I
‘I feel that seeing myself as an individual is something I have to do for myself…Some day I will find myself – soon, I hope – and be able to express myself to others, but I need you, as well as other people, to help me.’Footnote 1 This letter was written collectively by fourteen- to sixteen-year-olds enrolled on a ‘Mentally Gifted Programme’ in Alhambra, California. It was published in a newsletter designed for British members of the National Association for Gifted Children in 1979. The young authors emphasized that they felt like distinctive individuals, because they were intellectually ‘gifted’. As such, they needed a non-specified ‘you’ and also ‘other people’ to help them. While vaguely constructed, the ideas that ‘gifted child’ was a meaningful cultural and social identity, and that ‘gifted children’ needed distinct spaces, were well understood by British peers; the editor of the National Association's newsletter wrote that, ‘judging by the letters I've had in’, this was a topic child-members ‘feel very strongly about’.Footnote 2 This article uses such letters from the gifted young, alongside their poetry and essays, and those from adult voluntary leaders, to thoroughly excavate the distinct spaces created for young people labelled as ‘intellectually gifted’ in 1970s and 1980s Britain. In doing so, it shows how diverse ‘youth culture’ was in this period, looking beyond the trends of the ‘permissive sixties’. Indeed, the article argues that a more useful lens through which to understand these spaces is popular individualism: while the post-war welfare state had never catered for the gifted young, it was only in the 1970s and 1980s that parents took action, dedicating significant time, effort, and emotional resources to change this. Examining the resulting small, localized spaces of gifted youth culture shows the extent to which ideas of ‘the individual’ reshaped lives in 1970s and 1980s Britain, and the variety of ‘youth cultures’ in these decades, critically shaped by the young themselves.
The term ‘gifted child’ itself, like many new labels and identities, proliferated in use from the 1970s and 1980s. This term first originated in the nineteenth century, but the idea gained scientific authority when new psychometric tests of the early twentieth century, primarily developed in Britain, Europe, and America, developed ‘measures’ of giftedness.Footnote 3 While there were a broad variety of such tests, typically to qualify as ‘gifted’ a child had to perform exceptionally highly: on an IQ test, for example, designed to have an average score of 100, to be ‘gifted’ a child would have to score 120 or, by some measures, perhaps even 140. While psychometric testing became influential across the Global North – for example in school admissions, job recruitment, and military qualifications – American press, policy, and parents paid the most attention to identifying gifted children. Amidst the Cold War, American films and novels provided popular fictional accounts of the supernatural or mystical origins of these young people.Footnote 4 National and federal governments also gave significant funding to schools looking to help the gifted, hoping to furnish scientific advantage – this resulted in a proliferation of special schools for the gifted, special streams within existing schools, and extra-curricula provision.Footnote 5
In Britain, by contrast, there was very little educational or parental provision for children labelled as ‘intellectually gifted’ in the twentieth century; the National Association, which this article focuses on, was unusual. Britain's post-war welfare state aimed to cater for children of all ‘aptitude and ability’. The most academically focused form of education available in this system – the grammar school – educated between 24.6 per cent and 37.8 per cent of the secondary school-aged population between the late 1940s and start of the 1960s.Footnote 6 The gifted young did not receive specific sub-provision within this system, and this was not typically a category in political or press debate. When occasionally raised in parliament or local press by interested politicians or teachers, indeed, popular responses emphasized that provision for this subgroup must be rejected as ‘elitist’.Footnote 7 Despite small, local, educational experiments in extra enrichment provision for ‘the gifted’, for example in Essex, Oxford, and Devon, by 1977 a report by Her Majesty's Inspectorate still stated that: ‘For the vast majority of schools and their teachers’, gifted education was ‘neither implicit nor explicit in the day-to-day dialogue of school life’.Footnote 8 This changed significantly at the turn of the twenty-first century: the New Labour governments sought to identity gifted youth, ordering schools to provide enrichment classes and to keep a list of the gifted, and also partially funding a National Academy for Gifted Youth, to run extra-curricula courses.Footnote 9 Overall, nonetheless, the gifted child was not a strong feature of twentieth-century British policy: reflecting this, this category is not discussed in recent large-scale accounts of the welfare state or history of education.Footnote 10
Despite this, this article argues that studying the small and highly distinctive youth cultures that were established for, and lived by, gifted young people can be hugely significant for modern British historians. This article accesses these youth cultures through analysis of the National Association for Gifted Children. A small but fascinating group, this was founded in 1966 by Margaret Branch, a dynamic psychiatric social worker whose interest in this area was sparked by working with one ‘disturbed and epileptic boy with an IQ of 150’.Footnote 11 Initially, Branch focused on campaigning to raise awareness of this cause, and she gained a small amount of broadsheet newspaper coverage in the 1970s, arguing that providing for the gifted was an equalities issue, and not elitist at all.Footnote 12 By the 1980s, the National Association became more popular – it had 4,863 members by 1981 – but it also became more decentralized, as interested parents had joined from across the United Kingdom and formed fifty regional branches.Footnote 13 Many branches were focused on service-delivery rather than campaigning, and parent-volunteers organized weekend and holiday clubs for the gifted young. A national central hub remained significant, producing policy reports and newsletters for parents, children, and interested professionals, as well as counselling services. These rich materials – left uncatalogued in boxes at the organization's successor – are the primary source-base for this article.
