70 years old - very old - remember these things. At one place we lived we had a drive-in theatre basically in our back-yard and the house wired for sound from the movie. Dad cut a deal with the theatre when they bought the place so we saw movies for free. Yes, the screen was very visible from the house.
Those were the best days growing up. As a kid on the weekends you stayed out all day until it Dinner time . Then you got to go out until it got dark. You played with your friends all day all over the neighborhoods instead of sitting in your room texting them. You carried a dime with you anytime you went out in case of emergency so you could call home on a pay phone.
I have four siblings and we did exactly that, we stayed out all day playing with the neighborhood kids and when it was time to clean up for supper mom has a specific whistle for each of us.
Strange but good. Remember when we said SPAZ, COOL and all our other phrases. We were blessed to not have to go through what kids have to put up with today 💕🙏
It was a friendly time, a safe time, everybody knew everyone else and kept an eye out for each others children. There was no violence in schools, there were mothers who stayed home and Sundays were for church services and family dinners. Kids played without worry until those street lights came on and summer vacation was a free spirted time for kids to play with each other, building forts, endless street games, and sleepovers at each others house. A snow day was a "blessing" to be out of school and as soon as it was announced on the radio we all headed to the local hill to sled the day away. I cry for todays kids who have no earthly idea of what this was like.... it was a time that is sadly gone forever. We were the lucky ones to grow up at such an awesome time in America!
What a shame. Tell you what if I was born in the USA today I would move to the Far East. Or maybe Norway or the Netherlands. i would definitely NOT remain in this country. We didn't even have locks on our entry doors. And when we went to the beach here in FL we left our keys IN THE IGNITION so we didn't have to carry them down to the beach in case they became lost in the sand! Can you imagine that today?
...and we didn't have to wear safety helmets to ride a bike or stupid knee pads and numbered sun screens. We climbed up into trees, slept outside overnight in tents, walked to parks to swing as high as we could on swings, Climbed on high monkey bars, went as fast as possible on metal merry go rounds and fell or flew off at times, we often ran around bare footed on hot sunny sidewalks, got sun burned, jumped in leave piles/had leave fights, went sledding on the highest hills we'd find without adults, had snowball fights, and knew how to cross streets safely on our own, we'd be outside all day whenever off from school, we walked to school even in Kinder Garten in the cities. We actually loved being outside all day and early evenings on our own. It was authentic and purely spontaneous Inventive play until bedtime with windows open when it was warm or hot hearing crickets, cars driving near or in the distance, rain or the rustling of tree leaves in the breezes or winds. It was authentic and all good as granted. It was the utmost of actual living. If Baby Boomers are said to be spoiled it could only be true for the aforementioned above.
@@johnsherman6718 One of the first things I remember is my mom teaching me how to cross the street. We had damn good teachers. They taught us the 3 R’s. And our parents taught us about life. “ those were the days my friend, we thought they’ed never end.” But sadly they did. At 82 I have a few more years of the good times on you, but we both had the time of our lives. Have a great rest of your life John Sherman.
I would too but only to visit. I've become too enamored of the electronics age to ever want to stay but spending a month or so back then would be aces.
It was a great time to be a kid! I was born at the end of 1961 and am at the tail end of the baby boomer generation. I have fond memories of being a teenager in my neighborhood in the 1970’s! I had great friends. We played baseball all summer long and played football during the cold weather months. It was a simpler time and life was good!
Yes...everyone played outside all the time. Such great memories. My son used to play outside and I remember when video games started to be a thing in the '80s and he would get frustrated with his friends who stopped going outside to play.
@@itsdiane2you11 Scientists now say "The longer one stares at a cell phone, the greater their danger to become a zombie. Really. This is what scientists now say. Really.
I was born in 1955 the year color TV came out. In the 70's I was working 3 jobs at a time. buying perfect low mile luxury cars from $50. to $350. That was a lot of money for me back then, but I have always been a great Saver of money. Had showroom cars like a 1959 Pontiac 2 dr. I bought from a guy who stopped in to buy 1 gal. of gas to make it to the junk yard to sell it. I asked, he said he would probably get $100.00 for it. I offered $125.00 if he would wait until fri. He agreed. So many good deals back then and I traveled a lot in my HI way floaters! Sure miss everything except the war.
My dad was a milk man delivery to homes. Some people actually leave the door unlocked for him just to go on in . Times have really changed. S&h stamps were really neat. If you went on Wednesday to the store you got double stamps. My mom got several things throughout the years. We used regular cards on our bicycle spokes. It was a neat sound. Times have really changed. I remember all of these things. Life seemed so much simpler then. ❤️
My mother collected those and Gold Bell stamps. I remember her calling me over to the table and telling me to stick out my tongue. She would roll the stamps over my tongue and stick them in the book. I remember the time she caught putting postage stamps in the books. I can still hear her screaming!
Pasting green stamps into the booklets was one of my very first jobs at home. I really enjoyed it, especially when my mom's face lit up at a full book!
Up to the early 60's people typically turned those stamps in for a card table & matching folding chairs, or porch furniture. I recall the neighbor lady got a dutch oven.
I really got a kick from this one as I am a Boomer. Loved hearing the milkman delivering milk in the morning, and I’d swear it tasted better than market milk. I was one of the millions who saw the Beatles on Ed Sullivan. I could hardly wait to see that show that night. Thanks for talking about my generation.
@@johnpoole8321 - I remember when “Hound Dog” came out, and we were just young kids, and we thought that was the most fun song we’d ever heard. 😢 Fun times.
I remember Beatlemania when I was little. My older cousins had one of those Beatle dolls and the boots. I thought they were the ultimate in cool. We had the follow-up in the 70s which was Rollermania, when the Bay City Rollers became popular. We had the short tartan trimmed pants and the tartan scarf with our favorite band member's name on it to wave at the concerts. Fun times indeed! 😊
I remember those years with fond memories. The milk that was delivered was in a glass bottle, it had a cardboard seal on the top with a tab you could just pull to get it open and the cream separated and was on top. He would place it in a square insulated box on our doorstep and inside the box was our next order from a piece of paper he left the day before. All we had to do was check what we wanted on the list for the next day. I remember mom getting us around the table licking those S&H green stamps to fill up the books. She got quite a few items from those books. I miss the drive ins, the playgrounds, the metal speakers with the armored cables that hooked on your car window and intermission time when we could make a run to the snack bar. I had no idea Bonanza ran that long but I do remember being surprised that Dan Blocker weighed ten pounds when he was born. I don't know if it was a regional thing at the time but what you didn't mention was the cotton candy man and MR Softee that would come around. Thanks for the reminders of better times it was a joy to watch.
We lived out in the country, but we had an ice cream man who stopped once a week, bringing delicious popsicles, drumsticks (the ones with the round scoop of ice cream, choc, nuts on top), and various other ice cream treats! We also had a bread man stop once a week!
Bonanza was long running besides Lorne Greene was Canadian but what about Gunsmoke? Kitty was into menopause while Matt was still rubbing the barrel of his metal not his flesh of a gun. Kitty didn't get pregnant because if no marriage, no pregnancy-good family value.
@@haroldharwell7078, So your ice cream man was entitled I see. Ours had a trike where the freezer was on front with handlebars that was the steering. He had to ring a bell as he went down the street. LOL
Early marriage, my husband was a milk man in training. On one house, he was warned that the peoplevanted him to go in and put the milk in the refrigerator, but they had a little dog that would bite their heels. They had to try to beat the dog in and out. One morning, he caught the trainer. The bite scared the trainer so bad that he fell down and threw the milk. It broke and milk went everywhere. Such a mess. Thy had to clean it up. Anither delivery, the people had a big Doberman. He learned to throw an ice cream bar as far as he could and get the milk delivered before he finished it.
When I was growing up , I like so many S&h Green stamp books , I can still remember the taste of the glue , we bought camping gear with the stamps and went camping at starved Rock Illinois 🤣🤣🤣♦️♦️♦️‼️
I loved the Avon lady. I always got a tiny sample lipstick. We had blue chip stamps and green stamps, it was fun looking in the store at all the neat stuff they had. My grandmas basement was a little creepy. Full of coal beneath the shoot and what seemed like hundreds of jars of canned fruits and vegetables, an of course it was pretty dark. Occasionally my Mom would have chocolate milk delivered-it was expensive. And all the kids listened for the ice cream man in the summer. We also had Helms bakery trucks with these long, long drawers full of cakes, pies, donuts and bread. We four kids were sitting on the floor in front of the tv with our tv dinners. My Dad came home and surprised us with a new, very exuberant puppy who came running in and gobbled up each of our dinners. We loved it, my dad did not. It really was a great time to be a kid.
I honestly believe we lived in the very best time ever. Even with the social upheaval and the Vietnam war th. 60s were the greatest time to be alive. I remember all of these things and so much more. As another poster commented, we’ve lost so much.
Gen X here. Our family had milk delivery until 1979-1980. They still used the old stand-up driver trucks as well. I remember in the summertime with the windows open, hearing the glass bottles clinking at 4-6 AM when he showed up.
That's super true!! I have an uncle on my stepdad's side of the family and he's blond with blue eyes and 6'4. The other 2 boys are 5'8 TOPS with brown eyes and had dark brown hair but are bald and have been since their early 20s! However Scott still has a full head of hair and looks only like my grandmother LOL. If he wasn't the Milkman's kid then he was the Mailman's haha.
