Are you this old?

   / Are you this old? #101  
I remember my Grand Dad buying 160 acres of land on Grand Lake in Eastern Oklahoma when the lake was being built (about late 1930's early 1940's) for $1.00 per acre. That's right; one dollar per acre. My Dad was in that part of the country scouting for limestone deposits that could be quarried for material for roads and air fields, when he found the land for sale. They called it "dead Indian land".

He built a house and three cabins that he rented out; they didn't have electricity for several years; they used Coleman lanterns for light, drew water from a well with one of those long, tubular well buckets, cooked on a kerosene stove and heated with a fireplace. They had a Servel Refrigerator, that ran on kerosene. I spent many a Summer there (until I discovered girls); the house was only 100 yards to the lake.
 
   / Are you this old? #104  
Well - the pile is getting mighty high. So ..... here goes. I'm not quite as old as 2LaneCruzer but older than k0ua.

I can remember before dirt. It was all rocks and gravel. Then one day - Wallah - there was dirt. The only time I ever heard my Mom swear. It was just a whisper.

It was right after the war. We lived in a small rental house - right next to a gravel pit. Then my Dad got moved. This new house was right next to an apple orchard. Hundreds of acres of good 'ol black dirt. I will never forget - all that dirt was a true joy in my young life.
 
   / Are you this old? #106  
1965 - I graduated from the U of W. My father bought me a brand new VW. It cost $1695. It was that spring - a gas war in Seattle. Gas was $0.20 per gallon. The wife and I drove all the way to Anchorage in the VW. Many of the potholes in the AlCan were larger than that VW.
 
   / Are you this old? #108  
The first record player I remember was my Grandmothers. It was a stand alone model; you had to wind it up, and the music came out of a big megaphone shaped like a morning glory flower. Yucky music.

 
   / Are you this old? #109  
Shoe X-ray.jpeg
 
   / Are you this old? #110  
I do remember those, and looking at the bones of my feet. Thank goodness I never got a new pair of shoes very often, but during the war they made kids shoes out of cardboard. One pair lasted one day...I stomped through a puddle of water on the way home, and they ended up falling apart.
 
   / Are you this old? #111  
The couple that homesteaded my land gave an old "player" to my folks. A rather large wooden box with a large metal "speaker". You wound it up - it played music off round tubes made of something like bakelite. These tubes were the size of large toilet paper tubes.

The bear came over the mountain - Stars and Stripes forever - I'll take you home again Cathleen. It still works but many of the tunes are "warbley". The tubes are no longer perfectly round. I have around 18 tubes.
 
   / Are you this old? #112  
How about gasoline @ 36 cents per imperial gallon?---
---and I drove a VW 'bug' back then! (about$2.00 /full tank)
There was a time when I was selling gasoline for less than 30 cents a gallon in Texas. Many times I thought a VW might be a money saver and good idea, so I'd go by a dealer and drive one around the block and didn't want a VW for another year or two. And in 1965 my cousin bought a new VW. Early one slightly rainy morning, we were in that new VW and he was clowning around on a paved parking lot by yanking up on the park brake and sliding around. But then he ran up a short unpaved road and tried that, dirt piled up against the wheels and over we went. That's the only time I've been in a car that turned over. It turned over on my side, driver's door on top. He got it open and climbed out, stepping on me in the process, then was saying, "Well, come on and get out." I way lying in there laughing too hard to get out. I had been telling him he was going to do that.
 
   / Are you this old? #114  
I would put the penny on the back of the tone arm, cause our cheap GE turn table had no counter weight and the styis would just wallow through the grooves. :) Some folk would put them on the needle end to keep the needle from skipping. My dad had 78s, and had a turn table that used what looked like sewing needles. :) That was MONO. And I remember the explosion of tech to dual channel sound and how amazing that was. :)
I still have the original mono pressing of "Yakkity Sax" by Boots Randolph. The world is full of people who think Monte Python invented that music.
 
   / Are you this old? #116  
Here's an oldie: have you ever seen a hypocaust? That was a basement furnace with a big octopus of 8" ducts that went to every room in the house and circulated air by convection - no furnace fan. It was deluxe in the days before electricity. It would burn about anything; wood, coal, my dad had a cousin with one. He had converted it to a sawdust burner because sawdust was free.
 
   / Are you this old? #117  
I wonder if our coal furnace was originally of the hypocaust type. We'd lived with Grandpa until moving to Flint for Dad to open the TV station. Visiting years later the huge 'pot' and ducts were still there but Grandpa had a gas conversion upfitted with blower and eventually AC. The several 12" or so ducts reduced headroom in ~1/4 of the basement. There never were any cold air returns, but the house heated evenly anyway.
 
   / Are you this old? #118  
Seen one of those in a friend's house in Seattle. He called it the "Octopus" heating system also. It was weird to look at it, and how it worked. :)
 
   / Are you this old? #119  
Oak Forest HS

Still live about 15mins away.
South suburbs are pretty nice still.
Ah, you were south burbs, and I was nw burbs. Now I'm far nw burbs, Barrington area.
 
   / Are you this old? #120  
How about gasoline @ 36 cents per imperial gallon?---
---and I drove a VW 'bug' back then! (about$2.00 /full tank)

I’m younger than most on this thread, but my earliest gas station memories are of my dad pulling in to the local service station and telling one of the owner’s sons to give him $3 worth of gas. That was the usual amount he’d buy. They pumped the gas, checked the oil and tires, and washed the windshield for that $3. It was a big deal for me to be the one to say “$3 please”.
 

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