Sometimes it is interesting to think back about "Life in earlier decades"
I was born in 1937 in a boarding house run by my mother for the "Mountain Ice Company". There was no central heat, no indoor plumbing and no electricity. I really don't remember anything about living is that house except that one of the many ice houses in my home town burned down and I remember seeing that huge fire - one of my brothers was holding me.
The USA got into WW II on December 7, 1941 and I turned 4 on December 18. I don't remember that but I remember my 2 older brothers leaving to go in the army and we didn't see them again until the war ended. My third older brother joined the Navy early in 1943 when he turned 17. I remember the flag with 3 blue stars hanging in the front window.
I recall, buying stamps every week at school and putting them in a book - when you got $18.75 worth you exchanged them for a War Bond.
I remember getting an onion bag and picking milkweed pods for the war effort.
I remember A, B, C windshield stickers to indicate how much gas per week you could have.
We saved every piece of scrap metal, including the foil from chewing gum wrappers and cigarette packs and all tin cans for the war effort.
Turning off all the lights early at night - air raid drills, searching every place you could for old rubber tires, inner tubes and anything else made of rubber to contribute to the war effort.
Almost everything in the Sears catalog was stamped "Not available for the duration" My family didn't have enough money for new toys but it didn't matter because nobody else could get them either. My big Christmas presents in those years were either homemade or second(or third) hand. I didn't even know that until years later.
The speed limit was 35 mph to save tires - to get an A stamp you had to show that you had turned in all but 5 tires.
Every rural family had a Victory Garden. My dad even planted one for my sister and I - it was about 10 feet long by 6 feet wide and we took care of it. We would spade the soil, dad would plant it and we would weed and cultivate it (dad pointed out which were weeds and which were vegies). Dad would do most of the harvesting.
Letters from the "front" were writting on paper so thin it was almost like tissue paper and came in envelopes just as thin. Words and sentences that revealed anything about where the writer was were blacked out.
Kate Smith on the radio taught the whole country to sing "God Bless America" When you heard the National Anthem or saw the flag passing by you stood up. If you didn't somebody would remind you...
Everyone was expected to sacrifice for the "boys overseas". Patriotic signs and posters were everywhere. "Don't you know there's a war on?" was the reply you got if you complained about shortages.
Everybody was at war and everybody made some contribution to the war effort. I remember the unrestrained joy at V-E Day and when V-J Day brought the war to a close. Everybody welcomed our troops home with parades, parties, special services.
Look at the difference in the way we do wars today - 10 years of war in Afganistan and Iraq and if we didn't have TV to watch, we wouldn't even know it was going on.
I was born in 1937 in a boarding house run by my mother for the "Mountain Ice Company". There was no central heat, no indoor plumbing and no electricity. I really don't remember anything about living is that house except that one of the many ice houses in my home town burned down and I remember seeing that huge fire - one of my brothers was holding me.
The USA got into WW II on December 7, 1941 and I turned 4 on December 18. I don't remember that but I remember my 2 older brothers leaving to go in the army and we didn't see them again until the war ended. My third older brother joined the Navy early in 1943 when he turned 17. I remember the flag with 3 blue stars hanging in the front window.
I recall, buying stamps every week at school and putting them in a book - when you got $18.75 worth you exchanged them for a War Bond.
I remember getting an onion bag and picking milkweed pods for the war effort.
I remember A, B, C windshield stickers to indicate how much gas per week you could have.
We saved every piece of scrap metal, including the foil from chewing gum wrappers and cigarette packs and all tin cans for the war effort.
Turning off all the lights early at night - air raid drills, searching every place you could for old rubber tires, inner tubes and anything else made of rubber to contribute to the war effort.
Almost everything in the Sears catalog was stamped "Not available for the duration" My family didn't have enough money for new toys but it didn't matter because nobody else could get them either. My big Christmas presents in those years were either homemade or second(or third) hand. I didn't even know that until years later.
The speed limit was 35 mph to save tires - to get an A stamp you had to show that you had turned in all but 5 tires.
Every rural family had a Victory Garden. My dad even planted one for my sister and I - it was about 10 feet long by 6 feet wide and we took care of it. We would spade the soil, dad would plant it and we would weed and cultivate it (dad pointed out which were weeds and which were vegies). Dad would do most of the harvesting.
Letters from the "front" were writting on paper so thin it was almost like tissue paper and came in envelopes just as thin. Words and sentences that revealed anything about where the writer was were blacked out.
Kate Smith on the radio taught the whole country to sing "God Bless America" When you heard the National Anthem or saw the flag passing by you stood up. If you didn't somebody would remind you...
Everyone was expected to sacrifice for the "boys overseas". Patriotic signs and posters were everywhere. "Don't you know there's a war on?" was the reply you got if you complained about shortages.
Everybody was at war and everybody made some contribution to the war effort. I remember the unrestrained joy at V-E Day and when V-J Day brought the war to a close. Everybody welcomed our troops home with parades, parties, special services.
Look at the difference in the way we do wars today - 10 years of war in Afganistan and Iraq and if we didn't have TV to watch, we wouldn't even know it was going on.
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