Things gone forever: class, civility, responsibility for one's actions, pride in a job well done.
@joyceobeys68182 жыл бұрын
Yep! Excellent customer service n kindness.
@douglasskaalrud68652 жыл бұрын
There’s plenty of all those attributes left, you just choose to see the negative side of everything. Open your eyes.
@bighands692 жыл бұрын
@@timtebowfan628 Once competition was removed from the marketplace and companies outsourced everything the worker started to get a raw deal.
@bonniesilva51622 жыл бұрын
@@douglasskaalrud6865 My eyes ARE open, they're just not covered with rose-colored glasses. I don't know what world YOU'RE living in, but the America of today is NOT what it was in the past. I stand by my statement
@bonniesilva51622 жыл бұрын
@Irving Shekelstein Who said anything about race?...those attributes can apply to anyone. YOU'RE making it about race, so what does that say about your own focus?
@FlexibleFlyer502 жыл бұрын
The one thing I remember about the '50s and early '60s was the idea of "service." When I went into a store with my mother, someone was always there to help us----for her help with trying on dresses, making suggestions, making sure alterations were available. When we bought towels, sheets or blankets----all our purchases were carefully wrapped and boxed. The salesclerks took PRIDE in what they did. Customer service was their focus. Same with shoe shopping----I can remember always having a salesman rush over, measure my feet, and bring out at least 10 pairs of shoes to see which one I liked. People aimed to please back then----today "service" has gone out of America's vocabulary and into the dust heap of history.
@pkendlers2 жыл бұрын
I always loved customer service, but when you can't support yourself on the pay, you have to look for something else. :(
@jrnfw40602 жыл бұрын
True, and very sad. Just try to find a salesperson in a large department store, today. Good luck! The work ethic has really gone down hill. What gets me are four or five vacant check stands, only one open and operating, and a HUGE long line at that one and only, when they could very easily open up another check stand or two to accommodate more customers. And the latest thing are those darned self-checkout kiosks! I hate those things! Yes, they may be more convenient for some, but so impersonal, not to mention trying to figure out how to use them. We've given ourselves away to technology, and it's dehumanizing us.
@TheRetirednavy922 жыл бұрын
God I miss that.
@pkendlers2 жыл бұрын
@@jrnfw4060 you have stores that are trying to get the most profit out of what they're selling so you can't find a customer service person or even a checkout clerk in some stores. And if you can find one, they're sol underpaid they can barely care.
@cathyrowe5942 жыл бұрын
@@jrnfw4060 I recently asked a store manager if there were any live checkers available & he pointed out all the open automated lines. I said, "No thanks, I prefer to keep local folks employed by not using those d*$m things." As I walked to the end of a long line of check stands to reach the 1 with an actual person at it, a clerk whispered, "Thank you!"
@slim-oneslim80142 жыл бұрын
I remember the antenna being called "Rabbit ears" not "Bunny ears." Perhaps it depended on where you were from.
@janhankins9112 жыл бұрын
We called them rabbit ears, too.
@jayonnaj182 жыл бұрын
We called them RABBIT EARS where I lived!
@johnbernstein78872 жыл бұрын
We called them 'Children With Hangers"
@robthetindog82182 жыл бұрын
Born & raised in SoCal; dad was from Arizona, mom was from Nebraska. They called them rabbit ears too.
@JudgeJulieLit2 жыл бұрын
From the 1953 start of the Playboy magazine and human woman bunny, "bunny ears" were her headgear.
@ammo87132 жыл бұрын
RESPECT,KINDNESS,AND GOOD SERVICE !
@Hattonbank2 жыл бұрын
We had rock n roll, Elvis, Chuck, Jerry Lee, Little Richard............ and the girls all wore stockings and suspenders/garters! Oh what a time!
@jrnfw406011 ай бұрын
I remember Mary Jane style shoes that actually had pre-holed straps with buckles and prongs, NOT these velcro closures they have, today. If there weren't enough holes, parents could add what was needed with an awl. I still love the Mary Jane shoes, though the color selections today are sorely limited. Time was, you could get them in almost any color.
@calbob7502 жыл бұрын
What element of American society that appears to be gone forever…RESPECT.
@JeremiahArt652 жыл бұрын
Trust me there’s still respect
@fanaticat12 жыл бұрын
Not like it was back then...
@dadole99162 жыл бұрын
Respect went out the window in 2016 when an absolute pig of a person was elected president by less than half the country
@harmgregory45602 жыл бұрын
No, 'Bob'....
@jimoconnor6382 Жыл бұрын
Ass whippings got replaced by Ritalin
@sandradavis45512 жыл бұрын
Nothing like the fresh smell of clothes and sheets hung on a line outside!!! Also nothing funnier than helping our mom running and trying to yank them off the line when an unexpected rain came! ☺️☺️☺️☺️ Born in 1955
@glennso472 жыл бұрын
Nothing like the smell of diesel in the morning.
@nellgrill38452 жыл бұрын
Yes. Sandra !! Me too:. 1955🙂♥️
@dawnmason28822 жыл бұрын
I was born in 51 and remember that smell! Helped hang clothes out and bring them inburing nose in them to smell that wonderful clean smell! Still love to climb in bed and smell that fragrance!!
@sandradavis45512 жыл бұрын
☺️☺️☺️☺️
@lauriescott62752 жыл бұрын
I remember hanging out close on my mom s close line as a child with my sister too.
@walterbryant55432 жыл бұрын
I was born in 48, so not THAT OLD yet, but something about the soda fountain with all the high school kids all drinking malts or sodas made me want to cry. When I see all the hate and violence even in kids younger than these, it speaks volumes to how far our society has fallen. And yes, I know there are still lots of good people with solid values out there but not nearly enough. I'm praying for a turn around before it's too late.
@mpatrickthomas2 жыл бұрын
And drug stores had counters to eat at along with those fountain drinks and malts.
@fanaticat12 жыл бұрын
So did some of the five and dime stores...
@JoDo7772 жыл бұрын
It all starts in the HOME. Never blame children for being abused/neglected AT HOME, blame their parents or parent
@TheOzthewiz2 жыл бұрын
I remember THOSE days too, pushing 80. However, that "kinder and gentler society" , that George H. W. Bush spoke of, will NEVER return, things will only get WORSE until society collapses. Then (maybe), there will be a "reboot".
@wannaduckfin2 жыл бұрын
These are the signs of the return of Jesus. He said the #1 sign would be deception -Matthew 24. In 2 Timothy Paul said lawlessness would be one of the many horrible signs of the Lord's return. It's all unfolding. Get right with Jesus if you aren't now. I love you all.
@robertladue76472 жыл бұрын
The sodas, milkshakes and hamburgers were so good!
@edwiles52582 жыл бұрын
my granny taught me to iron in the late 50s and i got very good at it.....i cold take a can of spary starch and make a garment look like it came from a professional cleaners, in 66, while in the army, i ironed a lot of fatigues for the guys and this skill still serves me today....i have been married for 55 years and basically ironed all our cloths, most of the time
@Doorsteps7 ай бұрын
You were in the army in '66? Didn't you realize the Vietnam war was the beginning of the end for your imperialist country? Look at the true America now. Supporting and supplying Israel to mass murder unarmed civilians. You must be so proud. The state of the world today lays on the shoulders of your pathetic country. Keep ironing.
@winifredherman42144 ай бұрын
I actually ironed my sheets and my husband’s underwear when we married in 1965! Didn’t last long!
@edwiles52584 ай бұрын
Thank goodness I am retired so I do not have to iron much, but I still enjoy it and it any is done in our house, I do it.
@sandrasegerson10652 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1938 ! Still going strong ! Really enjoyed this video !!! Keep 'em comin' !!!
@patriciamullins49652 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1938 too and everything in this video .;-) ;-) Rang lots of bells I love this video
@vincecarnevale44062 жыл бұрын
Hang in there sweetie!!!
@osvaldonunez36212 жыл бұрын
share all your ideas with the world we love you !!!!
@sandrasegerson10652 жыл бұрын
@Wildlife warrior ... On this Earth or another Planet ?
@sandrasegerson10652 жыл бұрын
In the mid-fifties --- my high school days --- A very popular dance at the time was "The Bunny Hop" . (And had nothing whatsoever to do with TV reception) !
@davidmurray53992 жыл бұрын
Phone booths are another lost cultural icon. There used to be one in our neighborhood until around 2008, I think the property owner kept it by their business for nostalgia's sake. My Grandmother always bought Chevy's, she had a '57 BelAir just like the the one in the video. You could add phone books and Sears and Wards catalogs, especially the Christmas editions, to the list.
@howellwong112 жыл бұрын
How about the iconic phone booths in England. Where did it all go?
@JudgeJulieLit2 жыл бұрын
@@howellwong11 Starting about 1970 in USA, new half-shell phone booths on metal stand poles started to replace, phase out the former tall, step in and sit down, glass accordion-doored fully enclosing phone booths that offered quiet for listening, privacy for speaking, and shelter from outside elements. In the vintage Superman comics, Clark Kent would step into a phone booth and use it as a semi-private changing booth to don his Superman costume.
