Mid Century Home life -- The 50s

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 26. 04. 2015
  • A union worker at home and at work. His wife goes grocery shopping.
    They listen to the radio. He reads the newspaper. The middle class was being formed.
    Couples play bridge. Families go to church. The children go to school. 1950s
    For availability and licensing inquiries, please contact:
    www.globalimageworks.com/contact
    Ref: EPS 25

Komentáře • 19K

  • @TheBluewaterBlonde
    @TheBluewaterBlonde Před 3 lety +8970

    I grew up in the 1950's. Anyone who had a job could afford to buy a house. Anyone, even the guy pumping gas at the gas station could afford to buy a house. Now not even two paychecks can afford to buy a house.

    • @lemonielala3080
      @lemonielala3080 Před 3 lety +691

      Well.. If you were the right color... Those government sponsored mortgages were only eligible for people of a certain hue. Unfortunately.

    • @TheBluewaterBlonde
      @TheBluewaterBlonde Před 3 lety +908

      @@lemonielala3080 No, this is the 1950's. No special mortgages and government not involved at all. Everyone could buy a house, literally, and they were good homes, not shacks, average going for $10,000 for a 3 bedroom 1 bath home to $30,000 luxury home. These are prices here in So. CA, probably even less elsewhere. Times have changed for the worse on property values. Did you grow up in the 1950's? We all thought buying a house was just something you did if you were working.

    • @thegeeg1751
      @thegeeg1751 Před 3 lety +235

      The economy changed due to the "ANTI feminist" movement! Then we women were forced into the workplace.

    • @TheBluewaterBlonde
      @TheBluewaterBlonde Před 3 lety +518

      @@stephanipeloquin4631 Neighborhoods were segregated by public choice, not by any government program. People just feel more comfortable living close to those who share the same culture. It has always been that way -- it's why we have China Towns, Little Italy's, and when I was living in L.A. near Wilshire and Fairfax, the Fairfax area was all Russian Jews with wonderful delicatessens and bakeries.

    • @stephanipeloquin4631
      @stephanipeloquin4631 Před 3 lety +215

      @@TheBluewaterBlonde you're absolutely right about this in so many ways. People do tend to prefer living and socializing with people like themselves, when that's all they've ever known. And in those days, middle class white suburbanites did not have close daily interactions, as equals, with people who were not also middle class, suburban and white. So even though there was no law against a black family buying a house next door, you can bet your ass the neighbors are not going to be rolling out the welcome wagon. The bank officers are not going to approve the loan. And the property value *will* literally go down. That's a historical fact. That's what happened back then. The minute there was a pretty reliable word on the street that a POC was buying a home in white suburbia, white flight was triggered. Some people moved strictly because of the fact that their property value was about to take a hit, which doesn't seem racist. Others moved because they'd be damned if they'd "live in the same neighborhood as some damn n-words", which seems hideously racist. All the white folks who sold their houses through the white brokers (complicit in the whole white flight affair) were all aiding and abetting racism by their own choice. It's always us white people who have the choice in the first place. Chinatown and all the other places exist because new immigrants seek out familiar people at first, and then they never find diverse and integrated society we *should* be by now, so they stay where they're accepted. Like we all do. It's starting to happen. It's just sad that it has to be such a fight for so long. It really shouldn't be a fight at all. I mean, we really *argue* questions like which lives matter. What a stupid question, right?? Hahaha!
      Happy Christmas 🎄✝️
      Thank you for your perspective and your awesome answer and thought provoking statement☯️

  • @shirleyhill2982
    @shirleyhill2982 Před 5 lety +10313

    It now takes 2 people working full time to stay permanently in debt.

    • @Agm1995gamer
      @Agm1995gamer Před 5 lety +946

      Sure
      Why not
      Buy a house, two cars, three brand new iphones every year and a 60" screen then cry about debt.

    • @captaindestruction9332
      @captaindestruction9332 Před 5 lety +315

      Aviv Gannon buying a house and two cars isn’t necessarily bad if done right. Buying a house outright and not having a house payment and buying two used cars fully paid off. Of course that’s not how most handle things. They put it on the card or take out loans because they want the newest thing/the house NOW.
      Can’t bring myself to sympathize with people who do things to themselves.

    • @Agm1995gamer
      @Agm1995gamer Před 5 lety +65

      @@captaindestruction9332 exactly what i meant

    • @lorrainewadsworth9019
      @lorrainewadsworth9019 Před 5 lety +37

      Shirley., when i first read your comment i thought you'd made a typo error by writing 'in debt'.... im thinking you mean 'above water'... realised you hadnt made a mistake., i had !!!

    • @kayem7152
      @kayem7152 Před 5 lety +63

      Captain Destruction93 there’s lots of pressure on the US to keep up with the Jones’s

  • @Bbtwink
    @Bbtwink Před rokem +667

    Crazy to think how much simpler it was to have a home built back then

    • @lindamattioli7943
      @lindamattioli7943 Před rokem +4

      Better

    • @supermom23
      @supermom23 Před rokem +24

      I don’t really think it was all that much simpler. People were just more willing to sacrifice to save back then. It was the WW2 mentality and they embraced it. Young people now just don’t really get the sacrifice part of it. Like you can’t buy a $5 Starbucks coffee every day or wear Lululemon leggings. But it’s just a different generation.

    • @frances4797
      @frances4797 Před 11 měsíci +19

      ​@@supermom23Their priorities are definitely different that's for sure! Door dash is not "essential". Eating is essential. There's a difference lol.

    • @guysabol8743
      @guysabol8743 Před 11 měsíci +5

      $9K for a Levittown home on LI, our home cost $16K in 1952! HIX just N of levittown

    • @fuksmkoud6716
      @fuksmkoud6716 Před 10 měsíci +6

      from working in a factory too.
      its insane

  • @Im_so_Retro85
    @Im_so_Retro85 Před 5 měsíci +164

    I envy that generation. They worked hard, but had something to show for it at the end of the day. Now we work ourselves to the ground and can't even afford rent or food, much less own a home. So many of us have 2 or more jobs and still struggle.

    • @noahhabeger1342
      @noahhabeger1342 Před 3 měsíci +10

      Not only that most of us have to had roommates too

    • @chromxrobinandcorrinxcamil9031
      @chromxrobinandcorrinxcamil9031 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Humanity truly is a failure.

    • @creeguyvernon
      @creeguyvernon Před 3 měsíci +2

      1950s, you actually had to push your lawn .mower haha, I guess the small engine had not yet been invented yet, lol

    • @MisakaMikotoDesu
      @MisakaMikotoDesu Před 3 měsíci +3

      You can still have something to show for working hard. You probably think 40 hours is a long time, when it should be the bare minimum.

    • @xbemos
      @xbemos Před měsícem +2

      Great comment and so true

  • @TheTeacher1020
    @TheTeacher1020 Před 7 lety +10656

    In those days, one paycheck could support a family.

    • @simosc2
      @simosc2 Před 7 lety +800

      that's true...I have a receipt for my dads pay in the 50s or 60s for $56 for 44 hours work week..my parents raised 3 children on his income....we can learn from the past if we will

    • @lisalu910
      @lisalu910 Před 7 lety +622

      One paycheck can still support a family - I know many families who manage on one paycheck, including my own.

    • @shavaughn1980
      @shavaughn1980 Před 7 lety +726

      TheTeacher1020 I'm a stay at home mom and we live what is pretty close to a 1950s lifestyle. My husband doesn't make a lot but we make it work. We don't have cable and I don't buy a lot of premade or frozen food. We make sacrifices so I can stay home with the kids (we have 4) but it's worth it.

    • @grooveythoughts
      @grooveythoughts Před 7 lety +525

      Back then they didn't spend like crazed, bored, drones as we do today. Look at any long weekend ... what is the hi-lite going to the mall.
      Families got by with hand me down clothes, one phone, one black & white TV, a old radio, shared bedrooms with siblings, fewer toys, and less food than we have today. Now this man had a UNION job, many others lived with no insurance, no worker protections. Work hours when with the company needs not worker's rights as they do today. The wife often had only two formal dresses one for shopping and one for church...it was taken off as soon as she got home. We had home clothes and school clothes.
      No one ever wore their shoes without galoshes in winter---that is over boots. A family could not afford to pay for new shoes more than twice a year. A vacation meant a trip to see distant relatives... not time to visit Florida or elsewhere.
      They miss a lot of reality in these cheap (isn't america great) films.

    • @shavaughn1980
      @shavaughn1980 Před 7 lety +167

      *****​ that's a great point. I need to keep this in mind when I'm embarrassed by wearing the same 2 dresses to church every other week and when I fell bad about going to the thrift store for clothes for my kids. I can't even remember the last time we went to the movies or the mall.

  • @therealbologna2
    @therealbologna2 Před 4 lety +4691

    They had one paycheck, a family of 6, and were able to build their own house. I can’t even afford a studio apartment with my salary

    • @Deleralia
      @Deleralia Před 4 lety +65

      How? I don't see why people are having so much issues with living on their own. I'm doing just fine making enough to live with enough for some videogames every month.

    • @thes.a.s.s.1361
      @thes.a.s.s.1361 Před 4 lety +272

      Keep in mind people had more take-home pay. No medicare tax yet. Plus no one had cell phone, cable/satellite bills like we do today.

    • @paulskopic5844
      @paulskopic5844 Před 4 lety +231

      Budgeting is the key, a $600.00 cell phone is not a necessity.

    • @jamesrogers47
      @jamesrogers47 Před 4 lety +180

      You choose to have cell phone and cable or satellite bill. You could get a no contract phone and watch broadcast TV. A lot of what people see as necessities are actually luxuries.

    • @therealbologna2
      @therealbologna2 Před 4 lety +251

      @@jamesrogers47 I think if I took away my phone, TV, and other luxuries, it still doesn't make up for the fact they had one income for a large family and were able to build their own house.

  • @rayward9726
    @rayward9726 Před 10 měsíci +104

    I was born in 1953. My parents had a house built in 1956 for $11,400. 25 yr. mortgage @ 4% interest - $99.00/mo. Those were some good times.

    • @edithbannerman4
      @edithbannerman4 Před 7 měsíci

      @Hello there, how are you doing this blessed day?

  • @kandykate163
    @kandykate163 Před rokem +100

    I miss neighborhood grocery stores, it was more intimate and knew everyone.
    Now we have big box stores that are cold, distant, and alone.

    • @RRRIBEYE
      @RRRIBEYE Před rokem +8

      My wife and I retired to a very small, rural community. It has a bank, a service station, convenience store, library, medical clinic and a grocery store/meat locker. Our population is 300 and we thoroughly enjoy this small town life! We know everyone at all the businesses and we patronize them all we can - but we do make the 25 mile journey to town once a month for the bulk of our necessities, but there's nothing like what we have here - there. It's so hustle 'n bustle. No one smiles and says hello - but I try to when I catch a glance - or will hold a door for a stranger and wish them a good day. I haven't been to a big box store in over 20 years and don't miss it a bit! Oh, and our house and most in our neighborhood, were built in the late 1800s. We all tend to our homes with pride and we don't have too many issues with crime here.

    • @kandykate163
      @kandykate163 Před rokem +5

      @@RRRIBEYE I live on a small town but all there is for grocery is a local supermarket and Walmart and that's it.
      I would love to have a mom&pop grocery store, a bakery store, a butcher shop, a deli shop all within downtown since I love within walking distance to it. I dont care if it's a little higher in price

    • @austyn5004
      @austyn5004 Před rokem +1

      I live in Huntington Beach CA. We are small town big city feel. I have a mom and pop Iranian market that I shop at all the time. I know the cashiers and stockers. They’re great. Even the big box store I’m super friendly with majority of the workers there. That’s just kinda how it is in HB.

    • @kim_fd8938
      @kim_fd8938 Před rokem

      The neighborhood grocery stores were racist as hell

    • @tempestates13
      @tempestates13 Před 2 měsíci

      Even in big stores, if I see someone needing help and an employee isn't around I try to help. Being a '79 baby my parents taught me to be helpful and respectful.