Analysing the youth spaces created by the National Association, this article brings significant new ways of thinking to bear on our understandings of youth culture, the permissive society, and popular individualism. The constellation of activities organized for the gifted young – around nature, woodwork, classical and imperial history, and scientific innovation, for example – show the limitations of dominant historiographical and sociological accounts of youth culture in the 1960s and 1970s, which emphasize a framework of permissiveness: that youth culture meant the development of new consumer and sexual behaviours, and subversive or counter-cultural trends in fashion, music, and leisure.Footnote 14 These ideas have been nuanced by sociological researchers in the 1960s, such as Mark Abrams and Pearl Jephcott, and by historians writing in recent years, such as Helena Mills and Jim Gledhill, who have suggested that the majority of youth lives were not engaged in these trends, but rather ‘mundane’ or ‘ordinary’.Footnote 15 Yet, this article's case-study can significantly extend this analysis, and show what, exactly, youth culture meant for one group, who felt far from ‘ordinary’ but were also not ‘permissive’ – the gifted.
Beyond showing the variation in ‘youth cultures’, this article also provides a case-study of how individualism was lived in daily life. The article argues that gifted youth culture was not intended as a ‘vanguard’ against the ‘perceived threat of “modernity”’, to draw on Sian Edwards's characterization of the work of the Young Farmers’ Club decades earlier.Footnote 16 Rather, adult-organizers invited the gifted young to see themselves as a new social group – thinkers and subjects significantly defined by their intellect and who, as a result, would want to socialize together, and potentially rise as ‘future leaders’. Existing historiographical accounts typically focus on individualism as a political phenomenon, looking at when this idea emerged in political rhetoric, how it became established, and how it shaped electoral and consumer behaviours.Footnote 17 This article, however, complements newer works, for example by Emily Robinson, Camilla Schofield, Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite, Natalie Thomlinson, and Jon Lawrence, which have started to offer rich smaller case-studies about how individualism was lived, extending analysis of this concept beyond policy-making into daily life, and beyond ‘Thatcherism’ into surrounding decades.Footnote 18 Notably, this article offers a small case-study that, precisely because of its niche nature, demonstrates how far-flung, varied, and powerful ideas of individualism were in shaping distinct subcultural social activity in daily life in the 1970s and 1980s. Specifically, the article shows that parents organizing gifted groups felt that their distinct experiences and emotions were not catered for in the welfare state. Their response was not a turn towards isolation, nor to lobby for state provision, but rather to forge new communities through collective action, becoming providers themselves. Long-standing ideas of community then remained present in this activism, and yet it was also motivated by individualist ideas about entitlement and new expressions of emotion.
A final contribution of this article is its insistence that historical scholarship must take more seriously the ways in which young people themselves have structured social, cultural, and political life. The article uses a methodological framework of agency, drawing on recent works in sociology and history.Footnote 19 These theoretical literatures have demonstrated that we must not simply try to ‘find’ agency in history, nor, as Chris Millard warns, valorize any evidence of ‘experience’.Footnote 20 Rather, we must assume that young people had a level of power in any encounters in the social world, but that this power will have been exercised relationally, dependent on environment and the young person's own identity. This is not always recognized in histories of youth culture. Heather Shore's review of David Fowler's influential work in youth culture, indeed, noted that this historiography rarely considers ‘the agency of the young in the making of their own culture’.Footnote 21 More broadly, recent historiographical reviews by Colin Heywood, Harry Hendricks, and Sarah Maza have argued that ‘age struggles to assert itself as a category of analysis beside class, gender, and ethnicity in historical study’, because of a perceived lack of sources and because children are not ‘an organized political constituency’.Footnote 22 This article challenges these assumptions. It shows the value of child-produced sources, demonstrating that these are available particularly in uncatalogued materials, looking beyond existing archives.Footnote 23 The article demonstrates, also, that young people may not have organized as a political constituency, but that they did exert power: changing the views and leisure activities of their parents, voluntary leaders, and their teachers and peers at school, as they transferred ideas between ‘gifted’ and ‘non-gifted’ spaces.
Structurally, this article first discusses what we can know about the demographics of the National Association, and the motivations of its involved parents and children. It demonstrates the many gaps in informal, uncatalogued archives, but also maps out the likely biases involved in identifying ‘the gifted’. This section shows also how parents’ activism was driven by a distinct sense that collective action was the appropriate response to their individual experiences and emotions. Second, the article examines the distinct model of gifted youth culture lived in the Association's youth activities, as planned by adults, showing their distinctive, ‘individual’ nature. Third, the article explores how young people received and reshaped these spaces; this demonstrates the power of the young themselves in shaping ‘youth culture’. This seemingly small case-study, then, can demonstrate the pervasiveness and meanings of individualism in 1970s and 1980s Britain, and its implications for our thinking about youth cultures.
II
We cannot perfectly trace the demographics of those who attended and organized the National Association's fifty regional clubs in the 1970s and 1980s, due to the fractured nature of available archival evidence about this group. However, we can understand the Association's efforts to recruit from minoritized populations, and the challenges it faced in doing so. From parental writings, we can also understand the motivations of the Association's voluntary organizers.