@chiarac49672 жыл бұрын
The sears wish book was still around in the 70s. We would look through and choose our wishes. My parents would choose from what we circled, though I don't think they bought them at sears. We were toys r us kids!
@chiarac49672 жыл бұрын
@@JudgeJulieLit makes you wonder what would superman be today... there are no more phone booths, maybe a porta potty?
@peterbelanger40942 жыл бұрын
@@JudgeJulieLit Those doors could get stuck and people would get trapped in one from time to time. I think that's why they changed.
@kaiwildly39382 жыл бұрын
A few more things gone forever are people being courteous to another and thinking of someone else besides yourself.
@swannoir79492 жыл бұрын
People were selfish and self-absorbed then, too. The 80s was the age of excess, and brought with it the beginning of the "me, me, me" era.
@kaiwildly39382 жыл бұрын
@@swannoir7949 Affably disagree. Humanity throughout history had always carried a sense of selfishness but today, it's become mainstay in the conscience of the last few generations. People today are less courteous, kind and compassionate unless it gets them likes and they want the world to know. Pride has exceeded humility to a point of disgust. The eighties were mild compared to the millennial.
@harmgregory45602 жыл бұрын
I would say your point has nowhere been illustrated more plainly than in the decline and fall of the modern Republican party, alas.
@swannoir79492 жыл бұрын
@@harmgregory4560 Amen. It was Reagan and the Republican Party that issued in their "trickle-down economics" which got us into this mess to begin with. Then turnaround, and point the fingers at the Democrats, whom they expected to clean up this mess, they left behind. But the Democrats went along for the ride, regardless. That is why I'm staying my Black ass at home on election day.
@kaiwildly39382 жыл бұрын
@@harmgregory4560 Oh you’re right because the left democrats have been the epitome of righteousness. Give me a break and seek wisdom.
@dennislogan6781 Жыл бұрын
I was born in the 70's and I think that the 57 Bellaire is still one of the best cars ever.
@kfl6112 жыл бұрын
My mom was born in the early 1930s, she learned how to write cursive with a fountain pen and ink well. I found most people of her generation had very similar penmanship. This of course was before they had invented ball point pens.
@dantzmusic Жыл бұрын
@kfl611 *Back in that era was the term "cursive" used or was it simply referred to as "writing?"*
@djb63132 жыл бұрын
I miss so many of these. The nostalgia behind many of these is strong.
@wendyparsons7707 Жыл бұрын
Yankee I took your advice and bought the book. Yes it was a great book. Alittle slow at first bit it made me nostalgic for those years.
@larryn19292 жыл бұрын
The neighbors had a mulberry tree. Birds love mulberries. Birds loved relieving themselves over the laundry hanging on the lines. Their aim was incredible.
@jayarajjohnson24762 жыл бұрын
😂
@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr28232 жыл бұрын
Fault of the guy who hung the line. Not the birds.
@douglasgriffiths35342 жыл бұрын
They do have great aim, I must admit. I also have a mulberry tree and a clothesline. Far apart though. I have 3 acres, and they are on opposite sides. (Jan Griffiths).
@douglasgriffiths35342 жыл бұрын
@Jane Tannerevans My mulberry is male, so no berries or seed pods. Makes great shade though. (Jan Griffiths).
@davidmaher17302 жыл бұрын
And on my just washed car. Never failed!
@sharoncrawford71922 жыл бұрын
I remember my grandmother would starch and iron her bed sheets. When we visited, I always loved sleeping on those sheets. That was in the late 50s and 60s.
@lindagardener8552 жыл бұрын
I loved my Grandma’s crisp white sheets too!🥰
@donnadrane49772 жыл бұрын
When I grew up ironing was my chore. I had to iron sheets and my father’s underwear! I used to ask my mom who was going to know if dad’s underwear was wrinkled or ironed? I never got an answer except oh shut up and do your chores. Won’t touch an iron to this day. My good stuff I hang up right out of the wash when it’s done. If something is wrinkled I’ll throw it in the dryer dry and let the heat knock out the wrinkles. Lousy tee shirts and Cotten under pants go in the dryer. Bras go in a mesh bag to be washed on delicate and they dry on my door knobs!
@trevorgwelch74122 жыл бұрын
The biggest thing I miss are manners and self dignity . I'm sure there is a planet out there that is still 1950's .... people just like us . 😄🇺🇸
@wizzardofpaws24202 жыл бұрын
amen to that. Courage, faith too are no longer here amongst most people.
@Angelica-me4fj2 жыл бұрын
You are right...there wouldn't be as many kids in prison if MANNERS and RESPECT were taught!!!
@harmgregory45602 жыл бұрын
White, well-to-do people?
@harmgregory45602 жыл бұрын
@@wizzardofpaws2420 is incorrect, from what I can see.
@TheRetirednavy922 жыл бұрын
@@CarynGibson-ey1xn so what, not like the girls were raped, their panties were grabbed not while being worn.
@ConceptuallyYour3 ай бұрын
Each song on this channel is a journey through the most beautiful memories of time. ✈
@lindaduncan29542 жыл бұрын
The 50’s were the best of times….I’m so glad that I grew up during that time period.
@yeoldeseawitch2 жыл бұрын
im sorry but your nostalgia has gotten the better of you. those times were statistically inferior and obsolete now. just as this decade will be made obsolete in 50 years too. move forward, not back
@231mac2 жыл бұрын
@@yeoldeseawitch Your arbitrary interpretation has no significance over hers. Seriously, it takes a massive amount of narcissism to dictate how others are allowed to remember their past.
@yeoldeseawitch2 жыл бұрын
@@231mac well its true, whether you like it or not. we need to move on in life and not dwell on the past. its important to progress as a species.
@231mac2 жыл бұрын
@@yeoldeseawitch One: your reasoning is absolutely subjective and two: one can progress while still believing past events were/are better. Wow, how one dimensional are you?
@willie61852 жыл бұрын
@@yeoldeseawitch Dude You have some serious issues. Why would you come along and bust someone’s bubble like that. That was back when life was real. If you don’t like what you read or see hear go somewhere else and take your negative attitude with you. Your on line name matches your personality. Get a life and quit disrespecting others.
@dough67592 жыл бұрын
Old joke: a technician knows everything about something, an executive knows something about everything, and the switchboard operator knows everything!
@Ontheroxxwithsalt2 жыл бұрын
I'm a technician and we tell senior coworkers who often expect magic out of us "I'm a technician, not a magician."
@theobolt2502 жыл бұрын
Would it not be: the switchboard operator knows EVERYONE? Just sayin'.
@lindagardener8552 жыл бұрын
@@theobolt250 No, everything, cause they could listen in.
@joyceobeys68182 жыл бұрын
@@theobolt250 everything about everyone! LOL
@GhostRider-sc9vu2 жыл бұрын
My Grand Mother & Mother were Switchboard Operators for the Phone Company.
@RichardinNC12 жыл бұрын
When I was in Kindergarten in 1966, we'd go to a soda fountain at a local drugstore and get milkshakes. They all seemed to disappear by the 70s. My grandmother had an old washing machine with the ringer. She used it until her death in the 70s. My mother ironed dress shirts and used clothes lines into the 70s as well. You could do a video on the 1960s as well.
@thomasbranson72372 жыл бұрын
There was no kindergarden in North Carolina in the 60s. Me and my brother and sisters started school in the first grade. It should be still that way.
@ED80s2 жыл бұрын
Yes in the 70s and part of the 80s my mom was still using the washing machine with the ringer. She still line dries clothes in the summer months.
@RichardinNC12 жыл бұрын
@@thomasbranson7237 we lived in PA at the time.
@SSs-ch4ey2 жыл бұрын
I still line dry
@charlottecampbell43272 жыл бұрын
@@thomasbranson7237 My brother, sister and I.... That's not taught anymore.
@community19492 жыл бұрын
It was a wonderful time to be a child during that era.
@elultimo1022 жыл бұрын
"The '50s, when a kid could be outside at night, and not end up with his picture on a milk carton." (The Wonder Years). It was not unusual to get in the house after 9PM on summer nights. We were safe. I wish I could spend my life in the '50s---I would miss color TV & microwave ovens, not to mention modern medical.
@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr28232 жыл бұрын
@@elultimo102 Microwaves technically existed.
@elultimo1022 жыл бұрын
@@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 ----I first used a microwave at the Lincoln, Nebraska train station in summer 1960, when I was 11. I saw a demonstration on the Today Show a few weeks earlier. IDK how far back they existed as a home appliance.
@douglasgriffiths35342 жыл бұрын
@@elultimo102 My dad got my mom an Amana Radarange microwave oven in 1968. They had dials on them then, and the door opened like the oven door on a stove. She was still using it into the 90s. (Jan Griffiths).