  • @clayjo791
    @clayjo791 Před 3 lety +2314

    I can't imagine people in the 2090's looking back at the 2020's feeling nostalgic.

    • @lucasjohnstone6419
      @lucasjohnstone6419 Před 3 lety +70

      Trippy huh

    • @rolson1695
      @rolson1695 Před 3 lety +44

      Totally agree with you

    • @nayru1855
      @nayru1855 Před 3 lety +242

      with how things are going so far, i dont think anyone’s gonna be nostalgic for the 2020’s lol

    • @thepearlswirl
      @thepearlswirl Před 3 lety +14

      Right like what 🥴

    • @melvint-p9500
      @melvint-p9500 Před 3 lety +132

      The 1950s were also atrocious in plenty of ways and people are nostalgic for it.

  • @kilIstation
    @kilIstation Před 5 lety +2669

    Back then if you saw a 60 year old they were born in the 1890’s :0

    • @Cheersthewinners
      @Cheersthewinners Před 4 lety +99

      So? That's the same for these days. If you see someone in their 30s, they were born in the 1980's.

    • @bean7039
      @bean7039 Před 4 lety +21

      @@ryangaming5556 not deep at all

    • @Cheersthewinners
      @Cheersthewinners Před 4 lety +7

      @@bean7039 thank you. Not deep.

    • @CoolDrifty
      @CoolDrifty Před 4 lety +216

      tit nipples It’s not deep but it’s interesting to think about considering someone that’s 60 today was born in about 1960 but back then someone age 60 (not old by any means) was born in the 19th century, which feels incredibly long ago. You have to be a sociopath to not be intrigued in the slightest.

    • @Cheersthewinners
      @Cheersthewinners Před 4 lety +3

      @@CoolDrifty Its really not that deep.

  • @kathleenackerman1162
    @kathleenackerman1162 Před 9 měsíci +164

    I remember this era- yes, most families lived on one paycheck, but we also lived quite frugally. Our houses had one bathroom, one telephone, one TV set. No air conditioning, no dish washer, no clothes dryer. Most kids shared their bedroom with a sibling or two. Stay-at-home Moms often did not have a car. There was no cable bill- and depending on where you lived, the number of TV stations your antenna received could be limited. We lived in the NY metro area, so we had 7 stations-which was a lot!. Kids only got new toys on their birthdays and Christmas- except for little things that could be purchased with one’s allowance money. I would get 25 cents every other week (when my Dad got paid). That might buy a ball and jacks plus a box of candy, or I could pool my allowance with my sister’s and we could get paper dolls. And yes, our mothers all told us to “go out and play”. We were expected to play outdoors every day unless it was raining or a blizzard.

    • @aunch3
      @aunch3 Před 7 měsíci +13

      What’s your point? That you could have a nice home built for $11k because you clipped coupons? You can clip coupons all day today that’s not gonna by you a custom built home

    • @ggwoman
      @ggwoman Před 7 měsíci +34

      @@aunch3 the point is that people today waste their money on crap like Starbucks, video games, smartphones, cable TV, instant meals, third-party sites like Amazon, latest fads and gadgets, junk.

    • @antonioscendrategattico2302
      @antonioscendrategattico2302 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Because those technologies were relatively recent at the time, and thus a lot less cheap proportionally.
      It's a matter of technology, not of them being "frugal".
      As for going out and playing... well, that was before urban freeways, built because every single one of those families that moved to those idyllic suburbs all had a car, and all wanted more lanes because they didn't want to idle for hours in traffic.
      So, urban neighborhoods got bulldozed to the ground to make room for more cars. And then more cars. And even more cars.
      And today, traffic's worse than ever because traffic has never been solved by adding more lanes.

    • @antonioscendrategattico2302
      @antonioscendrategattico2302 Před 6 měsíci

      @@ggwoman The point is that OP doesn't understand economy or technology, and clearly neither do you.

    • @deborahgrysko2427
      @deborahgrysko2427 Před 6 měsíci +2

      I played in blizzard. Had fun. Really.

  • @aggienodari453
    @aggienodari453 Před rokem +367

    This was very nostalgic. I grew up in the 60s and early 70s. I have very fond memories growing up as a kid. We never stayed indoors. Playing sports in the morning, having lunch, going to the local community pool, walking back two and a half miles hungry as ever. After we ate dinner, we played more sports and came in when the street lights were on. No wonder why we were so thin and fit. School was great, no drama we all got along.

    • @ShawnBen
      @ShawnBen Před rokem +19

      You really got along with everyone in school! You must have went to a miracle school where everyone acted like Mary Poppins and Peter Pan! People got bullied back in the day. The main reason was being born to a poor family.

    • @patjones5723
      @patjones5723 Před rokem +3

      Ahhhhhh sorry...we got bullied back in the day too 😢😊

    • @aggienodari453
      @aggienodari453 Před rokem +9

      @@patjones5723 You're right, but there was nothing better when you stood up to a bully and then became friends.

    • @randomnes8221
      @randomnes8221 Před 11 měsíci +2

      @@aggienodari45313 year old here, now you get bullied for simples things like having a old phone or for no reason at all

    • @aggienodari453
      @aggienodari453 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Have confidence my friend. That makes you stronger.

  • @kmuniqco
    @kmuniqco Před 4 lety +2520

    Why old narrators sound the same.. It's like the same man in every documentary

    • @SimranYTSUBSCRIBE
      @SimranYTSUBSCRIBE Před 4 lety +49

      Lol ikr

    • @jesushernandez6140
      @jesushernandez6140 Před 4 lety +263

      I think it's called the mid Atlantic accent, I saw it on CZcams and it's pretty cool

    • @kmuniqco
      @kmuniqco Před 4 lety +47

      @@jesushernandez6140 Its a pretty cool accent 😁😁😁

    • @whathandleUtalkabt
      @whathandleUtalkabt Před 4 lety +40

      Back then 📺 were just coming out. The beatlea disnt even come out yet so guy probably had a narrators job on entire east coast.

    • @oozhaboo
      @oozhaboo Před 4 lety +30

      He stayed busy

  • @lyman135
    @lyman135 Před 4 lety +3974

    I love how the neighbors come over to play cards and they're wearing shirts and ties.

    • @rowdyrx6109
      @rowdyrx6109 Před 4 lety +379

      lyman135 We lived in a neighborhood where just about every morning one of the neighbors would stick her head out the window and yell “ coffees on”! Everyone knew everyone. No one had a t.v. Then (1948) kids were out side till the street lights went on. I was 6 years old. No 24 hour news cycle,no mobile phones

    • @rowdyrx6109
      @rowdyrx6109 Před 4 lety +117

      Mamma Mia many woman as well as men do not know how to grow old gracefully and look and dress like they just got out of bed

    • @DDios-ih9de
      @DDios-ih9de Před 4 lety +12

      @Mamma Mia 😀😜🤗

    • @Elflacito
      @Elflacito Před 4 lety +4

      rowdyrx sounds like shit my boi

    • @halibut1249
      @halibut1249 Před 4 lety +159

      People used to dress up to fly on a commercial airline. Now you see gym trunks, tank tops, and smell of too much body odor. People used to be much skinnier too. I think it's that kids ran around much more outside. Now they stay inside with computers, get driven everywhere instead of walking. And jeans - that's what farmers wore when working in the fields.

  • @rebeccaeverhardt214
    @rebeccaeverhardt214 Před rokem +335

    I wish we could still live I a time like this. Simple, innocent and happy.

    • @carmarasmussen8118
      @carmarasmussen8118 Před rokem +30

      Those days are long gone. This country has become a dystopian nightmare. 😮😮😮

    • @larryyouguessame6078
      @larryyouguessame6078 Před rokem

      Happy for who?..You think minorities were happy?..whites only…no jobs…racism everywhere?…sheesh

    • @missneko280
      @missneko280 Před rokem +11

      yea sir straight white oriole

    • @missneko280
      @missneko280 Před rokem +3

      people

    • @ramseygarcia1409
      @ramseygarcia1409 Před rokem +11

      I wish we could live like this too. Life seemed more happy and nice.

  • @sandihunter1260
    @sandihunter1260 Před 10 měsíci +32

    I was born in 1956 and this brings back many memories. My dad would bring home fish n chips every Friday after his work at the factory would end. It was always a treat. Saturday morning my mom, dad and me would go grocery shopping. They would drop me off at the magazine rack and I would read Archie comics etc. while they shopped. It was so much fun. Those were the days.

    • @samigreg5233
      @samigreg5233 Před 6 měsíci +1

      You dont look like you born 56. You look in the fourties

  • @thepearlswirl
    @thepearlswirl Před 3 lety +3515

    2021 is so horrible I’m getting addicted to watching videos of different time periods.

    • @krystalleal329
      @krystalleal329 Před 3 lety +86

      This is a real time machine.

    • @kr4t0sg.28
      @kr4t0sg.28 Před 2 lety +63

      You can thank the internet.

    • @heru-deshet359
      @heru-deshet359 Před 2 lety +174

      Many folks have thought of creating communities even towns that reflect the nostalgic values of that time. I would certainly love living in one.

    • @t23sp1
      @t23sp1 Před 2 lety +36

      I've been doing it as well.

    • @xxcoralineplayzxx2536
      @xxcoralineplayzxx2536 Před 2 lety +23

      Same

  • @shinyhandman6464
    @shinyhandman6464 Před 4 lety +511

    These ‘50s cameras have better quality then today’s security cameras

    • @pantheraleo4170
      @pantheraleo4170 Před 3 lety

      🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @RodolphosTechchannel
      @RodolphosTechchannel Před 3 lety +18

      35mm film cameras have a resolution of about 6-8k, as long as you have the appropriated film scanner, they only scanned in 480p back then because film scanners weren’t capable of more.

    • @user-ut9ln4vd5m
      @user-ut9ln4vd5m Před 3 lety +5

      This was undoubtedly filmed under ideal lighting conditions, security cameras aren't often needed in broad daylight. There's also the size difference - a 50s camera could be as big as a briefcase (or three), compared to a modern camera that could be no bigger than a fingernail (minus battery or power supply)

    • @Yodelinthegully.-
      @Yodelinthegully.- Před 3 lety +2

      It’s ok, not everyone is tech savvy.

    • @Rainb0wzNstuff
      @Rainb0wzNstuff Před 3 lety

      Fr tho

  • @oldobserver6810
    @oldobserver6810 Před 6 měsíci +72

    I was born in the early thirties, and this is pretty accurate for the time covered. I actually went to this Intermediate School in 1945 and 1946. It was a wonderful time to be young. My Dad worked for Ford, and this is the neighborhood where I grew up….the far East Side of Detroit, almost to the city border. I enjoyed seeing all this again. i feel so sorry for later generations who have never known the relative security of a more innocent time. Money was tight, but we were used to doing without because of the Depression and the War. Good times!

    • @samigreg5233
      @samigreg5233 Před 6 měsíci +6

      You are 90 above??

    • @lucasgallant8178
      @lucasgallant8178 Před 5 měsíci +6

      So your almost 100? You should NOT be spending your final years watching CZcams😭🙏

    • @Jojo01171
      @Jojo01171 Před 4 měsíci +3

      I feel like we are in Great Depression right now to be honest, the homeless crisis, nobody wants to work anymore and living in car’s or outside is common these days because there’s no point of even making money to pay ridiculous amount of rent, high taxes, the cost of living is unbelievably high for the hourly wage, it’s unfortunate, life was so much better then I envy you for living the good times.

    • @mollywolly4201
      @mollywolly4201 Před 3 měsíci

      Why not!? What a horrible thing to say. Should this person be spending their final years with their loved ones? What if they don’t have any? Unbelievable.

