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Memories of Growing Up in the 40's and 50's (and since, even)
email | 1/4/01 (this time) | Unknown

Posted on 01/04/2003 12:12:42 PM PST by Dakotabound

"Hey Dad," My Son asked the other day, "what was your favorite fast food when you were growing up?"

"We didn't have fast food when I was growing up."

"C'mon, seriously. Where did you eat?"

"We ate at home," I explained. "Your Grandma cooked every day and when your Grandpa got home from work, we all sat down together at the table, and if I didn't like what she put on my plate I had to sit there until I did like it." By this time, my Son was laughing so hard I was afraid he was going to suffer some serious internal damage, so I didn't tell him the part about how I had to get my Father's permission to leave the table.

Here are some other things I would have told him about my childhood if I had figured his system could handle it.

My parents never: wore Levi's, set foot on a golf course, traveled out of the country, flew in a plane or had a credit card. In their later years they had something called a "revolving charge card" but they never actually used it. It was only good at Sears-Roebuck. Or maybe it was Sears and Roebuck. Either way, there is no Roebuck anymore.

My parents never drove me to soccer practice. This was because soccer back then was just for the girls. We actually did walk to school. By the time you were in the 6th grade it was not cool to ride the bus unless you lived more than 4 or 5 miles from the school, even when it was raining or there was ice or snow on the ground.

Outdoor sports consisted of stickball, snowball fights, building forts, making snowmen and sliding down hills on a piece of cardboard. No skate boards, roller blades or trail bikes.

We didn't have a television in our house until I was 12. It was, of course, black and white, but you could buy a piece of special colored plastic to cover the screen. The top third was blue, like the sky, and the bottom third was green, like grass. The middle third was red. It was perfect for programs that had scenes of fire trucks riding across someone's lawn on a sunny day.

I was 13 before I tasted my first pizza. It was a Sam's Pizza at the East end of Fruit Street in Milford. My friend, Steve took me there to try what he called "pizza pie." When I bit into it, I burned the roof of my mouth and the cheese slid off, swung down and plastered itself against my chin. It's still the best pizza I ever had.

Pizzas were not delivered to your house back then, but the milk was. I looked forward to winter because the cream in the milk was on top of the bottle and it would freeze and push the cap off. Of course us kids would get up first to get the milk and eat the frozen cream before our mother could catch us.

I never had a telephone in my room. Actually the only phone in the house was in the hallway and it was on a party line. Before you could make a call, you had to listen in to make sure someone else wasn't already using the line. If the line was not in use an Operator would come on and ask "number please" and you would give her the number you wanted to call.

There was no such thing as a computer or a hand held calculator. We were required to memorize the "times tables." Believe it or not, we were tested each week on our ability to perform mathematics with nothing but a pencil and paper. We took a spelling test every day. There was no such thing as a "social promotion." If you flunked a class, you repeated that grade the following year. Nobody was concerned about your "self esteem." We had to actually do something praiseworthy before we were praised. We learned that you had to earn respect.

All newspapers were delivered by boys and most all boys delivered newspapers. I delivered the "Milford Daily News" six days a week. It cost 7 cents a paper, of which I got to keep 2 cents. On Saturday, I had to collect the 42 cents from my customers. My favorite customers were the ones who gave me 50 cents and told me to keep the change. My least favorite customers were the ones who seemed to never be home on collection day.

Movie stars kissed with their mouths shut on screen. Touching someone else's tongue with yours was called French kissing and they just didn't do that in the movies back then. I had no idea what they did in French movies. French movies were considered dirty and we weren't allowed to see them.

You never saw the Lone Ranger, Roy Rogers or anyone else actual kill someone. The heroes back then would just shoot the gun out of the bad guys hand. There was no blood and violence.

When you were sick, the Doctor actually came to your house. No, I am not making this up. Drugs were something you purchased at a pharmacy in order to cure an illness.

If we dared to "sass" our parents, or any other grown-up, we immediately found out what soap tasted like. For more serious infractions, we learned about something called a "this hurts me more than it hurts you." I never did quite understand that one?

In those days, parents were expected to discipline their kids. There was no interference from the government. "Social Services" or "Family Services" had not been invented (The ninth and tenth amendments to the constitution were still observed in those days.)

I must be getting old because I find myself reflecting back more and more and thinking I liked it a lot better back then. If you grew up in a generation before there was fast food, you may want to share some of these memories with your kids or grandchildren. Just don't blame me if they wet themselves laughing. Growing up today sure ain't what it used to be.


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To: CharacterCounts
Oh yeah, the air raid siren drills!

321 posted on 01/04/2003 6:15:25 PM PST by visualops
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To: Howlin
Remember when the TV went off the air with the playing of the National Anthem, then the screen went all scratchy ----and that sound!! If you fell asleep before the program ended, that sound woke you up. I can still hear it!
322 posted on 01/04/2003 6:15:44 PM PST by Exit148
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To: Howlin
!.....it's a wonder we're not all bald!

LOL. Bald, eaten up with cancer, arrested, gone to the dogs and every other thing that people think will happen if they suffer an inconvenience of any kind.