I babysat for three little girls way back when; a brunette, a blonde and a red head. The mom used to joke that their dad's were the milkman, the mailman and the meter man. LOL
Interesting fact about those milk trucks. The driver did not sit down, as there was no seat. He stood up the whole time, because it was faster getting it on out of the truck. I know because I worked for a very brief time as a milkman in 1968. And when I say brief I mean less than a week, as it was not an easy job and I hated starting work at 3:00 in the morning.
Some, milk delivery trucks had foldable seats at least in the 50's. Made it easier to get in and out when there was only a short distance between stops.
I remember my milkman driver from 1966-1969 he was a good man when I was a kid when he didn't show up after a week I asked my grandpa " where is he?" he told me he died ,,,My milkman drove for "Roberts" and on TV commercials the jingle tune was "Roberts the dairy on the move" That was in my hometown of Plainfield Indiana .
I remember in the late 1950s we would ride out bikes behind the fog of the mosquito sprayer, little did we know we were breathing in cancerous DDT but I'm happy to report that I'm mow 71 and still kicking!
I remember trying to trick the milkman into delivering chocolate milk by leaving notes pretending to be from my mother. I suppose the fact that they were written in crayon probably tipped him off that they were fakes!
An "A" for the effort! When we lived near Albany, NY in the mid 70's, we used to get a 5 gallon container of milk delivered by the milkman. It had a handle on top and a convenient tap to dispense. Of course when nobody was around, I would just drink from the tap! It was amazing how fast we drank that 5 gallons. My Grandparents were serviced by the Lehigh Valley Dairy, and they were able to get O.J. and iced tea delivered. Everything was in cartons by then.
Here in rural Scotland our milk is still delivered (usually twice a week), by local dairy farmers selling organic milk (which still has the cream on top). The homogenous milk supplied in supermarkets, has almost no nutritional value, while calcium absorption is almost nil. Fresh milk is something completely different - and even has its own special taste
I remember them all…I work as an operator for 2.5 years on those cord boards before I took a job in outside plant. I loved working the information desk. When calculators 1st cam out they were mega expensive. The Isley milk truck delivered cottage cheese, cream, milk, buttermilk. There was a Nichols bakery truck that deliver bread in the summer ( so my mom didn’t have to heat up the house with baking bread then. We lived I. The country and their were delivery people for all kinds of things: Charlie Chips ( potato chips in metal cans), McNess (spices and flavorings like vanilla and such),…in the summer all the traveling salesman showed up like Fuller Brush, vacuum salesman, Bible salesman, etc. then there was the book mobile from the county library too! There were always people dropping by, the insurance man, the paster, all those sales people…there were more then I listed. Memories 😎
Encyclopedia salesman ‼️ My grandmother got me the world books. I learned so much. Countries and the people... fascinating ‼️ Geography and great information. Computers are fine but reading is an experience like no other. My Dad made me read the paper at 4. I chose the funny papers. He read the paper at 2. He became an attorney and Circuit Court Judge. Smart and funny, a real treat to be around 💕🙏✌️
Yes I remember the fruit and vegetable truck, the knife sharpener guy, and our milkman brought all kinds of stuff besides milk. Bread, pastry, potato chips, chocolate milk, and more.
I'm 75 and I remember all of this. Those were better days than now. We didn't have cell phones, no microwave ovens and our TV in 1954 had one channel. A year later CBS and ABC stations arrived. Much simpler times. Dad's worked and Mothers stayed home and raised the children. People were friendlier and more respectful. Then the mid 60s arrived with the Vietnam War heating up. That was the beginning politically of where we are now. A mess.
I remember the milk trucks but we also had the egg truck as well. We had a box on the porch that was insulted for those deliveries. I also helped a friend of mine on his news paper route riding our bikes all over town delivering news papers. We grew up mowing yards and raking leaves and then in the winter months shoveling snow. We always watched Bonanza along with Mutual of Omaha's wild kingdom. The nightly news Huntly Brinkley report. Then after that was cartoons.
Mowing the lawn until my boyfriend made fun of me at 16 and I told my mother I wasn't going to do it anymore. I was the one to do everything and there was alot. At 75 tomorrow I'm still in shape. It gave me a good foundation for health. Yay babyboomers💕🙏✌️
If you can recall the insulated panels as being light gray in color with fuzzy edges, then like my family you had one with solid asbestos panels glued to all four inside and lid....found this out as an adult in my 30s.
I wasn't alive at any time in the 50s but wanna say drive-ins were still around in the 70's. The sixties were great in my book. So a magical time for children. No lash laws for the dogs. They were part of the neighborhood and would walk you home after the street lights came on. From a parents point of view at that time l can't say for sure what my parents thought. I think they had a good time too. 🙏
And one could adopt a dog or puppy at the SPCA for $15-$20, with no background checks or lengthy application processes, and you didn't need to register them at your town's borough hall and pay for a license in order to actually have them added to your family.
< No lash laws> Not like the leash laws they have now. These things are caused, in many cases, by lawsuits. We are a sue-happy society. Anybody is free to get those laws changed
Oh my goodness what a walk down memory lane. S&H green stamps. Mom would bring them home after grocery shopping and we would lick them and stick them in the book. My mom saved enough books for 1 Xmas present for each of us. What fun. 😊❤️
We had the milk man and the dry cleaners guy come to our house. Dad played in a band and had to wear clean white starched shirts. The delivery guy would save part of his sandwich to give to the German Shepard who guarded the house. She looked forward to him coming around
I remember all of these things. I was 13 when the Beatles performed on Ed Sullivan. Not one kid in the neighborhood missed it. It swept the nation. Many garage bands sprouted up due to the "British Invasion" as it was called. Mom always saved Green Stamps. Our house had a "Milk Chute" where the Milk man placed the milk. This was when I was a kid in Pontiac, Michigan. Good times!
That Ed show - the 3 in a row changed my punk ass 12 year old life. I moved later from CT at 23 to LA and worked at Capitol because of them. Mom and step-Dad loved Beatles and were hip so life through the 60s was very cool. Today I sit retired in N Hollywood turning 70 with my guitars still multi tracking my ass off for no other reason than fun. Still have my 16 magazines and LPs and about 100 books and Beatle stuff I harvested within arms reach of me. Long Live the Invasion!!! lol ☮
I remember seeing Planet of the Apes at the drive-in and dad had the wagon backed up facing the screen. Three or four of us kids piled in the back with pillows and blankets and the back hatch open. Dad and mom in lawn chairs at back of car and a cooler with "pop". Good times
I also saw Planet of the Apes at a drive-in, but on a date!😁 Probably not the best choice of movies, but it may have been the best movie at that time!?
Our apartment in SoCal in 1959 had a narrow driveway with tiny stoops to the back doors to access one of the parking areas. The door was unlocked with the refrigerator near the door with the empties between the door and the fridge. The milkman would come inside and he would put the order in the refrigerator, take the empties and shut the door. We had a bakery delivery that we kids called the Donut Man. S&H Green Stamps were a thing until the discount chains such as Target or K-Mart put them out of business.
You were a kid. Kids don't have the stresses of adulthood, including facing your mortality. But kids back then did hear that the Russians could hit the red button and destroy the entire world in 5 minutes. But no stress.
Most of these are gen x too. Damn near everything you showed were up to and thru the 70's. I was a 60's kid and I remember all of this and I took my kids to the drive in and shoved TV diners down their gullet on TV trays
My son has the metal TV trays that my mom passed to me. These sat on your lap and had "groovy" '60s flowers on them. I saw one of them in an episode of the Walking Dead in a scene with Eugene. Flashback. My son's kids use them often while watching TV. 😊
@@mariebussinger6565 My mom also cooked for us...we never had frozen dinners. My little brother thought a Swanson's Chicken Pot Pie was the nest thing ever - he never had one until he visited me after I moved out. My mom also made many of our clothes. She even made me my first two piece bathing suit. I loved it!
I remember going to the drive in and couldn't wait to get old enough to were my play clothes, and getting to stay up sometimes past my bed time and sharing the fun with a friend or two. I remember how we would sit and watch the movie in the back of the station wagon and by the time of the 2nd movie we would all be sound asleep. But then again it was a lot simple times in the late 1960's and early 1970's. Love from Marysville, California
@@kirkmooneyham It shouldn't, I don't live close enough for it to flood where I am. I have 2 leeves between me and the river. Love from Marysville, California
Happy Mother’s Day. My mom was a telephone operator for bell telephone company. She started in Lehighton pa and retired in the late 1980s from Allentown pa. The company is now Verizon and she is still going 85 years young
I’m 69 remember some of this stuff well it was a time kids could go just about any where and do whatever they wanted and parents didn’t worry about us we need those days again 😢
I would NEVER have thought to put my baseball cards on my spokes! I put regular playing cards there! Of course, I was a Tom boy. We had 3 channels on the television, and the reception was not all that good... until our father had an antenna installed on our roof with a controller to point it more accurately. Yes, the Ed Sullivan show: the Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Doors, Elvis Presley... shocked my mother who was watching; my father ignored it, reading his newspaper. As to schools, yes I had to learn how to use a slide rule; an electronic calculator was both an anomaly and a God send.
I was a tomboy too, and my dad also put up a roof antenna with a rotor for us. Thank goodness slide rules were not used when I took algebra/trig in high school! They seemed like a b***h to learn how to use, lol.