  • @ownedbymykitty270
    @ownedbymykitty270 Před 10 měsíci +65

    I grew up in the 70s and 80s. I saw my friends every single day after school and of course on weekends. Adults let us kids play outside unsupervised. We’d bike a mile or two away and get into what at that time was considered “trouble” lol (I.e. walking on the railroad tracks, jumping into the lake). I was never too big on video games though and mostly stopped playing as I got into my teens. When alone I mostly listened to music and read books. But what I really miss about my teens in the late 80s was listening with a friend to an entire music album on vinyl or cassette from beginning to end and talking about it.

    • @carlblake5271
      @carlblake5271 Před 7 měsíci +1

      Ditto!

    • @ericasklar4584
      @ericasklar4584 Před 5 měsíci +3

      I love your response. Books and music were my joy as . I grew up in the 80s and 90s but I have similar memories and experiences as u. Thank u for reminding me.

    • @ericasklar4584
      @ericasklar4584 Před 5 měsíci +2

      I meant to say "as well"

  • @paulh7589
    @paulh7589 Před 2 lety +2901

    Do you remember your parents telling you to be home when the streetlights came on? During summer break my friends and I would try to finish our chores as fast as we could so we could jump on our bikes and go about being kids. If one of us had too many chores that day, the rest of us would pitch in and help so we could all jump on our bikes and go about being kids. It was common for my friends and I to wind up 15 miles from home at age 12.
    Six of us got horribly lost one afternoon in a neighboring town. We finally swallowed our pride, went to the police station, and begged the officer to not tell our parents (out of sheer embarrassment). The officer called his brother who came by a few minutes later with a dump truck. We loaded our bikes in the back and jumped in with them. He brought us back to our neighborhood and made sure we all knew where we were. We made him promise (like 12 year old boys do) to not tell our parents. What a great memory! 12 yrs old riding in the back of a dump truck for 20 miles and none of our parents ever found out.
    I told my Dad about it during lunch when I was about 40. He knew all about it. The Policeman, Policeman's brother, and all six of our parents never said a word to any of us about it. The Policeman told my Dad that we were terribly embarrassed for getting lost and wanted to keep it secret. Isn't that cool?

    • @kristina8312
      @kristina8312 Před 2 lety +94

      Im pretty young 21. But my mom didn't want me to have a phone till I was 14. We had the same rule when the street lights come on you gotta run home. we got to stay out longer during the summer and I loved it. Also really cool story id cry if I ever got lost 😂

    • @madtater5948
      @madtater5948 Před 2 lety +115

      we didn't have street lights where I was raised it was all dirt roads and shacks I was told to be home before the coyotes came out at night

    • @patfarmer9193
      @patfarmer9193 Před 2 lety +73

      Amazing story! Oh how I wish I could’ve experienced a lifestyle like that in those days.

    • @paulh7589
      @paulh7589 Před 2 lety +20

      @@patfarmer9193 Thanks Pat. We are all 56 now and still best friends. We still blow each other shit just like we did when we were kids. It was a magical time to be a kid. We explored our surroundings without intervention, and talked about everything while we did it. We even named our dicks together. It was truly a blessed childhood. Sadly, one of us passed away last Monday.

    • @Eggnog88
      @Eggnog88 Před 2 lety +6

      @@madtater5948 That’s unfortunate

  • @lupitalopez1233
    @lupitalopez1233 Před 3 lety +1657

    I’ve fallen in the 1950’s side of CZcams and I can’t get out😂

    • @TheBluewaterBlonde
      @TheBluewaterBlonde Před 3 lety +18

      Haha, you're funny. I like it.

    • @juneberry1982
      @juneberry1982 Před 3 lety +35

      Why would you want to???

    • @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823
      @windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 Před 3 lety +19

      Have you looked up people who still do this now? You can't tell its 2020 at their houses.

    • @juneberry1982
      @juneberry1982 Před 3 lety +19

      @@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 I have. I saw one family that lived like the 50s or early 60s. I wanted to join the family! 😀

    • @olchat2012
      @olchat2012 Před 3 lety +24

      @@juneberry1982Throughout the years, I've even been buying antique and/or vintage furniture for my house. Real wood furniture built to last. I have a Singer sewing machine, a Osterizer blender, etc...It all makes me feel better, the way I felt as a kid growing up, a much simpler life when things seemed to, for the most part, work as they should...
      I love watching "Clara's depression cooking" right here on CZcams. That's just how my grandma and her way of life was 40, 50 years ago...

  • @triplehearts914
    @triplehearts914 Před rokem +130

    It's so neat to read everyone's stories in the comments! my mom was a little girl in the 60's and I remember her telling me that they went inside when the streetlights came on too. I hope you all have a good day!

    • @kahlimgia5662
      @kahlimgia5662 Před 10 měsíci +2

      And I am right there with ya Mommy😊.. "make sure u guys are inside when the street lights come on". I can still here my mother's voice lol....great memories @ that time🥰🦋🌻🙏🏽🕊💞.

    • @SweetKingTanner
      @SweetKingTanner Před 7 měsíci

      happen to be just like moments, passing

  • @evelynwhittington5089
    @evelynwhittington5089 Před rokem +48

    1950's was the best era. Beautiful cars, great music, people dressedd nicely. I wish I could go back those great days.

    • @zadenthepfplayer3805
      @zadenthepfplayer3805 Před 11 měsíci

      Me too

    • @bigdawg1448
      @bigdawg1448 Před 9 měsíci +6

      Racism?

    • @zadenthepfplayer3805
      @zadenthepfplayer3805 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@bigdawg1448 nah it seen like a nicer time war just ended and everyone wanna to be happy

    • @cjngguanatos4687
      @cjngguanatos4687 Před 8 měsíci +6

      The good old white days. No color folks in sight ahh those were the days. All American 🇺🇸

    • @BernieSutliff
      @BernieSutliff Před 8 měsíci +5

      When you have nothing else to gripe about, you pull out the race card! In spite of people like you, the 50s were the best of times!

  • @mynameisbob6628
    @mynameisbob6628 Před 5 lety +4712

    I think if you went back in time and told them what the world would be like in 2019, they’d be horrified.

    • @izzy18111
      @izzy18111 Před 5 lety +87

      Mynameis Bob have you seen a movie called Blast from the Past? I thought of it when I read your comment and the reaction the dad in that movie had to how much things had changed.

    • @Poway19
      @Poway19 Před 5 lety +59

      Isabel Ramirez IMO that movie illustrates perfectly how people and society changed over the decades.

    • @shaytvasmr7884
      @shaytvasmr7884 Před 5 lety +132

      Seriously 💯💯💯💯 it’s sooo fucked up these days

    • @freespiritable
      @freespiritable Před 5 lety +34

      @@limon6592 add to that the amazing news that they'd live longer.

    • @opentrunk
      @opentrunk Před 5 lety +73

      You couldn't pay me enough money to go back to that

  • @josron6088
    @josron6088 Před 3 lety +2801

    A time when you had a living wage job for life and you could pay your house off in 10 to 15 years..

  • @Code7Unltd
    @Code7Unltd Před rokem +35

    Every Friday night, Julia's JOJ is to compare the grocery prices for her Saturday morning shosh.
    That is, after the radio's turned down a little.
    ,*Radio plays louder*,

    • @waytoobiased
      @waytoobiased Před rokem

      YES

    • @thelight3112
      @thelight3112 Před rokem +3

      I work, while Julia goes and spreads her legs around town. ALL DAY! That means she gets around.
      That is gross, but we have to make sure we get money.

  • @1234singingismylife
    @1234singingismylife Před rokem +31

    I too grew up in the 50’s. It was a wonderful time. Mom fed a family of 5 on $25 a week. Families had a Dad and Mom. You were taken to church, Saturday night was the drive-in theater or Sunday after church was dinner and Lakeside Amusement Park. I would not want to change a second of my childhood.

  • @warwick802
    @warwick802 Před 4 lety +1495

    Gotta love the terrible audio quality, background music, accents, and most of all, the gentleman act from the men. This was truly the golden era.

    • @1dayfree
      @1dayfree Před 4 lety +18

      @Speaking Truth low awareness time more like...

    • @1dayfree
      @1dayfree Před 4 lety +72

      @ isn't it past your bedtime grandad? ;)

    • @supersniper698
      @supersniper698 Před 4 lety +9

      @@1dayfree Go to sleep now son.

    • @traxonwax
      @traxonwax Před 4 lety +13

      lorraine green sounds like my grandparents. What I would give to hear then lament about the “GoodO Ol’ Days”.

    • @danielcardenas4307
      @danielcardenas4307 Před 4 lety +80

      Be aware how terrible the world was back then...

  • @lazoputz3514
    @lazoputz3514 Před 6 lety +2923

    this is a real nostalgia trip. I am a child of the '50s. (born '49). For health reasons, I wasn't so much of an active child, and spent a lot of time in the kitchen with my mom. But, it did me no harm, and even today as an elderly man, her values remain with me, and I still follow the concepts she instilled in me. Even though a lifetime has gone by, my own family raised and moved on, my wife gone, and I live alone; I still shop at 3 different grocery stores for the best deals and top quality products. I clear the table and re-set it after each meal, and truth be known, when feeling lazy, have sat down in front of the tely with a TV dinner. But primarily, I still cook real food, in time-tested procedures. I worked for one company for 40 years, and retired with little fanfare after a lifetime of dedication. The highlight of my passing days is the anticipation of my grandchildren's visits, which contrary to current lifestyles, are spent mostly in the kitchen while I surreptitiously teach them "home-economics" and good old fashioned cooking. I have three grandgirls, and one of them especially enjoys our kitchen time together. It is her plan (she is 12 now) to be a master chef on a cruise ship. Anyway, enough of the nostalgia, back to "period" vids.

    • @justwanttowatchvideos9647
      @justwanttowatchvideos9647 Před 6 lety +199

      lazoputz very nice comment, thanks for sharing

    • @JoeKaye-hn5dt
      @JoeKaye-hn5dt Před 6 lety +62

      I actually still hang some of my laundry out on the line, sheets and jeans especially..

    • @dcwilson3368
      @dcwilson3368 Před 6 lety +104

      You're too young to be elderly.

    • @blackhawks81H
      @blackhawks81H Před 6 lety +178

      lazoputz you're living the dream my friend. Nevermind all the silly people who want a Ferrari and a helicopter.. You can't take that nonsense with you when you're gone. But memories, memories of the good times live on forever with your loved ones. Grandkids will tell stories of you when they're old and gray. And in this way, you've all but earned immortality. Thanks for sharing your story. It brightened up my day.

    • @edgregory1
      @edgregory1 Před 6 lety +4

      +Micheline I felt attracted to the neighbor lady.

  • @Thomas-ky3rl
    @Thomas-ky3rl Před rokem +36

    This is one the best vintage films of it's time and very heart warming. I keep coming back every few months to watch it again. Am I alone.?

  • @junbug1029
    @junbug1029 Před rokem +89

    I was born in the mid 50s and my mom was a stay at home mom. I have 3 sisters and we lived in a house less than 2,000 sf. My parents drove used cars. We went out to eat or to a movie once a year. My mom cooked our frugal meals and our vacation was a week at my great grandparents lake cottage. We had plenty of toys and art supplies to keep us creative and busy. We went to the library every other Saturday to borrow our books to read. I was the 3rd child and wore hand me down clothes and shoes. Mom sewed our clothes and cut our hair. We lived very frugally and so did our friend’s families. Now people eat out frequently, go to the movies, go on nice vacations and drive new cars.

    • @allimkhan7540
      @allimkhan7540 Před 9 měsíci +6

      The old day's were the best people had class and the world was normal

    • @andapeterson5996
      @andapeterson5996 Před 9 měsíci +16

      This is how I live now! I have 4 kids, cook almost every night, old cars, we know all the neighbors on the cul-de-sac, many church friends. You can build the life you want! It’s harder because we have so much advertising enticing us to profligate living!

