This is an interesting stroll down Memory Lane, something to divert attention from the pandemic, caregiving, bills, and even cold weather.
How many of these old items can you recognize?
https://www.buzzfeed.com/daves4/how-to-tell-if-youre-old
There's a list available on the forum where I found this; I'll post it tomorrow if all the items haven't been identified.
Have fun!
Officially Old
I loved marbles! I liked Chinese checkers because of the marbles.
I never played dominoes but I loved lining them up to knock down.
I loved my brother’s matchbox and hot wheels.
Who made bubbles out of dish liquid? I did!
Who played dress up, pranced around in your mom’s high heel shoes, an old purse of hers and a fancy scarf, etc?
My girls loved playing dress up!
I loved Spirograph!
I loved my slinky. I loved Gumby and Pokey! Barbie was for ‘big’ girls then. Now younger kids play with them too.
I liked Barbie and Skipper. I hated Ken. He was dorky! I was crazy about my brother’s G. I. Joe, he was cool!
I had baby dolls when I was really young and I loved the disappearing milk bottles.
Who had a doll that you pulled the string and she would talk, giggle, etc? Or the three foot doll, was life size to me because I was so tiny!
I loved paper dolls. I loved exchanging Valentine’s cards at school! Who had a pen pal from the Sunday newspaper? I did!
I loved the gold stars on test papers! I loved the ribbons for winning contests.
Hahaha, our nuns would be dressed in ‘full habit’ pointing the cap guns towards the sky for our races to begin.
I would always win the races because I was super fast.
Being fast came in really handy when running from a spanking!
I would run around the house five times faster than my parents.
My parents would get worn out and couldn’t catch me.
I was so little I could hide in places they couldn’t get to.
When I did come out I still got spanked! I only prolonged the inevitable.
Back then, there was corporal punishment in school. The nuns did not hesitate to smack us with the ruler.
My mom sewed a beautiful wardrobe for my dolls. She could make anything! She made my clothes and phenomenal costumes for Halloween and Mardi Gras.
I had to have wooden blocks placed on my bicycle pedals to reach them.
I loved going to my aunt’s house because she could afford chocolate milk delivered. Something about that cold chocolate milk in the glass bottle was better tasting than our Bosco or Hershey syrup.
https://www.wikihow.com/Play-The-Cat%27s-Cradle-Game
I'll get some yarn and start playing; it'll probably take me longer to learn at my age, but it will be fun.
Do you remember going to ice cream shops and getting real ice cream dished up on the spot? There was such a fresh fragrance in those stores; it was a special treat, especially on a hot day.
And that reminds me of something we did NOT have: air conditioning.
Just remembered - cotton candy. We used to get massive mounds of it in cones at state fairs. Spun sugar? I vaguely remember that.
Paper dolls? I do remember them, with various outfits with tabs to hold onto the doll base. I believe Dover Publications still publishes books with paper dolls. Do children still play with dolls, or are their toys all electronic?
I remember finding some doll dresses mixed in with some material; it really was a trip back in time. I do still have dolls set out to remind me of our earlier days.
That relates to another collection: A&P store used to either sell dolls, or give them out - I just don't remember. I do remember they were female and represented costumes of various nations. Mom used to collect them, and I vaguely remember seeing some when going through the house to sort out items.
Mom had quite a collection of them.
Golden, I didn't realize jacks were still available. Did you get them at a general store, something like Target? I don't remember how to play them, so I'll have to research. Imagine having to find instructions for something we did naturally decades ago!
I do remember slinkies, and hula hoops. And what about those hoops that we wore underneath skirts? I remember starching mine, putting it out in the yard to dry, then wearing it under...guess what...another oldie: a paneled Lady and the Tramp skirt that I made.
Remember the saddle oxfords that were pink and black?
Loved my hula hoop!
We wore those slips under our fancy dresses with the hoops.
We didn’t have air conditioning, dishwasher or clothes dryer.
I got cotton candy at the circus. I am so glad that Ringling Bros. is gone now! Our parents did not know about animal abuse in the circus.
Everything was full service, shoe stores, gas stations, etc.
Our parents could run a tab for groceries! You brought in a list. They filled the order. Even delivery if you needed it. Drugstores delivered.
Now everyone does Amazon!
Woolworth’s became Kmart and Walmart and Dollar stores.
Mom and Pop hardware stores became Lowe’s and Home Depot.
Who thinks movie theaters are going to die out? I do.
Skating rings are out. Now there are escape rooms, paintball, etc.
I never could bowl! I would bowl gutter balls in the next alley over! LOL
Cars: Leaded gasoline. No power steering. No power brakes. Seatbelts were lap belts only; and very unpopular. (My family didn’t bother with seatbelts until the late 1980s or so.)
Kitchen: Metal ice cube trays with a release lever; such a distinctive sound. Igniting the oven pilot light with a match. Washing dishes by hand.
No air conditioning until I was a teenager.
No remote control and no cable! Rabbit ears.
Birthday parties at home. No fancy parties like kids have now!
Hats and gloves for church!
Rolling houses! Don’t see that now due to Covid!
Our dates drove us to our proms. No limousine service like today’s seniors!
To go on a date my daddy would ask for last name, phone number, address, name of his parents and he gave me change for the telephone and bus fare in case of an emergency! Hahaha 🤣 I better not be late getting home either!
Mini skirts!
My mother would tell me to stoop to pick something up if I dropped it, instead of bending over! LOL
First bra size was size 28 triple A! LOL, I had to beg for it!!! My mom kept saying, “You have nothing to put into a bra!” I think they were called ‘training’ bras!
All of my friends were wearing bras and mom kept telling me to wear my undershirt under by white school uniform blouse. I told her that I had to have a bra! Hahaha 🤣
I was always the smallest kid in my class. I gave up on trying to put on a few pounds. It’s genetic I guess. My grandmother, aunts, mom and I are very small.
