Baby Boomers
Related: About this forumWithout revealing your age....
what is something you remember, that if you told a younger person they wouldn't understand?
I remember flipping thru the Card Catalog at the Library in order to locate a book.
RandySF
(70,954 posts)Along with a half dozen local UHF channels.
SCantiGOP
(14,296 posts)We had two channels until I was about 10.
One thing I remember was that girls were always cautioned to carry a dime with them on a date.....in case their escort tried to take liberties they could call home on a pay phone.
safeinOhio
(34,203 posts)pay phone.
Lunabell
(7,001 posts)Playing outside unchaperoned for hours. Walking and running for miles until the streetlights came on. And fireflies. Remember them?
littlemissmartypants
(25,713 posts)They used to be abundant but I don't think I saw any last summer.
ginnyinWI
(17,276 posts)We have them--live in the suburbs on a one acre lot. We NEVER put any weed killers or anything on our lawn. Maybe that makes the difference. They start up in July and end in September.
littlemissmartypants
(25,713 posts)kimbutgar
(23,460 posts)We didnt have them in San Francisco. They were so fascinating to me. This mean boy once caught one and smeared it on his face leaving a fluorescent glow. Shocked and fascinated by it.
whathehell
(29,840 posts)in my neck of the woods.
littlemissmartypants
(25,713 posts)Best nightlights ever.
whathehell
(29,840 posts)with holes in the lid for breathing.. We didn't advance to the point of nightlights, though.
brush
(57,941 posts)Last edited Sat Mar 4, 2017, 12:04 PM - Edit history (1)
no parents, no fear on Halloween night.
Then finally coming home with a big bag of candy and fruit, some unwrapped, and yelling "trick or treat" to mom who knew who it was at the door.
Butterflylady
(4,007 posts)634-5789
(4,318 posts)Yeah. Wow!~ Now kids don't even go out around here and they have these 'business visits'. At my age i still cannot remember one incident of razor blades in candy, or some other harmful candy inserts. But, parents don't want their kids going it alone.
femmedem
(8,449 posts)and tadpoles, find old cow skulls in the woods, play on rusted, abandoned farm equipment, come home with bouquets of Queen Anne's lace and clover.
I wouldn't be who I am today without those hours of solitary exploration.
Amaryllis
(9,819 posts)woods behind the neighborhood...exploring for many blocks in every direction. I had a control freak mom and she never even worried or tracked where we were. It was safe then.
pangaia
(24,324 posts)Freddie
(9,725 posts)They finally changed the rule when I was in 8th grade.
Also being FORCED to take "home ec" in 9th grade while boys got an elective period! That got changed before I graduated.
Not from the Bible Belt either - suburban Philly.
SwissTony
(2,560 posts)while we boys had to do woodwork. Home ec back then seemed to be mainly cooking. I'm much better in the kitchen than I am in the workshop. I couldn't cut a simple piece of timber square until I reached the age of ** (old).
PJMcK
(22,967 posts)The girls had a half year of Home Economics using the classroom with numerous kitchen set ups. The other half of the year the class learned sewing, knitting and the like. Meanwhile, the boys had half a year of wood shop and half a year of metal shop. My grade was the last year for that segregation; the following year, the new co-ed classes spent a quarter of the year in each of those four disciplines.
As a boy, I loved the shop classes. The wood shop was terrific and I still have two of the projects I made: a jewelry box and a lamp. We learned architectural drawing which I've used throughout my life whenever I had a home improvement project. Likewise, the metal shop was infectious and I have an aluminum jar on my desk that I turned on a metal lathe. Those classes were great learning experiences and I'm glad that the school expanded their enrollment to include the girls. Unfortunately, I never did learn to sew but I did learn how to cook!
There's a frightening and curious side story to the metal shop class. The teacher was a great guy who spent extra time with every kid to help make their projects interesting and good learning experiences. He was one of the first teachers I had who rarely answered a question; instead, he would ask leading questions to make the student think through their problem in search of the solution. This cognitive process has stayed with me.
Many years later, after he had retired, a story came out that this former teacher was arrested for having child pornography on his computer. In his plea deal/jail sentence, he turned over evidence of a nationwide child-sex ring that resulted in dozens of arrests and the freeing of dozens of young girls and boys from sexual slavery. It was a strange realization for me that a teacher I had respected and liked could turn out to be such a ghoul.
sarge43
(29,167 posts)For one semester boys took home ec and girls, shop.
randr
(12,485 posts)Boys made shop aprons in home ec and the girls made a sewing kit in wood shop
How disillusioning that must have been -- though I guess you were old enough by then to realize how complicated people are.
tonekat
(2,035 posts)They were all strange in their own way, but the old guy who taught Plastics/Graphic Arts always threatened boys who acted up by saying he was going to "Paint their pecker red, and their ass green". It didn't come off scary in the way he intended it to, it came off pervy.
MadCrow
(155 posts)Except on old clothes day when we could dress anyway we wanted within reason of course. This was in suburban NYC.
demigoddess
(6,675 posts)school, she had to wear a dress. I was second grade too, I think, and I thought the Principal was mean and stupid. The girl wore the prettiest plaid shirts and matching ribbons in her hair.
LenaBaby61
(6,991 posts)Riding to Catholic School with my late older brother in his brand new Monte Carlo as Barry White's "I've Got So much to Give" played loudly on his 8-track tape
HAB911
(9,365 posts)it had a handle to raise the capstan into place and there were twice the 'clunks' as it changed tracks
spooky3
(36,323 posts)mgardener
(1,900 posts)I'd forgotten about those!
And hair dryers remember those old ones ?
And
Dippity Do !
lillypaddle
(9,605 posts)It was green, wasn't it?
mgardener
(1,900 posts)Pink and green.
LakeArenal
(29,845 posts)lillypaddle
(9,605 posts)LOL
tonekat
(2,035 posts)MLAA
(18,653 posts)Just last Wednesday I mentioned dippidity do to my early 30s hairdresser. She had no idea what it was 😃
What a flashback! I remember putting that pink gooey crap on my bangs and then taping them down all night long. LOL
MLAA
(18,653 posts)solara
(3,872 posts)I also ironed my hair
MLAA
(18,653 posts)solara
(3,872 posts)tblue37
(66,035 posts)Last edited Sat Mar 4, 2017, 05:45 PM - Edit history (1)
marzipanni
(6,012 posts)Or used her favorite curling device, a little aluminum tubular thing with a 1/4" tube on one end and a 1/2" tube on the other, both with a slot to insert the end of a strand of hair and roll it up, stick a bobby pin to hold the hair roll, and repeat.
Once my aunt and I gave one of my older brothers a new look for a day by curling the top of his head of hair with 'Spoolies'. We badgered him 'til he gave in.
ShazzieB
(18,850 posts)I can't believe I actually slept on those things for YEARS.
tblue37
(66,035 posts)solara
(3,872 posts)Anyone remember 'spoolies'? The didn't straighten my hair enough, though.. my Mom used them.. she never understood the grape juice cans
Sparkly
(24,352 posts)(Empty, of course.) This was to get smooth, straight, bouncy hair. We'd make a high ponytail and split it in half. Then roll each or two large orange juice cans with half the hair - smoothy - and pin with extra-long bobby pins.
LenaBaby61
(6,991 posts)I remember HATING when people smoked indoors (Grocery Store, or in a restaurant) and I could barely breathe or enjoy my food because everything smelled and tasted like cigarettes
randr
(12,485 posts)TexasProgresive
(12,313 posts)Card catalog and periodical index.
Playing Red Rover, tag, and freeze tag in the streets and neighbor yards.
Riding the ferry across the Mississippi from Gretna to New Orleans and then taking 2 buses home at 8 years old.
Building and flying balsa wood control line model airplanes.
Building and painting plastic models of ships, airplanes and cars.
Mowing lawns for pocket money.
Mostly all kids' activities were organized by kids and no grownups allowed. (as long as we didn't cause trouble)
Going door to door to sell raffle tickets and chocolate bars for fund raisers in neighborhoods that were not ours.
If we wanted to go anywhere, it was walk or bike, forget about getting Mom or Dad to drive you unless it was to church.
Playing board games during the hottest days of summer at the one friend's house with air conditioning.
Collecting soft drink and beer bottles from the side of the road for the deposit money- and sharing a drink (no back drafting allowed) and snacks with each other.
Learning to touch type on a manual typewriter.
There is more but I think I've worn out my welcome.
Response to TexasProgresive (Reply #8)
Kittycow This message was self-deleted by its author.
PJMcK
(22,967 posts)Thanks for stimulating the (mostly) happy memories, TexasProgressive! Enjoy your weekend.
TexasProgresive
(12,313 posts)If so you have 2 feast days this month.
PJMcK
(22,967 posts)I'm Paul Joseph and I ain't no saint! (Just ask my exes!)