    • @allimkhan7540
      @allimkhan7540 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @andapeterson5996 Well said I agree makes sense. Good for you it's good to know some people in America 🇺🇸 still have class and morals!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @Nightwriter1843
      @Nightwriter1843 Před 9 měsíci +9

      I was born in 1965 and didn't get a store-bought haircut til I was close to 18 years old. Yes, we all wore hand-me-downs, so we'd better not be fatter than our older siblings :o) Mom made a lot of our clothes, cooked all our meals, and as you, Junbug, restaurants were only for 'special occasions'. Summers lasted forever, there were only three channels on TV, and Dad's word was law! Hey, any readers remember laying on the lawn, looking up at the clouds, and try to figure what the clouds looked like?!

    • @catherineannelockman3805
      @catherineannelockman3805 Před 6 měsíci

      Because they are probably living beyond their means...and using credit cards, etcetera...

  • @justinreyez5561
    @justinreyez5561 Před 5 lety +1245

    fat chance to even make eye contact and say good morning with your neighbor these days

    • @Araconox
      @Araconox Před 5 lety +107

      Our new neighbor (lady in her 60's ) hates us. I said good morning to her a few months ago and she said: 'What do you mean by that?' A real sweetheart.

    • @ryanscholz_
      @ryanscholz_ Před 5 lety +23

      Just the way I like it

    • @jmm1817
      @jmm1817 Před 5 lety +8

      @TheNauseator you sound like a dysfunctional person, sorry for you.

    • @cornstar1253
      @cornstar1253 Před 5 lety +12

      I know and like my white neighbours on either side. Good people

    • @themastersqueegee
      @themastersqueegee Před 5 lety +12

      What do you guys think caused this? Where did we go wrong?

  • @jaeracabrillos
    @jaeracabrillos Před 5 lety +564

    Works at a factory, can buy and build a whole frickin house

    • @BlankParty
      @BlankParty Před 5 lety +42

      That extra $40 he took out if his pocket really made the dream a reality.

    • @algomes715
      @algomes715 Před 5 lety +22

      My parents bought their first home in 1966. A triple decker in a working class boston. Neighborhood for $12,000 !. They told they saved for the $3,000 down payment for about 5yrs.charged their tenants about $125 a month! Crazy.....lol

    • @RandDickson
      @RandDickson Před 5 lety +5

      That still exists in Wisconsin.

    • @Marylandbrony
      @Marylandbrony Před 4 lety +2

      Then get misfigured in a horrible freak industrial accident.

    • @joselinema
      @joselinema Před 4 lety

      @@RandDickson Really? Do you live there?.

  • @keyland_
    @keyland_ Před rokem +17

    "It's 11 o clock! do you know where your children are?"

  • @jonnyjynxer8315
    @jonnyjynxer8315 Před rokem +91

    this is interesting because it shows how far society has fallen, the contrast is stark.

    • @GeneralElectric202
      @GeneralElectric202 Před 10 měsíci +8

      you're forgetting the fact that this was the suburbs and a sizable chunk of americans were still poor famers

    • @hoosierladyus48
      @hoosierladyus48 Před 10 měsíci

      @@GeneralElectric202 We didn't live on a farm, but we were poor.

    • @danielsolomon4600
      @danielsolomon4600 Před 9 měsíci

      “Society has fallen” is just coded for “white male privilege is no longer socially acceptable or sanctioned by law. Society is far better for MOST people now than it was back then stop being myopic

    • @cjngguanatos4687
      @cjngguanatos4687 Před 8 měsíci +1

      It has Fallon due to color folks. Back in the white days were the best days

    • @GeneralElectric202
      @GeneralElectric202 Před 8 měsíci

      the 17 hundreds?

  • @CryptidHunter_official
    @CryptidHunter_official Před 5 lety +799

    I've lived in the same house for 20 years and still don't know most of my neighbors

    • @adrianocollinzo5712
      @adrianocollinzo5712 Před 5 lety +85

      I hate everyone in my street

    • @christineroberts9780
      @christineroberts9780 Před 5 lety +23

      @@adrianocollinzo5712 😅😅

    • @cloud_c5222
      @cloud_c5222 Před 5 lety +26

      Maybe because you never try to meet or communicate with your neighbors

    • @adrianocollinzo5712
      @adrianocollinzo5712 Před 5 lety +55

      @@cloud_c5222 naw man i know what kinda people are in my street, not the kind of peoe you have round for tea. Utter filth bro.

    • @nelzelpher2088
      @nelzelpher2088 Před 4 lety +5

      Anyone who responded to the original poster and he himself, is always welcome to have tea with me.

  • @lz_creep6856
    @lz_creep6856 Před 4 lety +1472

    *always damn love those old narrarators their voice makes me calm* 😂
    Edit: wow thanks for the likes yall🤙🏽🖤

  • @minadoro
    @minadoro Před rokem +4

    Know your station in life, be happy with your lot.

  • @christopherhughes3381
    @christopherhughes3381 Před 11 měsíci +21

    I loved this. I was born in 72. Im nostalgic. And this really makes me feel warm and happy.

    • @edithbannerman4
      @edithbannerman4 Před 7 měsíci

      @Hello there, how are you doing this blessed day?

  • @genericguy_
    @genericguy_ Před 5 lety +589

    I like how neighbors interacted with each other

    • @AnthonyRobinson-rc9yd
      @AnthonyRobinson-rc9yd Před 5 lety +16

      My neighbors and I interact with each other because all of our kids play together, we take turns mowing our elderly neighbor yard and keep the homeless degenerates off the street

    • @cliffto6
      @cliffto6 Před 5 lety +8

      Is this american thing?? Cause we still have strong relationship with neighbors here, i live in Asia btw

    • @genericguy_
      @genericguy_ Před 5 lety +14

      I live in a apartment in a big city and here noboby knows each other😌

    • @kayzyr9442
      @kayzyr9442 Před 5 lety +3

      Assuming they got along

    • @desireeretiree
      @desireeretiree Před 5 lety +1

      @@cliffto6 very much so
      ...

  • @bean1396
    @bean1396 Před 5 lety +734

    We came straight home when we got off the bus. No playing until our clothes were changed and homework was done. Mom worked at home. My mother still used a wringer washer. Television was barely there. Radio was entertainment. We played outside, rode our bikes, jumped roped, hopscotch and had fun. In my home, we never ventured farther than we could hear our dad whistle. Supper at 5 and in bed by 8 during the week.
    Me and my friends would visit neighbors' yards for treats. My yard had tomatoes, potatoes, corn, onions, green beans and blackberries growing on the back fence. One neighbor had delicious strawberries. Another had a Cherry Tree and the other had the best rhubarb on the block. We picked everything and ate it right then. We were quite poor but I and my siblings never knew it. We had food, clothes and a clean house. We were happy kids.

    • @suzyq172
      @suzyq172 Před 5 lety +50

      Jesse Cole, such a beautiful comment. God bless.

    • @reggiebayard7223
      @reggiebayard7223 Před 5 lety +21

      i would of just masterbated for fun

    • @michellerjackson5776
      @michellerjackson5776 Před 5 lety +27

      God bless you for appreciating and sharing.. Oh how rich you are with gratitude of your upbringing ~ If only we could turn back the hands of time. .I'm 53, and miss the great days of MY youth. Blessings to you!! Thank you for sharing..

    • @icemachine79
      @icemachine79 Před 5 lety +31

      If you had all those things then you weren't poor. At worst, you were lower middle class.

    • @QueenBee-gx4rp
      @QueenBee-gx4rp Před 5 lety +15

      Jesse Cole Ahh...a clean house. How many no longer have that?

  • @jaymeade9898
    @jaymeade9898 Před rokem +77

    Notice how the father sits down with his daughter and helps her with her homework. He didn’t run to the school in a fit of pique and blame the teachers.

    • @sandys408
      @sandys408 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Some parents are lost at math . Teachers are supposed to teach that's why we pay them with hard earned tax money we earn at our jobs which we don't ask the teachers to come do our jobs.

  • @tommy..980
    @tommy..980 Před rokem +23

    I was born in 1959 and this was very much like our family… A few differences we had 11 kids a big Irish Catholic family… And did not have much money but we never knew it then…
    Other than that we had great parents that taught us good morals and values..
    All my family was blessed to be raised like that cause like the man said those morals and values stay with you and help you through your whole life…

    • @christiangoubaud
      @christiangoubaud Před 11 měsíci +1

      God bless you! God is good!!! ☝🏻✝️

    • @Rochelle937
      @Rochelle937 Před 11 měsíci +2

      You were very fortunate indeed. How wonderful to have a big family and so many siblings.

  • @patriciamasci6172
    @patriciamasci6172 Před 5 lety +1039

    Imagine how they would react if they saw the price & quality of food today! YIKES!!!

    • @msbrowngault
      @msbrowngault Před 5 lety +6

      Faint

    • @tommyboybr
      @tommyboybr Před 5 lety +75

      @Patricia Masci
      There’s a lot of people who lived in the 50’s that are still alive now, so they are aware of those things :-D

    • @jacquelineS9
      @jacquelineS9 Před 5 lety +26

      They complain all the time bout price. Trust me my dad is 70 yrs ols

    • @nuffflavor
      @nuffflavor Před 5 lety +9

      It all equals out. Back in those days the work vs cost still were issues.

    • @stevorobo692
      @stevorobo692 Před 5 lety +4

      This guy doesn't know how inflation works.

  • @buhnee7678
    @buhnee7678 Před 4 lety +765

    The downpayment was $50 for a $10,000 house that they’d choose to build out of a catalog.
    Ah the good ‘ol days 😭

    • @indiglo1971
      @indiglo1971 Před 4 lety +23

      My mom has a Sears and Roebucks house. It's awesome!

    • @happygirl4490
      @happygirl4490 Před 4 lety +10

      Most people had to build their own homes then. There were not that many to go around.

    • @wingmanalive
      @wingmanalive Před 4 lety +59

      I grew up in the 70's and my parent's house payment was $240. That included taxes. Today that same house is $240,000. I'm scared for my kids I really am. They will have to pay $60k for a car and $500k for a home. It's scary.

    • @Funeeman
      @Funeeman Před 4 lety +3

      Maybe thousand's of catalog is what built the house.

    • @RunninUpThatHillh
      @RunninUpThatHillh Před 4 lety +10

      @@wingmanalive Pay 5 grand for a good car, and rent somewhere to live. It's NEVER yours if they can take it away, so don't waste time on a mortgage. Ever.

  • @yinyangyt8749
    @yinyangyt8749 Před rokem +10

    I came here from CS188’s ytp and the original here is pretty pleasant to watch. Sometimes I wish life could still be as simple as this

  • @jayjay-bz3rr
    @jayjay-bz3rr Před 10 měsíci +3

    🎵“ Boy the way Glenn Miller played, Songs that made the Hit Parade….” 🎵

  • @holdshiftt2run308
    @holdshiftt2run308 Před 5 lety +1351

    "young married couple" yet the look like they are in their 40's.

    • @Khaatumo411
      @Khaatumo411 Před 5 lety +37

      HoldShiftt2Run you mean 50s

    • @iamchristianlewis
      @iamchristianlewis Před 5 lety +24

      He means as in age.

    • @BlackedOutDreams
      @BlackedOutDreams Před 5 lety +72

      Its all the smoking

    • @amywagner5500
      @amywagner5500 Před 5 lety +4

      HoldShiftt2Run oh who cares!

    • @holdshiftt2run308
      @holdshiftt2run308 Před 5 lety +35

      @Jason Dubya-DEEZNUTS What is called traditional values? looking old? I come a place more conservative and traditional than yours. Trust me, I know traditional values, but we are talking about age here. I just thought it was funny when he said "young married couple" but they looked like they were in their mid 40's.

  • @TheNomad2727
    @TheNomad2727 Před 5 lety +571

    amazing how raising 4 kids, mortgage and groceries, upkeep of house and car were all manageable under one factory wage.... times have changed a little bit since then

    • @LanielPhoto
      @LanielPhoto Před 5 lety +51

      Yep - they didn't have to pay for cable/satellite.fiber connections, no internet fees, no cellphone fees, no giving the bank a slice of the pie with every purchase via debit/credit cards, and generally living within their means, an not on credit card debts. Were they really that worse off?

