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Sunday, July 27, 2025

Ivy League Posture Photos - Part 51

Ivy League Posture Photos 

Yale started taking nude photos of incoming freshmen in 1919 as part of a program to detect and correct posture problems.  The Yale photos have erroneously been associated with William Sheldon, a psychologist at Harvard and author of Nazi-like eugenic theories who used Harvard nude posture photos to illustrate his theory of somatypes.  The Yale program predates Sheldon, and, as far as I can tell, the Yale photos were never connected to Sheldon's work.

Here are posture photos of eight more Yale students that I had the opportunity to acquire.  For privacy reasons, I redact the names of men who might still be alive.  One of these men may still be alive, so his name has been redacted.

This is Yale freshman J. T. on Oct. 9, 1953.

In 1952, Yale installed an apparatus using mirrors to photograph the front, rear, side and top view.

This is Yale freshman Philip R. Lottinville on Oct. 9, 1953.

Note the strange pins stuck to each student's back and chest.

This is Yale freshman Carleton T. Woodring, Jr. on Oct. 16, 1953.

The pins were stuck on at specific points for later posture analysis.  Supposedly, by examining the angles formed by connecting the points where the pins touched the body, certain posture problems could be detected.

This is Yale freshman Thomas Garcon Parker on Oct. 21, 1958.

If posture problems were detected, the student had to attend remedial posture sessions, and a second posture photo was taken.

This is Yale freshman Thomas Marsden Osgood on Jan. 31, 1951.

Photos taken before 1952 show only a side view.

This is Yale freshman John Horace Owen on Oct. 1, 1951.

The photography and analysis of the photos was conducted by the staff of Yale's Payne Whitney Gymnasium.

This is Yale freshman Andrew Maute Spieker on Jan. 31, 1951.

Nobody outside the gymnasium staff saw the photos, and the photos were not published for other students to see.

This is Yale freshman Nils Ronald Tongring on Sept. 27, 1951.

The posture photo program was discontinued in the 1960s, and later, most of the photos were burned.  However, some of the photos escaped burning, including the photos that I have been showing in this series.

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Note: some of my followers consider these photos an invasion of privacy for the students.  To protect the privacy of the students, I redact the names of students who may still be alive.  I only publish the names of students who have died.  Legally, the right to privacy does not extend beyond death, i.e. it does not extend to spouses and relatives of the deceased person.

I consider these photos to be a historical record of the time.  Almost all of the Ivy League posture photos were burned when their existence became widely known.  In my opinion, that was akin to book-burning of books that someone claimed were obscene.  These photos are not obscene.  They should be celebrated, not hidden away.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thomas Garcon Parker is a keeper. Every time a new crop of students appear on this site, I'm thankful Yale designed the posture program. Dozens and dozens of nude young men....every inch of them on display.

Gene Perry said...

that Spieker kid ... perfect ass

Anonymous said...

Thanks again for these photos; it's still a great series. I find them sexier than the men in the Estonian photos. It's fascinating to imagine how they felt when they had to take off their underwear for this session. The Estonian men were standing next to each other, too.

Anonymous said...

Waspy as all hell !
So much for the elite Ivy League schools of that time, and now they want to go back to that ! Education for the well connected and wealthy only.
They look like kids, hard to believe they were the elite. Why wonder America was so fucked up for decades. The Ivy League buckles to the reactionaries of today because deep down they want to go back into that abyss. Just look at the un-supreme court and its jackals !
They’re the Ivy League ideal.

Anonymous said...

Well, Thomas Garcon Parker at least got to wear a black band around his waist, even though it did nothing to hide his penis and perfect butt.

CAAZ said...

This is fascinating.

Dee Exx said...

what were those sock like things on Osgood?

Anonymous said...

Looks like sports tape used by jocks then and now to provide support and pain relief for joints and muscles.
-CA jock

Dee Exx said...

Thanks CA jock!

Anonymous said...

I went to school in Tulsa, OK in the early 1960's. In the second grade, we all took "posture pictures" in our underwear - boys and girls together. However, instead of pins, they put dots of some sort of white paint on our backs. It could have been radioactive, for all we knew.