But I'll feast any time I can.
TexasProgresive
(12,313 posts)leftofcool
(19,460 posts)littlemissmartypants
(25,713 posts)Here are some things that I remember fondly, being at the tail end of the boomer age bracket:
Family visits where we entertained ourselves with tall tale telling and singing around the piano together.
Waking up to the black and white test pattern.
Getting paid a dollar an hour to baby sit at age nine.
Hootenanny time at the park.
My first transistor radio with the single ear plug.
Learning to crochet, knit, embroider and tat from my grandmother.
Adding to your card catalog memory, the pride of being able to write my name on the card from the envelope in back of a book when checking it out from the library.
Waiting for The Bookmobile at the end of the road in the summer.
Great post, ButSeeYa. Thank you. ♡
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Baby boomers are the demographic group born during the postWorld War II baby boom, approximately between the years 1946 and 1964. This includes people who are between 53 and 71 years old in 2017, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.
gfwzig
(145 posts)SCantiGOP
(14,296 posts)But I also remember the sugar cubes from college in the early 70s that had a drop of LSD-25 on them............
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)the Salk vaccine was deemed safe and effective. I actually attended one of the Catholic schools involved in the testing of the vaccine. My older sister (but not me or our older brother) was in the test cohort. Alas, she was in the non vaccine group. And so I may remember the original Salk vaccine even more vividly than most.
I do remember being line up in a field near where we lived as every child in our neighborhood (and this was in the midst of the Baby Boom) was lined up to get the vaccine. My own mother was a nurse and was somehow involved in this, although after some 60 years I no longer remember the details.
But I do recall how much the Salk vaccine changed every day life.
JetFuel
(3 posts)And arguing when my parents said we wouldn't even remember who they were in a month.
Rhiannon12866
(223,396 posts)I was a kid, didn't know much about them, but she dragged me out in front of the TV and told me that I needed to watch, that this was history. So I actually remember watching that appearance and she was right! Welcome to DU, JetFuel! We're glad to have you with us!
Still Blue in PDX
(1,999 posts)I had never heard of them. It took me many years to appreciate just how savvy my momma was.
hedda_foil
(16,512 posts)People in their generation often had a couple or three kids by the time they were 25. If they were Catholic, the number if kids a couple had by 25 could easily be 5 or 6. So many got married right after high school. If they went to college, the expectation was that the girls be married within a few months of graduation -- if they didn't just drop out of school because they were getting their MRS. sooner. (My mother did that. Two years at Northwestern and married at 20.)
I'm on the invisible tip of the leading edge of the boom ... born between VE and VJ day in 1945. When husbands did war work or trained soldiers at posts in the states, a lot of them got pregnant after D Day in Europe, when the war turned decisively in the allies favor. My dad was 4F because he was allergic to something in the lunch they served the boys who were reporting for the draft. By the time he got to the medical exam, he was in the throes of a horrendous migraine which kept him out of the army. He worked as an engineer on airplane radios and weather balloons instead.
We had huge classes in school -- 40-45 kids per teacher, often in split grades. Of course, as soon as the vets came home, they couldn't build schools fast enough for years.
whathehell
(29,840 posts)I was only seven years old, but absolutely loved him!
RKP5637
(67,112 posts)gopiscrap
(24,203 posts)mgardener
(1,900 posts)To wear pants to school or work!
Not being able to attend Notre Dame University, all male school at the time!
And...
Washing dishes by hand, no dishwasher!
Black and white tv, no color!
Remember first electric can opener my dad bought for my mom.
sarge43
(29,167 posts)No television (not in our home anyway), radios ran on vacuum tubes, did advance math calculating with a slide rule, time pieces ran on gears. Yes, computers existed, but they had no effect on our lives. Everyone of them in existence had less memory combined than this desk top.
dhol82
(9,457 posts)They just got plugged in.
There was a tv show in the early fifties that had you put a plastic film over the tv and then you would draw on it in erasable marker to get the 'secret' picture.
I completely forgot the name of the show.
Squinch
(53,038 posts)I must have seen it in reruns because I was born after 57.
"Winky dink and me, winky dink and you,
always have a lot of fun together, (da da da)
winky dink and me, winky dink and you,
always fun in rain or sunny weather."
rzemanfl
(30,293 posts)"The program was successful because of its pioneering interactive marketing scheme, and Winky Dink became one of television's most popular characters of the 1950s. However, the show's production was halted despite its popularity because of concerns about x-rays from TV picture tubes. This was particularly true for early color television sets. CBS was also concerned about parents' complaints that children who didn't possess the interactive screen were drawing directly on the TV screen.
The show was revived in syndication for 65 episodes beginning in 1969 and ending in 1973. In the 1990s, a new "Winky Dink Kit" was sold containing a screen, crayons, and all-new digitized Winky Dink and You episodes.
Squinch
(53,038 posts)I can also remember the entire "Buster Brown Shoes" song.
rzemanfl
(30,293 posts)Squinch
(53,038 posts)rzemanfl
(30,293 posts)Squinch
(53,038 posts)rickford66
(5,681 posts)rzemanfl
(30,293 posts)EarnestPutz
(2,647 posts)And Froggie would say "....and you put it on your head".
Which Bob would do and then say "Oh no, froggie, look at
what you made me do!!!". After which Froggie would pluck
his magic twanger and disappear in a cloud of smoke.
ailsagirl
(23,843 posts)tonekat
(2,035 posts)Oh yes, I remember that one well.
ailsagirl
(23,843 posts)After all these years I still recall that!
solara
(3,872 posts)Infamous 1978 Drunk Driving TV Ad - Husband and wife fighting in the back ground as kid plays with toy car. Guy stumbles out the front door Wife yells to hubby's back as the front door slams shut: "DON'T TAKE THE CAR YOU'LL KILL YOURSELF!!"
whathehell
(29,840 posts)I think the name of that TV show was Winky Dink.
sarge43
(29,167 posts)Dad was in charge of replacing the dead in the radio. It was in a cabinet which was about 5 feet tall .. with dials.
Oh yeah, 78 records. BFD when stereos and LPs came out. Could listen to a complete symphony without changing out the records every five minutes.
Beartracks
(13,606 posts)========================
sarge43
(29,167 posts)dhol82
(9,457 posts)I had always thought of it as so cheap. The pack cost me over $20.
Guess it's now a specialty item.
sarge43
(29,167 posts)It brings back some painful memories -- manual typewriter, multi copies, carbon paper, typo ... mother $@*%!
RKP5637
(67,112 posts)paragraph ... and then those times of the smudges on carbon paper, then on my fingers, and then accidentally touching the white paper and ruining it. Yep!!!! mother $@*%!
Freedomofspeech
(4,382 posts)Sitting at night in the dorm...retyping a paper if you made one typographical error,
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)I had a temp typing job when I was about 18. I spent the entire day typing up one document, because I kept on making a mistake somewhere. Erase wasn't allowed.
Among the reasons I love computers, is that I can make a mistake and backspace to erase it, as I've done many times in typing this entry.
tonekat
(2,035 posts)The Word Processor!
Suddenly, everyone started overwriting!
pangaia
(24,324 posts)dhol82
(9,457 posts)They only had the one choice.
I remember the horrors of typing with it but loved the onion skin paper that was used for the copies.
I am using it for a design project.
tblue37
(66,035 posts)sarge43
(29,167 posts)tblue37
(66,035 posts)PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)by looking through the window of a neighbor's house, the only one in our neighborhood who had a TV.
CountAllVotes
(21,093 posts)Used the old skills of add, subtract & multiply.
I filled the forms out, signed them and mailed them in. No more TurdoTax for me!
Useless in my case as I have little income to report sadly.
Oh well ...
WiffenPoof
(2,404 posts)...grandson about the Beatles.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)about Paul McCartney, and explaining he used to belong to some other group, called the Beatles.
Chasstev365
(5,191 posts)Today, companies would sue and kids wouldn't find them funny.
rpannier
(24,585 posts)Not so much wouldn't understand as find weird or amazing
Milk Man Delivery
Turning in pop bottles for money
Cash registers that the clerk had to push the little levers and the numbers would pop up at the top (no computer anything)
Wandering around and seeing what there was to do that we thought was fun
Mid-rift shirts on boys and girls when I was in jr high
Getting a driver's license at 16 and no need for an adult in the car
TV stations signing off between midnight and 2 am
TV shows that began with "In living color"
No round the clock football during the fall
Movie theaters with only one screen
Balconies in movie theaters
Drive-in theaters
Rotary phones
Calling information and getting a real person
Calling any store or company and a rteal person ansered, not a recording telling me to push 1
GP6971
(33,280 posts)2naSalit
(93,100 posts)unless it was long distance calling, then you needed the operator to make the call.
rpannier
(24,585 posts)That was our number when I was young.
