Posted for your reminiscing pleasure on this Saturday in January.
I still remember that you didn't sass other kids' parents either. Because, somehow my parents found out about it before I could get home.
And we never locked our doors...how would our friends get in?
And we only had one car, Dad used it to get to work, so we had to walk everywhere, or wait for Dad to come home.
And we went to the Saturday matinee theater for a double feature and a cartoon for a dime!
We drank a lot of orange juice since we had five orange trees in our backyard, and we played in the orange groves at the end of the block (So Calif)
We would go to the other end of the block to my uncle's house and make fresh peach ice cream every Sat night during the summer. Course, we had to crank it because they hadn't put electric motors on the ice cream makers yet.
And we dressed up to go to church every Sunday morning. Coat and tie was the standard.
We would also sit around the radio in the evenings and listen to the variety and drama shows. Boy, did we have an imagination in those days. No TV screen to show us what was going on.
I'll have to keep remembering...more later, perhaps.
Actually I remember an awful lot of this, except the snow. It doesn't snow much in south Georgia.
Living in Pittsburgh in the late 1960s, we had metal milk boxes outside our front door for deliveries from the dairy man. Those boxes were especially useful in winter, when we used them to store our snowballs for the big battle with the other kids in the neighborhood.
I do remember the forts, digging holes in backyards, having orange fights in the orchard,riding our bikes everywhere are what occupied out time after school. Oh yeah the first car i remember my folks had as a kid was a 1947 Ford and I remember my favorite place to ride in it was on the ledge behind the back seat and the window with no child restraint devises.And I survived to write this post!
Me too.
With 50 TV channels to watch today I still can't find anything that compared to "Terry and the Pirates", or "Paul Lavalle and the Cities Service Band of America." or "Fred Allen" or "Amos and Andy"....and so many other radios greats.
I swear I got more education from 9 years with the Sisters of Mercy than some kids today get after 4 years at some liberal diploma mill.
My wife and I got our first Sears 'credit card' in 1960.
I cut it up and sent it back to them a few years ago when their interest charge hit 22%. They used to be a retail store now they're loan sharks.
Cripes I was even a Democrat back then when they stood for something other than getting re-elected every couple of years. Anybody remember Cong. Freddie St. Germain from Woonsocket, RI.
He coulda been Clinton's guru!
Ah, well....onward and upward!
Our aunts, uncles, teachers, priests, nuns, were allowed to correct us and we were made to listen.
We had no dishwashers but ourselves, and every night took turns washing, drying and sweeping the floor.
We had no showers so every morning we would take turns, oldest one first, and stand in the tub to wash ourselves off.
Saturday we got a full bath, but warm water was limited because of the small water heater so we were forced to top off the past bathers water to keep it warm.
We were woke up every morning by the sound of my father knocking the cold coals from the heater and refilling it with the coal in the coal bin.
We had to stand over the heater vent and dress, because there was no forced air heaters at that time, or we were to poor to own one.
Cokes were a dime and served in a fountain glass at the dime store, and twinkies were a nickel.
First time I saw color television. Next door neighbor's house. We watched "The Wonderful World of Disney" At 7:00 EST on NBC.
Mickey, and Goofy, and Donald and Tnkerbell on small screen, just like in the theater was a big deal.
I really believe that the day that JFK was assassinated was the very day that all things changed here in the USA. Shortly after that, the riots broke out and the cities burned. We got LBJ and all the inherent evil things that came with him. The serenity of the fifties gave way to the insanity of the sixties and thereafter. I swear that JFK's demise was the catalyst for all this. since most Americans lost faith in the society that was left for them.
I may be wrong, but it seems that after the severe shock of that event, Americans somehow, for a time anyway, lost our way. Thats when the liberals/socialists saw their chance and they pounced. It has taken us this long to begin a correction of that, although it started with Reagan. Hopefully, this correction will continue and be successful.
Would that it be so.