The National Association did not require a specific level of ‘IQ’ scoring or other such performance on psychometric testing to invite young people to join its clubs. A publication by the Association from 1989, Bright children, stated that intelligence tests ‘can be useful’, but were ‘not particularly good predictors’ nor ‘very accurate measures of intellectual ability’.Footnote 24 This observation was supported by contemporary sociological research in the 1980s and 1990s, particularly from America, which emphasized that psychometric testing was significantly biased towards white, middle-class boys.Footnote 25 Indeed, recent historical research by Rob Waters has shown how this affected the education of Black children, who were disproportionately sent to special needs schools on the basis of such tests.Footnote 26 In the absence of an effective metric, and also looking to help any parent who believed they needed support, the Association allowed families to self-identify their children as gifted and to sign up. Parents were charged a fee that organizers sought to keep low: in 1971, £2 per year ‘for a husband and wife’, 50p for students who were training, and £4 for ‘schools and other educational establishments’.Footnote 27 While typically referred by parents, some young people were recommended to join by local educational psychologists or teachers, particularly when partnerships between local Association leaders and local education authorities were strong.Footnote 28
Unfortunately, we do not have precise demographic data available, in the uncatalogued Association archives or in supplementary policy and educational documents, about the children or parents who joined the National Association. In part, this reflected conscious decisions of National Association leaders not to question their members about demographics. Earlier organizers of the Association – notably Branch – were passionate about the privacy of the young people involved, and did not wish to collect or to publish their demographic details or indeed photographs.Footnote 29 Augmenting this archival gap, the editor of the Association's magazines for children did not ask about the class, race, or ethnic backgrounds of children who wrote in, nor about which parts of the country they came from, and she recalled in 2021 that the young people did not mention this.Footnote 30 Trying to read for clues in the surviving publications themselves, names we read as representing ‘boys’ and ‘girls’ are featured equally. Surnames that we may read as more likely to be from first- or second-generation immigrant communities occur only rarely; notably traditionally Chinese surnames featured from the 1980s.
Another factor that makes it difficult to understand the demographic mix of this organization is the variety between the regional clubs, which led on organizing the extra-curricula activities. By November 1980, the organization had established forty-eight clubs, with two more in formation. The majority were in the south-east of England; however, there was also one club in Northern Ireland (in Belfast), two in Scotland (in Strathclyde and the Lothians), and two in Wales (entitled ‘North Wales’ and ‘South Wales’), as well as clubs located across England and one in the Isle of Wight.Footnote 31 Each of these clubs were organized by different volunteers, who, without significant oversight from the National Association, brought their own assumptions, and also catered to distinct regional and local populations and interests. Surviving branch accounts show that branch activities typically attracted regular audiences of between twenty and eighty children, depending on area.Footnote 32 Some groups had support from local education authorities – providing funding, staff, or space, but many did not.Footnote 33 Some were able to raise money from local parents to employ helpers and specialists to assist with running their courses, but many were not.Footnote 34 The majority were organized by parents, but some – such as the Isle of Wight branch – included ‘a primary school headteacher, a middle school headteacher, the principal careers officer and the senior educational psychologist’, interested for professional reasons, on their committees.Footnote 35
We have then only fragmentary evidence through which to understand the social mix of the National Association. We do know, however, that central organizers spoke and wrote a lot about class at the Association, and spoke about the need to include working-class children in their voluntary activities. Yet, we can also question how much these concerns translated to working-class participation – and indeed how inviting statements were, for example, from early Association leaders telling national press that working-class parents must become involved because otherwise their ‘poor home backgrounds’ may ‘suppress’ the chances of their children, leaving them in ‘dead end’ manual jobs.Footnote 36 Comments by the founder of the Lichfield branch, launching this in 1975, that this was a ‘classless organisation’, suggest perhaps a lack of attention here to how to actively facilitate diverse participation.Footnote 37
Yet, we do also know from Association newsletters that by the late 1970s, concerns about class manifested in practical efforts to recruit young people from the working classes and from minoritized ethnic backgrounds. This was a key concern of specific branches, notably in Wolverhampton, the Wirral, Merseyside, and Liverpool, where local organizers were able to start partnerships with local educational authorities also concerned about the educational achievements of deprived and immigrant children.Footnote 38 The local education authority in Liverpool started multiple projects in the inner city in the 1970s and 1980s, looking to overcome childhood underachievement linked to families’ material challenges: ‘poor and overcrowded accommodation; a lack of privacy with high noise levels; large families; many children ill-clothed, ill-slept, ill-fed and ill-medicated; much absence from school; outlooks affected by drab surroundings’ and poverty.Footnote 39 One initiative supported by Liverpool's local education authority was the establishment of a National Association club in 1978 – the authority provided space in a local comprehensive school, and contacts for the National Association's local organizers to work with headteachers and staff at local schools to identify potentially gifted young people.Footnote 40 In its first year, the club had 30 members; in its second year, 170 members; a membership that remained steady by the organization's third year. Child attendees were described in Association newsletters as ‘multi-ethnic’ and ‘multi-racial’; they were mostly boys (102 boys and 76 girls in November 1980) and ranged in age between 2.5 and 13 years.Footnote 41
These regional successes were important, and demonstrate the ongoing interest of many local Association leaders in positioning the rights of the gifted as an equalities issue. Yet, they were heavily dependent on support from local education authorities – and this was not widespread across Britain. As a consequence, it seems likely that much Association voluntary activity was predominately organized and attended by middle-class families. Qualitative suggestions of affluence are evident in the rich descriptions of clubs, often run from volunteers’ homes, as situated in, for example, ‘eight acres of rough pasture, a small, shabby farmhouse and [with] an assortment of domestic and farm animals’, or ‘a large estate on the borders of Surrey and Hampshire’.Footnote 42 Gendered dynamics are also suggested in these rich accounts – while focusing on children's activities and experiences, they also mention, for example, mothers as key organizers, ‘temporarily running’ such groups until children were ‘old enough for her to go back to primary school teaching’.Footnote 43
The only quantitative evidence we have touching on Association demographics fortifies these qualitative impressions about class. A 1987 survey, sampling 125 families, concluded that the group's membership remained disproportionately ‘middle-class’. While ‘middle-class’ was a broad category in this period, the survey also stated that its sample was ‘well-educated’ overall, and that only 6 per cent of their sample parents worked in manual professions.Footnote 44 Indeed, the survey stated that the Association had ‘not yet succeeded in attracting as many members from the working classes’.Footnote 45 The survey did not discuss race or ethnicity. Further, no available archival evidence suggests interactions between the National Association and the supplementary schools movement, organized by Black parents in this period to provide extra classes for their under-stretched children – despite the overlapping concerns and plans of these groups.Footnote 46 While the Association did not use psychometric testing, such tests had contributed to a cultural stereotype of ‘gifted’ young people as associated with whiteness; in line with historic discourses around nation-building and the young as ‘good citizens’ in building empires.Footnote 47 Such cultural stereotypes will have likely affected whether minoritized families felt comfortable accessing groups framed around ‘giftedness’ – unless significant efforts were made by local organizers to frame these spaces inclusively.