    • @raramuri100
      @raramuri100 Před 5 lety +23

      I got 3 3 kids and 2 homes plus my wife dont work all on an electricians salary. I dont drive brand new cars and we fo vacation at least once a year. It can be done but you have look for ways to g et t extra money and save. Read a book called the richest man in Babylon

    • @roddaman7545
      @roddaman7545 Před 5 lety +10

      Sure, but the earnings of the investor class and stockbrokers have quintupled since then, so that makes up for it. Right?

    • @krysg1304
      @krysg1304 Před 5 lety +10

      Yeah like how factory jobs here barely exist compared to then and you cant even afford a studio apartment on factory wage or minimum wage. You gotta work 2 or 3 jobs or go to college that's costs a fortune

    • @mecarr
      @mecarr Před 5 lety +15

      It’s because the unions have been diminished over the years.

  • @timp1051
    @timp1051 Před rokem +23

    I've watched this video more than once. Family, stability, faith...seems like another world.
    I wonder where that house is, would like to see what it looks like today.

  • @myrtellelee2857
    @myrtellelee2857 Před rokem +15

    I was born in 1950 and both my parents worked outside the home. We didn't have much money, but Dad and Mom made sure their five children were taken care of. We were a close nit family and still are to this day.

  • @__seeker__
    @__seeker__ Před 4 lety +467

    When ONE paycheck from a plant job could support SIX people’s lives.

    • @sadisticpsychopath220
      @sadisticpsychopath220 Před 4 lety +12

      Nandi the Bull those planet jobs paid good money, they were all Unionized and could provide a good living. Plus a new car was in reach for most middle class families. Nowadays all the cars are made in Mexico and China. So they can get away paying their workers a tiny fraction of what a union Ed American would make. Plus to add insult to injury a new car is unaffordable to most Americans. A new house wasn’t out of reach either if you could save for a down payment, same with college education.

    • @geraldboykin6159
      @geraldboykin6159 Před 4 lety +3

      I remember the early 60's was sweet!!!

    • @badgerking200
      @badgerking200 Před 4 lety

      Sun Bull I am not surprised cause this is still how it's like in India for middle-class families. My father was the only one to earn. We got education up to college debt-free and he built a home, bought a car while we were in middle school. He works in a government job. But here people don't use credit cards and save a lot, don't live extravagant lives.

    • @CornPopWazABadDude
      @CornPopWazABadDude Před 4 lety +16

      Yep, then feminazis ruined it for literally everyone

    • @rachelsantana2428
      @rachelsantana2428 Před 4 lety +1

      Our house ran just fine with it. We had no internet. Basic prepaid phones. Bought used car w cash. House payments are often cheaper than rent. We ate less so we were healthier and we went outside more too. Then we got raises and I went to work. We got credit cards and loans to buy things we thought we wanted, that would likely end up discarded. We have more money and less yet less. We def have less time and more stress. We are in the middle of paying off all debt to go bake to absolutely baisc needs again. It is possible.

  • @bookmagicroe9553
    @bookmagicroe9553 Před 2 lety +254

    This is how I grew up. Women talking over the fence, people stopping over without an appointment, adults playing cards,
    friendly neighbors, the styles of clothes...nostalgia for a slower, friendlier, more affordable time.

    • @Gail1Marie
      @Gail1Marie Před rokem +4

      Yet one of our neighbors with an unlocked door lost her purse when someone came into her house (while she was gardening in back) and snatched it off the kitchen table. And my house was burglarized. And we lived in a nice neighborhood! After that, we all started locking our doors during the day (we'd always locked them before going to bed). This would be in the early 1970s.

    • @seekingtruth1110
      @seekingtruth1110 Před rokem +7

      @@Gail1Marie weird. We never locked doors during that time. But still if you compared that to today. That is a cake walk.

    • @Gail1Marie
      @Gail1Marie Před rokem

      @@seekingtruth1110 My friend's family left to visit relatives, and somehow no one closed and locked the front door (it was summer, and the screen door was locked). The neighbors on either side of them were burglarized when they were gone, but the burglars skipped my friend's house. They evidently thought that because the door was open, someone was home.

    • @geekygalaxy4307
      @geekygalaxy4307 Před rokem +1

      If you were in America

    • @haikuwu
      @haikuwu Před rokem +1

      "friendlier".... yeah maybe to other whites you were lmao

  • @rossmathias5675
    @rossmathias5675 Před rokem +21

    Back when the quality of food was actually good and not pumped with preservatives and crap

  • @yongchun2183
    @yongchun2183 Před rokem +9

    The funny & hilarious video from Cs188 brought me to this video

  • @valeryl06
    @valeryl06 Před 5 lety +1264

    Sometimes I just wish things stayed like that. No computers, no phones...Kids rarely play outside anymore

    • @shaniatiffany7008
      @shaniatiffany7008 Před 5 lety +134

      Valery Nicolle Lemus Sandoval oh please shut up

    • @kittybitch5964
      @kittybitch5964 Před 5 lety +66

      Valery Nicolle Lemus Sandoval it’s awful!!! I took my niece to work with me one time (small business owner) to show her work ethic, and to make some $ for a upcoming school trip. I found her 3 different times hiding, on her phone!! I was so pissed! 14 years old and addicted to the phone

    • @Fearlessly91
      @Fearlessly91 Před 5 lety +17

      Whole Food Plant Based back then you wouldn’t have been showing her a work ethic because she never would have accomplished anything.

    • @MrJasonshores364
      @MrJasonshores364 Před 5 lety +97

      The trade off would be you wouldn't be able to have a say in anything, if your husband beat you You would have to deal with it. Racism and sexism we're rampant. The only real thing that's different is that we're app connected anx now we hear about it. Back then people just got abused, in every way and they didn't say anything. Sure some parts were good, but others not so much.

    • @carlthefriendlyllama2126
      @carlthefriendlyllama2126 Před 5 lety +67

      Most of these films are social conditioning. They are intended to display what the writer believes is a picture perfect world. I wish the world was as perfect as a 1950s short film but that's just not reality.

  • @nancychisholm9425
    @nancychisholm9425 Před 2 lety +1136

    I loved it when neighbors knew each other and talked and you felt safe in your neighborhood because everyone looked out for each other

    • @lisabaltzer4190
      @lisabaltzer4190 Před 2 lety +37

      I live in Idaho. It is still like that where I live. I love it here. I have lived in Chicago, Las Vegas and Los Angeles. Moving to Idaho was one of the smartest things I ever did.

    • @Hagfan789
      @Hagfan789 Před 2 lety +30

      Don't you mean where everyone looked like each other?

    • @MsNickie1001
      @MsNickie1001 Před 2 lety +30

      We still do. It’s a racially mixed neighborhood, and we all pretty much respect each other and are friendly.

    • @guitarguy8963
      @guitarguy8963 Před 2 lety +20

      Hey, neighbor! I live in Montana, by the western border. Just wanted to say, there was a lot of good times back then, but also a lot of bad. I went to a Catholic school, and they almost went broke trying to pay off the families of the kids who were molested and beaten by both the priests and nuns. In the 7th grade dad bought a Texaco station, and when I turned 16 we bought a tow truck. My uncle told my dad that he needed to get some equipment that would make us some good money, and help save lives, so we were the first people in Montana to get and use the jaws of life. No speed limit back then, you could drive and drink, and some very unsafe cars kinda ruined the 70's for me, but we were saving lives, and that made it better., But I saw way too much by the time I was 18. Nightmares, depression the whole enchilada. By the 80's,local fire departments started using the jaws to get folks out of wrecks, so I kinda drifted until I got a job driving night taxi. I figured if I could get drunks home, then less people would have to see the stuff I saw when I was 17. I bought rides, and made sure that people got home if they were drinking, no matter what. I tried to take the bad things I went through and make things just a little bit better. Now, I'm almost 66 years old, and I can say"I made a difference" times are what you make them, so be positive and make them better .

    • @RamSamudrala
      @RamSamudrala Před 2 lety +4

      Still the same with me and our neighbours in Western New York. But kids aren't allowed to play by themselves but my wife is close to everyone in the neighbourhood.

  • @robertyoung1777
    @robertyoung1777 Před 4 měsíci +4

    A civil society where efforts payed off.

  • @samuelfritz2446
    @samuelfritz2446 Před rokem +4

    The house is still standing today and in very good shape considering Detroit. It's at 15260 Hazelridge St

    • @MoparGuy1625
      @MoparGuy1625 Před 3 dny

      Unfortunately when a certain kinda folk move in they destroy everything they touch.

  • @roccodiciano4189
    @roccodiciano4189 Před 3 lety +833

    On sundays, all the shops were closed by law. It was time to spend time at church and family. We would often visit our large extended family at a relative's house and have an enormous multi-course meal. One felt part of a wider community. One felt safe and at peace.

    • @raymonddelisle6601
      @raymonddelisle6601 Před 2 lety +42

      Your right. Sunday. Nothing was open except for church. It was called the blue law.

    • @mikezylstra7514
      @mikezylstra7514 Před 2 lety +15

      K Mart put an end to that rubbish. First one opened up in my neighborhood (about 3 miles from this house). Opened on a Sunday, and the cops were there.

    • @heru-deshet359
      @heru-deshet359 Před 2 lety +15

      I really miss that.

    • @sharkkakirde1
      @sharkkakirde1 Před 2 lety +3

      Which Year was that?

    • @mikezylstra7514
      @mikezylstra7514 Před 2 lety +8

      @@sharkkakirde1 1962

  • @AsTheWheelsTurn
    @AsTheWheelsTurn Před 5 lety +734

    back when a man could work in a factory job or a skilled labor and support his entire family including a stay at home wife/mom and have money to save. what the hell has happened? now it takes two people working full time to have the same quality of life.

    • @rickrod8647
      @rickrod8647 Před 5 lety +73

      AsTheWheelsTurn modern day slavery🤫

    • @valerieehrlich7166
      @valerieehrlich7166 Před 5 lety +46

      our society pushed us into a different lifestyle. in the 1970s Gloria steinham pushed women to go back to work not that there is anything wrong with women working outside the home we went from a one income one car and no cable TV to a two income and more than one car society and cable TV and Internet that will take us to any place we want to go online and people seem to think that more is better and that is not true for me I quit driving j use other means of transportation. when needed stalk up on necessary supplies so that I do not have to go to the store so much do not pay for auto insurance (not necessary if you do not own a car and use other means of transportation ) no car means I do not have to worry about auto maintenance or buying gas and yet I am still independent. people think not owning a car means losing your independence no it doesn't I walk a lot (so that means no gym fees for me) and ride three wheeler bike

    • @82asha
      @82asha Před 5 lety +128

      Most people I know with 2 incomes still barely afford their house and living costs.

    • @roberttighe5687
      @roberttighe5687 Před 5 lety +36

      Actually even two people working won’t necessarily provide this comfort level of you live in an area like NJ. cost of living is so high.

    • @tedstranix7703
      @tedstranix7703 Před 5 lety +52

      Commie Trump and the evil Retardlicans and their stupid "trickle down economics" --- giving tax breaks to rich corporations does NOT benefit the working man one bit !!

  • @sharonholt3118
    @sharonholt3118 Před 9 měsíci +21

    I was born in the 50s. Would not trade it for the sad world we live in today! Magical time for me.

    • @PuffKitty
      @PuffKitty Před měsícem +1

      Same here, Sharon. There were still significant flaws in society for adult life, but as a child I had an idyllic, yet frugal, upbringing and I count myself lucky for it. 🐣➡️👵🏻

  • @markuspritsch7551
    @markuspritsch7551 Před rokem +5

    Marriage was teamwork and mutual respect for each others labors quite a bit then.