373 - in Sou Cal was Frontier
2naSalit
(93,100 posts)in rural Maine. By the time we went to NH you had to use 7 digits. It was in 2002 that I discovered you had to use all ten +1 to call in the same city (at that time it was Portland, OR) due to massive cell phone use.
happy feet
(1,109 posts)Watching the moon landing on black and white tv
Watching huckleberry hound and other cartoons weekday eves after washing dinner dishes and as a family
Playing street game - mother may I? Hide and seek, jacks, double Dutch...
Block parties
Drive in movie theatres
anxiously awaiting to see wizard of oz every Feb 22nd on black and white tv
Movie theatres had cartoon first before movie and if you missed the beginning you could stay in theatre for next showing
Ice cream man excitement
Sitting still with baby powder all over our bodies when extremely hot (of course no air conditioners)
GeoWilliam750
(2,540 posts)Smoking sections on airplanes
babylonsister
(171,657 posts)Trust me, it was haute couture.
malthaussen
(17,738 posts)-- Mal
Cooley Hurd
(26,877 posts)pangaia
(24,324 posts)dhol82
(9,457 posts)Collecting newspapers and old clothes to take to the rag seller for candy money.
Going to the movies for 25 cents and seeing two features, a newsreel, and several animated cartoons.
Walking home from school for lunch at the age of seven - and then back to school for the afternoon.
Having an air conditioner only in my parents bedroom and then hanging a big sheet over the stairwell so we could have the whole upstairs cooled down.
tobefree
(33 posts)With no expectation of getting out of it.
Response to tobefree (Reply #26)
littlemissmartypants This message was self-deleted by its author.
Rhiannon12866
(223,396 posts)He'd roll down the window and say "Fill it, please, regular." The same thing every time.
SCantiGOP
(14,296 posts)And, in what I thought was the coolest thing ever, when they were busy they didn't mind if he got out and pumped his own gas !
Rhiannon12866
(223,396 posts)He was not a fan of pumping his own gas, I believe my mother usually took his car and did it for him.
doc03
(36,813 posts)to grandmas house 120 miles round trip and have enough left to drive to work all week.
Rhiannon12866
(223,396 posts)We were going to stop for gas - but it was 47-cents! She said that we could definitely get it cheaper elsewhere!
doc03
(36,813 posts)15 cents for a gallon of gas.
Rhiannon12866
(223,396 posts)I didn't drive yet back then, but at $2.69 most places right now - even here in New York! - it sounds pretty reasonable to me!
tonekat
(2,035 posts)You didn't have to ask to have your windshield washed.
And the aroma of leaded gas! I loved it!
tonekat
(2,035 posts)democrank
(11,250 posts)Hiding under my grammar school desk during an "air raid drill"
Using someone's hand-crank telephone which had a "party line"
Putting a sheet of colored plastic (or cellophane) over television screen to go from black and white to color
Seeing cars with "rumble seats
Having a cast iron hand pump in the kitchen sink
Having a milk man leave glass bottles of milk (with cream on top) on the front steps
Having a "Bond's Bread" salesman come to the house each week and wishing we had enough money for the doughnuts in his giant pull-out truck tray
Freddie
(9,725 posts)Sold Sunbeam bread and other baked goods. Back when many families (like mine) only had one car and Mom was stuck home all day. The bread man also sold 5 cent and 10 cent candy to us kids. We'd smack the Turkish Taffy (vanilla was the best!) on the sidewalk so it would break in little pieces.
randr
(12,485 posts)Wagons being horse drawn. Also the old steam engine trains.
bullimiami
(13,996 posts)And the Charles Chips guy that brought giant cans of amazing potato chips and cookies.
dhol82
(9,457 posts)Remember the wooden crates.
griloco
(842 posts)dchill
(40,647 posts)PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)He died in 1999.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)How amazing is that?
Sancho
(9,106 posts)- Adjusting the antenna, or even turning a motored directional antenna on top of a tall pole, to get one of three channels: ABC, NBC, or CBS
- Using a slide rule for math computations in chemistry class
- Handing everyone a fan at church or some indoor events like school plays because there was no air conditioning
- keeping bottles of "white out", memeograph paper, ribbons, a dictionary, a ruler in a box in order to type term papers and reports
- trilled to get a 9-volt, AM only transistor radio for a Christmas present, and using it to hear that Kennedy had been shot while at school (on WTMA in Charleston, SC)
- building a concrete bomb shelter in the back yard, and stocking it with canned food in case of an nuclear war with Russia
- several file folders of paper maps from everywhere I traveled, charts from sailing trips, and booked street maps of cities; but you could get "Triptics" printed from AAA!
- Actually looking forward to the update column of World Book Encyclopedia to come every year or so
- separate black and white waiting rooms at the dentist office
- an entire bookcase in my office of decks of computer cards with programs to be read on a mainframe, and buying an Apple II+ for $1300 in 1978 with 4K (yes; thousands) of memory and writing programs in Basic! No word procession or spreadsheets - but VERY exciting!!
- I owned an Apple II+, IIE, IIC, Osborn I, TRS80, and Franklin 1200...and one of the first Macs!! Years after I left college
- Driving most cars without automatic transmissions and no air conditioning; also a school bus and dump truck - all with clutches. I still have a manual pick up truck!
- lawn darts, whirly gigs, incredible edibles, cap guns, pong
Maeve
(43,006 posts)Onto the tablet that we use for travel
The excitment of a personal computer--a Commodore 64. Bought my husband a new monitor at Target for Valentine's Day one year. Before that, the fanciest piece of electronics was a Bowmar Brain, an early calculator.
We made all the kids learn to drive a manual--just heard of a car theft that failed because the thief couldn't drive stick!
Creepy Crawlers.
Sancho
(9,106 posts)Yep, my brother and I loved the thing maker!!
Silver Gaia
(4,897 posts)hand-drawing ads for it
trying to keep my mini-skirt pulled down enough to keep my garters from showing
wearing pantyhose for the first time
zeusdogmom
(1,051 posts)I was co-editor of the school yearbook. Spent many hours in a small and unventilated room using rubber cement to secure pictures and script to the paste up pages. The script was typed of course on manual typewriters.
Silver Gaia
(4,897 posts)I did the school newspaper and the lit journal... Loved it!
randr
(12,485 posts)My stomach aches thinking about it.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)Like you, I started my (semi)adult life with stockings and garters. Luckily for me, the transition to panty hose happened soon thereafter. Skirts got shorter.
I'm somewhat fascinated to have realized that in recent years stockings in any form have almost totally disappeared.
DinahMoeHum
(22,507 posts)when I was starting a career in international logistics/transportation by ocean freight.
GP6971
(33,280 posts)it was backspace, backspace and the start over.
bullimiami
(13,996 posts)Magical.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)I had a job that required sending information by teletype. It sometimes took three or four hours to correctly type out the information without typos that would render it invalid. ARRRGGGG! How I HATED that part of the job.
tonekat
(2,035 posts)It was glassed off from the rest of the office, and had a little latched window you could open up to talk to the person in charge. The glass was that kind that looks like it has chickenwire embedded in it.
He'd go in there making his rounds of all the departments, and it must have been 120 db in there. Tons of punched paper ribbon all over the place. Pre-OSHA. It was in an old furniture factory, and his office had a curved glass block wall.
bucolic_frolic
(47,313 posts)it actually wasn't that long ago, but you know some remote areas
were behind the times for many decades
Squinch
(53,038 posts)With the toys. Flipping through it with my sisters to see what kinds of toys were out there.
sarge43
(29,167 posts)The record of Americana in the 20th century
Freedomofspeech
(4,382 posts)Lined with locally owned clothing stores, shoe stores, a meat market, Mcrorys and Woolworths, etc. We never had to leave town to buy anything! My Mom and I would walk uptown to shop and have a hot fudge sundae in Candyland...now those stores are all empty. We walked to school, home for lunch and would watch Search for Tomorrow and Guiding Light (15 min. live soaps) with my Mom and then walk back to school for the afternoon. Life was good and then Vietnam happened and my brother was killed in a plane crash...nothing was ever the same again.
RKP5637
(67,112 posts)battle ever since in so many ways.
Freedomofspeech
(4,382 posts)When this country decided bigger is better it all changed. Malls killed the downtowns and consolidation of schools hurt public education...as a retired educator, I witnessed this...
lillypaddle
(9,605 posts)and speaking of paper, no one thinking anything about your lunch trash being tossed out of the car window. Littering? What was that?
marzipanni
(6,012 posts)And once my dad picked up all the paper cups, containers, napkins, bags, etc. that the customers of the little drive-up seasonal restaurant down the street generated and tossed in our neighborhood, and gave a paper grocery bag full of it to the manager, saying, "I think this is yours". They hired a kid with a bag and a stick with a nail on the end to pick up trash for a while.