I’m not even a baby boomer (I’m Gen-X) and I remember all of these things still existing throughout my childhood. The only one I didn’t personally experience was the milkman, however I was aware of such dairy services still existing in some areas. It was certainly still a popular concept on TV, so I was aware of it. And Mom, Grandma, and I used to fill out those S&H stamp booklets in the 70s. Good times. 🙂
I remember so many things watching this video. As kids and teenagers, we had real friends and talked to them personally instead of by social nets. Miss those simpler times, but we can never go back.
I can remember all the things you mentioned, we also had the bread man come every day. It was Bond bread. They had different types of bread rolls, and they had some sweets, a glazed, oblong doughnut, which I loved as a kid. We had the seal test Milkman come my neighborhood, Abbotts milk come to their house. We also have the Fuller brush man come around the neighborhood, we even had a rag man come in his horse and wagon even though I live in the city, he was there. A lot of good times playing outside and going to the woods. Thank you for these memories! 8:05
I'm a Gen Xer and remember going to a drive-in movie or two (the closest one to me closed down in 1988) and we had our milk delivered by a local dairy from the late 70's - mid 80's. My siblings and I used to collect baseball & football cards but never put them in our bike spokes. So glad I was a child in the 70's and a teenager in the 80's because those were great times!
Small transistor radio to listen to the World Series the games played in the daytime during school hours. The teacher knew we were listening but let us get away with it during class.
Music was great in the 60s. Tons of lightning bugs and Charlie's Chips delivery guy in the 60's also. Saturday morning cartoons and then going out to play. Stay at home home Moms and everyone knew everyone on the block.
Burning your fingers on the TV dinner when it was time to peel off the foil on the veggies and dessert, yep. Good times. And "58008" inverted on a red TI LED display HA... we had the most fun. Good one, thanks as always.
Good memories of growing up in the 50's and early 60's. We lived in the country so when we finally got telephone service, it was a party line with several other families on it. Generally the # of rings told you who the call was for. If you picked up to make a call, some of the other families may already be on the line chatting. Eavesdropping others calls was frequent! It was a law in Oklahoma back then that if someone got on with others and said they needed the line for an emergency, the others had to hang up and give them the line. If not, they could be charged. But if you faked an emergency, YOU could then be charged so no cheating!!
Omg I forgot about the party line‼️ Us kids would listen in. When you wanted to call out and someone was on it you had to wait unless it was an emergency 💕🙏✌️
Was just thinking the same thing, I'm a country boy, almost 40 miles to town. Those phones turned many in our community into what we call "gossips". Had to be careful what you said, cuz someone was sure to be listening. Dad hated it, was nice to get markets, but if you contracted a sale, the whole community knew about it. Still, I miss the old days. we went to church with maybe 20 or so people in the pews, and it seems like folks just knew what was right or wrong. Born in '49.
I was a U.S. MARINE in 1968 when my grandfather died. I was in Washington state at a school, and could not go home I called collect to my grandmother and had to tell the operator I wanted to call Gueydan La, and the number was 4321. She asked for the rest of the number, I told her that is it, no prefix no area code, just 4321. She finally got me connected. I was his first grandson, so it was a hard time.
@@campfireaddict6417 Sure enough. We had a code worked out with my parents for when I traveled somewhere such as back to school. I'd tell the Operator I wanted to make a "person-to-person" call at their number for some fictitious name we'd made up. My mom or dad would answer and when the O would say she has a p-2-p call for XXXXX, they'd say "he's not here right now, call back later." That meant I'd arrived okay and so no charges. 🙂
No mention of Gold Bond stamps? They were more common the the S&H stamps in our neck of the woods. And my mom smoked Raleigh cigarettes and saved the coupons from each pack, and four more coupons inside the carton.
We'd have to run to the truck stop to get cigarettes for my friends' mom who looked so cool smoking those Winstons. We were like 10 years old. She seemed even cooler because she actually had a washer & dryer in her house.
I remember all of these things and I’m not quite in the baby boomer generation. The milkman brought back a lot of memories as did the TV dinners. I remember sitting on the couch with a TV tray and eating my dinner from off of it. Thanks for the fun memories!
Oh how well I remember all of these! On cold winter mornings when getting the bottles of just-delivered milk, the cold air forced about an inch and a half of pure white cream to the tops of the bottles. You had to shake the bottles to get the cream evenly distributed (or else try to gobble the cream up if Mom wasn't looking). Speaking of Mom, we would tease her that if our house ever caught fire she would risk life and limb in order to save her cache of S&H Green Stamp books.
Yup...remember licking cream off the paper tops when I took the bottles to the frig. Had to shake the bottles to mix the cream into the milk. Later homogenizing milk kept the cream from separating..
My earlist memory of the Milkman was the (Draft) Horse & Cart. The horse would respond to woah and get up commands but usually worked in silence knowing exactly where to go and stop. Usually, the Milkman had a hard time keeping up to the horse!
We never had milk delivered but our next door neighbor did. We would time our mornings by him. We would hear him turn off the motor, slide the door open, hear the glass bottles clinking, heard him walk up the steps and then the sounds were reversed. That meant I had to leave the house in 5 minutes to go to school.
Yea I'm a late boomer born near the end of 64.i remember seeing everything with the exception of the milk man.they we're gone where I was.we were on a telephone party line until my sister started dating boys and tied it up all time and we were kicked off it lol
We had a Nomad station wagon and when we would go to the drive in, my folks would put down the back seat and put a pad and blankets down. Very handy when we got sleepy! we also ate tv dinners and Banquet meat pies, and I recollect that they tasted much better than they do today. I could be wrong.
I was 12 in 1973, and did enjoy the Bonanza episodes in the mid 60s. I've had to watch them on streaming media to watch the earlier ones since I was born in 1961.
I remember the milkman when they used clydesdale horses, i always went out in the dawn and patted the horse, great memories, i wish i was still in that era❤️simple carefree days😢
I, too, remember (vividly!). For me, a 73-year-old with a remarkably good long-term-memory, it was yesterday. And I miss the 1950s terribly. And I praise God that I had a "perfect" childhood!❤
The Beatles were iconic as they led the way for other British bands., The Rolling Stones, Kinks, Yardbirds (With both Jimmy Page & jeff Beck) and earlier with Eric Clapton. Swinging Blue Jeans, Gerry & The Pacemakers, and many more. I am 69 and started playing the bass guitar in the late 60s and still do.
S & H Green Stamps where still in use through the 1970’s. I remember shopping as a little 7 year old kid at my local Mckays grocer in Coos Bay Oregon and seeing adults pick up the stamp books and green stamps. Tom Sisson
I still get my milk delivered early in the morning in glass bottles by a milkman - I've been doing it for years but during lockdown lots of people tried it and have continued. (UK).
Jimmy was our milkman. He let me ride with him to the corner. He had this big chunk of ice in the back that made everything cold and I fondly remember him letting me rub it. Once I brought a friend and he drove us both to corner. He was so nice. We still kept our milk shoot and my house now has a milk shoot although covered over on the outside with vinyl siding. It’s nice and cool just like Jimmy’s milk truck and I keep some of my art projects in there so they can feel cool. Born in 1959 I think I was about 4 when I met Jimmy. Mom and dad never had to worry about me tagging along with Jimmy to the corner and I’d toddle home. Alone. We didn’t live on a busy street so even that young I could cross without help. There was always someone outside to make sure you were OK.
In high school I remember that a man was measured by the size of his slide rule. We had one in the algebra 2 classroom that was hung over the blackboard that must have been 5-6 feet long as learning tool! I was trained as an engineer with a slide rule and now these young folks have never seen or heard of one. What we do today blows me away! Love watching those kids at SpaceX. I envy them so much!
@gregggoss2210,,, I just miss, the REAL times, when boys, were REALLY boys, and girls were REALLY girls, and there was no confusion, or mental illness, when it came to using public bathroom.
These were the Best Times ever. I miss them so much...espically the drive in's, where you could go in your PJ's and your mom could bring food to eat and snack too I know my mom did....
We got a used color TV in about 1964. The first color broadcast I saw was Bonanza. I was amazed at the intensity of the colors. Never liked the Beatles after they ruined my 7th birthday party. I thought I was going to get birthday kisses from some of the girls but all they cared about was the Beatles. Yes, I was born on Feb. 9.
Love the picture with Jack Kilby in it. He was co-inventor of the integrated circuit. Worked alongside my father at Globe Union in Milwaukee before going to T.I. Was a neighbor of ours for about 2 years also. He told Dad about the house for sale in his neighborhood that my parents wound up buying.
@@carolferguson19 Hi Carol, thank you very much for the compliment. Dad highly admired Jack Kilby. In fact, when Jack left Globe Union for Texas Instruments, Dad left shortly after also, going to work for Simplicity Outdoor Lawn & Garden in Port Washington, Wi.
My mother collected Triple S Blue Stamps. Mostly a New York City metropolitan area thing. Triple S Blue Stamps (Stop, Shop and Save) and Plaid Stamps were bigger there than S&H Green Stamps.
I’ve noticed while watching old TV shows like Bonanza, Rifleman, Wagon Train, Gilligan’s Island…………that the networks put a disclaimer before the shows that state they do not conform to the standards or opinions of todays world and you shouldn’t watch if you are offended by these old ideals. What a crock.
This brought a smile to my face. I remember all of these. Attaching cards to spokes was to sound like a motorcycle, not show off your cards. In the early 70s a calculator would cost about 2 months rent. I helped a friend put punch cards into a computer for his computer class.