Remaining Association files speak more about the motivations of parent-organizers than about their demographics. Letters and accounts from parents position their involvement emotionally, and as a necessary action to replace the poor provisions of the welfare state. Indeed, involved families spoke on television, in diaries, to Mass Observation, and to the Association about facing marital difficulties due to the strains of having an unhappy gifted child, and about being worried about their child being bullied and unhappy, all as they were not given adequate provision in mainstream schooling.Footnote 48 Parents then framed their involvement with the Association around isolation and desperation: they were looking for help coping with a child they could not understand, and they were ‘near snapping point’.Footnote 49 Amidst broader critique of the welfare state in the 1970s, parents framed this explicitly as a failure of education, social services, psychology, and associational life to cater for their distinct needs. One parent wrote to the National Association in 1977 that, ‘If I felt the need [for such provision], I reasoned, others did too, so if no-one else was prepared to fill the gap why not do it myself?’Footnote 50 Parents emphasized that filling this ‘gap’ was difficult – they were also ‘bring[ing] up four young children’ and needed ‘determination and sense of purpose’ – but they also felt that such voluntary action was necessary, for their own emotional well-being and that of their children.Footnote 51 Parents, then, conceptualized collective action as the appropriate response to individual suffering; bringing together historic traditions of voluntary action with new articulations of individual experience and emotion.
III
Association weekend and holiday clubs were structured by adult organizers around a specific vision of what gifted young people would need and want. The activities offered assumed that gifted children would be particularly physically, as well as intellectually, active, and engaged with practical, as well as intellectual, pursuits. They would, as a consequence, require particularly specialist and distinctive provisions, blending technical, academic, and sporting pursuits in ways that went beyond existing provision in schools.
The activities offered to the gifted young were often focused on the outdoors. Ideas of physical activity, mobility, and curiosity were embedded in the title of the courses, positioning young people as ‘Explorers’, suggestive of their physical adventurousness, as well as their intellectual prowess. Holiday camps would include active games such as ‘Hide and Seek, Capture the Flag etc’.Footnote 52 These outdoor activities were part of a vision of ‘good’ rural citizenship, with nature as a ‘facilitator of a morally and physically healthier citizen’, as described by Sian Edwards and Siân Roberts.Footnote 53 The rural homes that provided space for the holiday camps, indeed, were said to offer participants ‘the true sense of values which comes from an appreciation of the outdoors’.Footnote 54 Magazines also looked to inform young readers about wildlife rescue, how to identify garden birds, and ‘Understanding the countryside’.Footnote 55 This emphasis on the outdoors reiterated a post-war vision of the countryside as ‘traditional…a symbol of a timeless and shared national past’; quite separate from the simultaneous 1960s and 1970s moral panics around urban youth cultures of juvenile delinquency and gangs.Footnote 56
The clubs also offered a variety of inside activities. One description stated that clubs offered creative arts, intellectual debate, drama, computer science, mineralogy, and chess.Footnote 57 Another, emphasizing how activities sprawled across an organizer's home, discussed ‘woodwork in the basement, photography in the airing cupboard – in the hall, cooking, all kinds of games, maths, logic, chess and the more mundane kinds in the dining room’.Footnote 58 The precise nature of activities offered in gifted youth culture are difficult to characterize and describe. Something notable, however, is that these activities offered sporting, academic, manual, and creative outlets. This was distinct from the separate cultures created by grammar and technical school curricula in the post-war period, where the former focused on academic materials and the latter manual ones, with minimal crossover.Footnote 59 Gifted youth culture offered academic pursuits from the curriculum – such as maths – and beyond it – such as logic, debate, computer science, and drama. It also offered the more technical ‘life skills’ of cooking, creative arts, and the mysteriously described ‘mundane kinds’. This range of activities presupposed that gifted young people would benefit from being stretched in multiple ways, and that the existing provisions of the welfare state were inadequate.
The distinctive nature of gifted youth culture becomes yet more visible through analysis of the National Association's youth magazines. These magazines were segmented for children aged 3–7, 7–12, and 12–17, and were typically around twenty to thirty pages long. They primarily contained children's own drawings, poetry, book reviews, requests for pen pals, advertising for exhibitions and books, and views on topics such as education, though the adult editor also sometimes added articles expected to be of interest, and engaged in some dialogue with young correspondents. Most child readers published only one contribution, but those who wrote in often referenced older issues and discussions. This suggests that the magazines had a long-standing and significant audience, who would also meet at times at face-to-face events, but that they did not forge a continuous epistolary community within the space of the magazine itself. Notably, here, in the writings of the young people and articles suggested by the editor, scientific developments were frequently discussed, particularly archaeology, computers, and the sciences of measurement such as skulls and toe size.Footnote 60 Space was also a common theme, and magazines showed youth clubs observing rocket launches, space agencies sending information to schools, and reviews of books about ‘Tomorrow's world’.Footnote 61
Many themes were absent from these youth magazines. Notably, for example, the magazines’ ‘political forum’ did not typically discuss party politics or contemporary social movements such as second-wave feminism. Rather, they focused on scientific and economic policy, discussing nuclear defence and the ‘brain drain’.Footnote 62 Discussions of popular culture and society in these magazines did not consider contemporary issues of youth sexuality, consumption, fashion, or music. Rather, magazines focused on more niche pursuits: ephemera, ‘New Images of Man’ in post-war French art, Tolkien books, and fantasy gaming.Footnote 63 Historical discussions focused primarily on ‘dinosaurs & pre-history’, evolution, stately homes, the English Civil War, and the American Revolution.Footnote 64 This constellation of areas constructed ‘gifted youth culture’ in distinct ways, removed from permissive youth cultures of the same period.