TuxedoKat
(3,821 posts)Too many people litter in this country.
padfun
(1,857 posts)They had the atomic sign. I think they started to disappear around 1970 or so.
whathehell
(29,840 posts)Already shocked my niece with that one.
k8conant
(3,034 posts)whathehell
(29,840 posts)whathehell
(29,840 posts)Those fell by the time wayside, didn't they?
ShazzieB
(18,850 posts)...so I remember FOUR categories of classified job ads:
-- Help wanted male - white
-- Help wanted female - white
-- Help wanted male - colored
-- Help wanted female - colored
Just typing that made me shudder!
whathehell
(29,840 posts)I grew up in the North and never saw that..
Did these appear after the passage of Civil Rights Laws in the mid-Sixties?
Shanti Mama
(1,288 posts)Not liking all the buttons on my everyday tops.
IronLionZion
(47,036 posts)Thank God America is more diverse now. You don't even realize.
Trying to find something at a restaurant or find some recipe that doesn't suck to feed your one vegetarian (for religious reasons) friend. There are lots more vegetarians and options to feed them now.
Always have to carry a quarter with you for the pay phone. Which got screwed up when they raised the price to 35 cents. But now good luck finding a pay phone.
Being stranded somewhere without a ride home. Now, we can always get an uber/lyft in many neighborhoods, even small cities and suburbs.
FuzzyRabbit
(2,097 posts)And air mail stamps were (I think) 5 cents. Regular mail was 3 cents as I recall.
A fast food burger was 19 cents, the deluxe burger with tomato and lettuce was 29 cents.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)Yep. They cost a penny and could be sent anywhere in the country. When I was perhaps 10 or 12, the penny post card cost 2 cents. At some point they were discontinued entirely.
Oh, and I am surely older than you as I remember fast food burgers costing 15 cents. Which, according to an on line inflation calculator, is still less than $1.25, and you cannot buy a fast food burger for that low an amount these days.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)I had NO IDEA that pay phones ever went above 25 cents. And I'm old enough to recall when they were 10 cents. Never knew 5 cent call.
I'm also old enough to recall when pay phones were common. And young enough that I missed the era when signs saying "Pay phone inside" helped people find a pay phone. Apparently, before the 1950's, certain businesses would have pay phones inside, and might choose to advertise that. At some point, stand alone pay phones outside of businesses became common, the pay phones of my youth, that you young'uns don't recall.
IronLionZion
(47,036 posts)which is highway robbery. But I don't believe I've used a pay phone in the last 15 years. And we don't see many of them anymore as everyone has cell phones.
If I really want to feel old, I can remember when international calls had to be booked by appointment with the phone company. And if my grandparents weren't home when we called, it might be another few days or a week before we could try again.
tonekat
(2,035 posts)I remember when an older kid showed me how to unscrew the mouthpiece on a pay phone and touch the two screws behind the microphone to ground the circuit on the hook to get a dial tone.
Then they started making them so you could not unscrew them.
NeoGreen
(4,033 posts)Hoyt
(54,770 posts)JDC
(10,512 posts)sarge43
(29,167 posts)Shoe repair shops
terip64
(1,583 posts)so we could make prank calls without worrying that anyone could hear us laugh. Not nice, but fun! We also didn't have to worry about caller ID back then!
RKP5637
(67,112 posts)jarhead69
(8 posts)During a storm there was a huge flash of lighting, a clap of thunder that shook the house and the town air raid siren starting sounding. My mother thought it was the end of the world.
El Viejo
(26 posts)Your phone was on a party line.
wcast
(595 posts)mikeargo
(680 posts)Getting up to change the channel on the TV
'Ditto' papers in school
Some Republicans weren't assholes
Noon whistle at the fire station
NHL was 99% Canadian (and only six teams)
iamateacher
(1,104 posts)Where you hid under your desk....
randr
(12,485 posts)During Nuke drill, standing with hands behind back against wall in basement cafeteria, I get smacked by teacher for talking. I respond by telling him that if I thought this was a real bomb alert my ass is heading home to be with my mother. I was dragged by my ear to the principles office to await my mothers appearance where my wish was granted.
My mother waited until we were in the car to thank me for thinking of her.
bullimiami
(13,996 posts)tech3149
(4,452 posts)You could tell by the ring code who was getting a phone call and back then phone calls were mostly important.
tblue37
(66,035 posts)I could name a million of these things!
mchill
(1,094 posts)Louis1895
(779 posts)What? A Republican put country before party?
zeusdogmom
(1,051 posts)It was orange in the tube but kind of pink on your lips
Creme deodorant which came in a small jar and you applied to your underarms with your fingers
Perhaps TMI but sanitary products wrapped in plain brown paper located behind the druggist's counter. Plus you had to ask for them. Very embarrassing to a young teen.
sarge43
(29,167 posts)VCS has a lot of the old timey stuff - trip down memory land.
Alpeduez21
(1,865 posts)Walking through a neighborhood everyday putting the paper in each door. Then on Saturdays collection the money and giving the little rec torn from the book. Cursing the post office everyday federal holiday because they got the day off and Saturdays and Sundays.
Not wearing seat belts or using car seats.
Drive in movies
Getting hit by teachers in school and everyone was OK with that. Catholic school, of course.
pinboy3niner
(53,339 posts)The five and dime usually had a lunch counter, and ours had a popcorn machine that filled the whole store with the aroma of popcorn.
Bank and gas station premiums like a free toaster for opening a bank account and a drinking glass with gas fillup.
I remember getting free goldfish from the bank next to the Woolworth 5 and 10. The bank sent out small pieces of card stock in mailings. Kids lined up at the bank to insert the cards into a machine that determined if you were a winner, and a winner got a goldfish in a small bowl.
Free dinner plates in boxes of Duz laundry detergent.
GP6971
(33,280 posts)Everything entered in the passbook by hand.
AJT
(5,240 posts)sarge43
(29,167 posts)Two or three ran and hid somewhere or were damaged. Not getting out at quitting time today.
AJT
(5,240 posts)an emergency stand alone in the 80s.
randr
(12,485 posts)Took an hour to get computer to print my name.
mchill
(1,094 posts)dhol82
(9,457 posts)At least that's what I seem to remember. It just seems so odd.
sinkingfeeling
(53,129 posts)GP6971
(33,280 posts)malthaussen
(17,738 posts)... I think one of the more difficult things to understand today was how blase everyone was about personal risk. Smoking everywhere, no helmets or other armor for riding bicycles, skates, etc... to say nothing of pollution pre-EPA. One might reasonably question if we had no respect for human life.
-- Mal
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)By the early 1950's, and much earlier for the most part. Cigarettes were commonly called coffin nails.
The truly sad thing is that all these years later, more than fifty years after the Surgeon General's Report (and if you're too young to recognize the reference, then LOOK IT UP) smokers are still in total denial about the proven dangers of smoking. Oh, and if you don't think smoking can affect your health, then go to a high school class reunion, say 35th reunion or higher. You will have NO trouble figuring out who the smokers and the nonsmokers are. And that's only for those who are still living.
northoftheborder
(7,610 posts)"Oleo" which was white but came with a yellow dye to color it to look like butter (food rationing)
Thin stationery for writing letters to send "Air Mail". All others went by truck. Calling long distance expensive - for emergencies only.
Record player with 78's, then vinyl
No air conditioning, ran barefoot all summer
Hanging clothes outside to dry.
Mrs. Overall
(6,839 posts)bullimiami
(13,996 posts)aka-chmeee
(1,177 posts)from the Mimeograph.
bullimiami
(13,996 posts)dhol82
(9,457 posts)Probably toxic as hell.
Dream Girl
(5,111 posts)Polly Hennessey
(7,492 posts)Playing kick-the-can until dusk when mom would call us for dinner.
Riding bike without a helmet.
Skates that had to be tightened with a key.
Tomato Aspic - oh, dear.
Spending afternoons actually reading books for pleasure.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)Freddie
(9,725 posts)The barbershop, an appliance store, a mom and pop grocery, a corner tavern, a shoe store. Mom didn't work and Dad could support a family with his business. Now all these businesses are gone and we have nothing but chains.
Freedomofspeech
(4,382 posts)And communities in general.
CanonRay
(14,901 posts)mercuryblues
(15,166 posts)He came every week and sold anything from diapers to furniture and dishes. Butcher shops and bakeries were plentiful.
CrispyQ
(38,445 posts)Even my cousins who lived in the city didn't know what that was.
dhol82
(9,457 posts)littlemissmartypants
(25,713 posts)GP6971
(33,280 posts)to the house. Unloaded to the coal bin in the basement.
Faux pas
(15,394 posts)the back yard incinerator in SoCal before there was smog.
lapfog_1
(30,225 posts)while in high school (very progressive for that era).
