on 01-02-2014 04:22 PM
A young lad asked me the other day, 'What was your favourite 'fast food' when you were growing up?'
'We didn’t have fast food when I was growing up,' I informed him. 'All the food was slow.’
'C'mon, seriously. Where did you eat?’
'It was a place called home,'' I explained.
'Mum cooked every day and when Dad got home from work, we sat down together at the table to eat dinner. If I didn't like what was on my plate, I was allowed to sit there until I did like it.'
I didn't tell him the part about how I had to have permission to leave the table.
Here are some other things I would have told him about my childhood, but I’d figured he couldn’t handle it:
For example . . . . .
1. Some parents NEVER owned their own house, wore jeans, set foot on a golf course, travelled out of the state let alone country, or had a credit card.
2. My parents never drove me to school. We walked or rode a bicycle [you were really lucky to have one) that weighed probably 50 pounds, and only had one speed - slow.
3. We didn't have a television in our house until I was 10.
It was, of course black and white, and the stations went off the air at 10 PM, after playing the National Anthem and Epilogue. Transmission commenced at around 6:00 am with a locally produced news or farm show, featuring local people.
4. Pizzas were not around, and when introduced they were not ‘home’ delivered. But milk was.
5. Newspapers were delivered by young boys earning a few bob a week – a bob was the equivalent of 10 cents. My brother delivered newspapers, six days a week at 6:00 every morning.
6. Film stars kissed with their mouths shut and parents slept in ‘Single’ beds - at least they did in the films. There were no movie ratings because all movies were responsibly produced for everyone to enjoy viewing, without sex, profanity, violence or almost anything offensive.
If you grew up in a generation before there was fast food, you may want to share some of these memories with your children and / or grandchildren.
Just don't blame me if they bust a gut laughing.
Growing up isn't what it used to be, is it?
MEMORIES from a friend:
1. My Dad is cleaning out my grandmother's house (she died recently) and he brought me an old lemonade bottle.
In the bottle top was a stopper with a bunch of holes in it.
I knew immediately what it was, but my daughter had no idea.
She thought they had tried to make it into a salt shaker or something.
I knew it as the bottle that sat on the end of the ironing board to 'sprinkle' clothes with water because we didn't have steam irons. Man, I am old.
How many do you remember?
2. Headlight dip-switches on the floor of the car
3. Ignition switches on the dashboard.
4. Trouser leg clips for bicycles without chain guards.
5. Soldering irons you heated on a gas burner.
6. Using hand signals predating indicators.
Older Than Dirt Quiz:
Count all the ones that you remember NOT the ones you were told about. Ratings at the bottom.
1. Sweet [lollies] cigarettes
2. Coffee shops with juke boxes
3. Home milk delivery in glass bottles
4. Party lines on the telephone
5. Newsreels before the movie
6. The Sun; The Argus; The Herald; Newsday
7. TV test patterns that came on at night after the last show and were there until TV shows started again in the morning.
8. Originally there were only 3 TV channels [Channel 0 later 10 was the fourth)
But some people were lucky to receive 2 channels – lots of ‘snowing, ghosting, etc
9. Peashooters
10. 78 rpm - 16 1/3 rpm records - 33 rpm records - 45 rpm records
11. The introduction of vinyl and the LP [Long Play]records
12. Hi-fi's
13. Metal ice trays with levers
14. Blue flashbulb
15. Cork popguns
16. Wash tub wringers
17. Ice chests – and ice being delivered from a horse drawn cart later replaced by a little truck
18. School children being allowed to go home for lunch or the local shopping strip for chips & potato cakes or a hamburger wrapped in last weeks newspaper.
If you remembered -
0 - 5 You're still young
6 -10 You are getting older
11- 15 Don't tell your age
16 -18 You're positively ancient!
I must be 'positively ancient' but those memories are some of the best of my life.
PS. I used a large type face so you could read it easily
on 01-02-2014 05:15 PM
We made stilts from tin cans and string, hopscotch, skipping, and coming home when the streetlight came on (that is, if you had a street light)
Topping/tailing through lack of beds/floor space.
Favourite TV shows, Rin Tin Tin; Fury; Captain Fortune; Mouseketeers; Spin & Marty; Lassie.
Cotton nappies on the prop clothesline
on 01-02-2014 05:18 PM
played outside in the street, rode bikes without helmets, parents never worried where we were, hotels closed at 6pm. no sunday shopping, most shops closed at 12 noon on a saturday.
Kids never bored, played hop skotch, marbles, pickup stix knucklebones and skipping............all outside
01-02-2014 05:22 PM - edited 01-02-2014 05:22 PM
@purple_haize wrote:We had our milk in a billy can, the milkman use to come every day.
In Adelaide the rubbish men use to come to the back of the house to empty the bins.
The baker, the bottle man (collected old bottles) the milkman all had horse drawn carts.
Ah, the bottlo. Wish I still had some of those bottles, be worth a motza now.
on 01-02-2014 05:22 PM
I think childhood obesity began when the TV remote was invented. Dad used get us to turn the dial.
on 01-02-2014 05:25 PM
Cream on top of the milk, and a special gadget to syphon it off to use for whipping cream.
on 01-02-2014 05:26 PM
remember everything same as you spot, but not rental TV's with coin boxes?? I do remember we had a colour tv before colour was actually in australia, dad did a fair bit of ducking and diving so that could have had something to do with it.
on 01-02-2014 05:29 PM
Hi kengillard,
I still have my grandmothers (who was born in 1879) stirring stick and use it to poke the hand washing clothes into the water.
My mum used to use it for the copper, and I rescued it when she died..My dad made it for his mother but it is considerably shorter now - only about 18 inches long.
D
on 01-02-2014 05:30 PM
We had toilet paper rolls, but some of our neighbours had the cut up magazine pages/newspaper.. didn't like that one bit.
We had a copper in the laundry, in my time, it was just used every now and then to boil stuff up (what I don't know, bed linen, towels?). There was an agitator machine as well, and concrete tubs.
Rural mailman delivered the mail and fresh bread.
on 01-02-2014 05:33 PM
@purple_haize wrote:
@polksaladallie wrote:Detergent for the kitchen, laundry, hair washing, etc wasn't in Australia until 1961 or later.
My mother use to wash my hair with johnsons shampoo back in the late 40's.
For the laundry she used sunlight soap.
I wonder what was in the shampoo. Because detergent wasn't here until the 60s. Our hair was washed with bar soap, and I think there was vinegar in the rinse to remove the soap residue.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Beck's shampoo since 1930. Johnson's shampoo since about 1936. Johnson's Baby shampoo since 1954.
And never to forget for heavy soiled clothes the old kerosene soap also used mixed with sugar & hotwater into a paste to draw the heads of boils or splinters and such.
For gentle washing there was lux flakes & their soaps for bathing.
I can rember my mother trying a liquid washing soap in 1956.
on 01-02-2014 05:33 PM