One bathroom and one black rotary phone in the hall!
Remember those princess phones?
Daisy BB guns
Erector sets
Chemistry sets
(what were our parents thinking!?)
Lawn darts (Lethal)
Sling shots like Denis the menace
Lincoln logs
Electric trains
Trips to ER after playing Superman or Tarzan. Involved jumping from roofs. (Don’t know how any of us lived to the age of 12)
Adjusting carburetors
Three On The Tree
Ice tray popsicles
Converse Chuck Taylor’s . Never worn with socks.
Earth Shoes. So you’d always be walking up hill.
Bra strap hooks that would support 1000 lbs.
Recap tires
Doctors smoked cigarettes
Getting paddled by the principal at your elementary school.
I used #5 last week for mashing our Thanksgiving potatoes.
All of my cars have had a #10.
I used #12 working on weekends as a teen.
I still have a #15 but only for decoration in my laundry room.
I used #34 in grammar school. O.M.G.
My BFF and I spent hours in a #35.
There isn't enough money in all the world to pay me to be a kid again. I think growing up today looks pretty darn miserable.
We had ice delivered to the back porch by a guy with horse drawn wagon. It was covered with sawdust as it was stored in sawdust on the wagon. . The refrigerator (called an ice box in those days) had an upper compartment that you kept the ice in and you chipped off ice with an ice pick as you needed it for cooling drinks or whatever. As well, the block of ice cooled the fridge.
The "egg lady" delivered fresh farm eggs weekly also using a horse drawn wagon and sometimes gave us a loaf of home baked bread which smelled heavenly. Mother never baked bread.
There was an empty lot across the street which the dads fenced and flooded for a skating rink. Sometimes the couple in the house next to it put out a gramophone and we skated to music.
Our "swimming pool" was an abandoned quarry, the river which had some dangerous currents but we survived and became strong swimmers, or the Ottawa River which had log booms in it. We learned to walk on the booms.
One bathroom - only a bath, no shower.
The family next door had a wood fired stove for cooking and thus a woodpile behind the house. Sometimes there were rats in it
The local dads dealt with wasp's nests in the hedges by burning them out with lighted gas soaked rags on the end of a long stick.
Friends had a car with a rumble seat. It was a treat for us kids to ride in it.
The doctor routinely made house calls.
Mother phoned in her grocery order including fresh meat. She would ask for a nice roast of beef and we always got it. It was delivered later in the day.
The phone was a rotary dial with a hang-up ear piece and an operator which connected the calls. As a preschool kid I would chat with the operator.
We walked to school in almost all weather and home and back at lunch time. Very rarely when it was extremely cold the parents car pooled and drove us. We had to walk on an old railway track and bridge which crossed a stream which raged in the spring when the snow melted. You could see the water between the railway ties. It was scary sometimes. Once I remember it was very icy and slippery and I crawled across.
I was quarantined when I had mumps. I remember the large sign that was posted on the front of the house warning people.
Yes, there was quarantining in those days. It's not new.
Golden, you brought back a lot of memories...milk delivery, rotary dial phones (and multiple callers using one line), quarantine signs on the front door, burning trash in a "burn barrel", collecting red and green stamps to use for food purchases, the excitement of learning what a television was, and even more when we could afford to buy the first tv we'd ever had.
And I remember the daily shoveling of coal (and all that coal dust!) for heat, the periodic dumping of masses of coal into the coal bin, then using oil and having the massive tanks filled periodically. Electrical heating is such a piece of cake now.
Oh I remember begging for a "training bra" to which my Dad would ask "why do they need training?". Mom finally got me one, but after wearing that Medieval torture device, I went back to my comfortable undershirt for next couple of years.
I had a Huffy bicycle and would ride all over the area. I see that style of bike has come back into style.
Whoever would think that some day one would have hanging up a TV on the wall. My Dad worked for General Electric in the TV design division so he was always bringing home a prototype to try out. I remember the first color TV, Dad had his huge wire looking ring, a degausser I think it was called, that he had to use in front of the TV to get the color to work.
This remote was run by wire from the TV to the remote.... Mom wasn't too thrilled when Dad drilled a hole in the hardwood floor behind the TV and another hole in the floor next to the sofa so that the wire would run through the basement ceiling.
You have seen so many wonderful things in your life. I am sure it probably wasn't easy, but just think how much the world has changed and you got to see it.
My dad use to tell me stories about people having quarantine signs on their doors and how in his family home they had a coal running furnace. And when he was a little boy he would listen to shows on the radio. I used to love hearing his stories.
You brought back memories of my dad. 😊
Just think if they did quarantine signs today someone would scream that their rights were being violated!
Neighbourhood kids of all ages played games on our street like "Kick the Can" and "Run Sheep Run". As the sun started to set, mums would call for their child as it was their bedtime, and so the group got smaller and smaller with only the older kids left to play. It was good healthy fun.
One time my Dad paid a tradesman to remove that wallpaper in the dining room. Some type of heater was used on the walls to loosen the wallpaper. Then Dad heard "help" from the tradesman. Apparently under the painted ceiling was wallpaper which the heat had loosen up.... that was one big drop on one's head surprise.
She was also pressured to 'say' something about her freedoms in America, to be a part of a political statement, and about how America was so much better than Russia. She was silent or declined to be used for propaganda.
Leaving, on the way to the airport, the chess player said to stop the car, under protests by her escort, she got out and walked. Ending up at the park where elderly men gather to play chess. She greeted them and was readily identified as the American Chess Champion. She played chess with them. No document, no statement could have better shown the freedom of a U.S. citizen in Russia than her actions.