GWC58
(2,678 posts)when I was in elementary school we too had computers; an abacus! With a wondering look in his eyes he asked "what's that?" I told him to "look it up."
dchill
(40,647 posts)CountAllVotes
(21,093 posts)Used to drive in to a place to buy milk, orange juice, yogurt and other dairy products. The milk came in glass bottles at that time and we'd take a steel rack filled with empty bottles in and buy a new round of what was needed for the week. It was an early form of recycling but no one viewed it that way at the time (c. 1960).
I used to loved drive ins! Esp. the movie theaters! Those were fun fun fun!
WePurrsevere
(24,259 posts)It's like taking a trip back in time... the food, the mosquito coils, etc. Most I've been too even still play some of the same concession stand ads between movies too.
Freddie
(9,725 posts)There was one in the basement of the hospital (!) where I worked in the 80s and 90s, next to the soda and candy machines. They eventually removed it.
gademocrat7
(11,193 posts)littlemissmartypants
(25,713 posts)Each student bring a cigar box to school with scissors, crayons and pencils. To be kept in your desk at school. I threw a fit in protest because I wasn't allowed to bring it back home. I loved that cigar box and all it meant because there was No Kindergarten in our school system.
Mrs. Mink was my teacher's name and as far as I was concerned, she.was a super hero. But she wouldn't let me take that cigar box home.
pnwmom
(109,607 posts)littlemissmartypants
(25,713 posts)Before smokes were as regulated. They were in most stores, shops. Irrc.
pnwmom
(109,607 posts)Historic NY
(37,969 posts)FuzzyRabbit
(2,097 posts)Historic NY
(37,969 posts)they never need service, batteries, work if the power is out, can't lose them, and the phone company has to maintain the lines.
WePurrsevere
(24,259 posts)Praying like crazy to find a phone booth when your car is giving you trouble
Snow locally deep enough that, while dangerous, you could tunnel and crawl around in it without piling it up first
10-4
The button on the floor to switch your headlights from high to low
Going door to door to collect bottles to get some spending cash
Waiting for the TV to warm up to watch a show
A moose who likes knock knock jokes and ping pong balls
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)The cameras in the studios also needed warming up. If you've ever looked at the first reports of the JFK assassination, especially on CBS, the reason first reports are audio only, and only after a half our or so go to video, is because the television cameras needed a half hour to warm up. So while you can hear Walter Cronkite's voice at first, you don't finally see him until those cameras have had the time needed to warm up.
WePurrsevere
(24,259 posts)since I'm going to guess that they too were powered by tubes similar to TV's and older radios? I remember going into certain stores with my dad and there was a big display and a 'table' where you could plug in and test the tubes used in the old electronics.
I was absolutely fascinated by it, heck all electronics, but my dad, a GE accountant, wasn't into it at all and back then and as a 'girl' I was discouraged by him to pursue that interest.
Now there's something else that was much more common back then, gender roles. Sadly it and equality issues in general are still way to prevalent, but it's much less than it was. Unfortunately those strides forward seem to have some of the more fragile white sexist, racist, etc male egos threatened enough that they're desperately trying to undo much of it but I still have hope that we'll prevail against them and those types will become, if not as 'extinct as the dodo bird', 'as rare as hen's teeth'.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)Lebam in LA
(1,360 posts)Helms Bakery trucks
Milk man delivering milk, eggs and sometimes we even got chocolate milk (special occasions)
Jewel-T man, Fuller Brush man
Leaving the house early morning and not returning until just before dark, walking miles to get to the beach, Del Amo shopping center
No 405 freeway, Pacific Ocean Park
Chicken coops, outhouses
Party lines, rotary phones, Prefixes with 5 digit phone numbers. I still remember our # FR 55492
Getting all our vaccinations at the school cafeteria
Polio outbreaks, being purposely exposed to measles, mumps and chicken pox (better to get as a kid was the thinking back then)
Carrying jugs to the spring to bring home drinking water
Trick or Treating until mid-night without adults
Trick or Treating with adults and them getting shots of liquor as their treats
So many things have changed. Some good, some bad
tonekat
(2,035 posts)LOL, I remember in the 70s, a neighbor showing up in a sheet that said "Trick or Beer!"
He got his beer and came in for awhile.
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)missingthebigdog
(1,233 posts)The recording said:
The time is 10:12 a.m. The tem per a ture is 49.
Usually sponsored by a local bank.
CountAllVotes
(21,093 posts)Remember that by chance? I sure do!
littlemissmartypants
(25,713 posts)Hoyt
(54,770 posts)modern version), segregated facilities and restaurants, no TV, and much more -- some good, some bad.
Lefthacker
(264 posts)With actual "wood" woods. And high school baseball with wood bats.
JenniferJuniper
(4,548 posts)the joy of freshly mimeographed paper.
Freethinker65
(11,150 posts)liberalmuse
(18,876 posts)Which was freshly mimeographed and still warm and damp.
JenniferJuniper
(4,548 posts)DesertRat
(27,995 posts)No answering machine, corded phone.
MFM008
(20,008 posts)Superballs. Hula hoops. All metal easy bake ovens. Staying out all day and not getting kidnapped or killed.
1st run Star Treks...
randr
(12,485 posts)indicated what you needed the milk man to deliver that day.
In my case the milk "wagon" was actually horse drawn.
democrank
(11,250 posts)Kick
dewsgirl
(14,964 posts)is a hilarious concept. My son got a big laugh out of the fact I had one.
GP6971
(33,280 posts)The Velveteen Ocelot
(121,224 posts)Listening to kids' shows on the radio.
Watching Saturday morning TV shows when we finally got a TV - The Lone Ranger, Sky King, Andy's Gang, etc.
Being sent to the bakery with a quarter to buy a loaf of bread.
Playing outside in the summer until it got dark and we heard the curfew siren.
Having to watch The Lawrence Welk Show whenever Grandma visited.
Roller skates that clamped on to your shoes; you used a key to tighten the clamps.
Slide rules.
Sonic booms.
GP6971
(33,280 posts)LakeArenal
(29,845 posts)sarge43
(29,167 posts)Amazing any of us are still alive.
lunasun
(21,646 posts)SCantiGOP
(14,296 posts)But it would turn your fingers black.
tonekat
(2,035 posts)...in my mouth.
And, of course, got to play with the mercury after.
Bernardo de La Paz
(51,088 posts)GP6971
(33,280 posts)where you had a account and free delivery
CountAllVotes
(21,093 posts)Still that is!
LisaM
(28,687 posts)Republicans and Democrats in side by side booths at the county fair getting along.
randr
(12,485 posts)The sounds the trains made a night in switching yards. Steam engines with bells and whistles.
C_U_L8R
(45,729 posts)Crazy Foam, Silly Putty, TV Dinners,
Black and White TV, Ubby-Dubby....
"why don't you go outside and play... just remember to come home for dinner"
GregD
(2,263 posts)The operator (makes me think of Lily Tomlin's Laugh-In character Ernestine) answered the phone and literally had to plug cords in to transfer a call.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)and we were utterly convinced she was one of us.
I saw many an operator who had that hairdo, who thrust her hand into her bosom just like that.
Some years later I learned she'd never been an operator, which was somewhat disconcerting.
Laffy Kat
(16,529 posts)In my neighborhood nobody's yard was off limits, except maybe that older childless couple. Someone else mentioned a free-range childhood and that was absolutely my experience. In the summer we played from the moment we awoke until it got dark enough for our mom's to call us in each night. I can remember my older sister taking me at least a half a mile from home to explore the spillway tunnels!
gopiscrap
(24,203 posts)gopiscrap
(24,203 posts)ginnyinWI
(17,276 posts)I can still take a paper and pencil and do long division. My 34 year old, Masters' Degreed, school psychologist daughter cannot, and was amazed to see me doing it!
I also took slide rule in middle school. Slide rule!! lol
WhiteTara
(30,193 posts)and putting saran wrap on the tv screen to help rocky and bullwinkle.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)but if need be I can still do some pretty impressive long division by hand.
gopiscrap
(24,203 posts)gopiscrap
(24,203 posts)dhol82
(9,457 posts)You couldn't buy anything on Sunday.
FuzzyRabbit
(2,097 posts)We couldn't buy anything except food from restaurants or the rare small grocery.
Big grocery stores, gas stations, department stores, hardware stores, pharmacies, dry cleaners, shopping malls, etc, were all closed. I remember looking for an open gas station in Seattle, summer 1973. We finally found one.
gopiscrap
(24,203 posts)unblock
(54,196 posts)not "republicans who are liberal by republican standards" but republicans who are actually liberals, more liberal than many democrats.
hard to imagine these days....
