It’s a persistent question for people today: What is that “third place” where you spend your time that is neither home nor workplace and allows you to connect with community?
For many women in 1960, the answer was the bowling alley. That year LIFE published a story titled “The Social Whirl of Ladies’ Bowling” which explained why women were suddenly bananas over bowling. The article began by declaring that “eight million women have invaded the sport of bowling and transformed the nation’s 134,000 lanes into the greatest social center since the back fence.”
According to LIFE this trend was the end result of a domino effect that began with the invention of automated pin-setting machines in the 1950s. These new machines prompted owners to renovate their bowling alleys. And having undertaken these renovations, the owners then sought to bring in more customers—especially during the daytime. “They began selling the sport to women with telephone campaigns, free lessons, and most of all, free baby sitting,” LIFE explained.
The images by LIFE staff photographer Stan Wayman capture the full appeal to women of a day at the alley. He didn’t just shoot the women as they competed, but also as they socialized while their children were being cared for. One bowling alley in Dallas catered to female customers by adding a beauty salon with a view of the lanes.
Wayman traveled to Texas, Colorado, Ohio and Illinois to capture the scene around the country. One alley owner declared to LIFE, “We’ve become the people’s country clubs, and it’s the girls who have made it that way.”
But the party did not last—for women or men. The 50s and early 60s were the peak years for bowling in America, but since then the sport has been on a downward trend. The decline of bowling leagues was severe enough that bowling alone become a metaphor for the atomization of communal life in America.
Too bad. From Stan Wayman’s photos, it looks like these bowlers were having a good time.
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Opening ceremonies marked the start of a Women’s International Bowling Congress tournament at Belleview Bowl in Denver, 1960.
Stan Wayman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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Opening ceremonies marked the start of a Women’s International Bowling Congress tournament at Belleview Bowl in Denver, 1960.
Stan Wayman/LIfe Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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Phyllis Mercer bowled in Skokie, Illinois, 1960.
Stan Wayman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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Phyllis Mercer bowled in Skokie, Illinois, 1960.
Stan Wayman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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Phyllis Mercer celebrated a strike in Skokie, Illinois, 1960.
Stan Wayman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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These bowling housewives won a beauty contest organized by Hart Bowl of Dallas, 1960.
Stan Wayman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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Mary Loopo juggled cups of coffee that she was bringing to her teammates at a bowling alley in Columbus, Ohio, 1960.
Stan Wayman/LIfe Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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A bowling alley baby shower marked the departure of a member of the Baptist Women’s League in Dallas, 1960.
Stan Wayman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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Bowlers visited the bar at Orchard Twin Bowl in Skokie, Illinois, 1960.
Stan Wayman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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From a photo essay on the popularity of women’s bowling, 1960.
Stan Wayman/LIfe Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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From a photo essay on the popularity of women’s bowling, 1960.
Stan Wayman/LIfe Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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Donna Taylor celebrated her birthday with a party at Scioto Lanes in Columbus, Ohio, 1960.
Stan Wayman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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George P. Smith of Scioto Lanes in Columbus, Ohio, taught novice, Mrs. Jane Brown, the proper technique of releasing a bowling ball, 1960.
Stan Wayman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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A beauty shop adjoined Cotton Bowl lanes for benefit of women bowlers who wanted to have their hair set between games, Dallas, 1960.
Stan Wayman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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A beauty shop adjoined Cotton Bowl lanes in Dallas for benefit of women bowlers who wanted to have their hair set between games, Dallas, 1960.
Stan Wayman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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At the Hart bowling alley in Dallas, Texas, an attendant watched children play while their mothers bowled, 1960. Day care was used as an incentive to get more women bowling during the day.
Stan Wayman/Life Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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From a photo essay on the popularity of women’s bowling, 1960.
Stan Wayman/LIfe Picture Collection/Shutterstock
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Girls played while their mothers competed in a bowling league in Milwaukee, 1960.
Stan Wayman/LIfe Picture Collection/Shutterstock