@elultimo1022 жыл бұрын
@@douglasgriffiths3534 We got a "Frigidaire" made by Amana in '78, but left it with the house in '94. I picked up an Amana dial-front and one with a touch-screen and still have them, along with 2-convection. (garage sale specials). They were made to be repairable, and not disposable. I'm probably going to Craigslist at least two of them.
@winstonsmith30702 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1950 and remember all of these categories fairly well. A much better era than today from my perspective. Where have you gone Joe DiMaggio...
@mickeyfinnegan74692 жыл бұрын
yeah, 1953 here, glad i lived when i did,we saw a lot,life was more managable ,and if you were smart, you enjoyed it!
@mickeyfinnegan74692 жыл бұрын
I met a guy a few years ago, our age, he said" you know, we grew up in the best country in the world at the best time" kinda sums it up!
@bensteinberg215410 ай бұрын
Judging that you said it was a much better era from your perspective I’m assuming your perspective is not that of an African American
@jimculbertson23762 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1939 and you hit almost everything I remember of the '50's. In my small town, Geneseo, NY, Ulmer's Drug Store had a soda fountain. My future father-in-law had a '57 Belair, blue, white top, four-door hardtop convertible with a power pack. Incredible automobile. Great video. Thank you.
@chaseme98602 жыл бұрын
My grandfather had the same car. It was the Sunday driver. My grandmother sold it after he died. It was a sad day for me.
@cwilson69902 жыл бұрын
My late Dad did too Gosh how we miss that car ! Wish Dad never sold it , bought it new
@Cryo8372 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1953, even I remember a lot of this. We are so lucky to have lived through the short "golden age" of America (1946 thru 1966) when the average Joe had a great life and maximum purchasing power.
@douglas_drew2 жыл бұрын
Hey Jim, I never knew you were that much older than me (1950)! Did I ever tell you that my very first car was a '57 Chevy 2door sedan white over turquoise? And for me it was a nickel mug of root beer at Newberry's in Ithaca... two straws and see if I or my buddy could suck the fastest and drink the most. Hope all is well with you in historically beautiful Livingston County,
@glennso472 жыл бұрын
The world book encyclopedia was common in my school.
@itinerantpatriot11962 жыл бұрын
I grew up in the 60s but we still wrote on a blackboard at school. We also still did air-raid drills for a time. I remember ducking under the desk or lying down in the hallway. How did the comedian Louis Black put it: "Protection my *#&, it was kindling.!" I lived in Texas during the 90s and the Chevy dealer down the street from my home had a 57 Chevy in the showroom. I don't recall how many miles were on it but was in mint condition, light blue with a white leather interior. He told me it was mostly for show but he said if he got the right offer he would be open to selling it. Cool stuff. Thanks for posting the memories and keep up the good work.
@msmith78512 жыл бұрын
I, also remember the air-raid drills in school as a child. Very frightening...
@Thros12 жыл бұрын
Chalkboards we're still heavily used until the early 2000s then schools started using dry erase
@henny65662 жыл бұрын
@@Thros1 Yup, I grew up in the 80's and 90's and we still wrote on blackboards with chalk. In cursive also.
@Thros12 жыл бұрын
@@henny6566 they taught us cursive in the 90s but most schools are doing away with it now
@henny65662 жыл бұрын
@@Thros1 Yeah I know it's becoming obsolete.
@ronalddevine95872 жыл бұрын
Born in '47, I remember all, except writing on the blackboard. We were given stick pens, ink pots, and the lousiest pulpy paper to practice cursive. My older brother had a gorgeous '57 Chevy Bel Air, 2 door hardtop, fire engine red, red and black interior. Souped up engine, 4 on the floor, 1/4 mile in the low 14s. What a car!!!!
@pianomaly98592 жыл бұрын
A little younger than you, but I remember the pulpy paper, the widely spaced lines with the broken one in the middle in grade school in the 50's and early 60's. I've seen the handwriting of young adults and children today, little or no cursive, it looks like grafitti to me.
@jipsees19082 жыл бұрын
@@pianomaly9859 and they cannot read it
@AreaThirteenThirteen2 жыл бұрын
I don't think they even teach cursive anymore, nowadays it is about transgender issues and critical race theory.
@ankit39362 жыл бұрын
Where you from?
@thunderbird19212 жыл бұрын
Imagine if they brought back a car like the Bel-Air, only with modern safety features. That styling still looks good 65 years later!
@johnphillips79412 жыл бұрын
Amazing! I remember all of these things! I am 76. John.
@joshn9382 жыл бұрын
I would add S and H Green stamps and Plaid stamps to this list. I remember every adult feverishly saving all of theirs, filling out their trading stamp books in the hopes to get an item- toys, housewares, furnishings, you name it. Also, many car companies don't exist today that were around in the 1950s. When was the last time you saw an Oldsmobile, Plymouth, Studebaker, Packard, Hudson, Nash, or Kaiser-Frazer?
@rondaleroi2 жыл бұрын
Mom got me my two-volume unabridged dictionary (which I still have) with Green Stamps.
@marshahovenesian81422 жыл бұрын
As a kid, my job was to wet the stamps and put them into the book.
@jrnfw40602 жыл бұрын
Yes, and also orange stamps and Blue Chip stamps. I still have the pen and pencil holder and matching organizer I got from the Blue Chip catalog way back in the 60s.
@josephpepin8822 Жыл бұрын
I still have and use a soldering gun bought with green stamps.
@sherrie6492 Жыл бұрын
Or a DeSoto.
@JosephStJames20002 жыл бұрын
There was a soda fountain in the back of our local Woolworth 5 & Dime. My dad made quite the distinction between a malt and a shake: "They add malt to a malted." Given his girth, I tended to trust him on all things sweet. As for the seatbeltless cars, don't forget to metal dashboard! As a kid I loved the '57 Chevy because I could stand on the backseat and my head didn't touch the ceiling.
@smith1958b2 жыл бұрын
The thing I miss was "Downtown." As a teens we would go downtown to see a movie in a large movie house. After that we would go to Woolworths to eat at the grill. If we had any money left, we would go to the pinball arcade. Then stop at the bookstore to look at blacklight posters. There was even a "Topless" bar that would keep the doors open in the summer time. Us teen boys would stop and peer in until some man would come and chase us away. This was in the early to mid-seventies.
@saminaneen2 жыл бұрын
@@smith1958b I remember when boy's were ACTUALLY boys, and girls, were ACTUALLY girls, and the young boys and girls, ACTUALLY knew what public bathrooms, to use, do you remember that?
@momkatmax2 жыл бұрын
In the early 60's our Hooks drugstore still had a soda fountain and some independent drugstores had them into the late 60's early 70's.
@loveycat54742 жыл бұрын
Watson's in Orange California was a soda fountain and restaurant next to a pharmacy own by Watson. I remember eating there with my dad into the 21 century. Mr Watson was always at the pharmacy selling the medication. When he passed away it was turn into a sports bar. I felt it was such as shame to be destroyed.
@bobbybishop3682 жыл бұрын
Kuhns had a soda fountain where I lived .
@kbunky692 жыл бұрын
I remember when we got our encyclopedia. It was a big deal and can still remember the smell of the books
@emmgeevideo2 жыл бұрын
LOL... I'll bet a lot of those encyclopedias were never opened after the first few weeks.
@kbunky692 жыл бұрын
@@emmgeevideo no used them all through school years . Wish I still had them just for the memories, those and HUGE National Geographic magazines.. remember them
@cwilson69902 жыл бұрын
@@kbunky69 Me too my brother still has ours 🙂 gosh cursive writing , Do kids today learn it ??
@emmgeevideo2 жыл бұрын
@@kbunky69 LOL... Yes, I remember National Geographic. We used to flip through them hoping to find pictures of African tribes because the ladies didn't always wear more than a skirt.
@kbunky692 жыл бұрын
@@emmgeevideo lol
@TheAlvoss2 жыл бұрын
Some of the things I remember from the '50s: Garbage men for wet garbage, the not food Garbage was collected on a different day. 2. Coal deliveries for our coal furnace, 3. Men going down the street selling blocks of ice for those of us that didn't yet have electric refrigerators, 4. Traveling salesman that sold clothes to my mother, 5. Doctors who made house calls regularly, 6. Six ounce "tap glasses " for beer on draft (draught" to be correct), 7. 5 cent Cashews in a machine at one or both ends of the bar, 8. Saloons that had a rail to place a foot on, 81/2 saloons that still had spitoons, 9. being able to take a shotgun in a case that you checked in to the principal's office so I could go hunting after school. 1
@TheAlvoss2 жыл бұрын
* 10. Clothes lines and the sticks sold with a slot on one e n
@catsinhouse2 жыл бұрын
My first apartment post-university (1975) in Seattle still had an old-fashioned ice box. (We had a regular refrigerator, too.) How I loved that place - $160/mo., split with my roommate. Utilities about $8 for two months. Good times! (I made $440/month.) Now the same apartment is renting for over $2300/mo..
