Finnish School Uniform:  Individual Schools


Figure 1.--This photo shows the pupils at Kinahmo primary school in 1953. Kinahmo is a Finnish village about 15 km east of Polvijärvi, in the province of Eastern Finland, North Karelia region. Most of Karelia was seized by the Soviets in the Winter War (1939-40).  

One useful way to assess educational trends over time is to look at individual school portraits. This is especially helpful in Finland s most vchildren did not wear school uniforms. This not only illustrates chrnological trends, but also insights on demographic trends and differences at different levels of education. This helps to hone in on a range of school trends and compare different kinds of schools. We are attempting to acquire images to expand this section, but so far have found few Finnish shool photographs.

Lappeenranta School (South Karelia) (1922)

This class portrait was taken in 1921. It is a 4th grade class in the municipality of Lappeenranta, in the region of South Karelia. This was only a few years after Finland achieved its independence from Russia as a rexsult of the Russian Revolution. I am not sure about schools in Finland bdefore the Revolution. The Russians required instruction using the Russian language in many areas of the Empire. I am not sure about Finland. After independence of course all instruction was in Finnish. South Karelia where this school was located was seized by the Soviets in the Winter war (1939-40). The Finns evacuated almost the entire population before the Soviets gained control.

Kinahmo Primary School (North Karelia) (1953)

This photo shows the pupils at Kinahmo primary school in 1953. Kinahmo is a Finnish village about 15 km east of Polvijärvi, in the province of Eastern Finland, North Karelia region (figure 1). Most of Karelia was seized by the Soviets in the Winter War (1939-40). The school looks to be a small rural primary. Notice that many of the children are barefoot. This was presumably fairly common in rural areas. What we are not sure about is if this is a reflectioin of poverty or the children were more comfortable going barefoot.

Finnish School of Bangkok (Thailand) (2006)

This photo shows the pupils and teachers of the Finnish school of Bangkok (Thailand) on December 12, 2006. There seems to be a lot of teachers for such a small group of parents. The school started in January 1971 in the town of Phitsanulokin (central Thailand). Ten years later it moved to the capital, Bangkok. Since 1989 it have the status of official foreign school by the Finnish Government. The children are taught in Finnish. Presumably the Thai-looking boy is the child of a mixed Finnish-Thai family. Notice the children are barefoot. We suspect that Thai children from affluent families would not go to school barefoot, but the small size of the school may be a factor.








HBC-SU










Related Chronolgy Pages in the Boys' Historical Web Site
[Main Chronology Page]
[The 1880s] [The 1930s] [The 1940s] [The 1950s]
[The 1960s] [The 1970s] [The 1980s]



Related Style Pages in the Boys' Historical Web Site
[Smocks] [Berets] [Long pants suits] [Shortpants suits]
[Socks] [Eton suits] [Jacket and trousers]
[Blazer] [School sandals]


Navigate the Boys' Historical Clothing School Uniform Pages
[Australia] [Belgium] [England] [France] [Germany]
[Ireland] [Italy] [Japan] [New Zealand] [Scotland]
[United States]


Navigate the Boys' Historical Clothing Web Page
[Return to the Main Finnish school page]
[Introduction] [Activities] [Biographies] [Chronology] [Clothing styles] [Countries]
[Bibliographies] [Contributions] [FAQs] [Glossaries] [Images] [Links] [Registration] [Tools]
[Boys' Clothing Home]




Created: 7:13 PM 4/1/2009
Last updated: 5:41 PM 9/15/2009