Instead, adult-constructed spaces for gifted youth culture sought to draw the young gifted together, and thus away from their ‘non-gifted’ peers. A 1978 newsletter, reporting on a holiday retreat in Monmouth, Wales, stated that young people attending ‘enjoy a week spent in a world in which they are normal…they rarely get the chance to play with children of similar ability’.Footnote 65 The ideas of youth sociability underpinning this were not distinct to gifted spaces alone. Laura Tisdall has shown how, from the 1950s, psychology and education demanded that the ‘normal child’ must exhibit ‘extroversion and sociability’, rather than living the ‘inter-war ideal of a quiet, well-behaved individual’.Footnote 66 Nonetheless, the manifestation of this in 1970s and 1980s gifted youth culture was distinct. Notably, gifted youth were drawn together as a cohort of potential future leaders, whose leadership – and social value – would be based on intellect.
Ideas of preparing young people for their future roles were frequent in Association magazines. In its Summer 1979 bulletin, the Association asked children to think about the fact that: ‘THE YOUNG PEOPLE OF THIS COUNTRY HAVE A GREAT DEAL TO OFFER TO HELP THOSE LESS FORTUNATE THAN THEMSELVES – BOTH WITH IDEAS AND DIRECT HELP.’Footnote 67 The magazine asked children to undertake projects on key themes. One theme was war, and the magazine stated: ‘One day a “small” war could grow into the nightmare of total devastation by nuclear weapons. What can we do to begin to lessen the risks and start building a lasting peace?’Footnote 68 Another key theme was hunger: ‘How can we achieve a sense of unity in the world when some of us have so much and others lack the basic necessities?’Footnote 69 Another, freedom: ‘All over the world the basic human rights are being denied because of race, colour or belief. In Britain, freedom is being eroded. What can we do to turn the tide?’Footnote 70 While sadly no traces remain of children's responses to these prompts, their existence nonetheless demonstrates the adult interest in shaping the gifted young as distinct future leaders.
Gifted youth culture would equip Association members to meet these vast challenges in a variety of ways. The Association's Bristol and Isle of Wight Saturday Clubs, for example, taught gifted children Esperanto, a language created for international use. One teacher in Bristol told the Association's April 1978 newsletter that, ‘in taking up Esperanto one takes up a key to world understanding and to world harmony’.Footnote 71 Other Association magazines advertised ‘Project Trident’: a ‘year between scheme’ enabling young people who left school at eighteen to participate in voluntary service, work away from home, and take ‘challenging Outward Bound courses, Brathay expeditions or Ocean Youth Club sailing cruises’.Footnote 72 These experiences would show gifted students, before they entered university or established careers, ‘how and where they fit in the wider community and what it means to be trusted, respected, needed by and important to other people’.Footnote 73 The Association also helped children to identify and communicate with pen pals from America and Australia, looking to develop conversations ‘which might eventually spread all over our beautiful little world’.Footnote 74 All of these diverse schemes reminded the gifted young that they were distinctive individuals, and that they had a role to play, today and in the future, in forging a better world. This continued and extended the efforts of interwar voluntary organizations, such as the League of Nations Union. The Association continued to push a vision of ‘world citizenship’, but responded also to the ’new challenges’ of the late twentieth century. The Association also focused on influencing a distinct group of future leaders, rather than shaping all children as future citizens, reflecting and embedding popular individualism at this time.Footnote 75
Thus, Association spaces relied on the assumption that gifted young people required a distinctive cultural space: offering physical and intellectual pursuits; interests in science, rural life, and high culture; and shared socializing with new peers. This offering was detached from the political and cultural shifts of the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. It was not a space of punk music, milk bars, new cinema, or satirical comedy. Nor was this space characterized by, for example, simultaneous developments in youth culture such as the opening of new nightclubs.Footnote 76 Nonetheless, this space was also not necessarily a ‘vanguard’ against the ‘perceived threat of “modernity”’; organizers made no explicit reference, in their writings, to concern about permissiveness or concurrent youth cultures.Footnote 77 The spaces constructed for gifted youth are better understood within the blending of older traditions of collective action and newer ones of popular individualism in the 1970s and 1980s in Britain: parents felt that their young people required particularly distinct forms of leisure and social life, as individuals, but also that the solution to these new needs was small-scale collective action.
IV
Young people engaged in complex ways with Association spaces. Many accepted the idea that they required distinctive forms of youth culture, and embraced this, bringing it to bear on interactions with school peers. As theoretical literature on agency by Susan Miller and Tatek Abebe emphasizes, agency can mean assent, as well as critique.Footnote 78 Yet, young people were not passive recipients of these spaces – they also modified them through conscious criticism of adult ideas and through their everyday interactions.
