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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsSpring, 1962: A Day in the Life of a 7-Year-Old Boy (party lines, antenna TV, dirt roads)
Rabbit hole, inspired by Mike 03 post.
FredFlix
Published on Sep 20, 2017
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Song: Walk Right In
Artist: Rooftop Singers
Album: American Jukebox Classics
Licensed to YouTube by: UMG (on behalf of Blue Lagoon); UMPG Publishing, CMRRA, Peermusic, LatinAutor - PeerMusic, BMI - Broadcast Music Inc., UNIAO BRASILEIRA DE EDITORAS DE MUSICA - UBEM, Sony ATV Publishing, and 9 Music Rights Societies
Song: Baby (You've Got What It Takes)
Artist: Brook Benton
Album: Love and Marriage - 101 Classic Songs for Living and Loving Together
Writers: Phil Spector, Ellie Greenwich, Jeff Barry
Licensed to YouTube by: UMG (on behalf of HLI); LatinAutor - UMPG, LatinAutor, LatinAutor - SonyATV, Warner Chappell, LatinAutor - Warner Chappell, EMI Music Publishing, Audiam (Publishing), BMI - Broadcast Music Inc., Sony ATV Publishing, UNIAO BRASILEIRA DE EDITORAS DE MUSICA - UBEM, CMRRA, Abramus Digital, UMPG Publishing, PEDL, LatinAutor - PeerMusic, and 11 Music Rights Societies
hedda_foil
(16,375 posts)PS. No seatbelts in 1962. They weren't mandated until '68 and then different states started requiring them in different years. You didn't have to use them though. That took a lot longer.
Not only were seatbelts something of a novelty, I think parents back then with a lot of kids were more creative in finding places where the kids could fit.
I can remember when I was small enough to fit on (in ? ) the back shelf in Mom's VW beetle. Of course, if you had a station wagon or pickup truck, you could fit nearly unlimited amounts of children in the back.
yewberry
(6,530 posts)but we did have a party line at the house in Maine until the mid-70s. And the phone was one of the old big black bakelite wall-mounted rotaries. After that we upgraded to a plastic avocado green phone that matched the hideous orange and green vinyl wallpaper.