  • @agustinsalas2234
    @agustinsalas2234 Před 5 lety +295

    No cell phones no Internet no computers more time to talk spend time with family sad but those days are gone

    • @kathleenbrennan8422
      @kathleenbrennan8422 Před 4 lety +56

      You say as you write on the Internet lol

    • @gregcrabb3497
      @gregcrabb3497 Před 4 lety +8

      Even in the 70's when I was born (71) we only had three TV channels that went off the air every night. We didn't lock our car doors and we kids actually played outside. My mother wouldn't let us pile up on the couch in front of the TV. She made us get out and interact with the neighborhood.

    • @johnnyquest9519
      @johnnyquest9519 Před 4 lety +7

      Meh. It was just more time to listen to the family bitch about working and how much it sucks while watching them drink their day away while yelling at the kids for not cleaning the rooms correctly.

    • @Snakebite_33
      @Snakebite_33 Před 4 lety +4

      Says the imbecile on the internet.

    • @lostbraincellz
      @lostbraincellz Před 4 lety +6

      Agustin Salas you’re acting like you can’t do that anymore

  • @hattienuff1405
    @hattienuff1405 Před 4 lety +691

    Born in 1952, milk butter & fresh cream was delivered fresh daily to your door. doctors made house calls, there were no nursing homes, families cared for their elderly themselves, divorce was rare, mothers stayed home & raised the kids, only 1 paycheck was needed to live well. People were kinder, less hurried, we smiled at & greeted strangers. We knew ALL our neighbors & helped them out when needed & they would return the favor to us.
    I'm grateful I had those experiences, but looking around today I see just how very far we've fallen. I'm sad for those who've never known those days for now they are a distant memory.

    • @euhdink4501
      @euhdink4501 Před 4 lety +41

      Right. It was only in the seventies that one would begin lock the doors of the house and the car. Very happy to have had such a sorrowless youth, and very sorry as I see my grandchildren grow up in this dirty world.

    • @lindas546
      @lindas546 Před 4 lety +9

      My house was not like that!

    • @BoozyBeggar
      @BoozyBeggar Před 4 lety +34

      Divorce was rare because they didn't have "no-fault" legislation, the first of which in the entire country was signed into law by California governor Ronald Reagan. Absolute fucking traitor to conservatism, yet retarded boomers worship that Goddamn demon to this day.
      Never EVER trust a neocon.

    • @candacerain1
      @candacerain1 Před 4 lety +93

      Divorce was also frowned upon even if the wife was beaten. You had to obey your husband even if he gave you black eyes. SMH

    • @BoozyBeggar
      @BoozyBeggar Před 4 lety +27

      @@candacerain1 You've been watching too much Hollyweird fiction.

  • @baronbrrrrett
    @baronbrrrrett Před rokem +26

    Who came here after cs188 made a ytp of this?

  • @jimanderson1589
    @jimanderson1589 Před rokem +11

    How quaint and pleasant! There was such a connection to the people and world then, without social media. This was fun to watch. 😊

  • @imbadash8675
    @imbadash8675 Před 7 lety +1605

    I don't know how i ended up here but not leaving..

    • @patbrennan6572
      @patbrennan6572 Před 7 lety +47

      I don't know how I arrived on this site eighter, but let me tell you, I;m glad I did.. I had no idea things that were so tough could be overcome with hard work and support from the love of family and friends.

    • @michellegomez4905
      @michellegomez4905 Před 7 lety +1

      imbadash Ikr

    • @mopomilise
      @mopomilise Před 7 lety +4

      imbadash same here!

    • @1TalldrinkH2O
      @1TalldrinkH2O Před 6 lety +49

      I wish we all could live in a nice neighborhood with good neighbors. In heaven we can. I hope to see you and all of your family there.

    • @rubalcava1978
      @rubalcava1978 Před 6 lety +1

      imbadash me too

  • @patriciawilliamsn9605
    @patriciawilliamsn9605 Před 4 lety +164

    Born in 43 so this was pretty much my life growing up

  • @nersharific813
    @nersharific813 Před rokem +20

    Anyone here from Cs188?

  • @silver_fengo
    @silver_fengo Před rokem +23

    here come the cs188 comments lmao

  • @patriciajones4761
    @patriciajones4761 Před 3 lety +588

    I was probably the age of that littlest girl in the last scene. I remember when we got stockings at Christmas and they were filled with pecans, oranges, and apples and even though that seems ridiculous now we really liked it because it was our stocking and our own fruit. I remember when our Saturdays were filled with skating up and down the block, bicycle races, building forts out of whatever we could find , and playing in the mud making mud pies. We really had a lot of fun. In the summer we ate outside because it was so hot in the house. We barbecued whatever we could. Often it was fish that we caught at the river. My mom would buy a six-pack of coke a month and our treat was that we got to have one Coca-Cola a month. Dinner was often beans and cornbread. Once a week we had a fancy Sunday dinner after church. It was usually either pot roast, fried chicken, or ham. I loved it when my mother made fried chicken for Sunday dinner because that means I would get a piece of chicken in my lunch kit to take to school with buttered bread . My thermos always had iced tea . We always wore dresses to church. We went every Sunday and we would take a drive after our Sunday meal. We knew all our neighbors and we helped each other out. The neighborhood was filled with kids. In the summer we all went to Vacation Bible School at some church everybody had one of those tiny inflatable pools to play in and we ran through the sprinkler . When it rained if there wasn't any lightning all the children played out in the rain and had fun and would catch the rain in glass containers sometimes we find tadpoles . Most of the dads in the neighborhood had served in one of the wars. Most of us grew vegetables in our backyard and everybody hung their clothes out each morning on the clothesline. We walked everywhere we wanted to go or rode our bikes together I don't remember any fat people I'm sure there were some but I don't remember anybody being overweight. My mother wore dresses everyday in the house to clean the house and we wore dresses to school everyday. Most kids had two pairs of shoes one for church and one for school. Our shoes in the summer we're always flip flops and occasionally we would buy a pair of tennis shoes but we didn't wear them much. At Christmas time we usually got 2 presents. probably less than $25 spent on each child. We only took one family vacation when I was a child, to a place in New Mexico. Every summer we went to see all the grandparents who all lived in one very small town and stayed for a couple of weeks. All the grandparents lived way out in the country. We usually just made meals together and walked around on the streets during the visits. As a child we only went out to eat at a restaurant maybe once every two months and never to fast foods. It was very simple but I'm glad I grew up when I did it was a great time to grow up.

    • @katarinask139
      @katarinask139 Před 3 lety +20

      It reminds me so much of my childhood, I was born in 2002 in Slovakia. Is that now so different in the US?

    • @suzanneswanson4373
      @suzanneswanson4373 Před 3 lety +17

      @@katarinask139 Sounds like heaven

    • @judyfenske1429
      @judyfenske1429 Před 3 lety +14

      Oh, yes. The same for me.
      You write well.

    • @hilslamer
      @hilslamer Před 3 lety +24

      Brilliant glimpse into the simple past, thanks.

    • @northover
      @northover Před 2 lety +34

      Love your comments. Much was true for me, but we were white and middle class. It wasn’t such a great era for folks of color though.

  • @THEJOKER-nz6sy
    @THEJOKER-nz6sy Před 5 lety +504

    Now it takes 18 hour shifts 4 hours of sleep just to make ends meet

    • @ruthnorman1922
      @ruthnorman1922 Před 5 lety +19

      That’s because that’s what people choose to make it. Everyone has to have a car payment, $1800 a month apartment, $200 a month new iPhone, cable, Netflix, credit cards, student debt, motorcycle payment, eating out daily, and the list goes on.

    • @robellisberden
      @robellisberden Před 5 lety +5

      That is only if you live in America lol. In other countries you will not get a huge college debt

    • @shineeis5657
      @shineeis5657 Před 5 lety +2

      @@ruthnorman1922 Yes, sadly it's almost impossible in many cases to make a living without a car. If an area in America has Uber/Lyft it *could* work out. I know a lady who does that.

    • @hebrewmaven
      @hebrewmaven Před 5 lety +2

      Almost. I know people who work 2 jobs and get barely any sleep here in the city and I literally cant imagine doing that. But rent here is incredibly high and the houses are impossible. Put your college debt on top of all of this and its hard to imagine ever having anything more in life than my simple lifestyle. Is that okay? Sure. When I think is that okay for my future children, no, no its not. But hey, there is always hope.

    • @hetherm9171
      @hetherm9171 Před 5 lety +1

      No it’s because you choose to you can get a trades job without going to college and make a more than easy life but I’m guessing you’re terrible at handling money

  • @normasouthwood3182
    @normasouthwood3182 Před 9 měsíci +7

    I was born 1950 in rural England. Looking back, it was like a fairytale. My father bought our 1st house 1956, I remember everything clearly.

  • @cynthistar124
    @cynthistar124 Před 3 lety +537

    My grandma when I wear a shirt and jeans: *Why are you so fancy we are only going to the store?*
    1950s: *People wear ties to your house just to play cards*

    • @DoubleDogDare54
      @DoubleDogDare54 Před 3 lety +49

      My mother had an old photo she took of my father when they were dating. That was back in the late '30s. They were out fishing that day, in a wooden rowboat. My dad had on a proper long sleeve shirt, a tie and spats on his shoes. FISHING!
      I asked my mother about Dad's attire and she shrugged and said men dressed properly in those days. She told me she'd never have set foot out of the house without doing her hair, doing her face, wearing a dress, hat, gloves, silk stockings with the seams straight in the back, and heels. She always wore nail polish. Bright red.
      That's just how it was.

    • @samanthab1923
      @samanthab1923 Před 3 lety +5

      My 24 year old son had to go to a funeral the other day. When he asked should he wear a suit I had to tell him no. Most would probably be in jeans & snow jackets.

    • @DoubleDogDare54
      @DoubleDogDare54 Před 3 lety +11

      @Frank Silvers Mine, too. She was always very particular about her appearance. I remember once incident when I was probably five years old - not old enough to cross the street on my own. It was probably Memorial Day, I'm guessing. I was on the street corner by our house and I could look down a couple of blocks towards the center of town, which was an old fashioned town square with a court house in the middle. I could hear and see a parade going on around the town square. Excited, I ran into the house and begged my mother to take me to the parade. Well, she had been doing housework and was dressed for the job, not for going out in public. She agreed to take me to the parade, but had to do her hair, touch up her make-up and get completely changed into a nice dress, a hat, gloves, heels, purse, looking presentable. Once she was done she started to walk me down the street towards the center of town. We were met by crowds walking in the other direction. The parade was over. My mother, a typical lady of the times, had spent so much time getting properly dressed for being seen in public, we missed the parade! So she took me home, cleaned me up to look proper and took me shopping instead. Not as much fun as a parade, but she figured as long as she was clean and tidy, no point wasting it! :-D

    • @vownal8260
      @vownal8260 Před 3 lety

      @@DoubleDogDare54 wow

    • @riggs20
      @riggs20 Před 3 lety +8

      The men were even in pants and collared shirts to mow their yards! I don't think that happened much even in the 40's & 50's. At least not down here in Florida. Now Sundays for church? Definitely everyone dressed up for that!

  • @bigonion874
    @bigonion874 Před 4 lety +540

    $40 for a down payment on a house?
    That’s what I use to fill my car

    • @berenicebauer72
      @berenicebauer72 Před 4 lety +7

      That forty dollars was put in the bank along with other moneys that were put in the bank.

    • @charredskeleton
      @charredskeleton Před 4 lety +4

      Must be a small or not very empty car!

    • @Lazykitty261
      @Lazykitty261 Před 4 lety +3

      I have a 2006 Honda van and it only take 30 bucks to fill what are you driving

    • @poetcomic1
      @poetcomic1 Před 4 lety +10

      @@Lazykitty261 Probably a car in California with $4.50 a gallon gas.

    • @Lazykitty261
      @Lazykitty261 Před 4 lety +4

      poetcomic1 that would make more sense but why would you live in California

  • @tammytsang3487
    @tammytsang3487 Před rokem +22

    This video enriched my horizons because I was born in Hong Kong in 1965 and only have limited knowledge about the lives in North America more than half a century ago. Life was not perfect back than , but a family with only one paycheck got by pretty well .