This comes into clearer view through a case-study of one particularly long-standing National Association club: the Moberly Saturday Club, in north-west London. The roots of this club developed in 1971, when two parents established the London Explorers’ Club in their home. As was typical, the club enabled attending young people to pursue academic knowledge acquisition games and puzzles alongside a range of crafts, arts, and manual activities. From 1976, after a partnership with the Inner London Educational Authority was established, the group's activities moved from a house to the Moberly Centre. This fostered significant expansion and, by November 1978, the National Association newsletter reported that the group served up to 150 Explorers each Saturday afternoon in term-time.Footnote 79 This shift also saw a formalization and professionalization of the Club. The newsletter stated that the group had employed a part-time professional director, relatively atypical for such groups, and that its initial founder was also available to give advice for similar projects.Footnote 80
As Kathryn Gleadle and Ryan Hanley have demonstrated, we can read children's agency even from adult-produced sources, with careful attention.Footnote 81 Accounts of adult organizers of the Moberly Club show that young people engaged in a variety of ways, constructing imaginative play that went beyond planned activities. Discussing the home-based version of the club, in a 1976 newsletter, one parent-organizer wrote that ‘in the bathroom’ of the house ‘extraordinary sex changes occurred – boys appearing mincing down the stairs having found the Chairman's teenage daughter's nightgown, wig and lipstick, and girls appeared with moustaches in navy uniform’.Footnote 82 While tempting to read this as an example of permissiveness and fluid gender norms, scholarship tells us also that such playing with gender, using cross dressing as entertainment, has often reinforced gender norms as much as challenged them.Footnote 83 Nonetheless, it is significant that involved young people used household objects from spaces not designated for formal play, and that they led their own activities. Other parent accounts of the Moberly group recall an atmosphere where: ‘No gasps of disapproval were heard by those wishing to spend the afternoon sliding down the banisters’ and children moved ‘at will from area to area’.Footnote 84 Adults organizing these courses did not prevent, and indeed happily reported on, this later. Archival materials provide some evidence that this type of imaginative play may have been dampened by the move to the Moberly Centre in 1976. This new space was more managed and formalized, and the young people involved had to book and choose activities in advance, rather than using whatever household items they came across. One Association report stated that a ‘few’ of the ‘original’ members did not like ‘the new regime’, and that it had lost ‘intimacy’ and an ‘easy and free choice of things to do’.Footnote 85 Nonetheless, other young Explorers testified to very much enjoying the new space, and the activities made available to them.Footnote 86
Young people's writings about the Moberly Club show that while engaging with this space in playful ways, they also accepted the broad ideas that they needed distinct provision as gifted young people, that they were different from other young people of their age, and that they were, potentially, future leaders. Two relevant testimonies were offered in a 1979 edition of the journal of the National Association, from a ten-year-old and a thirteen-year-old boy. Discussing the club, the ten-year-old stated that typically he joined in with school games played by his friends, but that ‘what I would really like to do also would be to talk about the world with them but no one wants to as they would all much rather play “catch”’.Footnote 87 For this child, the Saturday Club meant that he had been able to meet an ‘older boy’, who ‘discusses with me everything I would like to know about the wealth of Great Britain, the world monetary system, and political parties and what they stand for’.Footnote 88
The thirteen-year-old stated that when starting education at the age of five, he had already completed the relevant reading and ‘found school very uninteresting’. Unlike the ten-year-old boy, who was able to socialize with his classmates, the thirteen-year-old found that it was ‘difficult’ to mix socially as ‘there was little I could share with them’.Footnote 89 As a consequence, the boy ‘found solace only in reading’ and was frequently ‘bored and restless’.Footnote 90 When he met a psychologist, who ‘explained to me that I was “gifted”’, his life changed.Footnote 91 For the following two years, he explained, he felt ‘timid and withdrawn’, though academically he continued to perform well. Aged nine he joined the Saturday Club and was able to socialize with new peers and to develop special interests in computers, photography, and philosophy. The boy stated that: ‘These things gave me something to work at and be proud of’, and also a peer group he could identify and socialize with.Footnote 92 Overall, he felt now that he should try to offer something of ‘importance to the world around me’, particularly based on his ‘mind…this I feel I can offer to the world’.Footnote 93 These young people then both testified that the label gifted had been very significant in their lives. It had changed how they felt about themselves and their peer groups, and also given them ideas of their own future roles in society. These young people's sense of being a ‘gifted individual’ had been augmented through participation in Moberly activities.
Beyond the Moberly Club, these ideas were also common in the writings of young people to Association children's magazines, and in their recorded testimonies from other local branches. The ideas of being a distinct group, ‘the gifted’, separate from other peer groups, come through strongly in transcribed recordings of two children attending the Wolverhampton branch – described by Association publications as situated in ‘an educationally deprived area’.Footnote 94 In free-form conversation with an interviewer, ‘J’, a boy aged ‘11 plus’ and ‘B’, a girl aged ‘12 plus’ both emphasized that the identity of giftedness made them feel different from their peers at school.Footnote 95 Significantly, these children embraced this. J stated that he, ‘enjoyed…being so far ahead of the other children’ and feeling ‘solitary’, while B said, ‘I'm becoming a “lone wolf” and I like it.’Footnote 96 B even performed her distinct gifted identity in interactions with school peers, indeed, stating that, ‘I liked to invite school friends to tea then I got so bored with them that I asked for them to be taken home again.’Footnote 97 The writings of gifted young people likewise frequently suggested that they saw themselves as distinct from teachers also, and found many teachers to be overly strict with them – a finding that chimes with Laura Tisdall's argument, based on analysing teachers’ magazines, that gifted children in post-war England and Wales were ‘stereotyped as “cocky”’.Footnote 98 Gifted young people then took the distinct ideas of gifted spaces in to their school environments.