My first calculator was a Bomar Brain sold by Sears. Add, subtract, multiply and divide. That was it. Later I had a TI electronic slide rule. I was going thru advanced electronics at Naval Air Station Millington Tn in 1973.
We were lucky-my cousin worked as an electrical engineer for TI. He got us stuff like that cheap. I had one of the first digital watches they made with the red display and white plastic band. Cost like 10 bucks. Also got us a TI55 calculator.
They were good time to grow up, we spent our summers playing baseball, swimming in the river, and using our imaginations, in a small country town, everyone knew everyone. I have always likened it to growing up in a Norman Rockwell painting.
0:00 🎶No milk today, my love has gone away, the bottle stands forlorn, a symbol of the dawn 🎶 (Herman's Hermits: "No Milk Today") 0:50 🎶Knights of the Green Shield, stand and shout!🎶 (Genesis: "Dancing with the Moonlit Knight") 6:51 🎶Operator, will you help me place this call? You see, the number on the match book is old and faded.🎶 (Jim Croche: "Operator") These videos are lovely and bring back so many memories! And perhaps they'll help younger generations understand some of the songs from my day too 😊
Had an original Hard Day's Night theater ticket that cost $1.25(saw 11 tines in the theater). Wore oyt a Sgt Pepper's album. Literally had to buy another. Green Stamps,operators,playing outdoors 'til dark. I remember all of these you mentioned. (& used imagination when we played,not from a video) Beatles 4 Ever!
One of my fondest memories was being able to eat our Sunday dinner in the TV room while watching Walt Disney and eating soup and sandwiches like the Campbell’s soup commercial said because they went together and then watching Bonanza before bedtime!!
I DO remember and experienced almost everything in this video. Not so much the card in the bike spokes, at least not around my neighborhood, I don't recall many kids having bikes where I grew up. I didn't have one because my parents couldn't afford it. But I didn't really need one. All the kids I played with lived in and around the projects I grew up in. It was an awesome childhood.
Awesome? In the projects? The ones by us were pretty trashy (WWII vintage). They finally tore them down in about 1955. My dad & uncle went through looking for pipes doors, wiring, etc.
As kids we would pick up worn out, damaged or just pitched out bikes. We had a pile of them,and cannabalized parts to build a few bikes. Only street paved was main street. The rest were all gravel.
@@LUIS-ox1bv Yeah, so I hear. I really don't remember seeing anyone doing that though. But as I said, not a lot of kids in my neighborhood had a bike. I would have done it if I had a bike. Maybe I'll try it now on my mountain bike. It won't look weird an old man riding a bike with a card on the spokes will it?
You've got some fabulous photos here , my compliments !.....And I sure do remember the switchboard - I was even an AT&T operator for a while : memories ! 😀
Certainly Better times. No robots could ever replace a kind human !! I miss the good old days !! God bless all the viewers & you sir too for sharing !!
Born in 1950 I remember all of these things and more. Drive ins were a regular event and cheap entertainment to watch first run movies. The price of everything was significantly less and gasoline was cheap. Life was much less complicated.
Check out Part 2 here!
ua-cam.com/video/RCc3bsSqXl0/v-deo.htmlsi=iUM6w2rG_PRQ2DYM
71 years young and remember everything on this clip like it was yesterday, when “all my troubles seemed so far away!”
I am 72 years old & I remember everything on this video!
Now it looks as if they’re here to stay.
76 here. Can't remember what I did yesterday, but remember all of these.
Oh you kids, I am 83, most of these things were for town kids.
70 years old - very old - remember these things. At one place we lived we had a drive-in theatre basically in our back-yard and the house wired for sound from the movie. Dad cut a deal with the theatre when they bought the place so we saw movies for free. Yes, the screen was very visible from the house.
Those were the best days growing up. As a kid on the weekends you stayed out all day until it Dinner time . Then you got to go out until it got dark. You played with your friends all day all over the neighborhoods instead of sitting in your room texting them.
You carried a dime with you anytime you went out in case of emergency so you could call home on a pay phone.
I have four siblings and we did exactly that, we stayed out all day playing with the neighborhood kids and when it was time to clean up for supper mom has a specific whistle for each of us.
Till the streetlights came on...lol
We called collect,let it ring twice. Mom then knew to pick us up and didn't cost that dime😅😂
Exactly you got it💕🙏✌️
@@Freya-bs5tx Excellent ‼️ Good ol' days we were blessed 💕🙏✌️
I am 65 and blown away by all these wonderful memories. How could things that seemed so normal now appear very strange!?
Democrats happend
@@junicohen7918 👎How does it feel to not have full control of you brain?
Strange but good. Remember when we said SPAZ, COOL and all our other phrases. We were blessed to not have to go through what kids have to put up with today 💕🙏
@@junicohen7918 You got it exactly 🤙🙏✌️
@@johnopal316 Feels like...democrats happening.
I am 65 and remember everything that was mentioned. Boy, those sure were simpler and way better times! Thank you!
Agree
I'm 75 and except for losing a lung in Nam, I lived the best and happiest life humanly possible.
Unless u went to Viet Nam…
I’m 60 amazing memories such simpler times
AGREE !!! 😪
It was a friendly time, a safe time, everybody knew everyone else and kept an eye out for each others children. There was no violence in schools, there
were mothers who stayed home and Sundays were for church services and family dinners. Kids played without worry until those street lights came on
and summer vacation was a free spirted time for kids to play with each other, building forts, endless street games, and sleepovers at each others house.
A snow day was a "blessing" to be out of school and as soon as it was announced on the radio we all headed to the local hill to sled the day away. I cry
for todays kids who have no earthly idea of what this was like.... it was a time that is sadly gone forever. We were the lucky ones to grow up at such an
awesome time in America!
What a shame. Tell you what if I was born in the USA today I would move to the Far East. Or maybe Norway or the Netherlands. i would definitely NOT remain in this country. We didn't even have locks on our entry doors. And when we went to the beach here in FL we left our keys IN THE IGNITION so we didn't have to carry them down to the beach in case they became lost in the sand! Can you imagine that today?
Ditto! It was the best of times! Great fun was spontaneous and there were many kids from big families of all ages!
Amen to that!
And then the late 60’s happened and it all started to unravel.
...and we didn't have to wear safety helmets to ride a bike or stupid knee pads and numbered sun screens. We climbed up into trees, slept outside overnight in tents, walked to parks to swing as high as we could on swings, Climbed on high monkey bars, went as fast as possible on metal merry go rounds and fell or
flew off at times, we often ran around bare footed on hot sunny sidewalks, got sun burned, jumped in leave piles/had leave fights, went sledding on the highest hills we'd find without adults, had snowball fights, and knew how to cross streets safely on our own, we'd be outside all day whenever off from school, we walked to school even in Kinder Garten in the cities. We actually
loved being outside all day and early evenings on our own. It was authentic and purely spontaneous
Inventive play until bedtime with windows open when it was warm or hot hearing crickets, cars driving near or in the distance, rain or the rustling of tree leaves in the breezes or winds.
It was authentic and all good as granted.
It was the utmost of actual living.
If Baby Boomers are said to be spoiled it could only be true for the aforementioned above.
@@johnsherman6718
One of the first things I remember is my mom teaching me how to cross the street. We had damn good teachers. They taught us the 3 R’s. And our parents taught us about life.
“ those were the days my friend, we thought they’ed never end.”
But sadly they did.
At 82 I have a few more years of the good times on you, but we both had the time of our lives. Have a great rest of your life John Sherman.
We've lost so much. It breaks my heart.
Our parents: the greatest generation.
Agree
Mine too.
Sad, but true...if we could ONLY go back...
I'd go back in a minute.
I was blessed to have been a child in the 50's and 60's. What an amazing time! I would go back in a heartbeat! ❤
You know it. A lot safer too. I didn't know what a Vagina was until I was about 12 or 13. How's that for innocence?
I Definitely would give just about anything to go back yo that time. Fond memories, simple times, no corruption. Alas, gone forever
Me too!
Take me with you 😂😂😂
I would too but only to visit. I've become too enamored of the electronics age to ever want to stay but spending a month or so back then would be aces.
It was a great time to be a kid! I was born at the end of 1961 and am at the tail end of the baby boomer generation. I have fond memories of being a teenager in my neighborhood in the 1970’s! I had great friends. We played baseball all summer long and played football during the cold weather months. It was a simpler time and life was good!
Yes...everyone played outside all the time. Such great memories. My son used to play outside and I remember when video games started to be a thing in the '80s and he would get frustrated with his friends who stopped going outside to play.
@@itsdiane2you11 Scientists now say "The longer one stares at a cell phone,
the greater their danger to become a zombie. Really. This is what scientists now say. Really.
@@artlewellan2294 well that ended up being true
I was born in 1955 the year color TV came out. In the 70's I was working 3 jobs at a time. buying perfect low mile luxury cars from $50. to $350. That was a lot of money for me back then, but I have always been a great Saver of money. Had showroom cars like a 1959 Pontiac 2 dr. I bought from a guy who stopped in to buy 1 gal. of gas to make it to the junk yard to sell it. I asked, he said he would probably get $100.00 for it. I offered $125.00 if he would wait until fri. He agreed. So many good deals back then and I traveled a lot in my HI way floaters! Sure miss everything except the war.
62, here...we're the tail end of Boomers
My dad was a milk man delivery to homes. Some people actually leave the door unlocked for him just to go on in . Times have really changed.
