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1950s Memories From Our Visitors

When we look back in time small things or words can jog our own memories

Childhood In The Bronx In The 50s United States

Memory Posted By: christine M

I entered 1st grade at PS 68, the Bronx 1949, graduated 8th in 1957 and graduated HS 1961, so the 1950's are basically the memories of my school years.

I remember 1st gr air-raid drills either under our desks or classes lined up in the interior school hall ways.

It was the era of the atomic bomb and as children in NYC, authorities expected us to be bombed by Russia.

As a 6 year old I and all my friends wore dog tags around our necks.

Sounds incredible now, but slipping that metal chain with 2 ID tags over my young neck was a daily part of getting dressed for school.

Maybe that early childhood trauma is what turned so many of us war babies into being leaders of the the 60's anti war protest groups. Who knows.

Our family, like most, had one car and my father did the driving.

Friday was payday and a trip to do the weekly grocery shopping. This was the one night we would eat out. After shopping at Safeway, we'd climb the stairs to the 2nd fl Chinese restaurant and ordered egg foo yung, pepper steak and chow mien; every week was the same.

We never varied our order. There was a neon restaurant sign outside the window that would cast strange colors on our dinners - that no chef ever intended.

The restaurant had a huge juke box with bubbles and red plastic.

My parents always said it cost too much money to play, so I just looked at it.

Safeway had wooden floors with saw dust, and by the early 50's the sugar shelves were once again full.

The rationing of the 40's was over. Wonderbread made small child sized loaves with the same wrapping as the adult size. I was always allowed my own loaf to bring home. Between weekly shopping, the mothers managed by sending the children to the corner store - usually with a couple quarters wrapped and tied in a hankercheif.

As a treat, we were allowed to buy a kosher dill pickle from the open barrel and a 5 cent bag of Wise potato chips.

By the mid and late 50's, my girlfriends and I would look at the candidates for that year's Miss Rheingold Beer and vote for who we thought was prettiest.

We bought milk by the qt not the gal. Home delivery was big. Dugan brought fresh baked goods. the milkman delivered our milk, eggs, cream and butter. A vegetable man and scissor sharpener came around in a horse drawn cart in the late 40's early 50's.

The Good Humor man was a daily source for icecream. We could hear that bell blocks away - no matter what game we were playing - in time to beg a nickle or dime from our mothers.

None of the households I grew up with kept icecream in their freezer section; there were no freezer sections - just a spot large enough to hold an aluminum tray for freezing ice cubes.

We had a Good Will bag in our entry hall next to the seltzer trays. Good Will and the Seltzer man would pick up regularly and drop off new bags and sodas.

In the early 50's when I was hiding from an atom bomb under my school desk, my older sister volunteered for civil air patrol, watching the skies with German binoculars.

My mother made aluminum etched trays at ladies Home Bureau, volunteered for church commitees and played weekly canasta in our home. Mostly we walked places or took the bus or subway.

We kids never played inside the house. Even on snowy days. We changed into our play clothes after school (our old school clothes that were torn or outgrown), and went outside until called for dinner.

Our Sunday clothes became school clothes and our school clothes got one more go at life by being play clothes.

There were very few over weight kids. We played stick ball at "the point" - the intersection of 2 neighborhood streets, or fairy tale characters under the huge pine trees in my girlfriend's front yard.

By mid 50's I was old enough to spend Summer days with friends at Wilson's Woods Pool, a WPA built Tudor style public pool. There was never a concern about safety.

Every Summer week end meant a family picnic/beach trip - either to Sherwood Island in Conn. or Orchard Beach in the Bronx.

We'd leave at the crack of dawn to stake out a good picnic table and be the last family to leave when the sun set. No one was anxious to return to those un-airconditioned apartments.

The women made the summer staples of macaroni and potato salads and packed the huge coolers. The men lugged then to what we always hoped would be the ultimate picnic spot.

Oh yes - no sun screen either for the children in those days. Every summer meant at least one giant skin peel and sleepless painful night for me and my fair skinned friends.

Winter meant sled rides down 'dead man's hill' in scratchy wet wool snow suits. Nobody knew who had died there, but we were all sure it had happened.

Of course, in addition to neighborhood legends, every neighborhood seemed to have that one wacky character.

Ours was Old Mr. D who sent away to the old country for an old fashioned mail order bride.

The year before her arrival, he built a 3 story cottage with no windows or door on the first floor. He had a wood ladder to enter the 2nd fl. She arrived, was more modern than he anticipated, and took the next ship home. Mr. D never married after that.