Many young people also embraced the idea of themselves as future leaders, because of their gifted identities. This sense is clear in explicit policy commentary of young Association members – for example a sixteen-year-old writing to the Association in 1980 that Britain's ‘biggest problem…at the moment is that the population is too large’: ‘if we were to divide the world’, they advised, ‘it should be done so that small groups emerge and so that everyone could participate in directing their state’.Footnote 99 Another sixteen-year-old, likewise engaging with global politics, wrote to the Association in 1982 to criticize the nuclear deterrence defence system as ‘farcical’, given first that ‘many non-aligned countries have developed or could develop weapons of massive death potential’.Footnote 100 In addition to seeing themselves as future leaders, the gifted young also expressed anxieties about the Cold War more generally, and in creative ways. In a 1979 edition of Explorers unlimited, a young person whose age was recorded as ‘13 or 14’ wrote a short horror story, in which a man in bed, hearing a plane fly overhead, thought: ‘Perhaps it was Russian. It might be carrying a bomb, an atomic bomb. There might be another war.’Footnote 101 Such broad concerns about the Cold War have been traced in the accounts of other young people in this period also, and, indeed, here hint towards the broader social engagements of the gifted young, who will have discussed warfare and global politics at school and in their family homes. Nonetheless, the ideas of future leadership were a distinctive part of gifted youth culture, linked to an idea of the gifted as special individuals.
Young Association members then felt different from their peers. Yet, their sense of difference was not entirely shaped by adult conceptions. Rather, young members also changed adult-produced ideas about gifted youth culture. First, young people questioned the specific label ‘gifted’, and how it changed adult behaviours. The 1979 letter from American young people – with which this article opened – also stated that ‘being gifted does not make everything easy’; it made teachers ‘push harder’ and ‘others who are not gifted resent me sometimes for getting better grades or being just a little more perceptive than them’.Footnote 102 British respondents wrote that they felt ‘different’, likewise, but argued that while teachers and peers recognized them as ‘gifted’, they did not receive special provision in school, but rather worked in environments without ‘much proper streaming’ where they missed out on ‘stimulating conversation, [and] a chance to exchange views and opinions’ with gifted peers.Footnote 103 Young people then happily joined the National Association, and took advantage of the activities offered, but also questioned how broader educational and social structures framed ‘giftedness’. Gifted young people were also not afraid to criticize adult ideas more broadly – also in poetry, for example, criticizing adults for forcing them to travel on the London underground, despite their fears, or cruelly removing them from an enjoyable Christmas fair.Footnote 104
A second theme which gifted young people reconceptualized was the idea of national leadership. The ten-year-old mentioned above, for example, had a complex relationship with visions of his future role. He stated that he would ‘like to become a barrister and a Member of Parliament as I find law and politics fascinating and I love talking’.Footnote 105 In this account, his preferred imagined future – in that moment – was pursuing law or politics, potentially productive pathways for the gifted child. Nonetheless, the young person did not connect these professions with ideas of national or global morality, virtue, or social value. Rather, he would pursue these routes because he found them ‘fascinating’ and ‘love[d] talking’.Footnote 106 Further surveys, discussed in Association newsletters, found that the gifted young wanted a diverse range of careers – not only in leadership positions but also as ‘a fashion writer’, ‘a professional dancer’, or managing ‘a travel agency’.Footnote 107 The gifted young were confident in their future prospects, but wanted to determine how they would use their ‘gifts’; they did not accept the characterization of themselves as ‘future leaders’ lightly.
A third idea that the gifted young modified was the assumption that they would want to socialize together. In this case, young members modified this idea through their lived behaviours, rather than through explicit critique. Indeed, Association members often experienced peer disputes and conflict on Association courses, shaped by a powerful sense of age and gender distinction. A description from a parent-organizer of a camp in South Wales in 1977, for example, emphasized that gifted youth brought into contact with one another struggled if competitions were not won and lost aligned with chronological age. The author described how one ‘sturdy nine-year-old’, ‘took it very hard that he could be beaten at target shooting by a weedy seven-year-old’.Footnote 108 More broadly, this organizer also described how attendees had often not played with other gifted youth before and, hence, ‘were not used to competition. They were used to winning. And they did not much like the new experience of being beaten.’Footnote 109 This focus on chronological age as a marker of difference was furthered in Association magazines, where children wrote to the group with brief notes that they were, for example, not merely aged nine but ‘9¾’.Footnote 110 The gifted young, again, enthusiastically participated in leisure spaces for ‘the gifted’, but pre-existing cultural ideas about how capacity should relate to age and gender were not entirely over-ridden by this new identity. Children's interest in chronological age likely came from their concurrent experiences in schools, where this concept had shaped the ‘practical reorganisation of schooling’ since the 1930s, and increasingly since the Second World War.Footnote 111 A sense of age must be included in our understandings of popular individualism.
The gifted young then exercised agency: many assented to the idea that they had unique capacities as distinctive individuals, but they also made claims about how this should affect their future roles, and adult and peer relationships.Footnote 112 The gifted young reshaped gifted youth culture, and their accounts must be critical to understanding it. They brought assumptions from spaces designed for ‘the gifted’ into schools (notably ideas of their own intellectual superiority) and they brought assumptions from their broader lives into gifted spaces (particularly around the significance of age). Gifted youth spaces were thus a part of the rich tapestry of these young people's social and cultural lives, but spaces that presented a powerful vision of distinctiveness and difference.
V
The mid- to late twentieth century in Britain saw an explosion of new medical and social categorizations and classifications, buoyed by new forms of writing and the development and formalization of new professions. This period also saw a series of cultural, social, and political changes around permissiveness and the ‘new society’, which reshaped the lives of the young economically, socially, and politically. This article uses a seemingly small case-study – the leisure activities of those identified as ‘gifted’, as co-ordinated by the National Association for Gifted Children – to illuminate what these trends meant and how they were experienced.
