George Williams put it into practice
when he founded the original Young
Men's Christian Association in the
back room of a factory in Victorian
London. Among the early men who
were inspired by Williams was a Civil
War veteran in Columbus, Ohio,
Henry Beebe Carrington. It was he, in
1855, who first brought together the
young men of central Ohio under the
auspices of what would soon be
known as the Columbus YMCA.
After a brief disruption during the
Civil War, the YMCA spread
throughout the area and began
establishing itself as a local
institution among the teeming
masses, flocking to Columbus for
factory work. Here they would find
positive, wholesome opportunities for
spiritual, intellectual, and physical
growth; a place to stay; food to
sustain; skills to learn; and many
other fellows eager for camaraderie.
In the 1890's, men didn't just "go to
the Y," they belonged to it, became
part of it. Although branches of sorts
existed at The Ohio State University
and the old Union Station, there was
no YMCA facility for men to go to for
physical exercise, a class, or quiet
reading time. All of that changed in
1893 with the opening of the original
Central YMCA on Third Street,
downtown, the first of many dedicated
facilities the Association would own
and operate in the years to come.
The YMCA's evolving and rather
simplistic reputation as a "health
club" was already evident in its turnof-
the-century facilities. However, it
offered far more than physical fitness
to its membership of young working
men, many of whom were new to city
life and often undereducated.
Anxious to learn, the men joined
discussion groups and frequented
the building's extensive library; the
YMCA's classes in business and
trades were eventually recognized as
the YMCA Schools, which still exists
today as Franklin University.
As the Association grew in
membership, so did its geographical
reach. The YMCA established a
presence in the city's South Side, then
a bustling center of local industry, to
serve the large number of factory and
steel mill workers there. Also, the
YMCA began acquiring open land in
earnest, south of Columbus and as
far away as Bellefontaine, in
anticipation of its first forays into
camping, particularly for youth—a
YMCA tradition to this day.
The first decades of the 20th century
were a period of highlights and
hardship, for both the world in
general and the Columbus YMCA. The
onset of World War I necessitated a
change in focus for the YMCA, as it
adapted to serve the needs of newly
recruited soldiers with its short-lived
Army Barracks YMCA. U.S. involvement
in "The Great War" only lasted a
couple of years, but it wouldn't be the
last time the YMCA contributed to a
home-front war effort.
As it had before with youngsters and
South Side factory workers, the YMCA
opened its arms to embrace another
community eager for its benefits—
Columbus's vibrant African American
community. The Spring Street YMCA,
built at the dawn of the Jazz Age,
was one of the first YMCAs in the
country to specifically serve the Black
community, and was a beloved
institution for decades. Its successor,
the Eldon W. Ward YMCA, today,
serves a diverse community.
The core intent of the YMCA has
always been to help people in need,
and at no time in its history was
there more need than during the
Great Depression. When much of
America was out of work and
struggling to survive, the YMCA
offered rooms, meals, and assistance
to Columbus men down on their luck.
Faced with imminent closure, YMCA
staffers voluntarily took steep pay
cuts to keep the YMCA financially
solvent—and able to continue to
serve their community.
The spirit of teamwork and shared
sacrifice that helped pull the YMCA
and its community through the
Depression found a new outlet when
the United States was suddenly drawn
into another World War. As before,
the YMCA offered both sober
necessities and pleasant diversions
for the masses of new soldiers either
stationed in Columbus or passing
through on their way to Europe or
Asia. The YMCA played an integral
part in the donation and volunteer
drives that were a common part of
American life during the war.
Although primarily a public service
organization, the YMCA became
synonymous with recreation and fun
for the whole family. In the Fifties,
the Columbus YMCA turned its
attention from the more serious
matters of past decades to the
leisure-time activities of returning
veterans and their new families.
Besides offering everything from
youth camping to social events, an
abundance of new YMCA branches
and facilities sprang up to serve the
new suburbs around central Ohio.
The YMCA prides itself on its
diversity and inclusiveness—women
and girls would finally be granted
membership privileges as full
members by the early Sixties.
The YMCA accepted the challenge to
adapt to new demographics and
social attitudes. By the Seventies,
when former "hippies" started having
their own families, the YMCA began
to evolve to a point where programs
and services had something to offer
contemporary families.
If anything epitomizes the Seventies,
it was the trend of "The Me Decade."
A young generation acutely aware of
their own health and fitness
demanded new programs and
activities that went beyond the crude
barbells and boxing of their parents'
generation. They found that the
YMCA had already pioneered aspects
of modern-day fitness that still rings
true today - aerobics, racquetball,
jogging/walking, and a new YMCA
innovation, the PULSE program.
Once an organization dominated by
working class men, the YMCA of the
Eighties and Nineties focused on
families and the needs of women and
children in particular. Besides hatching
plans for new state-of-the-art branches
throughout the rapidly expanding
Columbus metro area, the YMCA itself
expanded into untapped areas such as
child care. By now it truly was a YMCA
for all of central Ohio.
Much of the YMCA's efforts in the
last decade have been in renovating
old facilities, expanding into central
Ohio suburban communities, and
continuing to address the everchanging
needs of the growing
communities it serves. Childcare,
residential services, programs for
persons with disabilities and older
adults, camp, teen programs and
many others have all carved their
place in history to sustain and
embody the mission of the YMCA of
Central Ohio. With optimism, hope,
compassion and commitment, YMCA
leaders continue to prepare for the
next 150 years in the face of
tumultuous times and a historically
comparative need for YMCA
programs and services.
Over the decades, our United Way
partnership has been essential to the
YMCA's ability to meet the critical
needs of the communities we serve.