@michaelwascom622 жыл бұрын
@Greg Bloomfield Thanks for recalling the Fuller Brush man (or as I thought it was when a kid: "the full-of-brush man!" Also there was the Watkins man and Kirby vacuum cleaner salesmen who'ld come to your door. The last time I saw a Fuller Brush man was 1971.
@3mtech2 жыл бұрын
@@catsinhouse And you still make 440 a month. Capitalism baby
@pattymiller90402 жыл бұрын
Also, the wringer washer, the milkman making deliveries...& glass bottles for milk (even in school), pop in glass bottles, country doctor, poodle skirts with net slips under & bobbie socks (I missed those, but remember from my older sister😁), Ivory bar soap, black & wh tv, movie camera & those movies on reels, and Elvis......same older sister loved him; she also watched Bandstand every Saturday(?)......
@baumcollcsame7871 Жыл бұрын
Seeing those clothes being hung on that clothes line, I remember how fresh they smelled when my mom brought them into the house when they were dry. It made the whole house smell WONDERFUL!!!
@dennisanderson38952 жыл бұрын
What an era! What a time to be alive and working/plying/learning! Given that some trends lingered and held on a bit, I'd say the 50s-70s was the best 30 years to be growing up/living!
@mr.nugget84122 жыл бұрын
the 50s and 60s sucked but the 70s - today are probably the best time to be alive
@PatHouseworth Жыл бұрын
@@mr.nugget8412 Writing like a total moron...you wear it well.
@ethanshelbyskateboarding9980 Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately it all had the worst cases of racism as well as people getting away with child, spousal and animal cruelty they any other decade that followed
@ethanshelbyskateboarding9980 Жыл бұрын
AND NO STUPID STUPID INFOMERCIALS
@wendynichols6946 Жыл бұрын
No, sorry to disagree the 1960 were the best. Best fashion, hair styles, music everything was great
@DennisJohnsonDrummer2 жыл бұрын
Born in 1960, I still remember the Encyclopedia salesman walking down the street and my dad agreed to buy a set. We had them for so many years. This was before man landed on the moon, so it was funny to read through that letter to see how they predicted things like that. So many things I miss about those times. One kind of blue jeans and if you wanted them faded, your mom had to bleach them. Ripped jeans were turned into play clothes, not something to wear as a fashion statement. Mom stayed home while dad worked. She was there to greet us when we came home from school. You only ate out on special occassions. Gas was cheap and cars were huge and were made of metal. You ate at the dinner table without the television blaring. There were no cell phones or computers. People didn't curse on television. Naked people didn't appear all over the screen. Couples got married before living together. (well, mostly) Stores were closed on Sunday. Television went off the air at midnight. (or maybe 10 pm). The Nation Anthem was played on t.v. as it went off the air each night. Boys were boys and girls were girls. A prayer was said at the beginning of the day in school. Parernts didn't have to sign a consent form for their kids to be paddled in school. If a kid deserved a paddling, he or she was lit up by the principal. There was no "time out" to think about what you had done. You were wrong and you paid the consequences and thought twice before ever doing that again. You could understand the lyrics of songs on the radio. Some didn't make sense, but at least you could understand what was being said. Cursing in a song was not in "fashion". Women didn't wear yoga pants to the grocery store. Pajamas were worn only in the home. People dressed up to attend sporting events. Preachers didn't wear ripped jeans in order to attract a younger crowd to their congregation. News reporters actually reported the news and refrained from giving their opinions. Football players didn't dance in the end zone after scoring a touchdown. They simply smiled and handed the ball to the referee. Fans didn't run onto the field in protest of the latest complaint. I could go on and on and on. Maybe someone could add to this list. Have a great day!
@taxikalaty51152 жыл бұрын
You honestly believe that bullshit the moon landing was a hoax still a hoax
@skyemacallister13062 жыл бұрын
Great list. Don't forget the milkman and bread delivery man. Playing outside until the street lights came on.
@bradbackauthor99402 жыл бұрын
I was born in 1956, and I remember that growing up in the 1960s included being able to play outside anywhere in town, without any parental supervision, walking 3 miles each way to school every day, and never having ANYONE to DRIVE us to school, because only Dad owned a CAR, and h needed it for work!!
@skyemacallister13062 жыл бұрын
@@bradbackauthor9940 1952 model here. Always walked to school, no matter the weather. Dad had the '54 Ford for work. :) I remember the day he came home and said "well, looks like I have to buy a Chevy!" It was his way of telling us that he'd just been hired at Chevrolet Engineering at the new General Motors complex north of Detroit. I'll never forget that last ride in the old Ford. Dad took me with him and he bought 25 cents worth of gas, telling the attendant that he was selling the car that day and getting a new one. Ah, memories...
@marktharp44622 жыл бұрын
I remember so much of that...1957 here!
@wesmcgee16482 жыл бұрын
Born in 58 but my memories of the early 60s were were very similar. Raised in a small town, 50s technology continued. Telephone calls were long distance 10 plus miles away and you had to go through an operator. Very expensive too.
@bostongirlsandy2 жыл бұрын
My family had to make international calls to our family in the old country and that was expensive up until the mid 90s.
@texasred27022 жыл бұрын
"Numbah, please..."
@kevinbergin99712 жыл бұрын
Also born in '58. Recall that the EXCHANGE was often based on the initials of your town
@domsalexa2 жыл бұрын
I remember seeing the laundry ringer, telephone switchboard, did the cursive on the blackboard in 2nd grade and we had the Compton’s Encyclopedia instead of the Britannica. Born in 65 here.
@bettinae95522 жыл бұрын
I love this nostalgic video! I remember fluoroscopes in shoe stores, and then, when we'd shop in Gimbel's, we'd climb the few stairs to a platform where our salesmen would press the toes of our shoes to make sure they'd fit. Some doctors also had fluoroscopes to check for broken bones after an injury. It was amazing that I could wiggle my fingers and see the bones! Oh, do I miss the switchboard operators! The other day I spent HOURS trying to reach my service provider. The voice menu couldn't understand my question, and I kept trying to reach a human being. A switchboard operator would have known what I wanted and gotten me to the right person in a few seconds. I miss when companies would pride themselves on customer service -- that's a thing of the past. I also miss being free as a child. We didn't need play dates, we'd just go outside and find our friends. Saturdays we could spend the whole day in the movies. Back then, even our humble movie theater had a live show, then a travelogue, newsreel, cartoons, and two feature movies! There was also a matron who patrolled the children's section. She actually wore a white uniform and wielded a flashlight. What I miss most was getting to know our neighbors. As a child, I was fascinated by old people, and would question them non-stop about what their childhood was like. My most vivid memory is my conversations with a particular neighbor. She had been born a slave! This was in the 1950s, so she would have been in her late 80s or early 90s. And what fascinated me most was that, if she also loved talking to very old people, she could have met someone who had been born before the Revolution!!! Time is a funny thing, sometimes it creeps along, and sometimes it speeds by. Thanks for posting these videos. You make time slow time just a bit!
@samanthab19232 жыл бұрын
Our neighborhood in NJ was built around the old Gimbel estate. Lovely stone mansion on a hill Far View.
@harmgregory45602 жыл бұрын
I trust everyone is aware of the health problems caused by amateur operated X-ray machines./
@diatribe52 жыл бұрын
But now they’re in airports. I chose the pat down instead. I try to avoid airports anymore.
@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr28232 жыл бұрын
@@harmgregory4560 florouscope (sp?)
@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr28232 жыл бұрын
Lucky you still have a foot. Edison's assistant didn't make out that well.
@glenminnick37242 жыл бұрын
Just jogged my memory, i'm 68 and have forgotten a few things, thanks!
@bostongirlsandy2 жыл бұрын
I grew up in the 90s and early 2000s and we had antenna tvs, cursive handwriting and encyclopedias. I would have liked to enjoy a soda fountain at the drug stores.
@bighands692 жыл бұрын
Soda fountains existed because there was lots of wealth and prosperity in society. They started to disappear when people had less money to spend.
@kimchee941122 жыл бұрын
@@bighands69 School lunch was 35 cents, if you skip a lunch or two you could have a nice banana split with three scoops of ice cream after school. Don't tell mom that.
@e.pluribusunum79162 жыл бұрын
I'm probably the same age as you and we could get a coke anywhere we wanted. It wasn't a luxury item. TV's with rabbit ears sucked, cursive handwriting is pointless unless you're trying to impress someone. We have the internet now so you don't need encyclopedias. You're not missing out on anything, I promise. People weren't better in the 50's, they were actually super racist and and sexist and the upper middle class made it worse for all Americans just like they do today.
@robertadams66062 жыл бұрын
Yea there was a Soda Fountain near where we lived until 70s they would put flavored syrup in your Coke, cherry, chocolate, vanilla was another but can't remember what it was.