S&h stamps were really neat. If you went on Wednesday to the store you got double stamps. My mom got several things throughout the years.
We used regular cards on our bicycle spokes. It was a neat sound.
Times have really changed. I remember all of these things. Life seemed so much simpler then. ❤️
Our house had a milk chute for the milkman to leave the milk in.
We had an insulated milk box on our front porch. I remember getting cottage cheese in colored aluminum drinking cups. We used those cups for years.
My Dad used to tease kids... " You look like the milkman!"
For many years, I used a punch bowl and cups purchased with green stamps.
I got my first tennis racket with S&H green stamps!
I loved the way these memories were put together. It reminds me of times we were human and respected each other .
My Mother collected these stamps , She purchased an aqua dish & bowl set , And a portable 8 track radio for my Dad . great video.
My mother collected those and Gold Bell stamps. I remember her calling me over to the table and telling me to stick out my tongue. She would roll the stamps over my tongue and stick them in the book. I remember the time she caught putting postage stamps in the books. I can still hear her screaming!
Pasting green stamps into the booklets was one of my very first jobs at home. I really enjoyed it, especially when my mom's face lit up at a full book!
Up to the early 60's people typically turned those stamps in for a card table & matching folding chairs, or porch furniture. I recall the neighbor lady got a dutch oven.
Oh yeah, here in Georgia was the S+H green stamps!
@@sheilacape4794 we had both. Massachusetts
I really got a kick from this one as I am a Boomer. Loved hearing the milkman delivering milk in the morning, and I’d swear it tasted better than market milk. I was one of the millions who saw the Beatles on Ed Sullivan. I could hardly wait to see that show that night. Thanks for talking about my generation.
Me also, we used to watch Elvis concerts as well. I remember he did 1 in Hawaii.
@@johnpoole8321 - I remember when “Hound Dog” came out, and we were just young kids, and we thought that was the most fun song we’d ever heard. 😢 Fun times.
I remember Beatlemania when I was little. My older cousins had one of those Beatle dolls and the boots. I thought they were the ultimate in cool. We had the follow-up in the 70s which was Rollermania, when the Bay City Rollers became popular. We had the short tartan trimmed pants and the tartan scarf with our favorite band member's name on it to wave at the concerts. Fun times indeed! 😊
I also saw the Beatles on Ed Sullivan because of my older sister. I was pretty little but I’ll never forget the excitement!
@@daisydukes8252 - “Excitement” is exactly the right word!
I remember those years with fond memories.
The milk that was delivered was in a glass bottle, it had a cardboard seal on the top with a tab you could just pull to get it open and the cream separated and was on top. He would place it in a square insulated box on our doorstep and inside the box was our next order from a piece of paper he left the day before. All we had to do was check what we wanted on the list for the next day.
I remember mom getting us around the table licking those S&H green stamps to fill up the books. She got quite a few items from those books.
I miss the drive ins, the playgrounds, the metal speakers with the armored cables that hooked on your car window and intermission time when we could make a run to the snack bar.
I had no idea Bonanza ran that long but I do remember being surprised that Dan Blocker weighed ten pounds when he was born.
I don't know if it was a regional thing at the time but what you didn't mention was the cotton candy man and MR Softee that would come around. Thanks for the reminders of better times it was a joy to watch.
We lived out in the country, but we had an ice cream man who stopped once a week, bringing delicious popsicles, drumsticks (the ones with the round scoop of ice cream, choc, nuts on top), and various other ice cream treats! We also had a bread man stop once a week!
Bonanza was long running besides Lorne Greene was Canadian but what about Gunsmoke? Kitty was into menopause while Matt was still rubbing the barrel of his metal not his flesh of a gun. Kitty didn't get pregnant because if no marriage, no pregnancy-good family value.
I remember the "Good Humer" ice cream truck.
Saturday morning matinee at the theater.
@@haroldharwell7078 Commander Cody, we've come a long way from a detective with a jet pack, leather jacket and a 38.
@@haroldharwell7078, So your ice cream man was entitled I see. Ours had a trike where the freezer was on front with handlebars that was the steering. He had to ring a bell as he went down the street. LOL
Guess I'm getting old...I personally remember all of these things 😂
Early marriage, my husband was a milk man in training. On one house, he was warned that the peoplevanted him to go in and put the milk in the refrigerator, but they had a little dog that would bite their heels. They had to try to beat the dog in and out. One morning, he caught the trainer. The bite scared the trainer so bad that he fell down and threw the milk. It broke and milk went everywhere. Such a mess. Thy had to clean it up.
Anither delivery, the people had a big Doberman. He learned to throw an ice cream bar as far as he could and get the milk delivered before he finished it.
I do too. I also remember the coal man who would put an alarm clock to shame.
Yeah, I'm sure I'm old. It snuck up on me! 😎
Right there with you!
When I was growing up , I like so many S&h Green stamp books , I can still remember the taste of the glue , we bought camping gear with the stamps and went camping at starved Rock Illinois 🤣🤣🤣♦️♦️♦️‼️
@@theodoreroberts3407 thanks for that one! I remember the coal truck would come and deliver it down a shute onto our basement coal room
I loved the Avon lady. I always got a tiny sample lipstick. We had blue chip stamps and green stamps, it was fun looking in the store at all the neat stuff they had.
My grandmas basement was a little creepy. Full of coal beneath the shoot and what seemed like hundreds of jars of canned fruits and vegetables, an of course it was pretty dark.
Occasionally my Mom would have chocolate milk delivered-it was expensive. And all the kids listened for the ice cream man in the summer. We also had Helms bakery trucks with these long, long drawers full of cakes, pies, donuts and bread.
We four kids were sitting on the floor in front of the tv with our tv dinners. My Dad came home and surprised us with a new, very exuberant puppy who came running in and gobbled up each of our dinners. We loved it, my dad did not.
It really was a great time to be a kid.
That was our basement.
Tupperware parties. I heard they recently went belly up. I also hear Pyrex is in trouble.
Let's not forget "AMWAY".
Or the Regal lady who came around before Christmas for Christmas cards and decorations.....
I honestly believe we lived in the very best time ever. Even with the social upheaval and the Vietnam war th. 60s were the greatest time to be alive. I remember all of these things and so much more. As another poster commented, we’ve lost so much.
Gen X here. Our family had milk delivery until 1979-1980. They still used the old stand-up driver trucks as well. I remember in the summertime with the windows open, hearing the glass bottles clinking at 4-6 AM when he showed up.
Our milkman usually arrived mid-morning.
Divco milk trucks. Unchanged body design,1938-1986, if memory is accurate. They were still in service in my city in the early 90s.
A secure feeling to hear those bottles clink all was right in the world, men working, products ordered and brought.
If there was a kid in a family who didn't resemble either parent, they were often jokingly called "the milkman's baby". 😉
That's super true!! I have an uncle on my stepdad's side of the family and he's blond with blue eyes and 6'4. The other 2 boys are 5'8 TOPS with brown eyes and had dark brown hair but are bald and have been since their early 20s! However Scott still has a full head of hair and looks only like my grandmother LOL. If he wasn't the Milkman's kid then he was the Mailman's haha.
That was me . All my bothers a sister were dark haired not me I was blond when I was very young .
I babysat for three little girls way back when; a brunette, a blonde and a red head. The mom used to joke that their dad's were the milkman, the mailman and the meter man. LOL
Oh that's right I forgot‼️ Funny phrase everyone said. The good ol'days 💕🙏 ✌️
@@michaeljohn9263 Good story I love it ‼️ Good thing he looked like his grandmother LoL💕 🙏✌️
Interesting fact about those milk trucks. The driver did not sit down, as there was no seat. He stood up the whole time, because it was faster getting it on out of the truck. I know because I worked for a very brief time as a milkman in 1968. And when I say brief I mean less than a week, as it was not an easy job and I hated starting work at 3:00 in the morning.
How could you drive if you couldn’t sit down?
Some, milk delivery trucks had foldable seats at least in the 50's. Made it easier to get in and out when there was only a short distance between stops.
I remember my milkman driver from 1966-1969 he was a good man when I was a kid
when he didn't show up after a week I asked my grandpa " where is he?" he told me he died ,,,My milkman drove for "Roberts" and on TV commercials the jingle tune was "Roberts the dairy on the move" That was in my hometown of Plainfield Indiana .
Our milkman always called me butch, and sometimes gave us chunks of ice to chew on.😁👍
My cousin Ralph drove me to school in a milk truck. I later on drove a milk truck for w. e. Davis
Dairy. There was always a seat.
I remember in the late 1950s we would ride out bikes behind the fog of the mosquito sprayer, little did we know we were breathing in cancerous DDT but I'm happy to report that I'm mow 71 and still kicking!
Me too. I remember that exotic smell.
Thank you for the trip down memory lane. I experienced every single one of these. It was a different time for sure
I remember trying to trick the milkman into delivering chocolate milk by leaving notes pretending to be from my mother. I suppose the fact that they were written in crayon probably tipped him off that they were fakes!
An "A" for the effort! When we lived near Albany, NY in the mid 70's, we used to get a 5 gallon container of milk delivered by the milkman. It had a handle on top and a convenient tap to dispense. Of course when nobody was around, I would just drink from the tap! It was amazing how fast we drank that 5 gallons. My Grandparents were serviced by the Lehigh Valley Dairy, and they were able to get O.J. and iced tea delivered. Everything was in cartons by then.
