Rather than me continuing with the hijack of
@margali 's thread, I thought I'd move a response to
@Ridgerunner over here. I hope that is okay with Ridge' and Gardening with Rabbits.
Dad would have been 102 this week. Came close, huh?
Yes, he was a year younger than your father. Dad said that he remembered seeing Coolidge on a train. I didn't ask him to explain that but his family was in Las Cruces by then and wasn't that one of the transcontinental railroad routes?
Anyway, that means our fathers not only experienced the Great Depression but they were 11 and 12 years old when the stock market crashed in 1929. Hoover was president by then.
Whatever optimism for their future that those boys felt during the 1920's, must have taken a serious hit when news spread about speculators jumping out of windows on Wall Street, banks collapsing, and then migrants moving out of the Dust Bowl.
Dad's family home in eastern Oklahoma was somewhat out of that ecological and agricultural disaster. So was their home in southern New Mexico. Also, they managed to arrive there
before the Dust Bowl years. That was probably just a stroke of luck.
Lucky guy but ... not all that much. Pulled himself up by his bootstraps? You know, that is physically impossible and dang near, metaphorically impossible - except for a very small percent of us.
Steve
who remembers colorful flour sacks
I'll help with the hijack. I also remember Eisenhower/Stevenson running against each other. I grew up on a farm where we used plow horses instead of a tractor. Mom made many of my sister's dresses from flour sacks, they were printed with patterns so you could do that and get a pretty dress. Life has changed a lot in my lifetime.
But I think about the changes in my dad's lifetime. He was born in 1917 and grew up on a farm, as did the majority of US citizens of that time. He rode a horse to the grocery as a teenager when his Mom needed something. When his family visited others they traveled in a horse drawn farm wagon, with seven kids you needed something with capacity. Think of modes of communication, I don't think radio stations became that common until the 1920's. Think of the war planes of the WWI, that was state of the art.
Then think of when he died in 2003. It had been a lot of years since we had men on the moon. Supersonic jets had long since been banned for public transportation because of the sonic boom. With proper equipment you could communicate with any part of the globe. The internet was a common way of life.
Things are still changing rapidly, you will probably soon be seeing lists of what the kids graduating high school this year consider ancient history. But I have trouble visualizing anyone going through more of a basic change in lifestyle that Dad went through. ...