@e.pluribusunum79162 жыл бұрын
@@CarynGibson-ey1xn If you like cursive, that's fine. I was just pointing out that the ability to write in cursive isn't a requirement to being understood. I personally don't judge people based on their signature. The jobs I have had require me to sign my name thousands of times to the point where my signature is just a scribble.
@Martin.Wilson2 жыл бұрын
Other things gone forever: decency, civility, common sense and politeness,
@lindagardener8552 жыл бұрын
Only with some.
@margarettickle96592 жыл бұрын
Companies did not expect you to do 3 persons work to keep your job. Multi-tasking was not heard of. Employees were respected.
@nowthatsjustducky2 жыл бұрын
Meh. I still see plenty of all of that.
@sinatrasmoke94482 жыл бұрын
Bingo!
@mr.blackhawk1422 жыл бұрын
Civility, and politeness are the SAME. Am I the only one left that knows his 'theres'. It sometimes feels like it!
@howtubeable2 жыл бұрын
ALSO GONE FOREVER: 1. American manufacturing. 2. The American Middle Class. 3. The American Work Ethic. 4. Civility and good manners. Being polite. 5. Objective Journalism in the mainstream media. 6. Dressing modestly. Seriously, the list goes on and on.
@jessrevill18522 жыл бұрын
5 has been gone for a long time.
@xr6lad2 жыл бұрын
5: oh please. If anything it was far more of an establishment and tow the government line media back then. Now we have far more options to see different views and actually do our own research into an issue than accept what was printed.
@sassy00102 жыл бұрын
The American work ethic still exists -- even more so today imho. It's just not recognized because so many worker's rights have disappeared, and people are starting to seriously recognize that so they're just not willing to break their ass for crummy wages anymore.
@JOHN----DOE2 жыл бұрын
Good list. Here's another: corporations that valued their employees and customers and made useful, valuable products. Eastman Kodak comes to mind.
@victorbruce57722 жыл бұрын
Affordable housing new cars you can fix yourself
@kathleenirish8516 Жыл бұрын
My grandma and her twin both worked as cardboard operators. My mom and dad & his dad both worked for the phone company. I started working for the phone company right out of high school. Had 2 first cousins also work for phone company. I did 37 years, dad was 42, his father 45. Overall my family put in well over 150 years.
@DouglasUrantia Жыл бұрын
Born in 1943 but I was afraid to use the X ray shoe thing, it looked scary to me. I remember being 16 and having an old man wash my car windows, I was embarrassed. We had 3 sets of encyclopedias....now we have google which is filled with thousands of lies.
@jimkeskey2 жыл бұрын
1. Common sense 2. Decency 3. Self-Respect 4. Patriotism 5. Free Speech 6. Sense of Humor 7. Marriage 8. Manhood 9. Womanhood 10. Literacy 11. Penmanship 12. The Ability to Drive
@mr.nugget84122 жыл бұрын
well at least list the good things about the 50s
@ethanshelbyskateboarding9980 Жыл бұрын
You forgot racism
@jimkeskey Жыл бұрын
@@ethanshelbyskateboarding9980 Oh racism still exists. BLM is as racist as it gets :)
@bobdavis4848 Жыл бұрын
Surely deep down you know that some of those examples are overgeneralizations. All twelve are not gone forever from the world. I think some of those things are just less common. Your putting "Manhood" and "Womanhood" after "Marriage" makes it seem you are against gay marriage. I respectfully disagree. You have a right to your opinion, as do others. What "Decency" is defined as is something some disagree on. Literacy, penmanship, and careful driving are among things that have always been important to me.
@bobdavis4848 Жыл бұрын
@@ethanshelbyskateboarding9980 Racism isn't gone.
@MadMatt-bs3xv2 жыл бұрын
I wasn’t born till 1982, but I still remember learning to write cursive on the chalkboard and putting tinfoil on those rabbit ears in 1989. But I definitely never heard of those foot X-ray machines until watching this. That gave me a good laugh.
@JudgeJulieLit2 жыл бұрын
@@BooBooKitty001 Shoe store salesmen would seat customers who had selected a shoe style from the display, then fit their unshoed foot onto a metal scale on the floor to measure the foot to get the right size shoe.
@peterbelanger40942 жыл бұрын
Cursive was nothing but a torture, it was pointless. It's only useful for old dip-ink pens. That's why it was invented, to minimize lifting of the pen which caused drips. For modern pens and pencils it's useless. Anyway, I could never get it right. My teacher eventually gave up and gave me special permission to just print.
@peterbelanger40942 жыл бұрын
@@jetstream6389 Fingernails, and those metal chalk holders used to draw multiple parallel lines, with no chalk installed.....
@lindycorgey27432 жыл бұрын
I've got some school papers when I was in High School in the 1970s. You had to write everything in cursive. The funny thing is I can't read my papers anymore. It all looks like heiroglyphics to me. If I write anything it's all print now. Still know how to write cursive.
@joycefranklin89812 жыл бұрын
I remember those x-ray machines. You wiggled your toes to show how much room you had in the shoe. They were fun!
@bobtaylor1702 жыл бұрын
Oh, dear sir, I remember drugstore soda fountains until 1970. Every neighborhood had one. They were like alcohol less neighborhood bars. The food was delicious, great truck stop - like food.
@thomasallen38182 жыл бұрын
My parents owned a chain of grocery stores from 1950 until their retirement in 1981. The super markets all had soda fountains with a service eat in counter and booths. Our main or original location was in a shopping center my dad had built in 1953, and the soda fountain was expanded into a full service restaurant/steakhouse. I along with my siblings decided to take another path in life and only worked with our parents through high school and college.
@e.pluribusunum79162 жыл бұрын
Thanks for reminding me why I don't want to go back to 1950.
@willie61852 жыл бұрын
I just love these videos. I have so many comments but I’ll just mention a couple. We had a drive up restaurant called the Flame and the waitress would come out with roller skates on and take our order. When she brought the order out you would have to roll up the window a little bit so she could hang the tray on it. Also I remember when grandma and grandpa got there first phone. It was a party line and it didn’t matter what ring it was grandma would answer it and yell on it as loud as she could. She couldn’t understand how anyone could hear her through the wires. It was so funny. And one more. My Aunt Dorothy was doing laundry and she got her boob caught in the ringer. That was also so funny. Long time ago.
@patgarcia46642 жыл бұрын
Oh, yes! The drive-ins! Our favorites in Los Angeles, CA in the late 50s and early 60s were Van deKamp's and Henry's. Good times!😍🥤
@janhankins9112 жыл бұрын
I remember that! Ours was a "Steak 'N Shake" and the waitresses (no waiters that I remember) would roller skate around and take your order and then bring the food to you (roller skating carrying the tray). I had forgotten about that. Thanks for the memory.
@spankynater42422 жыл бұрын
I bet your aunts nipple didn’t think it was funny.
@bettywiendels57142 жыл бұрын
@ 18 years of age, I had my long hair stuck in the wringer roller, so I turned it off and removed my hair from it. I know a guy around my age who had his arm stuck in it as a small child and ended up with the scars. Unfortunately, he died in the auto collision @ about 23 in 1981.
@leftylou60702 жыл бұрын
@@bettywiendels5714 You were lucky to have an electric wringer. Ours was manual, arm muscles only!
@mariekatherine52382 жыл бұрын
A lot of these things endured through the 1960’s, and a few into the 1970’s.
@journeytothemosthigh50212 жыл бұрын
So much more could be added to this. I see a part 2 in our future😂
@doktormcnasty2 жыл бұрын
Yup. Like it being possible for a household to be supported by a single income earner.
@autodidact5372 жыл бұрын
Letter openers, cigarette cases & cocktail shakers.
@helenboula35382 жыл бұрын
I don't know how it goes you can never go back.
@helenboula35382 жыл бұрын
I remember all those days in the drugstore when you got the drinks and The fountains and the grill they have jukebox with dance and then then they had the drive-ins and they have little patio dancing outside the cars
@Dan13736 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the memories!!!!!! I remember all those items that you mentioned and they seem just like yesterday!!!!! Unfortunately the only way we can go back is through all the pictures we took!!!!!
@nyca520 Жыл бұрын
My older sisters were 50s children and I was a 60s child. They were gracious enough to take me with them in their teens. I always watched them dance, go to car hops, watched American Bandstand together, they took their younger brother on Coney Island rides, Nathan's, Mitchell's and Big Daddy's for lunch. Miss them.
@davidsquires1542 жыл бұрын
I, was born in 1957 and I still remember when my mother would wash clothes on Mondays and iron on Tuesdays. I, remember the Maytag Square Wringer Washer and the Sear's Kenmore Wringer Washer also. I, still remember when my mother would hang laundry on the clothesline to dry before ironing clothes. I, remember the Colonial Style A&P Stores,and when Kroger gave Top Value Trading Stamps. And, soda fountains in the Department Stores and Drugstores. The, rabbit ears antennas. Life was much more simpler back then, than now a days.
@golden.lights.twinkle23292 жыл бұрын
Not simpler if you were a woman.