SCantiGOP
(14,296 posts)Most Democrats were racist tea party assholes, but Southerners still voted Dem like the unions and inner cities and Catholics did because we could never vote for the party of Lincoln.
I remember when the Viet Nam protests were in full bloom many of the heroes in the Senate who were trying to end the war were GOP. Many of them were from the West Coast.
littlemissmartypants
(25,713 posts)50 Shades Of Blue
(10,897 posts)PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)The rerun season was (I might have this wrong) 20 weeks. So not all episodes would show up in reruns. I well remember the frustration of hoping a specific episode would be rerun, and wasn't.
littlemissmartypants
(25,713 posts)I realize how much I have forgotten. Really great idea, this was! Thanks again, ButSeeYa. ♡
Sedona
(3,821 posts)so you could have some privacy while you talk. Mine reached from the kitchen to the garage and the other way out to the patio
Motley13
(3,867 posts)record stores, you & friends went into a booth, put on a 78, danced & left w/o buying anything
SCantiGOP
(14,296 posts)I had an elective and knew that the class was almost all female, so that was the attraction.
Little did I know that it would possibly be the most useful class I ever took in High School.
mchill
(1,094 posts)bullimiami
(13,996 posts)Seriously why do I remember a phone # from 50 years ago?
mchill
(1,094 posts)Motley13
(3,867 posts)radical noodle
(8,742 posts)pinboy3niner
(53,339 posts)FuzzyRabbit
(2,097 posts)k8conant
(3,034 posts)rzemanfl
(30,293 posts)sagesnow
(2,872 posts)will be forever etched in my brain.
WheelWalker
(9,202 posts)if you got out of class to do it... a punishment if you had to stay after school to do it.
Mrs. Overall
(6,839 posts)Clacking them together until they shatter everywhere!
I did enjoy my purple clackers on a long white string. Mine never did shatter--luckily.
GregD
(2,263 posts)I'm a programmer, and when I started this stuff, that's what all of our data was recorded upon
Binkie The Clown
(7,911 posts)And this is what a "program" looked like:
Later we moved up to AUTOCODER on the 1400 series and finally COBOL on the S/360
Amaryllis
(9,819 posts)use before i had to retype the whole darn page.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)for extra money.
I threw in various dumb jokes along the way. And was never caught by anyone, not the kids I typed for and definitely not the teachers. Although, come to think of it, the teachers knew I was the one doing the typing and probably gave us all a pass.
Lint Head
(15,064 posts)names such as Haldeman, Ehrlichman, Henry Cabot Lodge and others that would be obscure to a younger person watching or listening to the news. My son is in his twenties and very interested in what's going on today. But when names like that are mentioned and certain things that I experienced, maybe during the JFK assassination or Watergate or McCarthyism, or someone are a reporter is trying to make a point using those references I know he doesn't understand the totality of the discussion. He will ask me what they mean sometimes though he is very smart.
wcmagumba
(3,199 posts)in my small town we had one of these across the street in a residential neighborhood. It seems like there was one every few blocks. The lady and her family lived in the back of the store near us, it had the big curved glass counters with candy and cigs, groceries with unsure dates on them, pop in glass bottles. I used to ride my bike between these while delivering Grit newspapers...(that's another one that is gone).
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)local convenience store and redeem it a week later. They made a difference in my life back then.
GentryDixon
(3,017 posts)to use the Encyclopedia Britannica for research.
I loved going there, which led me to my love of reading. Years ago I belonged to the Literary Guild for my books, but with the advent of BN and other such stores I got away from ordering from them.
I am an old gal, and not ashamed to admit it. The alternative is my darling departed sister.
oldtime dfl_er
(6,993 posts)and Fireball XL-5
lapucelle
(19,543 posts)Ron Obvious
(6,261 posts)It's still great for camping, etc.
Tastes pretty much how I remember.
Va Lefty
(6,252 posts)lunasun
(21,646 posts)Eddie Anderson his voice got damaged as a kid hawking out loud selling newspapers That's how he happened to sound that way
Benny gave him some of the better joke lines and you can stay at his mansion
https://www.bedandbreakfast.com/ca-los-angeles-therochestermansion.html#img-8
Remember Benny's safe ? I think it was in the basement with alligators? Or down a tunnel?
Va Lefty
(6,252 posts)sarge43
(29,167 posts)Jack, "Wwweelllllll........"
Followed by the live audience laughing for at least minutes
Basement as memory serves, accompanied by hilarious sound effects, creaking doors, echoes, chains
Basic LA
(2,047 posts)I mentioned the old novel & movie "Sophie's Choice" to a group of professional people in their 30's and was met with blank stares. Trying to clarify, I said, you know, the movie with Meryl Streep. No one had heard of her.
Fresh_Start
(11,342 posts)to try to pick up a 4th channel
longship
(40,416 posts)Although, I go back to Smilin' Ed McConnell days. When he died, Andy Devine took over the franchise.
They often featured Ramar of the Jungle adventures. But nobody wanted to see those. It was all about Froggy.
Hi-ya kiddies! Hi-ya, hi-ya, hi-ya! Pfftpfftpfftp!
lapucelle
(19,543 posts)on the local channel, and Wonderama with Sonny Fox.
radical noodle
(8,742 posts)Playing jacks on the front porch
Going "visiting" on Sunday afternoons
#45s on a portable record player and 78s on a console record player/radio.
The First Family record album (which I still possess)
Crinolines and always trying to outdo other girls with the most elaborate and most layers
Wrapping angora yarn around your boyfriend's ring
"I like Ike"
Sitting up front by the school bus driver and pulling the lever to make the stop sign stick out.
Mimeo machines at school
Standing outside with my Grandmother trying to see sputnik
Doreen
(11,686 posts)black and white TV.
8 tracks.
Cassette tapes.
Beta vs VHS.
Penny candy that was actually a penny.
MrPurple
(985 posts)PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)And I've paid attention to area codes in my normal life.
So without going into a lot of detail, area codes make a difference.
lunasun
(21,646 posts)only.
I don't know how they would stay in business now in little neighborhood storefronts like back then just selling single selections like that to (primarily ) kids
But they kept me in candy cigarettes and fizz tabs for years along with fake vomit , itching powder and a tin that said salted peanuts which no one should open if they didnt want a surprise
DeeDeeNY
(3,520 posts)You could stay all day with one admission ticket. So if you got there in the middle, you just stayed to see the rest of the movie and then the beginning through the middle to where you came in. Or even longer if you wanted. There were also lots of double features, and some movie theatres gave out dish sets although I don't remember why.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)and we stay inside for hours, watching the movies, the previews, the cartoons, the newsreels. We'd watch a movie until we got to the point where we'd arrived, stay a few more minutes and then leave. I have no idea how we knew when to go outside to be picked up, because none of us had a watch. But it was wonderful.
Amaryllis
(9,819 posts)doc03
(36,813 posts)Chiller Theater, Sunday afternoon studio wrestling, Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom, David Garaway and J Fred Muggs, Isaly's chip chopped ham and Scyscraper
Ice Cream Cones.Having bad air allerts almost every day in the summer.They had a mine bullitin board on the radio and it took 5 to 10 minutes to list all the mines
that were working or not.
doc03
(36,813 posts)Freddie
(9,725 posts)Dad and my brother wore a suit and tie, Mom and I our best dresses (never pants). I think when most women started working and had to "dress up" all week was when church started getting more casual.
SCantiGOP
(14,296 posts)but we would laugh at pictures from the 1940s of men at baseball games in the summer wearing coats and ties.
Warpy
(113,131 posts)and being on a party line.
Hint: there was no celebration to those lines, they were dominated by one or two gabby people who never seemed to hang up to eat or sleep, meaning everybody else had to scream "EMERGENCY!" at them to make a 2 minute call.
MrPurple
(985 posts)that Ma Bell's monopoly on renting phones to everyone finally got broken up.
MrPurple
(985 posts)Those were rough times, young'uns.
Bernardo de La Paz
(51,088 posts)lapucelle
(19,543 posts)heading home when the streetlights went on...
going to the grocery store with a quarter and a note from your mom so you could buy her smokes...
the Star Spangled Banner when TV stations signed off for the night...
napi21
(45,806 posts)Milk delivered in the winter would freeze and expand the cream out of the top of the bottle.
Everyone I knew declared automatic transmissions bad, unreliable, and for drivers who were too lazy to use their left foot!
A job that was an upgrade from a regular typist-a keypuncher-the KP Dept. at the place I got my first job had 50+ full time.
Gas was .25/gal. High Test was .27/gal
Having to shovel coal to fed the furnace every so many hours, and bank it off at night so it would last till morning.
Being able to drive by yourself as soon as you passed your drivers test-no Cinderella licences then either.
Almost everybody did their own work to fix their car & keep it running.
Most moms didn't work outside the home.
One car per household until your kids got old enough to get their own.