T

he blizzard of the early 50's cut us off from City services. The neighborhood men all took their coal shovels and shoveled out our street.

Houses were heated with coal or oil. The coal trucks would dump their shinny black loads down shuttes into the basements. Our basement had a coal bin and when it got cold, my father would go down with his shovel. Our apt was heated by radiators that would bang until they were emptied of the condensation.

Fall meant burning piles of raked leaves in the yards and baking potatoes in tin foil in the ashes. There were no burning bans - even in the Bronx - or if there were, nobody enforced them.

In the early 50's we got the first TV on the block and all the neighbors crammed in to watch Queen Eliz II coronation.

My dad spent hrs adjusting the roof antennae to face the signals coming from the Empire State Building to the south of our home. My mother's job was to monitor the fuzziness on the screen and call directions out the open window to my Dad. Some other time perhaps you'll permit me to talk about being a young teen and entering HS in the doo wop era of the late 50's - parties in finished basements, parents popping downstairs to check on the refreshments and us, Friday night Confraternity dances at our local Catholic school hall, the Sisters in their habits telling us and our dance partners to 'leave room for the Holy Ghost', our local pizza parlor where the dough was hand made, the cheese was from Italy, and the large pizza filled most of the table. It was a great time and place to grow up. Thanks for the web site.

Comment From Steve said..

Thank You Christine for sharing your memories with me and all our other visitors . Sometimes I think times of what appears to others adversity makes us stronger

Comment From Anonymous

Steve; Yes; makes us stronger, and I think also has made those of us who were shaped by those times - blessed. Why blessed? because the emphasis in my childhood and teens was on people not things. The gadgets which distract us and separate us from community were not there. Our entertainments came from activities which included others. Children played together, fathers discussed news and sports over a cup of coffee at the local sweet shop, neighbors met outside on hot summer nights. Even hanging out the laundry (always on Mon), meant a wave and a chat with the neighbor women who were doing the same. I don't remember feeling deprived; most who I knew were leading similar lives so that helped. And, there wasn't as much to buy. The skills I/we learned by making things still benefit us today. My older sister made me a push cart from old boards and roller skates. Every Aug meant a mother/daughter subway trip to Manhattan's garment district. There we would buy designer fabric remnants and I'd sew my back to school wardrobe. Not only were these experiences tremendously satisfying and instructive, but they are examples of what I call community activities. Now I have a closet full of store bought clothes and not one piece is as meaningful as what I created/crafted myself. The adults in my childhood taught us how to rise to and solve problems. Somehow, life in the 40's and 50's seemed more human, predictable and controllable - and I don't think this is just the distorted opinion that comes with age and time. I think this is a wonderful web site. Christine

My Special Christmas 1959

Posted By Alex

With Christmas just round the corner and seeing all the parents at the shops picking presents for their children reminded me of my best ever Christmas as a child

My father was in the Navy and many Christmas times he was away , but I remember the year 1959 because he was home for most of December and my parents were acting very secrative .

Anyway Xmas day came and normal toys and sweets in my sack at the end of the bed and I started playing with them as any normal kid does, and go in to wake my parents up to show them what santa had left ( I still believed in Santa at 8 ) and my dad tells me Santa left a note with him about something he couldn't get down the chimney and I would find it outside.

Still in PJ's I rushed outside to find the coolest blue bike I had ever seen in my life with a bell and lights .

Now you must remember my parents were quite poor so my dad had bought an old bike and spent the month of December cleaning it, fixing it and painting it , that present sticks in my mind more than any other because I can now imagine how much work and time my parents spent on it and how much love must have gone in to it

I would like to thank my parents so much for that and all the time and love they gave me as a child

Alex

Growing Up In Australia In The 50s Australia

Memory Posted By: Teresa

In winter we used to have crumpets for breakfast with good lashings of butter. We used to cook them on a toasting fork over the hot coals in our combustion stove. Doing it this way also made us warm as it was our only form of heating apart from the open fire in the lounge which used to go out overnight. What a wonderful life we had as kids, not a worry in the world

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Remembering the 1950s

The 50's were the boomer years and the children from those years are now the parents and grandparents who caused that boom in the birthrate

The 50's also were one of the last decades where the traditional roles of the woman staying at home and being a homemaker and the man as the sole breadwinner for a family.

Due to these family dynamics it was also the heyday of the TV daytime soap opera which a drama shown during the day when the man of the family was at work and the ( Soap Manufacturers )advertisers could target a very specific audience " the stay at home mum.