323 posted on 01/04/2003 6:15:58 PM PST by WVNan
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To: wardaddy
>>We first got Shakeys around 65 or so....served black beer and you sat at long tables with checkered cloth and they did sing alongs with banjos<<

Yep, I remember going to eat there a couple of times as a kid. Couldn't you watch them make the pizza thru the window?

324 posted on 01/04/2003 6:17:11 PM PST by visualops
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To: Exit148
You were probably too young to see the Hookers and the sailors, Boston in those days was the best liberty town on the East Coast, according to my Dad. He met my mother at a USO thing, Her Irish Catholic ways straightened his young a## out.
325 posted on 01/04/2003 6:17:21 PM PST by Little Bill
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To: Dakotabound
Ever since civilization began, elders have always been reminiscing about the "good old days." Contrasted, of course, with the spoiled rotten kids of today who never had any hardship and don't appreciate a damn thing. (These being the kids that they raised, of course, but that somehow never comes into it.)

Of course I am guilty of the same thing. I'm always lecturing to my kids on how different things were when I was growing up during the 1970s. No computers. No VCRs. No video games. Why we didn't even have cable TV. But we knew how to have a good time. For example, we would put on our platform shoes, polyester bell-bottom pants, silk shirts and head on to a disco dance at the high school where we would listen to real music. Not that headbanging crap that kids listen to today but real bands like the Bee Gees, KC & The Sunshine Band, The Ohio Players, Grand Funk Railroad. Those were the days...

326 posted on 01/04/2003 6:17:46 PM PST by SamAdams76
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To: tubebender
LOL. If it was an insult then I'm in it with you friend. Where did the years go? It seems like yesterday.
327 posted on 01/04/2003 6:17:54 PM PST by WVNan
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To: Dakotabound
Although there is much that was good about the 40s and 50s, you can call me spoiled because I like things like antibiotics, the Internet, being able to travel anywhere on the planet in hours instead of weeks, and air conditioning. I can do without polio and whites-only drinking fountains as well.
328 posted on 01/04/2003 6:18:57 PM PST by strela
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To: Dakotabound
Of course, for the blacks, life was a little tougher back then. Segregation, especially in the south, made it so. Never forget that (even if you're white like me). :-/

foreverfree

329 posted on 01/04/2003 6:20:55 PM PST by foreverfree
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To: StormEye
Where did you grow up?

Do you remember May Day and all the hippies in tents all over downtown near the monuments?
330 posted on 01/04/2003 6:20:59 PM PST by visualops
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To: FITZ
"Or they took a doily from under some knick-knack and wore that!! Even a kleenex held on by a bobby pin! Strange days back then."

You didn't DARE go into a Catholic Church without sth on your head!!!! To this day, I feel strange if I am in a church - any church, without a head covering. At that time, it was really drilled into you, -----and the guilt stays. (Don't get me going on those man-made rules!!)

331 posted on 01/04/2003 6:21:21 PM PST by Exit148
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To: Exit148
Before the hair-dryers and rollers, there were those horrid 'pin curls' with a bobby pin pushed thru

Before those horrid pin curls, there were those rags that your hair was wrapped around and then tied in a knot. I would go to bed looking like I had stuck my tongue in the toaster.

332 posted on 01/04/2003 6:21:50 PM PST by WVNan
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To: Humidston
Ah, for the sound of Martin Block and the Hit Parade with the top ten hits.....Saturday mornings.........before TV and Dick Clark. Unfortunately poor Martin was not pretty and his disk jockey days were over, but that voice was deep velvet.

333 posted on 01/04/2003 6:22:03 PM PST by wingnuts'nbolts
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To: Conservababe
So,okay, when are we finally going to admit that we teased our hair?

You mean when we all looked like cone heads? When women could have easily smuggled something inside there?

Not me! ;-D

334 posted on 01/04/2003 6:23:55 PM PST by Humidston
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To: Exit148
Remember when the TV went off the air with the playing of the National Anthem, then the screen went all scratchy ----and that sound!! If you fell asleep before the program ended, that sound woke you up. I can still hear it!

I remember that some stations showed just the test pattern during the day.
(Perhaps they didn't have enough programming for a full schedule.)
Anyway, my parent's called it the "hiccup station" and told me to watch it to cure my hiccups.
I was young enough to believe them, but maybe now I can sue them for child abuse.

335 posted on 01/04/2003 6:26:19 PM PST by Willie Green
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To: muggs
That's what I use mine for too. They are also right useful for cracking nuts and pressing flowers.
336 posted on 01/04/2003 6:26:50 PM PST by WVNan
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To: Exit148
And now we all pay top dollar for sound screens that make that SAME white noise so we can get to sleep at night without "hearing anything." :-)
337 posted on 01/04/2003 6:30:10 PM PST by Howlin
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To: wingnuts'nbolts
Alas, I religiously attended the Saturday morning fun club so I rarely listened to the radio. I must confess I vaguely remember the name but not the velvet voice.
338 posted on 01/04/2003 6:30:13 PM PST by Humidston
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To: Willie Green
LOL!!!!!
339 posted on 01/04/2003 6:31:00 PM PST by Humidston
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To: muggs
They were little colored plastic clothes pins, like you hang laundry up with, that we wore on our collars.
340 posted on 01/04/2003 6:31:23 PM PST by Howlin
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