Giftedness was a label of great power and privilege: it was tied up historically with eugenicist ideas and significant discrimination. Yet, parents involved in giftedness organizations emphasized that they joined not to gain power nor prestige, but rather due to their experiences and emotions of desperation and isolation. Notably, these parents, mobilizing in the 1970s and 1980s, felt that their families had fallen through ‘gaps’ in the post-war welfare state, illustrating Robinson, Schofield, Sutcliffe-Braithwaite, and Thomlinson's argument that the welfare state was itself one of the ‘diverse drivers’ for the rise of popular individualism in the 1970s: for it ‘promised equality (even if in paradoxical ways)’ and thus shaped subsequent popular accounts of individual rights.Footnote 113
Critically, these parents believed that a universal welfare state should provide for the distinct individual needs of all young people, and also that existing systems of education and welfare were failing to do so. Their response was not to lobby for systematic change, nor to do nothing, but to meet these requirements themselves, through voluntary action, establishing new leisure spaces specifically for ‘the gifted young’ across Britain. Many of these clubs tried to include working-class and ethnic minority populations, but overall they were likely dominated by white, middle-class families. Inside the clubs, adult-organized activities told the involved young that they were special and unusual, and that they must interact with one another.
The gifted youth cultures created by the National Association branches look far removed from the permissive cultures often charted by existing historical and sociological accounts.Footnote 114 Young people did not engage with new fashions, music, or consumer trends in these spaces, but rather with classical music and history, outdoor pursuits, and practical skills such as woodwork. Association magazines did not condemn or criticize permissive cultures; they simply did not mention them. This then contributes to our thinking about the significance of permissiveness in daily life: if the permissive youth cultures of the 1960s were this invisible in one youth space by the 1970s, where else were they absent, and how powerful can they have been? Yet, this characterization also goes beyond Mills's account of many youth lives as ‘mundane’ or ‘ordinary’, rather than permissive, in these decades.Footnote 115 The gifted young were seen as far from ordinary – they were presented as potential future leaders, albeit in fuzzily characterized ways. Youth cultures were not merely ‘mundane’ or ‘permissive’ in the mid- to late twentieth century; they were individual. Youth cultures were segmented in an endless variety of distinct ways, as localized and community action looked to cater for all preferences and needs. Historiographies of youth culture must account for individualism, and descriptions of popular individualism must account for age.
Young people themselves shaped youth cultures too. This statement should not seem controversial: since the 1990s, historians of childhood have written powerful accounts of childhood action.Footnote 116 Yet, nonetheless, this field remains seen as ‘on the margins’ of historical scholarship, according to recent critical historiographical accounts, which attribute this to young people's limited ‘power’ and to a lack of available sources.Footnote 117 This article has looked to rebuff these claims. It has shown that the gifted young had ‘power’. Using recent methodological thinking about ‘agency’, which shows how agency can be assent, or small-scale change, it has demonstrated that the young changed the spaces of gifted youth culture both through conscious critique and by virtue of how they engaged with available activities.Footnote 118 The article has also shown that we do have sources available through which to understand children's lives in the past, by both reading ‘against the grain’ of adult-accounts – as Gleadle and Hanley have also demonstrated – and also through young people's own writings, which were accessed by working with a voluntary organization to access rich, but uncatalogued materials.Footnote 119 This work often simply requires going beyond existing established archives.
Overall, then, the case-study of this article seems small – giftedness was not a significant part of the welfare state, or of national educational provision, in modern Britain, and thus has been excluded from existing historical accounts. Yet, there were rich and distinct spaces of youth culture created around this category by passionate campaigners and parents. Tracing the assumptions embedded in these spaces, and youth responses to them, shows the diversity of ‘youth cultures’ in modern Britain. Even this niche subgroup, ‘the gifted young’, received distinct provision in these decades, and expected to be treated as distinct individuals due to this new identity. Even in these spaces, which were small scale and seem very specific, there were also significant tensions around what ‘gifted youth culture’ meant. This then shows the pervasiveness and power of ideas about ‘individualism’ in daily life in 1970s and 1980s Britain. It shows also that the tensions around theoretical and political constructions of ‘the individual’ – examined in existing historiographical accounts – were also reshaped in daily life.Footnote 120 Critically, this article has furthermore demonstrated that gifted youth culture was significantly influenced by the young themselves, and thus that the agency of young people must be a critical part of our historical accounts. New groups of young people felt increasingly ‘individual’ in the 1970s and 1980s; their resulting actions drove voluntary action and reshaped cultures of leisure, education, and sociability in daily life.
Acknowledgements
I gratefully acknowledge that this research was funded by a Wellcome Research Fellowship in the Humanities and Social Sciences [grant number: 212449/Z/18/Z]. Sincere thanks also to the anonymous peer reviewers of this article, who provided such detailed, constructive, and thoughtful feedback on an earlier draft – it was a model of generous peer review. I'd also like to thank Emma Griffin, the Editor of this journal, for her generous and expert editorial guidance on this piece, and also all other staff at the Historical Journal. With thanks also to Siân Pooley, Grace Huxford, Dion Georgiou, Sarah Kenny, and Gillian Lamb for reading earlier versions of this article and sharing insights and critique from their own fantastic work. I also gained great insights from discussions on gifted children with Jonathan Taylor, who performed fantastic research assistance work for me generously funded by the Ludwig Fund, of New College, Oxford. Finally, I'd like to thank Potential Plus UK for making the rich uncatalogued archives of the National Association for Gifted Children available to me for research, and also the former campaigners I have spoken with so far during this research project.
Funding Statement
This research was funded in whole, or in part, by the Wellcome Trust [grant number 212449/Z/18/Z]. Further support was provided by the Ludwig Fund, New College, Oxford. For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a CC BY public copyright licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission.
Competing Interests
The author(s) declare none.