Following on from the end of World War the cold war became a grim reality because both sides had the power and technology for a Nuclear holocaust, but equally both knew any war could not truly be won.

This is also the first decade where the worlds economy was driven by consumer demand for the goods that were now available and were produced in large numbers in Japan for consumption by the rest of the western world and many of the household names that are part of our daily lives including Sony date from that period.

This is also the decade that many of inventions and technology developed during war time could be adapted for peacetime including harnessing nuclear energy for use as electricity with first nuclear power stations built towards the end of the decade and the groundwork for today's digital revolution with the invention of the microchip and the computer modem.

Towards the end of the decade the cars continued to get larger with bigger front and rear fins and nobody worried about MPG gas was a mere 25 cents

Music: At the beginning of the decade the crooners were still popular but by the end of the 50's a new genre of music was born and some of the greats who started at the end of the 50's included Elvis ( the Pelvis ) Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis, Bill Haley and the Comets setting the stage for the groups of the 60's

This was also the decade where the Television became a major part of most families lives and the birth of "Rock N Roll"

Please try to speak to parents and grandparents to try to understand how different it was in the 50's where after the war years many families were started while sharing a home with parents because of the lack of housing and the boom in children , if your parents are willing to share memories on The People History please do but if not at least they will have been passed on and not lost.

A Child of The 50s U.S.A.

Memory Posted By: Great Times

I think about those days a lot!! The days when we knew and trusted all of our neighbors, when we either walked or rode our (one and only) bicycle everywhere we went, band concerts at our local park on Friday nights, also many, many times going to this same park to watch the "boys" play baseball, the local movie theatre, the sock hops, and on and on and on. I am ever so grateful to have been a "child of the 50's"!! Some wonderful memories!!

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Joining the Navy at 17yrs Old U.S.A.

Memory Posted By: Jim W

The proudest day of my life was 1 July 1958. I was barely 17 years old when I arrived at the Great Lakes Naval Training center for basic training. The Navy changed my life forever by giving me a sense of belonging and the pride of accomplishment. I will be grateful, and proud of my service, for as long as I live!

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Imaginative child in the 50s U.S.A.

Memory Posted By: Cindy B

I was an imaginative child and felt like one with nature. I was the mouse in the garden but I was also the hawk in the sky. I had to either sneak away and hide or spread my wings and boldly display myself. I learned through nature which to be and when to be the mouse or the hawk. My love of animals was great but my instinct knew that death was life for another. I did not want the mouse to be killed but the hawk needed him to survive. It was fate. At times if I had the chance I would intervene, but mostly I learned to look away and allow nature to take its course. It was the right thing to do and I couldn’t fight that fact.

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A sinking LST North Korea 1950s Korea

Memory Posted By: Don B

The ship had been abandoned and nothing working. Man there was one hell of a lot of noise as things were banging around and the crunch/grinding of the metal bottom being torn away on the reef. We started to actually walk down into raw gas. I told Shorty there was no way we could start an engine in these gas fumes without blowing all to hell. It was one of those really eerie situations where it was so dark we were actually going by feel as we went down the stair well and all the banging noise. Shorty and I had to go back to the ship and wait until daylight and we could see.

We did. As daylight came we were sent back over. This time when walking down the stair well we could see a bit better but still dim. We waded down into the gas and I timed the ships roll so the banging "junk" drifted away from the hatch and opened it to look in the tank hold and could just see a jeep tied to the back of the hold and 50 gallon gas drums flying all around loose and leaking gasoline, and the jeep was getting beat all to hell by the gas drums. I quickly closed the hatch and told Shorty we needed to get the hell out of there. The Ship had a hole in the bottom that the jeep could have been driven through. The reef was all that was holding her up. We went back to the Ship, reported to the Chief. With Whale boats and a series of lines, we got a cable on the LST, jerked it off the reef and made a run with it for the beach to shallow water and let her sink there..

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Childrens Toys From The 1950's

Childrens toys offered a much wider range following the boom in babies born, but toys were very much gender designed with dolls, prams, dressmaking for girls toys and Cowboys and indians, cars and construction sets for boys.

Part of our Collection of Toys from The 1950's

Kids Toy Examples From The 1950s

1950s Music

A new generation of pop stars including Elvis Presley were created whose main target audience was teenagers.

From our 50's Music Page

Fifties Music

Life Was Easy in the 50's U.S.A.