  • @albrown1812
    @albrown1812 Před 9 měsíci +10

    This almost brought a tear to my eye,The simplicity of this time.Sure you were dealing with debt,bills and there were other grievances in the times. But you had a genuine control over your life,there were opportunities everywhere, there was a US structure. Where do people even work today? Beyond content creating,social media influencing,and professional gamers? Yeah the period had its difficulties,but there was so much to look forward to...

  • @addangel
    @addangel Před 3 lety +858

    I hate that I was expecting her to put the vegetables in plastic bags

    • @ItsTreen
      @ItsTreen Před 3 lety +16

      I thought the same thing😩

    • @mothersarmsreadinesscoachi9360
      @mothersarmsreadinesscoachi9360 Před 3 lety +69

      Oil company created the plastic industry. They also created the bullshit about deforestation so we all switched to plastic to save the trees. Then they said we could recycle it. Which is another oil industry lie. Enjoy your green bullshit. It’s a a lie. Marketing

    • @LolLol-rq7yf
      @LolLol-rq7yf Před 3 lety +26

      @@mothersarmsreadinesscoachi9360 plastic is still a bad thing

    • @ishouldhavetried
      @ishouldhavetried Před 3 lety +33

      @@mothersarmsreadinesscoachi9360 You could always meet in the middle and bring your own reusable bags. It's what we do. We don't use plastic, and they're not open either.

    • @allenwood3805
      @allenwood3805 Před 3 lety +7

      I don't think plastic was invented then

  • @oscarbirch6685
    @oscarbirch6685 Před 4 lety +536

    Wow my grandmother told me that was the days when u could leave your screen door open

    • @jessicah3450
      @jessicah3450 Před 4 lety +8

      My mom and her brother used to sleep on the front porch most summer nights.

    • @declaytor
      @declaytor Před 4 lety +37

      Ummm, I still leave my screen door open. There are quite a few places in America outside of NY, LA and Chicago that are very quiet and peaceful.

    • @FedUpSouthernGirl
      @FedUpSouthernGirl Před 4 lety +36

      If u live in certain mostly ethnocally homogeneous areas, u share enough cultural beliefs that trust is high. Multiculturalism ruinstrust amongst neighbors

    • @SUperMAn-ht7zl
      @SUperMAn-ht7zl Před 4 lety +5

      uhm mostly everyone in Canada still do this. Only time we don’t is during winter.

    • @mattball7074
      @mattball7074 Před 4 lety +13

      And beef was 44 cents a fucking pound!!! & community was a real thing where problems were resolved with teachers, neighbors, and children!

  • @dougharding5231
    @dougharding5231 Před 11 měsíci +20

    Sometimes i think I'd be willing to go back and live in the 50s as an adult. Yeah, I'd miss some of today's tech, but i think it would be worth it. None of this unbelievable crap we are forced to put up with today. Just living with friendly neighbors as a middle American.

  • @blackvulcan100
    @blackvulcan100 Před rokem +4

    As an Englishman watching this I found it a brilliant watch, got to say I love you Americans, my wish at the age of 76 is to visit the US once again as I did in 1969.This time with my wife.

    • @MrTruckerf
      @MrTruckerf Před rokem

      We would be honored by your presence, sir. I am 70 but have never visited England although legend has it that my predecessors came from England and Wales 175 years ago. This is still a great country if you visit the right places. Where I live is friendly and crime-free.

    • @blackvulcan100
      @blackvulcan100 Před rokem

      @@MrTruckerf Thanks Dale, which part of the US are you from ? ps just a snippet of information, when I was in the US in 1969 we went to golf club a fella recognised my accent and said he had been stationed in England during the war at a place called Tewksbury and did I know It,oh yes I knew it as I only lived eight miles from Tewkers as it was sometimes called. He reminisced with us. Even at my young age of 22 I remember thanking him for his service to freedom in WW2. God bless America, God save the King.

  • @saumaydudeja7423
    @saumaydudeja7423 Před 5 lety +167

    Guy had a whole life flashback looking at a cheque

    • @Rmx1524
      @Rmx1524 Před 5 lety +3

      Life came at him fast apparently

    • @zacharybenson1818
      @zacharybenson1818 Před 5 lety +1

      *Czech

    • @mabelsue123
      @mabelsue123 Před 5 lety

      Zachary Benson 😂😂😂

    • @Funeeman
      @Funeeman Před 5 lety

      Was he a draft Dodger?.Or was he too old?

    • @patrickmcdonald6116
      @patrickmcdonald6116 Před 4 lety

      @@Funeeman If he was hired on in 1936-1937 as a tool and die maker then his position was very likely considered essential to the war effort in 1941.

  • @yellowbird5411
    @yellowbird5411 Před 4 lety +521

    I was a kid in the 50's too. The thing I miss the most is the simplicity. We didn't ask for a lot, we valued what we had, we took care of our possessions, and were proud of our accomplishments. There was usually a family unit with grandparents around, picnics in the park or beach, and expectations about kids' behavior. You didn't talk in class, or you got sent out, even for whispering. There was discipline. Kids were not treated like adults, and they often were not asked their opinion. Kids didn't yell and scream in the stores or throw tantrums. It was unheard of. They would be on restriction for an entire week for even talking back - once. You ate what was on your plate, and if you didn't want it you didn't eat. Things were real "treats." Now we get to do it all, all the time, and it's boring. Going to the beach, playing with friends, riding your bike, getting a new game for Christmas, running around under the sprinkler on a hot day. School, work, church and socializing at home or at a friend's house were the activities, except for maybe boy or girl scouts. Today things are too complicated, have too many issues, and people are very dissatisfied with the world. People look for reasons to be unhappy, because we've "got it all." We're bored. Less is more.

    • @guinevererodriguez3807
      @guinevererodriguez3807 Před 4 lety +54

      I agree with most of your comment but I’ll like to say I highly disagree with the whole “talking back” and “kids not being asked their opinion” . Personally I want my (future) kids to do both of those things. Now of course not for everything or in any kind of way, but I dislike that back then you could state ANYTHING and it would be seen as “talking back”. That kind of stuff is basically like saying “how dare you have any thought of your own!” “How dare have a different opinion from what I raised you!” “How dare you think critically!” I want my children to be critical thinkers and have their own opinions (and be able to explain why they think that way). I want them to be like that because as far as I know, society has progressed and advanced thanks to people who were critical thinkers. Sorry for the long comment.

    • @OhBLZD
      @OhBLZD Před 3 lety +3

      Sounds exactly as life right now..

    • @Enraged-vu2vb
      @Enraged-vu2vb Před 3 lety +19

      @@RickR69 dude i get where your at but i c'mon it's old now it's dead. it was fun while it lasted though...

    • @madelers
      @madelers Před 3 lety +2

      🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻

    • @Enraged-vu2vb
      @Enraged-vu2vb Před 3 lety +6

      iAMhonka lol ok

  • @MarioMario-gf5wb
    @MarioMario-gf5wb Před rokem +14

    cs188 sent us here!

  • @ultratoughscene
    @ultratoughscene Před rokem +28

    Julia takes the entire fahkin week to do the shopping!

  • @Dolxe_luna
    @Dolxe_luna Před 5 lety +1263

    Ohh look! When food wasn't all covered in plastic!!!

    • @smalls1713
      @smalls1713 Před 5 lety +51

      Nope, just flies and parasites

    • @steveluth3139
      @steveluth3139 Před 5 lety +23

      And when they had to trow away lots of food because of it. Unless we stop demanding we can get every type of food we want at any time we can not go back. Probably can't even go back because of the population increase. You do know that the plastic used on food is more enviroment friendly then what we all would trow away if we didn't? Why do people think these problems are so easy to define and fix :')

    • @LilRotte3
      @LilRotte3 Před 5 lety +10

      Just toxic powders.

    • @palefeathervaldez3563
      @palefeathervaldez3563 Před 4 lety +4

      @Adam Defibaugh Such a smart ass aren't you.

    • @LilRotte3
      @LilRotte3 Před 4 lety +1

      @Retro Playz nope.

  • @stephensgate1
    @stephensgate1 Před 5 lety +207

    I was born in ‘62, married late in life, and my wife, born in ‘66, have a 12 year old son, still live like we did as children. I worked for the same company for 35 years, retired now, and we both are home everyday when our son comes home from school. We still hang our clothes out to dry, we cook 90% of our meals at home. I absolutely hate how things are these days, but do all I can to live the way I was raised. I feel blessed to have been raised in the way my parents raised me. -Stephen, Ohio

    • @bobbyfrancis8957
      @bobbyfrancis8957 Před 4 lety +1

      Did you grow up with a wringer-washing machine, like I did? (It still had to be plugged in, though).

    • @ducluongdo8012
      @ducluongdo8012 Před 4 lety

      Come to Asia then. We still hanging our clothes to dry them.

    • @urekmazino6800
      @urekmazino6800 Před 4 lety

      That's cause of your location.

    • @Nadine4266
      @Nadine4266 Před 4 lety +6

      God Bless you

    • @vuk8623
      @vuk8623 Před 4 lety +1

      Buckeye Bushcrafter come to the balkans, we still do most of that stuff actually all of the world does as long as you’re not in a major city

  • @ashrafnm2448
    @ashrafnm2448 Před rokem +4

    What a sweet family. During those days people lived their lives full of togetherness., though not possible now.

  • @NotThatBob
    @NotThatBob Před 7 měsíci +5

    I was born in the 50s. My family was called middle class poor. But we had a house. I wore hand-me-downs and often had carboard in the bottom of my shoes because of holes lol. But OMG we lived better than most kids today. After school I delivered news papers, then I did odd jobs for neighbors. Weekends was when I cut lawns, or shoveled snow. I even washed cars. We always had food and our utilities were never cut.
    I loved that life. I'm retired now, not rich, but I have zero debts.
    BTW, Personally know teens now a days that work very hard. So there is hope for the future. Life when I was a kid was hard, but OMG it was so fun.

  • @briankearney6386
    @briankearney6386 Před 3 lety +324

    If these people in the video could see 70 years ahead to the future I think they would be mortified

    • @tomsdotter3228
      @tomsdotter3228 Před 2 lety +31

      I grew up in the 50s and 60s. I AM mortified.

    • @gerardramirez6320
      @gerardramirez6320 Před 2 lety +15

      I would think so, am 63 and I am mortified. Disregard of property and life, we used to play wiffle ball in the street at night because nobody had ac , all colors of people and we had fun and were respectful.

    • @seecanon5840
      @seecanon5840 Před 2 lety +7

      I was born in 1951, now 70 and was mortified 30 years ago when wages went up, housing stayed the same and morality, character, respect and humanity started going down the drain. People worried more about the color of their skin, when they got their ‘monthly allowance’ and they didn’t have to work for what they needed, housing, transportation, healthcare and a job that would last more than 4 years. Now housing, transportation, healthcare, food and education has gone to hades in a hand basket.

    • @robarment7673
      @robarment7673 Před 2 lety +4

      If I was transported back to the 50’s as an adult, I’d be mortified.

    • @mikezylstra7514
      @mikezylstra7514 Před 2 lety +5

      Thank goodness I was born in '48. If I was 30 today I'd hang myself.

  • @jeffmorse645
    @jeffmorse645 Před 4 lety +178

    I was born in 1960. My older sisters and brother were born in the late 1940s and mid 1950s. Dad was a union construction worker (crane operator) and Mom was a housewife. We had a comfortable home, nice car and everything we needed on Dad's paycheck. Mom worked hard too - keeping a home and raising four kids wasn't easy. I'm really grateful to have been born into a family like mine during that time.

    • @rondarawson6236
      @rondarawson6236 Před 3 lety +2

      You were soooooo lucky😁👍

    • @hunterhoefker
      @hunterhoefker Před 3 lety +3

      idek why i’m watching this😭 i was born in 2002

    • @jeffmorse645
      @jeffmorse645 Před 3 lety +2

      @@hunterhoefker Gosh idk, maybe because you're curious about what life was like in the past?😉

    • @musahaque2000
      @musahaque2000 Před 3 lety

      Born 2000, have a twin brother and little brother born late 2000s, stepdad used to be a waitor now a factory worker, mum used to run a home-day care now does nursin', came from workin' class home then got better, mum would work up to full hours a day, family was strugglin' financially and to provide vacancy but pulled through, grateful as well for what I have.