Ha, that's a pretty good trick. I would have probably tried that if we had milk delivered back then. 😂
Great story !😂
Here in rural Scotland our milk is still delivered (usually twice a week), by local dairy farmers selling organic milk (which still has the cream on top). The homogenous milk supplied in supermarkets, has almost no nutritional value, while calcium absorption is almost nil. Fresh milk is something completely different - and even has its own special taste
I just felt bad for the milkman that had to put up with Hyacinth Bucket, (pronounced Bouquet).
The postman too!!!
Are the tops still colour-coded? Gold was the best if my memory serves me well.
@@flyingphobiahelp silver now .. just silver
@@skfalpink123 guess I’m not coming back to Edinburgh 😂😂
Yep.. we used to shake it to mix the cream.
I remember them all…I work as an operator for 2.5 years on those cord boards before I took a job in outside plant. I loved working the information desk. When calculators 1st cam out they were mega expensive. The Isley milk truck delivered cottage cheese, cream, milk, buttermilk. There was a Nichols bakery truck that deliver bread in the summer ( so my mom didn’t have to heat up the house with baking bread then. We lived I. The country and their were delivery people for all kinds of things: Charlie Chips ( potato chips in metal cans), McNess (spices and flavorings like vanilla and such),…in the summer all the traveling salesman showed up like Fuller Brush, vacuum salesman, Bible salesman, etc. then there was the book mobile from the county library too! There were always people dropping by, the insurance man, the paster, all those sales people…there were more then I listed. Memories 😎
Second hand Lions 😄 I forgot about the bookmobile, thanks for the reminder.
YES ‼️ I forgot. Fuller brush always came. What about the ice cream truck. Ringing his bells up and down every corner. Thanks for reminding me 💕🙏✌️
Encyclopedia salesman ‼️ My grandmother got me the world books. I learned so much. Countries and the people... fascinating ‼️ Geography and great information. Computers are fine but reading is an experience like no other. My Dad made me read the paper at 4. I chose the funny papers. He read the paper at 2. He became an attorney and Circuit Court Judge. Smart and funny, a real treat to be around 💕🙏✌️
The Fuller brush man was at our house the day Kennedy was shot.
Yes I remember the fruit and vegetable truck, the knife sharpener guy, and our milkman brought all kinds of stuff besides milk. Bread, pastry, potato chips, chocolate milk, and more.
I'm 75 and I remember all of this. Those were better days than now. We didn't have cell phones, no microwave ovens and our TV in 1954 had one channel. A year later CBS and ABC stations arrived. Much simpler times. Dad's worked and Mothers stayed home and raised the children. People were friendlier and more respectful. Then the mid 60s arrived with the Vietnam War heating up. That was the beginning politically of where we are now. A mess.
Now women are fat, desperately and have tattoos. They were prettier back then.
I remember the milk trucks but we also had the egg truck as well. We had a box on the porch that was insulted for those deliveries. I also helped a friend of mine on his news paper route riding our bikes all over town delivering news papers. We grew up mowing yards and raking leaves and then in the winter months shoveling snow. We always watched Bonanza along with Mutual of Omaha's wild kingdom. The nightly news Huntly Brinkley report. Then after that was cartoons.
Mowing the lawn until my boyfriend made fun of me at 16 and I told my mother I wasn't going to do it anymore. I was the one to do everything and there was alot. At 75 tomorrow I'm still in shape. It gave me a good foundation for health. Yay babyboomers💕🙏✌️
I remember sneaking in my parents bedroom upstairs and watching The Little Rascals, I Love Lucy and the rest. She was downstairs making dinner 💕🙏✌️
@@carolferguson19 Lucky you. I'm 72 and getting the dwindles. Former track star, swimming team all city champ, never fat.
If you can recall the insulated panels as being light gray in color with fuzzy edges, then like my family you had one with solid asbestos panels glued to all four inside and lid....found this out as an adult in my 30s.
The driver, he drove standing-up
I wasn't alive at any time in the 50s but wanna say drive-ins were still around in the 70's. The sixties were great in my book. So a magical time for children. No lash laws for the dogs. They were part of the neighborhood and would walk you home after the street lights came on. From a parents point of view at that time l can't say for sure what my parents thought. I think they had a good time too. 🙏
And one could adopt a dog or puppy at the SPCA for $15-$20, with no background checks or lengthy application processes, and you didn't need to register them at your town's borough hall and pay for a license in order to actually have them added to your family.
< No lash laws> Not like the leash laws they have now. These things are caused, in many cases, by lawsuits. We are a sue-happy society. Anybody is free to get those laws changed
I enjoy looking back on simpler times, wonderful memories, and my past. I miss the America I grew up in!
I miss it too.
Oh my goodness what a walk down memory lane. S&H green stamps. Mom would bring them home after grocery shopping and we would lick them and stick them in the book. My mom saved enough books for 1 Xmas present for each of us. What fun. 😊❤️
We used a sponge...
@@leecowell8165 to avoid a green tongue.
We had the milk man and the dry cleaners guy come to our house. Dad played in a band and had to wear clean white starched shirts. The delivery guy would save part of his sandwich to give to the German Shepard who guarded the house. She looked forward to him coming around
Smart delivery man‼️ The simple good life 💕🙏✌️
What a great memory!
In Florida we had doctors who made house calls!
I remember all of these things. I was 13 when the Beatles performed on Ed Sullivan. Not one kid in the neighborhood missed it. It swept the nation. Many garage bands sprouted up due to the "British Invasion" as it was called. Mom always saved Green Stamps. Our house had a "Milk Chute" where the Milk man placed the milk. This was when I was a kid in Pontiac, Michigan. Good times!
That Ed show - the 3 in a row changed my punk ass 12 year old life. I moved later from CT at 23 to LA and worked at Capitol because of them. Mom and step-Dad loved Beatles and were hip so life through the 60s was very cool. Today I sit retired in N Hollywood turning 70 with my guitars still multi tracking my ass off for no other reason than fun. Still have my 16 magazines and LPs and about 100 books and Beatle stuff I harvested within arms reach of me. Long Live the Invasion!!! lol ☮
I was 13 also. I’ll never forget that night!
@@cuda426hemi Sounds like a great time!😊
I remember seeing Planet of the Apes at the drive-in and dad had the wagon backed up facing the screen. Three or four of us kids piled in the back with pillows and blankets and the back hatch open. Dad and mom in lawn chairs at back of car and a cooler with "pop". Good times
I also saw Planet of the Apes at a drive-in, but on a date!😁 Probably not the best choice of movies, but it may have been the best movie at that time!?
@@pattymiller9040 And groundbreaking/controversial
Kids wore pajamas to the drive in and were carried in asleep when the family got home. Care and security.
@@mariebussinger6565 Yes! 🙂
I’m sure everyone here had roller skates with a key. I can still feel them on my feet with the bracket tightened around my toes. LOL!
I fell down a lot!
They need to bring back drive ins. There are a few around, but I really miss them.
Our apartment in SoCal in 1959 had a narrow driveway with tiny stoops to the back doors to access one of the parking areas. The door was unlocked with the refrigerator near the door with the empties between the door and the fridge. The milkman would come inside and he would put the order in the refrigerator, take the empties and shut the door. We had a bakery delivery that we kids called the Donut Man. S&H Green Stamps were a thing until the discount chains such as Target or K-Mart put them out of business.
I remember the Helms donut man early in the morning before sunrise.
Also a boomer from L.A. - Hi there !
@@LTMH369 Our Helms man usually came through in early afternoon. We always stopped him for candy (I loved the candy drawer).
@@itsdiane2you11 I remember fresh donuts before sunrise. I did even know they had candy.
@@LTMH369 I called it the secret candy drawer...don't know why. It wasn't deep and not hugely stocked but it did have a few candy bar selections.
Great video!! Great memories of simpler and less stressful times.
There was plenty of stress. We just kept it inside we didn't " share" things as much.
You were a kid. Kids don't have the stresses of adulthood, including facing your mortality. But kids back then did hear that the Russians could hit the red button and destroy the entire world in 5 minutes. But no stress.
You're right! Simpler times.
Most of these are gen x too. Damn near everything you showed were up to and thru the 70's. I was a 60's kid and I remember all of this and I took my kids to the drive in and shoved TV diners down their gullet on TV trays
My dad bought my brother a calculator in 1971 when he left for college. It cost $100. That's
$762.22 today (US-CPI).
My son has the metal TV trays that my mom passed to me. These sat on your lap and had "groovy" '60s flowers on them. I saw one of them in an episode of the Walking Dead in a scene with Eugene. Flashback. My son's kids use them often while watching TV. 😊
We were lucky to miss the frozen dinners and fast food. Mom cooked fresh. She was traditional and French. Also knitted and sewed for us.
@@mariebussinger6565 My mom also cooked for us...we never had frozen dinners. My little brother thought a Swanson's Chicken Pot Pie was the nest thing ever - he never had one until he visited me after I moved out. My mom also made many of our clothes. She even made me my first two piece bathing suit. I loved it!
@@itsdiane2you11 our Moms were a gift.
I remember going to the drive in and couldn't wait to get old enough to were my play clothes, and getting to stay up sometimes past my bed time and sharing the fun with a friend or two. I remember how we would sit and watch the movie in the back of the station wagon and by the time of the 2nd movie we would all be sound asleep. But then again it was a lot simple times in the late 1960's and early 1970's. Love from Marysville, California
Hope the river doesn't flood you guys too bad this time.