@joyceobeys68182 жыл бұрын
Fully agree that the morality n kindness n good service are a thing of the past. My husband just said, sheesh, what service? Though there has always been immorality we do see it is far worse than it’s ever been. That’s the saddest part. Little kids could go for walks n play all over in the neighborhood without fear of being stolen or harmed. I miss those days. But the sin will be taken care of pretty soon. :) I wonder if there will be malts n things like that in the 1000 year reign?
@joyceobeys68182 жыл бұрын
Rolling laughing my husband laughed and said I don’t remember mom doing all the work, we all had to help, LOL I loved the ringer washers! My clothes got so clean n smelled so good. N I loved hanging up clothes on the line. Women ironed because the material wrinkled. I always ironed my jeans but didn’t need to, but I liked the clean crisp creases. Note: Never put the T poles for clothesline’s in a birds path in the sky or you will be rewashing lots of clothes. Birds take certain paths like we have roads. Find a path they don’t take! LOL I miss the old stores like a Benjamin Franklins, Woolworths, Hudson’s, Wards, Sears, free popcorn n beer nuts in various places! Old time hardware stores where you could find anything n everything but there was an ashtray in every corner n sometimes a spittoon. By then most used a pop bottle. Gross! LOL I loved those days though! I loved listening to the stories on the radio. And listening to WJR n CKLW n etc... our radio had buttons with the names on them n it would go to that spot, LOL And later I got one I could fling the knob to the right or left real fast to get to where I wanted on the radio n I didn’t have to program anything. A rotary phone you could whip against the wall n it would still work. If you were upset you could slam the receiver down but last second we always refrained! LOL Now there’s no temptation cuz there is nothing to slam down! LOL 😂 We still have a working phone booth here because the Mennonites use it. Which I probably should get a picture of before they get rid of it. Beautiful days n simpler times! We were all healthier too! ....Especially if we didn’t eat bottom feeders n pig. People that ate these n pig seemed to get sick more often than others. I loved the old stores n the pop machines where you lift the lid n it was full of ice water n got the wet bottle of pop for a dime n later a quarter n piped the lid off with the bottle opener attached. We made things out of bottle caps n saved them n got free things n discounts in the lids. We also made gum wrapper chains n played marbles n jacks n rode bikes n never went in the house til the lights outside came on. We made forts n collected tadpoles n craw dads for fishing n used red chiffon paper over a flashlight at night in the rain to get earthworms! LOL I loved those days! We didn’t have to buy a permit for everything. The police didn’t pull cars over for money, they were our friends n cared for us. I remember my mom having fits about the little rascals not having parental supervision and said nobody should watch that trash! LOL I could go on and on! LOL
@kittycat49002 жыл бұрын
Top Value Trading Stamps AND S & H Green Stamps. I remember my mother colleting them and then going to their "stores" to purchase something with the filled books. Several of our gas stations gave them out too.
@glennso472 жыл бұрын
I remember LIFE Magazine and Saturday Evening Post magazine.
@DS-uh6ss2 жыл бұрын
Cursive writing has made a comeback in bullet journaling and related aesthetics. Not just cursive, either, but there's been a revival of Spencerian penmanship, specifically, amongst Gen Z students. Very cool to see.
@margyb74692 жыл бұрын
I am learning Spencerian Handwriting atm. I did learn it in primary school, which was as Catholic school, but on starting high school we had to print so I forgot how to write cursive. I was born in 1958
@starababa1985 Жыл бұрын
My neighbor is teaching her two sons to write cursive, using the Palmer method. It allows you to write more quickly, and some people see it as a sign of a better education.
@kennethswain63132 жыл бұрын
Our Buster Brown children’s shoe store had the x ray machine.
@vernwallen42462 жыл бұрын
"I.m Buster Brown,i live in a shoe,that's my dog tide he lives there too".😂😂😂
@samanthab19232 жыл бұрын
@@vernwallen4246 * Tige pronounced like tiger without the R. A bulldog too 🐶
@adamandrews41072 жыл бұрын
We had soda fountains in Detroit during the ‘60s. Loved them!
@victorialynough8863 Жыл бұрын
I remember having a dress exactly the same as the little girl in the photo in the classroom made by my grandmother. Plaid cotton was really in style! My grandparents gave my parents a television as a gift in honor of my birth in 1952!
@anniecarroll80102 жыл бұрын
Loved this, took me back to the soda fountain, drive in movies, walks in the park with my sweetie at dusk, and Church picnics on the grounds. We were smarter back then, we knew right from wrong, didn't have to to worry about offending everyone. We could almost trust Dr.'s, politicians and always Ministers. Now we have vet them before using their services. Our children are paying the price.
@Laura0IN2 жыл бұрын
Out little town just got word that someone is going to reopen the soda fountain shop this summer! I’m praying that it happens before everyone gathers for my parents anniversary. My kids and my brothers kids remembered when we moved to a small town that had a soda fountain shop that was still open, 1999. It closed shortly after though, to the disappointment of us all. We will be ecstatic if this opens before family comes!
@yournamehere18862 жыл бұрын
@@Laura0IN As soon as I have enough revenue, I'm going to start a soda fountain business... Along with all the classic soda fountain drinks, we'll serve 🍔burgers,fries,classic sandwiches🥪and sell Sundries, and various things you can't get elsewhere...
@harmgregory45602 жыл бұрын
If everyone knew right from wrong, why were so many people treated badly? why were so many toxic substances dumped in lakes and rivers? (and the air?)
@cøle13122 жыл бұрын
Take those rose-tinted glasses off your eyes.
@floridaactor Жыл бұрын
@@harmgregory4560 Not to mention banning some people from restrooms, lunch counters, drinking fountains, front of the bus, etc. because of their skin color.
@1805movie2 жыл бұрын
There are still a good handful of soda fountains in the U.S. There's one called Shug's Soda Fountain in Seattle (which opened recently).
@luisreyes19632 жыл бұрын
We still have one in Chicago in Marge's Candies. 🥤
@gildersleevefan672 жыл бұрын
There's a great one at a drug store in downtown Abilene, KS as well. It's worth checking out and keeping in the spirit of theings if you visit the Eisenhower Presidential Library and Museum
@golden.lights.twinkle23292 жыл бұрын
There's one at Economy Drug in Ely, Nevada
@vegetariansuniteworldwide80912 жыл бұрын
@@luisreyes1963 I have been there! The Beatles made a stop there and you can sit at the same booth.
@cm11332 жыл бұрын
Carlisle Drugs in Alexander City AL still has a soda fountain. Well, it still did when I worked at Russell Athletic from 1995-1998. I hope it still exists. It was a really nostalgic place to relax and enjoy a good cheese burger.
@lindagardener8552 жыл бұрын
As an Australian born in the mid 1950’s, we had Hills hoist rotary clothes lines that were always wonky from us kids swinging around on them, which was a lot of fun. Almost every family had one - many still do, actually. In the 50’s Mum always did the washing in the copper with a wringer attached, and then it got hung on the wonky clothes line until we girls had to bring it in later that day and fold it all. That was a big job. There were eight kids in my family. I don’t really know what a soda fountain is. We had bottled soft drinks like Coke, Pepsi, Passiona and Fanta orange and of course lemonade. These were often in a self-serve fridge that you put money in the slot, then slid your selection across to get it out. There was a bottle opener on the side. We had milk shakes in the big metal containers that kept them really cold. Chocolate malted was my favourite. We also had thick shakes. There were ‘spiders’, which was just coke poured over ice cream in a glass, but I didn’t really like them. We also had sit in booths in the Milk Bars, as we called them, and you could order banana splits, and ice cream sundaes. They usually had a juke box, which was lovely, and sometimes the older girls would dance, even though there wasn’t much room. Later on in the 60’s they got pinball machines, which were so much fun. I remember that sweet pop it made when you got enough points for a free game! I got pretty good at playing them for ages on just one sixpence. I used to get in trouble from my father though, cause I guess it wasn’t seemly for a young girl to be playing the ‘pinnies’. Ahh, they were good times.
@davidpar22 жыл бұрын
I saw a pic or vid of a mid century Australian back yard the other day, and there was one of those rotary clothes lines in it, which I thought was interesting, because we had them just like that here in America, too
@stephaniebattersby45562 жыл бұрын
coming from n New Zealand most houses here still have rotary clothes lines i do,
@tintobrass5322 жыл бұрын
We had Hills rotary clothes lines in the UK mate
@lindagardener8552 жыл бұрын
@@tintobrass532 Wow! I thought they were an Aussie kind of thing! Did you swing on yours?
@tintobrass5322 жыл бұрын
@@lindagardener855 Yes mate, and I can remember my old man shouting at me “You break that, and you’ll bloody pay for it out of your pocket money”!
@stevedeleon87752 жыл бұрын
Bunny ears are still around with the FREE TV reception on Modern TV's
@MrGchiasson2 жыл бұрын
We had a black & white console TV. When you changed a TV channel the knob made this loud, "ketchunk kerchunk" sound. Then you'd adjust the 'rabbit ear' antenna to get the best picture reception.