My weekly grocery bill was $10.
Rent on our first apartment was $75/mo.
Electric bill was $5.00/mo.
littlemissmartypants
(25,713 posts)YOURE A YOUNG LADY NOW: MENSTRUAL EDUCATION THROUGH ADVERTISING https://www.radcliffe.harvard.edu/schlesinger-library/blog/youre-young-lady-now
And...
DeeDeeNY
(3,520 posts)An accepted part of buying shoes for kids!
heaven05
(18,124 posts)mainstreetonce
(4,178 posts)And crinolines.
OneBlueDotBama
(1,432 posts)on the shelf below the rear window, driving back from the cottage on Sunday night.
Glamrock
(11,994 posts)Still Blue in PDX
(1,999 posts)Vanessa Rose
(14 posts)I remember only making long distance calls if there was an emergency, otherwise we wrote letters.
pnwmom
(109,607 posts)PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)I recently read a novel in which people in the 1950's somewhat casually called each other long distance, including from England to the U.S. or vice versa. It was obvious that the novel was written by someone who'd come of age a great deal later than the time frame of the events of the novel. I'm a half decade or so younger than the characters of the novel, and I know quite clearly that we simply didn't make long distance or (as happens in the novel) overseas phone calls casually. Those kinds of calls were reserved for genuinely major events. Sigh. It's more than obvious the novel was written by someone of a very different generation, used to the conventions of our era.
Totally Tunsie
(10,885 posts)Mendocino
(7,755 posts)paper routes
Bubs Daddy, a 10 inch cylinder of gum about as big around as a little finger
The 20th Century With Walter Cronkite
Jonny Quest
WW1 vets were common
driving from Ohio to Florida for spring vacation, no interstates
Sorry to interrupt, this is a special bulletin from CBS news
the smell of ditto copies
Munsters vs The Addams Family
duncang
(3,713 posts)With a tv tube to check in their tester and buy a replacement.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)there was one and only one family in our housing complex with a TV. Everyone was invited, or maybe we all simply showed up. I recall standing outside their place, watching the show through the window, since the living room was completely full of people. We wouldn't get a TV for two more years. While TVs rather quickly became common, there was a time when having one was a rare privilege.
Milk being delivered and put in the milk box outside our apartment.
The Mickey Mouse Club. My favorite Mousketeer was Doreen.
Skates that you attached to your shoes, and were sized using a key.
I still miss card catalogs.
SCantiGOP
(14,296 posts)In the late 60s, that was the set price for a gallon of gas or a pack of cigarettes.
I remember putting a quarter of gas in the car once to make sure I got home that day. Smart ass gas station attendant, after he had pumped the gas, gave me a free map of the State and told me to enjoy my ride.
k8conant
(3,034 posts)InAbLuEsTaTe
(24,634 posts)k8conant
(3,034 posts)we set up the film strips and movie projectors for the teachers that couldn't figure out that "high-tech" stuff.
InAbLuEsTaTe
(24,634 posts)AJT
(5,240 posts)Then looking through it at all the great toys and, for whatever reason, the parent/children Christmas morning matching pajamas.
secondwind
(16,903 posts)NBachers
(18,167 posts)"Start fresh, with L&M
Stay fresh, with L&M
Unlock a whole new world
Of- fresh smoking pleasure.
Start fresh, stay fresh, with L&M."
Enoki33
(1,605 posts)MFM008
(20,008 posts)Watching the moon landing live.
Not being allowed to use the phone hanging on the wall in the kitchen.
Playing with Super-balls.
making creepy crawlers..
Looking up words in a dictionary.
Vaccinations in the school gym.
so so many things.
BigMin28
(1,477 posts)S & H Green stamps, going to Hancock fabrics and picking out patterns and fabric for the clothes my Mom made for me. Also, the Jewel T man stopping by our house.
donco
(1,548 posts)defacto7
(13,627 posts)with your left foot using a button on the floor.
doc03
(36,813 posts)NotASurfer
(2,316 posts)of course Mom said that when she was in school, the day before hunting season started, students old enough to be out at dawn the next morning would check their deer rifles in the office, so they could head out right after school.
doc03
(36,813 posts)all for 50 cents. Then going to Isaly's for a Scyscraper cone for 15 cents.
doc03
(36,813 posts)MLAA
(18,653 posts)Last edited Mon Sep 11, 2017, 12:07 AM - Edit history (1)
SummerSnow
(12,608 posts)2. Write it in cursive. They never heard of that either
* this thread is the best
onecaliberal
(36,203 posts)MLAA
(18,653 posts)Warpy
(113,131 posts)She said Miss Whosis made her want to throw up in the sink.
MLAA
(18,653 posts)Just googled it...her name was 'Miss Nancy' Claster.
Funtatlaguy
(11,800 posts)Ward, you were a little too rough on the Beaver last night.
Heartstrings
(7,349 posts)The best Popsicles, bought at our neighborhood corner store. The store owner was a hoot and would always add the flavor of your choice as addition to the 10 for 10 cent bag I got.
I feel fortunate to have lived in that era....
mjvpi
(1,570 posts)Willie Pep
(841 posts)VHS
Video rental stores
Trying to watch premium cable channels (yes, including the naughty ones) through scrambled pictures.
1-900 numbers, again including the naughty ones. Why do I remember these so vividly? LOL.
EDIT: The card catalog at the library too.
Warpy
(113,131 posts)and how big the blocks of ice were when they were delivered every other day.
Getting bread and milk delivered to separate boxes on the front porch. Seeing the milk bottle lids popped off and sitting on a column of frozen cream on super cold days.
Feeding the rag man's horse a piece of carrot.
Watching my parents do hobbies while radio shows played (we got the first TV on the block when I was four).
Loving the old Dumont Netowrk's animation of a big ass plane circling an itty bitty earth when they signed on.
Getting free miniature loaves of bread when supermarkets would have a grand opening (now they just get sold out and put new signs up).
And mostly, being trusted to play outside all over the neighborhood, as long as I came home before it got dark. Walking to school by myself and to the park by myself at the age of seven and feeling very grownup when I did it.
applegrove
(123,448 posts)Night.
procon
(15,805 posts)Binkie The Clown
(7,911 posts)to check them out in the tube tester to see which one was bad. Every grocery store had a tube tester and a selection of the most popular vacuum tubes like the 6AU6, the 12AX7, and the ubiquitous 5U4, which was usually the culprit when everything went out including picture and sound.
FuzzyRabbit
(2,097 posts)Hopalong Cassidy
Sky King
Roy Rogers
Mickey Mouse Club
and later:
Perry Mason
Highway Patrol
M-Squad
Dragnet
Binkie The Clown
(7,911 posts)Howdy Doody was coming next because Kate was signing off.
Also, later:
My Little Margie
Our Miss Brooks
Captain Video
Tom Corbett, Space Cadet
Rocky Jones, Space Ranger (I had such a crush on Vena Ray)
Mickey Mouse Club (I had such a crush on ... no, not Annette, but Doreen)
chillfactor
(7,694 posts)with static showing on the screen.....the first telecasts of the Jackie Gleason Show.....
k8conant
(3,034 posts)Nickel candy bars
7¢ Fudgsicles and ice cream cones (2 scoops for 13¢)
Pepsi at 30¢ a 6-pack
My father complaining that hot dogs were now a dime apiece instead of a nickel.
Gerald McBoingBoing on TV
Mickey Mouse Club
"Nap"time on mats in kindergarten (hanging our coats in the cloakroom)
Wearing leggings in the winter over our dresses to go to school
Being amazed at stereo vs monaural record players.
Smoking leftover cigarette butts after meetings at our house when I was 10
Riding my bike to the library because I missed the bookmobile stop on Monday nights.
Gas for 19.9¢ a gallon
Waiting until a baby was born to find out if it was a boy or girl
Using a Friden calculator
Using mathematical tables for interpolation and extrapolation
Peanut butter and jelly sandwiches and 1¢ milk for lunch in high school
Rolling our skirts' waistbands in junior high
Movies in the auditorium during lunch
Driving from Michigan to Tennessee with 6 of us in the car (and my having to have my feet on top of the ice chest the whole time) took 17 hours on US-25 or US-27
Counting posts along the Pennsylvania Turnpike to pass the time, or playing the alphabet game while riding, or writing down all the states for which we saw license plates.
Playing ping-pong.
Setting up a scary hallway with the entrance covered with a blanket.
Smelling fresh Ditto copies in school.
Camp Fire Law
Worship God.
Seek beauty;
Give service, &
Knowledge pursue.
Be trustworthy ever, in all that you do.
Hold fast onto health,
And your work glorify,
And you will be happy, in the law of Camp Fire.