@@kirkmooneyham It shouldn't, I don't live close enough for it to flood where I am. I have 2 leeves between me and the river. Love from Marysville, California
@@dorothydromgoole8040 Or the earthquakes.
@@campfireaddict6417 I would say, the earth quakes. They kill but the child hood memorys are just that a memory. Love from Marysville, California
Happy Mother’s Day. My mom was a telephone operator for bell telephone company. She started in Lehighton pa and retired in the late 1980s from Allentown pa. The company is now Verizon and she is still going 85 years young
I’m 69 remember some of this stuff well it was a time kids could go just about any where and do whatever they wanted and parents didn’t worry about us we need those days again 😢
I would NEVER have thought to put my baseball cards on my spokes! I put regular playing cards there! Of course, I was a Tom boy. We had 3 channels on the television, and the reception was not all that good... until our father had an antenna installed on our roof with a controller to point it more accurately. Yes, the Ed Sullivan show: the Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Doors, Elvis Presley... shocked my mother who was watching; my father ignored it, reading his newspaper. As to schools, yes I had to learn how to use a slide rule; an electronic calculator was both an anomaly and a God send.
I was a tomboy too, and my dad also put up a roof antenna with a rotor for us. Thank goodness slide rules were not used when I took algebra/trig in high school! They seemed like a b***h to learn how to use, lol.
@Mick_Ts_Chick I had to use a slide rule for 1 year in high school. The next year we had calculators!
I’m not even a baby boomer (I’m Gen-X) and I remember all of these things still existing throughout my childhood. The only one I didn’t personally experience was the milkman, however I was aware of such dairy services still existing in some areas. It was certainly still a popular concept on TV, so I was aware of it. And Mom, Grandma, and I used to fill out those S&H stamp booklets in the 70s. Good times. 🙂
Yeah, for the purposes of clicks, the Greatest, Silent and X generations will never, ever, never remember any of these phenomena!
I just commented that!
Yep, Gen-X should know a lot of this stuff.
I still have a partly filled green stamp booklet.
I'm X too and about half of these were before my time, but some they still had.
I remember so many things watching this video. As kids and teenagers, we had real friends and talked to them personally instead of by social nets. Miss those simpler times, but we can never go back.
So many memories- thanks! Remember all the fun facts!
I must say, growing up in the 60's and 70's I ate quite a few Swanson dinners.
I remember that T.V. dinners and Chef Boyardee pizza kits were what we had when Mom and Dad went out for the evening and we had a babysitter.
"How do you handle a hungry man, the man handler"
And Banquet, Then 'Hungry Man'
@@urbanurchin5930 My Mama made those pizza kits. She added ground beef and onions. Sooo delicious!
They were and still are gross and beyond disgusting, but we didn’t know better back in the day, I guess. Everyone should know by now.
You just put a smile on my face taking me back to a better and simpler time! Thank you!!
I can remember all the things you mentioned, we also had the bread man come every day. It was Bond bread. They had different types of bread rolls, and they had some sweets, a glazed, oblong doughnut, which I loved as a kid. We had the seal test Milkman come my neighborhood, Abbotts milk come to their house. We also have the Fuller brush man come around the neighborhood, we even had a rag man come in his horse and wagon even though I live in the city, he was there. A lot of good times playing outside and going to the woods. Thank you for these memories! 8:05
I'm a Gen Xer and remember going to a drive-in movie or two (the closest one to me closed down in 1988) and we had our milk delivered by a local dairy from the late 70's - mid 80's. My siblings and I used to collect baseball & football cards but never put them in our bike spokes. So glad I was a child in the 70's and a teenager in the 80's because those were great times!
Small transistor radio to listen to the World Series the games played in the daytime during school hours. The teacher knew we were listening but let us get away with it during class.
You could take them on your bike and listen to rock & roll.
Very nice! I remember ALL of these things and more!
It WAS a simpler time! Thanks for the walk down memory lane!
Music was great in the 60s. Tons of lightning bugs and Charlie's Chips delivery guy in the 60's also. Saturday morning cartoons and then going out to play. Stay at home home Moms and everyone knew everyone on the block.
I loved Charlie's Chips. My dad would hide them because I would get out of bed at night and eat the whole can, or get sick which ever came first.
Burning your fingers on the TV dinner when it was time to peel off the foil on the veggies and dessert, yep. Good times.
And "58008" inverted on a red TI LED display HA... we had the most fun.
Good one, thanks as always.
....also, don't forget 7734 ( hELL ) that was a scandal in Sunday School !
Good memories of growing up in the 50's and early 60's. We lived in the country so when we finally got telephone service, it was a party line with several other families on it. Generally the # of rings told you who the call was for. If you picked up to make a call, some of the other families may already be on the line chatting. Eavesdropping others calls was frequent! It was a law in Oklahoma back then that if someone got on with others and said they needed the line for an emergency, the others had to hang up and give them the line. If not, they could be charged. But if you faked an emergency, YOU could then be charged so no cheating!!
Omg I forgot about the party line‼️ Us kids would listen in. When you wanted to call out and someone was on it you had to wait unless it was an emergency 💕🙏✌️
Was just thinking the same thing, I'm a country boy, almost 40 miles to town. Those phones turned many in our community into what we call "gossips". Had to be careful what you said, cuz someone was sure to be listening. Dad hated it, was nice to get markets, but if you contracted a sale, the whole community knew about it. Still, I miss the old days. we went to church with maybe 20 or so people in the pews, and it seems like folks just knew what was right or wrong. Born in '49.
Long distance calls were discouraged because they cost money on the phone bill.
I was a U.S. MARINE in 1968 when my grandfather died. I was in Washington state at a school, and could not go home I called collect to my grandmother and had to tell the operator I wanted to call Gueydan La, and the number was 4321. She asked for the rest of the number, I told her that is it, no prefix no area code, just 4321. She finally got me connected. I was his first grandson, so it was a hard time.
@@campfireaddict6417 Sure enough. We had a code worked out with my parents for when I traveled somewhere such as back to school. I'd tell the Operator I wanted to make a "person-to-person" call at their number for some fictitious name we'd made up. My mom or dad would answer and when the O would say she has a p-2-p call for XXXXX, they'd say "he's not here right now, call back later." That meant I'd arrived okay and so no charges. 🙂
No mention of Gold Bond stamps? They were more common the the S&H stamps in our neck of the woods. And my mom smoked Raleigh cigarettes and saved the coupons from each pack, and four more coupons inside the carton.
My mom smoked belair, the menthol version of Raleigh. I still have a bunch of those coupons.
We'd have to run to the truck stop to get cigarettes for my friends' mom who looked so cool smoking those Winstons. We were like 10 years old.
She seemed even cooler because she actually had a washer & dryer in her house.
I remember all of these things and I’m not quite in the baby boomer generation. The milkman brought back a lot of memories as did the TV dinners. I remember sitting on the couch with a TV tray and eating my dinner from off of it. Thanks for the fun memories!
Oh how well I remember all of these! On cold winter mornings when getting the bottles of just-delivered milk, the cold air forced about an inch and a half of pure white cream to the tops of the bottles. You had to shake the bottles to get the cream evenly distributed (or else try to gobble the cream up if Mom wasn't looking). Speaking of Mom, we would tease her that if our house ever caught fire she would risk life and limb in order to save her cache of S&H Green Stamp books.
Yup...remember licking cream off the paper tops when I took the bottles to the frig. Had to shake the bottles to mix the cream into the milk. Later homogenizing milk kept the cream from separating..
My earlist memory of the Milkman was the (Draft) Horse & Cart. The horse would respond to woah and get up commands but usually worked in silence knowing exactly where to go and stop. Usually, the Milkman had a hard time keeping up to the horse!
As an early Gen Xer (born 1965) , I remember many of these events.
I remember the metal box out front of the door for the milkman.
We never had milk delivered but our next door neighbor did. We would time our mornings by him. We would hear him turn off the motor, slide the door open, hear the glass bottles clinking, heard him walk up the steps and then the sounds were reversed. That meant I had to leave the house in 5 minutes to go to school.
Yea I'm a late boomer born near the end of 64.i remember seeing everything with the exception of the milk man.they we're gone where I was.we were on a telephone party line until my sister started dating boys and tied it up all time and we were kicked off it lol
Gen X (73) and you are correct.
I remember the metal box too. But I can't remember getting milk from a milkman. I was pretty young.
Our "milk chute" was built into the wall...opened up inside in the broom closet.
We had a Nomad station wagon and when we would go to the drive in, my folks would put down the back seat and put a pad and blankets down. Very handy when we got sleepy! we also ate tv dinners and Banquet meat pies, and I recollect that they tasted much better than they do today. I could be wrong.
We used playing cards on the bike wheels, they were more pentiful. But they would wear out really quick.
While you lived through this time, you think this is the way it will always be. Boy, was I in for a surprise! Thanks for video.😊
Very good video!! I fondly remember each of those events! Thanks fir posting!
Excellent.
Yes, I do remember many of these precious, precious moments.
Aww, simpler, always better.
I was 12 in 1973, and did enjoy the Bonanza episodes in the mid 60s. I've had to watch them on streaming media to watch the earlier ones since I was born in 1961.
Best year ever! Good ole 1961
I was also born in 1961. 😃
Me too.