@jamesritter29762 жыл бұрын
I really miss the soda fountain.
@STho2052 жыл бұрын
There are a few still around here and there. Rexall franchise local pharmacies seem to be the most common to still have them
@lanegunnell12182 жыл бұрын
Move to Utah! Because the Mormons don't drink coffee, soda fountains have become the de-facto "coffee shop". There's millions (not literally, of course) here.
@dynjarren83552 жыл бұрын
@@lanegunnell1218 Thanks for the tip. What do they have against coffee ☕️? What is it? The demon drink? I don’t get it. Because Caffeine is a drug? Very Strange.
@rondaleroi2 жыл бұрын
@@dynjarren8355 Yes, it's the caffeine.
@hollyking25802 жыл бұрын
Phone booth stuffing would definitely be a Tik Tok challenge if the booths still existed.
@wesmcgee16482 жыл бұрын
You'd think so. Unfortunately there's much more dangerous stuff on there.
@l.s.a19902 жыл бұрын
FK TikTok
@luisreyes19632 жыл бұрын
Too bad today's college students are more interested in radical politics & gender identity, rather than campus hijinks. 😕
@animeevergreenathena2 жыл бұрын
@@wesmcgee1648 Take making anything with using Nyquill for instance. I'm surprised that even nowadays, the federal government hasn't yet issued a law that states that you need a license to buy it. The stuff has 10% alcohol for goodness sakes!
@michaelmullin79412 жыл бұрын
In middle '60s, we had Volkswagon Beetle Stuffing.
@emmetttaylor17392 жыл бұрын
I am 72 years old and I remember all of this. You do not talk about the bad only what you think was good. In all times there is good and bad. We need to talk about both.
@majorbuzz2 жыл бұрын
I agree with your comment. A lot of people were young and still in their families care. I know that my parents had many concerns. They came out of the depression and a world war that created a nuclear nightmare.
@robertladue76472 жыл бұрын
Cursive! On the blackboard, loved it!
@ammo8713 Жыл бұрын
NUMBER 1....RESPECT !!!
@dobbins25502 жыл бұрын
Love your channel and the memories they evoke.
@jenniferdjaslowskj9932 жыл бұрын
shades of PLEASANTVILLE and BACK TO THE FUTURE. So very happy that KZbin and others came up with this feature. Who was it that said: "You can never go home again"? sure you can.....with a click of a keystroke.
@gunnarbiker2 жыл бұрын
Started watching these on my 65” TV and it’s even much more enjoyable now! 😀
@barbarabraman1762 жыл бұрын
I have so many fond memories of the 40s and 50s but I will mention only one. Local soda fountain had the sit up to the counter stools PLUS white wire backed chairs sitting up to small round tables. This has been so much fun.
@stevedeleon87752 жыл бұрын
I'm 63 years young & I still write in Cursive!
@osvaldonunez36212 жыл бұрын
I Am Only In My Early 20s But I Can Not Help Myself From FeelIng Oh So Greatly Attached To This Wonderful Magical Era… Thank You For Sharing Sincerely ! ! ! !
@jrnfw406011 ай бұрын
Because the values of that time speak to your heart, even though you didn't experience that era. Some necessary reforms have come about since then -- employment hiring decisions based on legitimate qualifications and not just skin color, gender or age. And women being promoted on the basis of their ability, experience and work performance, and not held back just because they're women. Reforms like that were sorely needed, in the interest of true fairness and justice. However, we still have a two-tiered justice system, even today, so the catching up was never complete. What I don't understand is WHY there's still a disparity in pay between male and female employees. I thought equal pay for equal work was encoded into law a long time ago. Yet, there are still issues with women being paid less for doing exactly the same work as their male counterparts. That part of the Equal Employment Opportunity Act is not being enforced. WHY NOT?
@newyorknight2 жыл бұрын
I remember many years ago leaving the city. I had a sense of adventure at 18 years old. So I took a trip to Montana,the scenery was breathtaking. I did have an opportunity to stop in this old but fully intact maltshop. I got to chatting with the owner and he had owned the place since the 50s. He said he never changed the style of the malts,or his out of this world cheeseburgers. I enjoyed everything about that place. I wish we could bring some of the stuff from the 50s back again😊
@randymillhouse7912 жыл бұрын
Sounds like a business opportunity...
@jenniferdjaslowskj9932 жыл бұрын
sounds like an episode of T.Z. (twilight zone). That was the theme in a couple of his shows and I loved them Many of us yearn to relive our youth or certain times of our past. Oh, to have a time machine, program it to a time a place you want to return and relive that time for just a little while maybe a version of TOTAL RECALL, without the horror of course, like a mini-vacation. Though it might be hard having to return to the present.
@jamesslick47902 жыл бұрын
Over-the-air TV still exists and so do "Rabbit Ear" antennas. I luckily live in a "signal rich" area an no longer need cable as I can receive 60+ broadcast channels with a set of rabbit ears that I bought at Dollar General LAST YEAR for less than $10.
@lindagardener8552 жыл бұрын
Impressive. I remember those rabbit ears - you had to stand on a chair in the corner on one leg leaning to the right arm extended fully🤣 Sometimes it worked, but by that time you were usually out of vision range of the tv anyway. Happy days🥰👍
@joyceobeys68182 жыл бұрын
@@lindagardener855 That’s why I got my sister to do it but she never would stay put! What a brat! LOL
@lindagardener8552 жыл бұрын
@@joyceobeys6818 😂😂😂
@lindycorgey27432 жыл бұрын
Speaking of TV. Kids were the "REMOTE CONTROL" for their Parents.
@lindagardener8552 жыл бұрын
@@lindycorgey2743 Yes, they were👍😊
@roberthurley68602 жыл бұрын
Thanks for posting this great video, it brought back many memories. My dad had a 1957 Plymouth Belvedere, two tone, automatic push button. He had a lot of great cars over the years but that was the one he had prized the most. The odometers then only went to 100,000 miles and then back to zero and I remember him taking me for the ride when that happened.
@pattymiller90402 жыл бұрын
A lot of kids in my family back then, and in 1960 (?), we got a late 1950's three seater station wagon.....the back seat faced backwards....so fun!! But it was some type of Plymouth with the push buttons! I guess that concept never really caught on!!?
@ispeakmytruth15492 жыл бұрын
Born in 1958. When my parents brought me home from the hospital as a newborn, my Dad`s car was a 1956 Plymouth Belvedere in pink with white wall tires! He was teased about the pink but he loved it!
@davekramer42662 жыл бұрын
2 Disagreements; 1st the TV antenna was called Rabbit ears{The Bunny ears Referred to the Playboy Bunnies, starting in 53}.. 2nd; Washers were a Norm, it was Dryers that were a Rarity.. You forgot that at the Soda bars was also a Small Jukebox Console, that cost from a Dime a play, to 25cents for 5 plays, after about 1958 they went up to 25 cent a play $1 for 5 plays..
@jrnfw406011 ай бұрын
Yeah, that's true. My mother had a wringer washer clear into the 1960s, but didn't get a dryer until much later. And after getting the dryer, she still had to wait a long while to get an automatic, top-loading washer. We had to pinch pennies. Hey, do you recall when banks paid decent interest on savings accounts? On the average, a bank paid around 4.5%, and a Savings and Loan (remember them?) paid 5%. Today's piddling interest on savings is a joke!
@pinsolomons2 жыл бұрын
Things missing since the 1950s: Public morality, personal modesty, respect in general for other people AND their belongings, strong work ethic, the deisre to succeed at ones tasks or goals and more.
@jrnfw406011 ай бұрын
Once upon a time, NOT so long ago, private property rights were not only respected but sacred. Two of the Ten Commandments address property rights: "Thou shalt not steal", and "Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's goods." In today's world, private property rights mean little, as do several of our other Constitutional rights. The country is going to hell in a hand basket, unless things get turned around SOON!
@republicunited21832 жыл бұрын
I miss America!
@jrnfw406011 ай бұрын
Yet, we still have Miss America.
@nancybarta81672 жыл бұрын
I still do laundry and ironing on Saturdays!!!!I did a trunk switchboard for The Whittier daily news while I was in college!Still have this camera!I taught for 40 years retiring in 2014 and I wouldnt let them take out my chalkboard.......for the messy whiteboard!I bought a set of World book in 1985 and still find it extremely useful!I had my own set from the 1950s.I loved pantie raids...lol...........we would only leave out underwear that was sexy and they hung it across campus on a clothesline!!!!
@CarsandCats2 жыл бұрын
Panty raids ended in the 70's when young women stopped wearing any panties!
@willie61852 жыл бұрын
I remember after school we had to clean the eraser’s that the teachers used on the black board by banging them together. Of course it was outside.
@samanthab19232 жыл бұрын
My Nan would hang the unmentionables inside the other wash.
@johnzeszut31702 жыл бұрын
I remember also the famous "send away" advertisements in the back of comic books!