    • @thatgirlshae6913
      @thatgirlshae6913 Před 3 lety +5

      I was born in 2001. Glad I was NOT alive in the 50s. I’m black. Much better off in the modern era lol

  • @JustMe99999
    @JustMe99999 Před rokem +4

    Produced in 1950 - just the beginning of the decade. Probably more representative of the post-war 40's life.

  • @Chris-lh7wj
    @Chris-lh7wj Před rokem +53

    I was born in 83. The thing I always notice about this generation, which i guess would be my grandparents or the WW2 generation, is how genuine and moral they were. The seemed to have a better sense of right vs wrong. They helped each other because it was the right thing to do, whereas today people only seem to help so that others will think better of them. I don't understand how this happened, how does morality just go away? How do we go from being a close knit community to being complete strangers?

    • @alisonhowton1039
      @alisonhowton1039 Před rokem

      Their children/our parents turned out to be greedy, and voted for that "trickle down economics" bs. Boomers really took their childhoods for granted and destroyed it for their own kids and grandkids. It's so sad, because the adults who came from the great depression (their childhood) and lived this lifestyle did NOT want this to happen. But their boomer kids just shoved them into retirement homes, waited for them to die, and then took the money and squandered it on themselves.

    • @robinguertin574
      @robinguertin574 Před rokem +16

      School prayer was taken out of the public school in the 60's, that certainly didn't help. They kicked God out, and things have been going downhill ever since.

    • @Thundralight
      @Thundralight Před 11 měsíci +6

      Media and Hollywood

    • @greggmitchell4173
      @greggmitchell4173 Před 11 měsíci +6

      We need to get back to this. No morals anymore.

    • @Thundralight
      @Thundralight Před 11 měsíci +1

      ​@@Frunobulax74 Most people own nothing they are just under the illusion they do. Miss house or car payments

  • @quester09
    @quester09 Před 5 lety +2501

    I was a kid then. It wasn't too bad, except for the constant anxiety about imminent nuclear annihilation.
    duck and cover, children.

    • @kathleenmacellis751
      @kathleenmacellis751 Před 5 lety +82

      comets & blueberries ... remember cowering under our desks during air raid drills ?

    • @sharid76
      @sharid76 Před 5 lety +97

      Kathleen Macellis - Yes!! And I also remember wondering why we were crawling on the floor under a wood and steel desk to "protect ourselves" from something that could vaporize us in the blink of an eye!? 🤔 And nobody really had an answer for me when I asked. I was a precocious child, and tended to think and act and ask in terms of direct questions, expecting direct answers in return!
      I was in the 1st grade in 1963, and of course 2nd in 1964, and still recall grim faces and strange news reports on TV before I even started school when the Cuban missile crisis was going on, as well as later on just before Thanksgiving when President Kennedy was shot! That was a very strange time for me.
      Back then, students in all grades still rode the bus to school, including juniors and seniors. They rode the same bus I did when I was in 1st and 2nd grade, but they transferred to another bus at my school to get to their high school. I remember hearing the strangest conversations during the period of 1963-64 and 1964-65, when they were talking about some strange place (to me) called Viet Nam, and some stuff about the Army and fighting in another War.
      We weren't in it as heavily in 1963 as we were going to get yet, and where I grew up was heavily populated with all 5 branches of the military, so going to school with "military kids" was just a daily fact of life. They would come and go at the oddest times, and talked a lot about their fathers and older brothers being in it.
      The Army has two posts there, one of them Transportation HQ for the whole Army.
      The Air Force Base was Tactical Air Command HQ, which was renamed in the 90's to Combat Air Command (I think.) My husband was in the Air Force when we met and married, stationed at that base.
      The US Navy North Atlantic Fleet Headquarters is in Norfolk, VA, just "a hop, skip and a jump" down the road, and even the Coast Guard has a station in Yorktown. Military everywhere.
      There is also Newport News Shipbuilding right downtown, on the banks of the James River, and they build all the Navy submarines, and many aircraft carriers. They are also a repair and refit location, and many ships being repaired are "home ported" there during that time.
      The Marines are also stationed with the Navy, and Quantico Marine Base isn't that far away. So, seeing uniforms isn't all that unusual, and I remember lots of housing areas nearby that were only for military families. I became a military wife when we married, but we didn't live "in quarters" because it was just the two of us, no kids, and it seemed you couldn't even get quarters unless you had children back then! It would be another 20 years before housing was upgraded, rebuilt and built new by private companies who have contracted out to provide quarters for military families. They look like high grade apartment, townhouse and semi-detached quality homes now, with all kinds of amenities! And all it costs you is your housing allowance, which everyone who lives off base gets ANYWAY. But we got out well before any of that stuff happened, and lived off base. Anyway, enough ruminating! It's time for breakfast! 😉

    • @graviler2514
      @graviler2514 Před 5 lety +45

      the real purpose of covering beneath desks is for finding and identifying successfully the remains of the bodies under the collapsed buildings, good luck hiding from radiation.

    • @ooluta7578
      @ooluta7578 Před 5 lety +75

      Not that bad? You must be white...black kids feared nuclear annihilation and being lynched.....or the lynching of their parents

    • @summerseahorse1363
      @summerseahorse1363 Před 5 lety +11

      OO Luta I take it you lived through the era?

  • @Skeptigal1
    @Skeptigal1 Před 3 lety +278

    At 60, I've lived both lives. A few moms worked outside the home, but most were still homemakers, and my mom was the BEST. Busy every minute cooking, baking, sewing, truly making a home and loving it. Dad worked hard and relaxed when he got home. We kids played outdoors with the neighbors and entertained ourselves. Dogs ran free and joined in the fun. Today, the world is unrecognizable, and it hasn't changed for the better. Wish I could go back, but at least I experienced it!

    • @timmybuckm9868
      @timmybuckm9868 Před 3 lety

      Cool

    • @toscatattertail9813
      @toscatattertail9813 Před 3 lety +18

      Amen, So much has changed. 2 income families aren't making ends meet. Then credit cards were seen as an last resort evil, now they are almost a necessity. You made your own clothes if you were female (at least i did once i got old enough to manage the old treadle sewing machine) now it's cheaper to buy them. There are fewer families sitting down together for an evening meal, people take their meals to thier individual desks and eat separately. Now you have the "No child left behind" policy, which is bogus because some kids need that extra time to mature and learn. Personally i would like to see the schools go back to a more individual, less test oriented learning theory.

    • @mj_romero4687
      @mj_romero4687 Před 3 lety +7

      You know, the life you described is very similar to the one I used to have back in Colombia. Now in Canada you don't see any of that (running outside, talking to the neighbours). I think it's a problem within the developped countries

    • @riggs20
      @riggs20 Před 3 lety +4

      Not all changes have been bad! It's too bad we can't hang on to the good stuff while incorporating things that have changed for the better! The best of both worlds!

    • @MissMolly3377
      @MissMolly3377 Před 3 lety +10

      Yes. It was a fantastic life, wasn't it? My mom was the same way. My dad was a hard worker, always working for us, too. I miss those days. You're right, the world is unrecognizable, but we did get to live this way. It was wonderful.

  • @madcat789
    @madcat789 Před rokem +230

    When I say I miss the fifties, I don't mean the nuclear anxiety, the racism, the sexism; I meant this. Being able to plan and buy your own home. Having a union that will be in your family for generations. Being able to work analogue and to do things in your head. Friendly neighbors. Friendly cities(or at least the illusion of it), everything.
    I will never be able to live this life.

    • @Erik_Ochoa013
      @Erik_Ochoa013 Před 9 měsíci +22

      As a Gen Z, you just described what I want to see and experience to a T. We shouldn’t want to bring the 50s back, it should already be here.

    • @madcat789
      @madcat789 Před 9 měsíci +12

      @@Erik_Ochoa013 Buddy the last decade that was like this was the 1990s and the early 2000s, up to 2008. Those were the best years of my life.

    • @hoshimaruhajime7933
      @hoshimaruhajime7933 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@madcat789ain't it the houseing crisis in 07

    • @madcat789
      @madcat789 Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@hoshimaruhajime7933 the crisis started slowly in 2007 and kicked off in 08.

    • @user-kc7mu4jp4p
      @user-kc7mu4jp4p Před 8 měsíci +8

      Well said, exactly right. Those who were vulnerable to racism and sexism had a harder time in those days. The family shown here were part of the relatively lucky set.

  • @jasoncutshaw8401
    @jasoncutshaw8401 Před rokem +6

    Why can't We have this life today??

  • @cindyweir9645
    @cindyweir9645 Před 2 lety +698

    My gosh I remember we had that same lawnmower. I was born in 1947 and everyone enjoyed this type of life. This was the blueprint for American families. My granddad and father worked at a GM plant, belonged to the union and made a living wage.
    Almost everyone had a garden and ate dinner together every evening. My mother was the best cook ever. Sunday dinners at grandparents house, then the adults would play penny ante poker. Family reunions in my aunts backyard, and chicken soup on the stove. We had a coal furnace when I was 8 and gas when we moved in our own house. Us kids played outside till dark. All the neighbors knew each other and helped out if you needed anything.
    I remember our first TV set with 3 or 4 channels, westerns, Howdy Doody,
    I Love Lucy and Arthur Godfrey.
    Life was simple then for sure.
    Thanks for the memories.

    • @hopefletcher7420
      @hopefletcher7420 Před 2 lety +63

      That was my childhood too. So many good memories. We weren't rich but my parents bought their first house in 1954, four years after they married. The mortgage was $52 a month. Mom made her own bread and canned fruits and vegetables.
      She had a routine. I remember Monday was washing day. The washing machine had wheels so it could be rolled to the sink and a hose to connect it to the faucet. It had electric rollers on top to squeez the clothes. Hung outside except in the winter when they were hung in the cellar. She sprinkled the clothes that needed ironing, rolled them up tight and put them in a heavy plastic bag. Tuesday was ironing day.
      She cooked three meals a day and I remember she would inspect the cupboards and make the menu for the coming week before making the weekly grocery list. The menu always included a "leftovers" night because you didn't throw away food.
      We were in a small town in Connecticut. There were no sidewalks in residential streets, or street lights. No one was afraid of strangers. We didn't have a TV until maybe 58 but Mom read to us every evening and we listened to shows on the radio and played just using our imaginations. Going to the drive-in movies was a BIG deal. Church every Sunday, Weekday Church School every Wednesday (Catholics went to Holy Family, Protestants went to Magyar Evangelical Reformed Church and I think the lone Jewish kid got the afternoon off), and Summer Bible School every summer.
      When I compare my childhood memories to what the world is like today for kids I feel sad. I think most children today don't have what we did: freedom and innocence, and parents who protected us from adult worries.

    • @Gail1Marie
      @Gail1Marie Před 2 lety

      How did your coal furnace work? Did you have one of those "octopus" kinds in the basement? Did it have an automatic feed for the coal? Or did you have to stoke it up every night before bed by hand (and again during the day)? I can't imagine how much dust there was all over the furniture from using coal!

    • @BellyJae
      @BellyJae Před 2 lety +5

      I have one of these lawnmowers now. We have a pretty small yard and I refuse to buy a gas powered one. :)

    • @Gail1Marie
      @Gail1Marie Před 2 lety +2

      @@BellyJae I envy you. A hand mower keeps the grass so velvety soft compared to a power mower.

    • @cindyweir9645
      @cindyweir9645 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Gail1Marie We had to go to the basement and feed that thing. We had a bin That the coal was dumped in. It did not leave a residue on anything. It was pretty clean. He didn’t have thermostats though so it could get pretty hot upstairs. You controlled it by the vents in the floor.