H.E. Vandervell and T. Maxwell Witham, in their book
Figure Skating, which was published in 1869. The first attempts to make artificial ice occurred during the 1870s in England and the U.S. The first notable indoor
ice rink was made in 1876, by
John Gamgee, in
Chelsea along the north bank of the
Thames River; it measured 24 by 40 feet. By the end of the 19th century, many major cities in Europe and North America had indoor rinks. In 1879, the first artificial ice rink opened in the U.S., at
Madison Square Garden in New York City. Also in 1879, the Madison Square Garden rink was the venue for the Grand Carnival, which Hines called "large and spectacular" and was one of the carnivals popular in the U.S. and Europe, especially by the Vienna Skating Club, at the time. Carnivals, beginning in the 1870s, provided opportunities for skaters of all skills and levels to present shows for their parents and families, and for the general public. In 1879, the National Skating Association, the oldest national federation overseeing the rules of speed skating and figure skating (now known as
British Ice Skating), was formed. It was organized to regulate the rules of speed skating, but figure skaters joined within a year of its forming. The first international figure skating competition was held in Vienna in 1882; according to Kestnbaum, it established the precedence for future competitions. Sponsored by the Vienna Skating Club, competitors from Vienna came in first and second place, with
Leopold Frey, who was a student of Haines', coming in second place.
Axel Paulsen from Norway came in third place. Competitors were judged on 23 compulsory figures, a four-minute
free skating program, and
special figures. The
International Skating Union (ISU), the organization that oversees the sport of figure skating, was founded in 1892, in the Netherlands.
Pim Mulier from the Netherlands was the ISU's first president. The ISU adopted the international style of skating instead of the American style and English style. The American style disappeared by
World War I; the English style continued into the 21st century. According to Hines, the "English and international styles can be described by the body style employed for their figures". The English style employed a rigid body style in combined skating; the international style included more use of the skater's arms. The American style of skating, which included dancing on the ice and figures that were not tied to special figures, tended to combine the English and international styles. Grapevines, which Hines calls "a uniquely North American innovation", required skaters to keep both feet on the ice for the duration of the figure. The first
World Championships was held in
1896, in
St. Petersburg, Russia. Only male skaters competed. The
Cambridge Skating Club was founded in 1898. In 2011, it was one of the only outdoor natural skating facilities still in existence and was a member of
U.S. Figure Skating. As Hines reports, it depended upon weather patterns; as of 2011, the club was able to provide about 30 days of skating per winter.
Theresa Weld,
Nathaniel Niles,
Sherwin Badger,
Roger Turner,
Maribel Vinson,
Joan Tozzer, and
Bernard Fox trained there in the years before
World War II. ==Early 20th century==