@ammo87132 жыл бұрын
REMEMBER THOSE X-RAY GLASSES ???😁
@johnzeszut31702 жыл бұрын
@@ammo8713 Sure do! And one hundred army men for a buck or so with their own cardboard foot locker.
@angelahardison6575 Жыл бұрын
Cursive writing builds character, as well as domestic chores/ outside home chores; going to a library & interacting with customer service politely. Remember proper manners at home & in the social circle.....
@xx7secondsxx2 жыл бұрын
I had a dryer but I had to wash clothes by hand in the tub. My GAWD!!!! The weight of a wet basket of clothes... The oldskool wash women were HARDCORE!!🤘🏋️♀️💪💪
@timmmahhhh2 жыл бұрын
The great thing with encyclopedias was that you could look up something and then have you eye be caught with other topics to learn about. That might hold true with the internet too but I'm willing to bet it doesn't happen as much.
@michaelwascom622 жыл бұрын
Another great asset of encyclopedias -- NO annoying commercials!
@lindycorgey27432 жыл бұрын
I'll see something on the internet like face book and then go look it up. In some ways I wish the internet was up in the 1970s. But I did enjoy the Encyclopedias of the day.
@timmmahhhh2 жыл бұрын
@NO-TO-NATO sadly you're right. The internet can put in front of people ideas that don't have to be fact checked or from a reliable source, or even true. The encyclopedia company could be held to a higher standard.
@stalkinghorse8832 жыл бұрын
Bunny ears? Rabbit ears was the correct phrase.
@pkendlers2 жыл бұрын
"Bunny ears" had to do a popular Dad's magazine at the time, 😂
@LilannB2 жыл бұрын
Lunch counters in drug stores existed into the 1970s. You could get a cheeseburger and fries cooked to order and eat it at the counter in the drugstore. Some department stores also had lunch area where you could get cooked food. I was shocked to find out recently that cursive is no longer taught in schools. Along with finding out that kids no longer walked to school. They are driven or take a school bus. When I was growing up on the first day of school you were driven by a parent to make sure you knew how to get there. Then we walked to school usually with friends. You would see groups of children walking all at the same time. We walked in rain, snow or sunshine. Most schools I walked to were 3-5 blocks away. I suppose that is why it was unusual to see fat children or teens back then as most of us got exercise walking each day.
@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr28232 жыл бұрын
There was one at Woolworth's into the 80s. Right across from where Dillinger got killed, btw.
@kenfrank2730 Жыл бұрын
In Los Angeles in the 1970s there was a Thrifty drug store with a food counter. I remember the food being very good. Sometimes my mother and I would eat dinner there.
@kerrischuh8000 Жыл бұрын
I lived in a small town in Kansas during the 80’s and the local drug store still had a soda fountain.
@danielkoher1944 Жыл бұрын
Highways have pretty much stifled walking. There’s not many sidewalks, and schools aren’t a part of the neighborhood. Most children are bussed because of consolidation. If you have or go to the EU, you’ll see the traditional way of traveling. Also, Main Streets still had lunch counters in the mid~eighties. With ancient walk in wooden, glass, seat, and ceiling exhaust for phone calls.
@jimoconnor6382 Жыл бұрын
@@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 One in Calumet City
@julieshepherd59892 жыл бұрын
Enjoyed this, thanks for sharing. 🙂🌷
@stankulp10082 жыл бұрын
in the early 1970s, our town had to rely on the old switchboard to make calls for a few weeks while the phone system was rebuilt after a mishap. People stopped using the phone except for calls going outside of town. It was easier to go over to a person's house than to wait 20 minutes for an operator to connect you.
@skylilly12 жыл бұрын
We had the Brittanica books. I remember doing a lot of book reports using them. My parents would have us pick out a book and we had to pick out topic and tell them about it. lol We loved Brittanica. Schools should go back to using the chalkboard. Pressure from your peers might make you study harder. It worked for us.
@golden.lights.twinkle23292 жыл бұрын
We bought a second set in the 1980s. There was one book missing out of the set so there were a few things we knew nothing about!
@pattymiller90402 жыл бұрын
We had the World Book encyclopedias.....I acquired them!!😯
@freeguy772 жыл бұрын
Funk & Wagnalls encyclopedia that I acquired in the early-'70s for only $2 per letter volume, sometimes getting two letters for a rare letter as Q or X! And I still remember how to spell that word from Disney's character, "Jiminy Cricket" in a segment of "The Mickey Mouse Club" (1955-59), who yelled out each letter: "E-N-C-Y-C-L-O-P-E-D-I-A." "Look THAT up in your Funk & Wagnalls!" --Dick Martin ("Rowan & Martin's Laugh-In" tv show, 1967-73).
@pattymiller90402 жыл бұрын
@@freeguy77 My siblings & I watched Mickey Mouse Club every day back when....I had forgotten about Juminy Cricket!😁 And, those Funk & Wagnals....I have about half of a set, which I bought a volume a week from a local grocery store. It was in the mid 70s (?) when I had young children, thus many distractions, thus why only half a set of F & W encyclopedias!🤷🏼♀️
@tonyc9452 жыл бұрын
I still have them. Also year books from 1952 to 1962. Wonder if they are worth anything to collectors?
@Corgis1752 жыл бұрын
We had a soda fountain at Madura's Pharmacy in South Amboy, NJ. I had a 1956 Turquoise Chevrolet in the 1960's. It burned oil quite a bit and my uncle got it for me. Wish I had it today.
@samanthab19232 жыл бұрын
I wonder if that was around in the 60’s. We lived in Matawan but my dad would drive us up to the So. Amboy YMCA. We’d be given money for lunch & hang out swimming & playing in the gym.
@ewmhop2 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU FOR TAKING ME BACK TO CANAL STREET AND K& B DRUG STORE ,BEST NECTOR SODA FLOAT EVER. BUT WHAT I MISS THE MOST ARE THE LOVE ONES NOT HERE ANYMORE.GOD BLESS
@tonimonteith8125 Жыл бұрын
Bonnie, you are spot on.
@jchow59662 жыл бұрын
wonderful! More please. 😊
@evelynrogers71452 жыл бұрын
Good days. Good people
@l.s.a19902 жыл бұрын
Simple times, simpler life....
@yeoldeseawitch2 жыл бұрын
we now live a better life today. move on from those days, please?
@tinahardman98052 жыл бұрын
@@yeoldeseawitch No way am I moving on!!! I was a 70's kid in the UK and if there was a time machine I would be back there immediately. Better times, nicer neighbourhoods and genuine communities. Never have I known a society that was more miserable, nothing good about it. You can keep it!!! 70's forever!!!!
@yeoldeseawitch2 жыл бұрын
@@tinahardman9805 you old folks befuddle me....
@tinahardman98052 жыл бұрын
@@yeoldeseawitch Some of you young folks are simply off your rockers to be honest. Notice how I don't generalise. You want us to live in your crazy woke world which I have absolutely no time for. I live in the UK and its just the same there. I pity you as this is probably all you have ever known.
@chadliterutherford91982 жыл бұрын
@@tinahardman9805 It's awful the old generation didn't listen to Henry Ford when he warned about the Ju's and America fighting World War II for no reason, if you had just left Europe well enough alone the 50's would have never ended
@chachadodds58602 жыл бұрын
Wonderful nostalgic walk back to a simpler time. I remember helping my grandmother with the ringer washer, hanging clothes on a line with clothes pins, and ironing my grandfather's handkerchiefs. My mother, was a switchboard operator, at Motorola. Her first automobile, was a white 1957, Pontiac Bonneville, with red interior. My mother was a classy lady, but that car was nothing but trouble for her. We couldn't afford a set of Encyclopedia Brittanicas, but I recall longing for them, and drooling over the set at our local library. Eventually, my prized possession as a teenager, was my hardcover Webster's Dictionary. I think you forgot to mention the neighborhood grocery. They were the transition between the mercantile, and supermarkets. And the Dimestore, which was a hybrid of pharmacy, soda fountain, newsstand, and trinket store. There were neighborhood versions, and the famous Woolworth's. In the summer, we walked to the Dimestore, every day. I purchased my first Barbie doll there, and we would often walk home eating our orange push-ups.
@douglasgriffiths35342 жыл бұрын
I worked at Motorola too, but not as a switchboard operator. I was in the engineering department for 23 years. I worked at the Government Electronics Group in Scottsdale, AZ. (Jan Griffiths).
@Barbarra632972 жыл бұрын
Dad had one of those cameras, I loved it and it took good pictures! When you looked down inside it was like a tiny tv screen.
@stevedeleon87752 жыл бұрын
I'm the proud owner of a family owned 1957 Chevy Nomad 🇺🇸 Wagon..I've been offered Alot Of 🤑for it..NOT FOR SALE...My dad bought it Brand New in 1956 off the show room floor here in 🏜 Tucson, Arizona from Murray Bryant Chevrolet👍