Memory Posted By: ray c

Stationed at Mcgiure AFB in the 50's and hitchhiking home on week ends thru thre Poconos just to ride my 50buick at home with my girl then back to the base again life was so easy then.

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Boomer growing up in the 1950s UK

Memory Posted By: Baby Boomer

My Memories from the 50's

I was born in 1950 , and grew up with a dad in the Royal Navy and my mum didn't work , fairly typical as most of my mums friends didn't work.

By to days standards we would be considered poor some foods including sugar and eggs were still on rationing and most dinners were based around beef mince, and up till I was 8 we lived in Navy married quarters .

The shops were very different to today most housing estates would have a local butcher, a greengrocer, a sweet shop, A hardware shop, a newsagent and general store.

Things like TV were just starting to appear but it was quite a while before my parents could afford one so I went to friends houses who had a TV to watch, more often than not all that was on was the test pattern.

My mum's contribution to family income like many other thousands of others was selling Avon as an Avon Lady,

Toys were fairly basic and as kids some of the games we played included Uckers ( navy name for Ludo ), Snakes and ladders, Patience, Gin Rummy and other card games or board games, any bike I had as a kid was second hand which my dad would fix up and would be my Xmas present.

Many may be surprised to hear that Christmas was very different in those days to today , things like oranges and nuts were considered a luxury due to the cost and not being readily available and were a major part of my Christmas presents in my stocking

Food consisted of anything made of mince and any vegetables that were in season, no such thing as frozen foods or fast foods available in those days.

The other memory that I recall is when we would take a trip to visit relatives ( Aunts, Uncles Grandparents )etc. who lived 120 miles away my dad would do a full service on the car including oil water and would carry A large toolbox in case of breakdowns , and so that the car didn't overheat we would stop half way to give the car a chance to cool down.

Like most families we were a one car family and my mum didn't drive so any time we went to the nearest town it was on the local bus or walk or cycle

I suppose the other major difference was the amount of discipline parents exerted over children if I did anything wrong my mum would send me to my room and if I did anything really bad my dad would wallop me with a slipper , rules in our house were to be obeyed at all times.

I thought I would just mention one other thing that strikes me from my memories and how unusual it would be by today's standards , my dad was a Radio Operator in the Navy and during the nuclear testing done on the Christmas Islands him and many other ordinary sailors were put "on a safe place on the island" to describe the nuclear explosion to officers many miles away in safety on the ship. And when the sailors came back and were all discovered to have a form of radiation poisoning the navy were surprised.

Well I hope you enjoyed my memories af my life from 1950 - 1959 if I get time I will write something about my time in the 60's

Changes in Where We Live UK

Memory Posted By: webmaster

Of the many changes I have seen in my life the biggest are those where the places I grew up as a child have changed

I grew up in a small village on the South Coast of England called Portchester and the two towns either side of us were Fareham and Cosham

I used to cycle from Portchester to Fareham and nearly all the road had farms on one side of the road this was in total about 12 miles , when I visited back many years later there was not one bit of empty space , every part of both sides of the road were filled with houses , It makes you wonder where does Portchester end and Fareham begin.

This was not really a local problem as now on that part of the South Coast every city is joined to every other city by rows and rows of houses. They Should Just Change The Name of the south coast to SOLENT CITY

This is not even just a UK problem although I think it may be slightly worse

When I first came to Lovely Elkhorn in Wisconsin the main route between Elkhorn and Chicago still had many green fields for farming and each time we take the trip to Chicago there is less and less greenery and more and more houses to be seen

I would be interested to here other peoples memories of how where they live has changed

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1950's Fashion

With the economic boom in the Fifties, glamour become fashionable once again and A-line and pencil skirts were very popular form-fitting fashions. Dresses in the decade would often feature stylish ruffles or lace accents and were usually knee-length or tea-length. Going into the late fifties and 1960s mini-dresses and maxi-length skirt outfits entered the scene. The mid-50's trends in women's fashion changed again. Round-neck styles on sleeveless shirts or long sleeve shirts were popular, as well as polo-necks. Dolman sleeves dominated fashionable tops in the fifties and sixties, The examples below are from Our new updated Fifties Fashion Section, with examples of Ladies, Mens and Children's Fashion Clothes and Accessory examples including dresses, hats, shoes and much more take a little time to browse through them

Ladies Dresses From The 1950's

Examples of Ladies Dresses From The 1950's

Ladies Shoes and Hats From The 1950's

Examples of Ladies Shoes From The 50's

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