I was 52 days into 62. Peak of the boom
I remember the milkman when they used clydesdale horses, i always went out in the dawn and patted the horse, great memories, i wish i was still in that era❤️simple carefree days😢
I, too, remember (vividly!). For me, a 73-year-old with a remarkably good long-term-memory, it was yesterday. And I miss the 1950s terribly. And I praise God that I had a "perfect" childhood!❤
Me too! Cheyenne, Sea Hunt, Have Gun--Will Travel. Baseball cards. A Three Musketeers candy bar cost 5 cents. Comic books were a dime. Oh, yeah!
This brought back some great memories. Excellent video. I’m following 👍🏻
The Beatles were iconic as they led the way for other British bands., The Rolling Stones, Kinks, Yardbirds (With both Jimmy Page & jeff Beck) and earlier with Eric Clapton. Swinging Blue Jeans, Gerry & The Pacemakers, and many more. I am 69 and started playing the bass guitar in the late 60s and still do.
I haven't heard The Yardbirds for a long time! I know they had a few hits!
The Beatles are still my favorite band ever! 😍❤️🔥
I am older born in 1951 graduated in 1969 I remember everything
The local Kroger's gave out Top Value Stamps. It was a big deal for me at age 8 to put them in the books and go with my mother to redeem them.
And S & H
Yep, I licked many a yellow TV stamp when I was a kid lol! Loved going to the redemption center with my mom. 😊
Riding in theMilk Mans truck down the street and then getting a big chunk of ice. That was fun for 3 of us little kids!
I was born in 1950.. and they were wonderful times. Wish I could do it again 😢
I was born 1962. You're an old guy
S & H Green Stamps where still in use through the 1970’s. I remember shopping as a little 7 year old kid at my local Mckays grocer in Coos Bay Oregon and seeing adults pick up the stamp books and green stamps.
Tom Sisson
I still get my milk delivered early in the morning in glass bottles by a milkman - I've been doing it for years but during lockdown lots of people tried it and have continued. (UK).
Those were the very best of times in the very best of times. Many fond memories.
Jimmy was our milkman. He let me ride with him to the corner. He had this big chunk of ice in the back that made everything cold and I fondly remember him letting me rub it. Once I brought a friend and he drove us both to corner. He was so nice. We still kept our milk shoot and my house now has a milk shoot although covered over on the outside with vinyl siding. It’s nice and cool just like Jimmy’s milk truck and I keep some of my art projects in there so they can feel cool. Born in 1959 I think I was about 4 when I met Jimmy. Mom and dad never had to worry about me tagging along with Jimmy to the corner and I’d toddle home. Alone. We didn’t live on a busy street so even that young I could cross without help. There was always someone outside to make sure you were OK.
In high school I remember that a man was measured by the size of his slide rule. We had one in the algebra 2 classroom that was hung over the blackboard that must have been 5-6 feet long as learning tool! I was trained as an engineer with a slide rule and now these young folks have never seen or heard of one. What we do today blows me away! Love watching those kids at SpaceX. I envy them so much!
If I remember correctly the milk trucks had seats that would fold out of the way so the driver could sit or stand..
I remember those, too.
2:30 - According to my Google Assistant, there are now only about 300 drive in theaters still in operation in the United States.
Yes sir, much better and happier times. Don't think there is anywhere to go from here. I enjoyed most of my life. I'm ready to go now.
@gregggoss2210,,, I just miss, the REAL times, when boys, were REALLY boys, and girls were REALLY girls, and there was no confusion, or mental illness, when it came to using public bathroom.
@@saminaneen ,👍
@@gregggoss2210 Rodger that
These were the Best Times ever. I miss them so much...espically the drive in's, where you could go in your PJ's and your mom could bring food to eat and snack too I know my mom did....
We got a used color TV in about 1964. The first color broadcast I saw was Bonanza. I was amazed at the intensity of the colors. Never liked the Beatles after they ruined my 7th birthday party. I thought I was going to get birthday kisses from some of the girls but all they cared about was the Beatles. Yes, I was born on Feb. 9.
Love the picture with Jack Kilby in it. He was co-inventor of the integrated circuit. Worked alongside my father at Globe Union in Milwaukee before going to T.I. Was a neighbor of ours for about 2 years also. He told Dad about the house for sale in his neighborhood that my parents wound up buying.
Excellent story ‼️ It was really cool times. Some of my friends became famous but still down to earth. The good ol' simple life compared to today 💕🙏✌️
@@carolferguson19 Hi Carol, thank you very much for the compliment. Dad highly admired Jack Kilby. In fact, when Jack left Globe Union for Texas Instruments, Dad left shortly after also, going to work for Simplicity Outdoor Lawn & Garden in Port Washington, Wi.
My mother collected Triple S Blue Stamps. Mostly a New York City metropolitan area thing. Triple S Blue Stamps (Stop, Shop and Save) and Plaid Stamps were bigger there than S&H Green Stamps.
Locally maybe, but you could find S&H stamps all over the country.
Wednesdays were "double green stamps" day. That's when my Grammie did her grocery shopping.
I remember going to the Rocket drive-in in El Paso Tx to see Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid in 1969.
I am 81 now and I can tell you that was the most amazing time in my life 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👏👏👏👏👏👏👏🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸❤️🌹💕💐
Born in 59. Grew up in the 70s. All of this was part of my life. Not just 50s and 60s
I’ve noticed while watching old TV shows like Bonanza, Rifleman, Wagon Train, Gilligan’s Island…………that the networks put a disclaimer before the shows that state they do not conform to the standards or opinions of todays world and you shouldn’t watch if you are offended by these old ideals. What a crock.
This brought a smile to my face. I remember all of these.
Attaching cards to spokes was to sound like a motorcycle, not show off your cards.
In the early 70s a calculator would cost about 2 months rent.
I helped a friend put punch cards into a computer for his computer class.
We used playing cards on our bikes. Usually a King or a Queen.
My first calculator was a Bomar Brain sold by Sears. Add, subtract, multiply and divide. That was it. Later I had a TI electronic slide rule. I was going thru advanced electronics at Naval Air Station Millington Tn in 1973.
We were lucky-my cousin worked as an electrical engineer for TI. He got us stuff like that cheap. I had one of the first digital watches they made with the red display and white plastic band. Cost like 10 bucks. Also got us a TI55 calculator.
They were good time to grow up, we spent our summers playing baseball, swimming in the river, and using our imaginations, in a small country town, everyone knew everyone. I have always likened it to growing up in a Norman Rockwell painting.
0:00 🎶No milk today, my love has gone away, the bottle stands forlorn, a symbol of the dawn 🎶 (Herman's Hermits: "No Milk Today")
0:50 🎶Knights of the Green Shield, stand and shout!🎶 (Genesis: "Dancing with the Moonlit Knight")
6:51 🎶Operator, will you help me place this call? You see, the number on the match book is old and faded.🎶 (Jim Croche: "Operator")
These videos are lovely and bring back so many memories! And perhaps they'll help younger generations understand some of the songs from my day too 😊
Had an original Hard Day's Night theater ticket that cost $1.25(saw 11 tines in the theater). Wore oyt a Sgt Pepper's album. Literally had to buy another. Green Stamps,operators,playing outdoors 'til dark. I remember all of these you mentioned. (& used imagination when we played,not from a video) Beatles 4 Ever!
Beatles rule! 🎸🥁🎤🔥
Been there and done all that. Thanks for the nostalgic trip.
One of my fondest memories was being able to eat our Sunday dinner in the TV room while watching Walt Disney and eating soup and sandwiches like the Campbell’s soup commercial said because they went together and then watching Bonanza before bedtime!!
Going for Sunday day
I DO remember and experienced almost everything in this video. Not so much the card in the bike spokes, at least not around my neighborhood, I don't recall many kids having bikes where I grew up. I didn't have one because my parents couldn't afford it. But I didn't really need one. All the kids I played with lived in and around the projects I grew up in. It was an awesome childhood.
I remember using the old baseball cards and cardboard. Once they wore out they would fly off and the adults would come out yelling at you.
Awesome? In the projects? The ones by us were pretty trashy (WWII vintage). They finally tore them down in about 1955. My dad & uncle went through looking for pipes doors, wiring, etc.
As kids we would pick up worn out, damaged or just pitched out bikes. We had a pile of them,and cannabalized parts to build a few bikes. Only street paved was main street. The rest were all gravel.
Cards on bike spoke was universal. I lived from coast to coast, growing up, and this was a common practice among kids during the 60s.
@@LUIS-ox1bv Yeah, so I hear. I really don't remember seeing anyone doing that though. But as I said, not a lot of kids in my neighborhood had a bike. I would have done it if I had a bike. Maybe I'll try it now on my mountain bike. It won't look weird an old man riding a bike with a card on the spokes will it?
You've got some fabulous photos here , my compliments !.....And I sure do remember the switchboard - I was even an AT&T operator for a while : memories !
😀
I was born in Bronx NY in 1973 and am grateful for being able to experience some of the great things from the Baby Boomer era.
Thanks for not hating us they were awesome times. Not a day goes by without thinking of them.
Certainly Better times. No robots could ever replace a kind human !! I miss the good old days !! God bless all the viewers & you sir too for sharing !!
Multi party phone lines. Most time you had to wait your turn to get a connection.
@@donallen2819 We were never allowed to listen. We immediately had to hang up, per our parents. It belonged to our next-door neighbors...
Born in 1950 I remember all of these things and more. Drive ins were a regular event and cheap entertainment to watch first run movies. The price of everything was significantly less and gasoline was cheap. Life was much less complicated.