Trenton City Museum Presents “Sport Nite Extravaganza”
Exhibition Will Celebrate the History of Decades-Long Annual Competitions at Trenton High School
Public Invited to Opening Reception Saturday, September 27, 1:30 to 4:30 pm
(Trenton, NJ) Put on your finest red and black and celebrate the spirit of Sport Nite Extravaganza, the new local history feature at Trenton City Museum. The exhibition opens with a festive reception on Saturday, September 27, from 1:30 to 4:30 pm. An array of vintage-costume-clad mannequins, student artwork and reproductions, audio recordings, yearbooks, and memorabilia recalls the school spirit of students at Trenton High School across the decades, from 1935 to 1999.
Offering a vivid trip down memory lane for those with Sport Nite memories of their own, or an interest in Trenton history or love of vintage costuming and memorabilia, the exhibit is a culmination of several years of dedicated research, community outreach, and curatorial collecting by creator Karl J Flesch.
“I first learned about Sport Nite as a kid, seeing my mother’s TCHS ’Bobashela’ yearbook, “says Flesch. “I even got to attend two Sport Nite events in the early 1960s. A suggestion from 1963 Red Team Captain Susan Ecker Reem that I document all the Sport Nite articles I could find turned into what is now a whole exhibition at Trenton City Museum.”
As he dug deep into archival sources, Flesch discovered that three of his cousins, 1946 Black Team Flag Bearer Paula Veldof Hughes, 1957 Prince’s Prelude costuming seamstress Barbara Norton Shea, and 1960 Red Team Flag Bearer Betty Ann Norton Loney, all had been Sport Nite participants. Within a single family was evidence that this long-standing Trenton tradition deserved to have its story told for a new audience.
Flesch says that over the course of the yearlong exhibit, talks and other special programs highlighting Sport Nite’s personal stories and documented history will be announced.
SPORT NITE’S EARLY YEARS
Trenton High School’s second principal, Dr. Paul R. Spenser, conceived of a “Girls’ Sport Night” in 1935 for the school’s female students to “show off their dramatic side in a friendly competition” of the Red and Black Teams, echoing the school’s colors.
The THS girls’ health program largely centered on physical education, but it went beyond the development of the body to include exercises to promote good health, and dances and rhythmics to develop poise and grace. An enjoyable program of competitive sports arose from it to instill in students a love of games and the spirit of sportsmanship. Started as a way of enabling girls to use and display their athletic and creative abilities, Girls’ Sport Nite grew into a fun and spirited rivalry presented as a spectacular revue of performances that captured the attention of the community and received wide news coverage.
The girls at the school (and later the boys in the 90s) were divided into two competitive teams. The competitions took place for a total of 42 years – including an early 70s to early 90s hiatus – and ended in 1999. The Red Team won 19 times, the Black Team won 21 times, and the teams tied twice. Along the way, other schools, including Neshaminy High School, Bensalem High School, and St. Anthony’s High School, took lasting inspiration from Sport Nite.
Trenton City Museum’s September 27 opening reception from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. is open to the public. Admission is free, though donations to “Team Red” and “Team Black” are appreciated. For more on “Sport Nite Extravaganza”, visit ellarslie.org/tchs-sport-nite-extravaganza or call 609-989-1191.
ABOUT TRENTON CITY MUSEUM AT ELLARSLIE
Located in Trenton’s Cadwalader Park, Trenton City Museum is accessible from Parkside Ave. and has ample adjacent parking. It is open Thursdays through Saturdays, 12 to 4 p.m.; Sundays, 1 to 4 p.m. There is no admission fee to view the museum’s art and history exhibitions, but donations are welcomed. Trenton City Museum is housed in Ellarslie Mansion, an 1848 Italianate Villa on the National Historic Register. The surrounding Cadwalader Park was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted, who designed iconic spaces such as New York City’s Central Park. The museum showcases exhibitions of contemporary fine art, ongoing and changing history displays that explore Trenton’s rich industrial and cultural past, and hosts community events and family workshops all year. Learn more at ellarslie.org, 609-989-1191, or tms@ellarslie.org.