Soupy Sales touting "Sealtest--the best milk in all of DEE-troit" (and he was the only one who dared to pronounce De-TROIT with (as my father would say) the ac-CENT on the wrong syl-LAB-le)
PoindexterOglethorpe
(26,771 posts)Petrushka
(3,709 posts)Radio shows with plenty of sound effects
to spur the imagination:
Gang Busters
The Lone Ranger
The Shadow Knows
Inner Sanctum
sprinkleeninow
(20,560 posts)pnwmom
(109,607 posts)get the red out
(13,608 posts)Playing in my Papaw's giant Olds 98.
chelsea0011
(10,115 posts)k8conant
(3,034 posts)We have Britannica now (from 1992 or so)
chelsea0011
(10,115 posts)Where did they go?
pansypoo53219
(21,771 posts)treadle dentil drill. extremely old multi piece radio. TV TUBES! no telegraph yet. hell, just my potato smooshers are very old school. i love time travel.
Butterflylady
(4,007 posts)pangaia
(24,324 posts)llmart
(16,331 posts)by placing bowls of bowling water in it and then chipping away at the ice.
pangaia
(24,324 posts)milk delivered in glass bottles..
playing after school in the woods until dark
black and pink
walk a mile and a half to school
1950 ford- our first car
1954 ford- second car
pangaia
(24,324 posts)Playing in the 'woods' every day after school...
Black and pink the 'in' colors
'56 Chevy Belair
Ration stamps right at the end of WW II ( my mom got them, but took me with her to get extra)
Crank telephone (I think I remember that) and getting the operator
WALKING a mile and a half to get to school.
nocoincidences
(2,328 posts)like Sheena Queen of the Jungle and Hopalong Cassidy!
That strange milky smell in the Elementary School Cafeteria. I am convinced that odor turned me off on milk for life.
riverbendviewgal
(4,322 posts)We had a hill next to our house, which in winters we woild sled on, in spring we flew our kites, in summer we would sit and count the stars until we lost track, in Fall we took big cardboard boxes and slid down the hill.
Milk man and Bond bread man came to the house. On Thursdays the one armed veteran drove his fish truck slowly down the streets for housewives to buy their fish for Fridays supper.
Telephone party lines, I got the transistor radio. 45 rpm records.
S & H stamps and the family spending a day at the kitchen table putting the stamps in the books.
Kids went to weddings that didn't cost thousands of dollars.
Live local bands at high school dances.
Mr. WIZARD Saturday TV show.
Rocky Jones space show
Wink Dink
American Bandstand
Air raid drills where we hid under our desks.
Elementary classes with 2 or 3 rooms for each grade. We were baby boomers.
Response to ButSeeYa (Original post)
Fresh_Start This message was self-deleted by its author.
Snackshack
(2,541 posts)Free Range childhood.
Rotary Phone.
Yellow Front.
Points & Condenser.
Lawn Darts...
yesphan
(1,600 posts)and these things....
sdfernando
(5,398 posts)and a bit later....using and acoustic coupler to access dial-up BBS.
stonecutter357
(12,776 posts)dewsgirl
(14,964 posts)He seems to think I'm talking about a calculator that makes calls????
llmart
(16,331 posts)Petti pants
Dr. Ben Casey blouses
Angora or mohair sweaters
Stretch pants with the strap under the foot
Girdles and nylons with seams
Poodle skirts
Gym suits
Ironing your hair
Spit curls
Orange juice can hair rollers
Penny loafers
Saddle shoes
RandomAccess
(5,210 posts)You can find some of the episodes on YouTube (which surely has to be the greatest repository of cultural history ever imagined).
RandomAccess
(5,210 posts)To this day *I* can't figure out how we lived without photocopy machines.
RandomAccess
(5,210 posts)SCantiGOP
(14,296 posts)Wondering if I would have to wait until my wedding night to lose my virginity (thank you, sexual revolution of the 60s!)
Thomas Hurt
(13,929 posts)wasupaloopa
(4,516 posts)wasupaloopa
(4,516 posts)Duck and cover
Civil defense
Air raid drills
redstateblues
(10,565 posts)wryter2000
(47,551 posts)Although I went to a vintage diner recently and saw one. Id forgotten about them.
pbmus
(12,439 posts)Absolutely no such thing as the word service in our vocabulary anymore..
lostnfound
(16,689 posts)pansypoo53219
(21,771 posts)i know how a wood stove works. things used to be made out of cast iron.
wnylib
(24,552 posts)had scarlett fever, health dept putting quarantine sign in our front window.
Penny candy and 2 for a penny candy in wooden frame case with glass windows at corner mom and pop store.
Getting written script from doctor to take urine sample to hospital lab for pregnancy test, then waiting several hours for results.
American Bandstand setting trends in music and hair styles (for girls).
Bouffant hair styles, "bee hive" hair that was "teased" (back combed) and piled high on top of the head, then sprayed with lacquer hair spray.
Wool cardigans and pullover sweaters with pleated, plaid wool skirts. Wool wrap around skirts in tartan plaids with large kilt pins that resembled giant safety pins.
Weaving pot holders at summer playground activities and selling them for spending money to neighbors who did not really need or want them but rewarded our efforts.
Playing until hide and seek until dusk in summer when parents called us home. Then sitting on the porch with cold soda or Kool Aid drinks until the house was cool enough inside to sleep.
Radios, automatic transmissions being extras on new car purchases.
Very long cars with big fins that could not fit into some old garages.
Talitha
(7,467 posts)I grew up in Chicago and once in a while as I was playing in the back yard, I'd hear a distant "Rags, old iron! Rags, old iron!" accompanied by the rhythmic clip-clop of a Horse's hooves.
It was the junk man. I couldn't understand what he was yelling though, and misunderstood it to be Rags-o-line. So I'd run inside and tell Dad that Mr. Ragsoline was coming.
Mom let me feed the Horse a carrot while Dad got his junk out of the garage and loaded it onto the wagon. I don't know if Mr. Ragsoline paid Dad any money or not, though... I was too busy feeding and petting the Horse.
Skittles
(159,949 posts)military family, often overseas, trans-Atlantic phone calls were ridiculously expensive
Sparkly
(24,352 posts)Some I realize -- I know there are media they won't understand (LPs, tape, etc.) But the card catalog is a great example. They have NO idea what it is like to do original research, vs. clicking on a link and paraphrasing. It is challenging for teachers, and has me questioning whether and why they need to retain information vs. processes, concepts, relationships -- a different paradigm.
Totally Tunsie
(10,885 posts)Just Googled them, and apparently they're still around as a "southern tradition", which doesn't explain why I had one when living in CT.
phylny
(8,598 posts)or later, when you could drive. For some reason, my family called it the "butterfly window."
634-5789
(4,318 posts)Prell shampoo. That pearl dropped in the bottle showed just how luxurious it was. Is Prell a thing anymore? And...it wasn't the holidays until I saw that team of Clydesdales for Budweiser. Good times!
Mersky
(5,327 posts)It was the corner of the M-Z that chipped a bone in the top of my foot. I actually have a bone spur from this that acts up and causes me trouble some days.
TrumpVirus
(13 posts)We would fight over it and remember my mom would put a timer clock set for 30 minutes, when we would have to hand it over to a sibling for their 30 minute turn...
Auggie
(31,845 posts)Our local Shell station gave out tumblers and highball glasses with the Cleveland Browns logo on them. Sinclair once gave out large blow-up dinosaurs. Think it was minimum 10 gallons.
Looked like these:
Joinfortmill
(16,557 posts)Some photos, although none like the one my folks had:
https://www.etsy.com/market/mangle_wringer
El Supremo
(20,382 posts)ShazzieB
(18,850 posts)What I do remember is phones being hardwired straight into the house/building. No changing or rearranging without the phone company sending someone out to do it.
If you needed to replace a phone or change to a different type of phone, you had to get it from your local phone company, and someone had to come out and install it.
If you lived in a small town, all the latest styles weren't necessarily available, and you had to setle for whatever they had.
No matter what kind of of phone you got, it remained the property of the phone company.
When it became possible to buy a phone in a store, you couldn't do it without first having a plug-in wall jack installed, unless you lived in a place that was new enough to have them already installed. (Which we didn't.)
I was so happy when we finally moved to a newer place and could buy a phone of our choice, bring it home, and plug it in.
Bones1
(18 posts)For lunchtime in HS to go to our designated smoking area, with ashtrays, outside, covered from the rain, to smoke cigarettes with my friends. But no smoking in the bathrooms !
RobinA
(10,175 posts)in college, I was super happy to be assigned to the dorm that had phones in every room.
Voice79
(8 posts)I live in Ohio. When I was 18, we had 3.2 beer. Ohio voted and approved a law requiring age 19 for everyone for purchasing liquor and beer. Ronnie Regan threatened states federal highway funds if they did not raise the drinking age to 21. How did he get away with this? Can you imagine this happening today?