My Childhood In The Distant Past
Reluctant as I am to say so I must admit something: I am an old man. My youth was in a Post-World War Two 1940s and 1950s.
I was born in 1946 in Cleveland and raised in a small town in the hills of Western Pennsylvania and, in many ways, I lived a childhood rooted in the 19th century. Whenever I tell someone of my daily life they react as if I was telling them a story about an earlier time. They find it hard to believe when I tell them that my mother bought her fruits and vegetables from a man with a horse drawn wagon, we had bearded hobos knocking on our door for a handout, and quarantine signs on our front door whenever a kid got one of the many childhood diseases.
When I moved from The Valley to go to college in The Big City people were amazed and amused when I told them about The Pony Man.
There were few times more exciting for the neighborhood kids than those days when the old wooden wagon piled high with fruits and vegetables and pulled by a pinto pony came down the street. The Pony Man’s name was Carmine and the pony was Tony. My mother would make her selections and drop her money into the basket that sat on the seat next to Carmine. Business concluded Tony would move on to their next stop. Tony knew the route by heart.
A remnant of the Great Depression were the Hobos who “Rode the rails” from coast to coast looking for work. Many of them had been wandering for decades unable to leave the life on “The Road.” Our house was just two blocks up from the river and the main railroad tracks that carried passengers and
freight up and down the Valley. It was not unusual for a Bearded Hobo to knock on our back door looking for a handout and/or an odd job. My mother was a soft touch and handed out a lot of sandwiches. I once found this symbol scrawled on a tree near the house. It meant that a nice lady lived there.
There were also “Tinkerers” who would walk through the neighborhood shouting out “Knives sharpened! Pots Fixed!” Tinkerers were itinerant repairmen, the original “Jack of all trades” workers. They would help the neighborhood Mothers by pounding out dents in their pots and pans and grinding the kitchen knives sharp again. Those were not throw-away items.
Given recent events in our world most people are seeing the word “Quarantine” for the first time. I grew up seeing that word a dozen times a year.
In the 1950s there were a number of highly contagious diseases that were often called “Childhood diseases.” Measles (3 different versions), Mumps, Chicken Pox, and others would sweep through every
year and the local Board of Health would try to control the diseases by posting “Quarantine” signs on our front door. It meant that no one got in or out of that house until the disease had run its course. My father had several bouts of staying in local motels while I and my brother were sick.
In the Summertime the Quarantine was sometimes violated on purpose. When the word got around that a kid had measles or whatever the neighborhood mothers would throw a “Measles Party” to deliberately expose their kids to the disease just to get it over with before school started again in September. It was somewhat perilous, but effective.
A child’s life in those days in my small town was certainly different. It was a much simpler time in many ways than today. However, it also had its own terrors that no longer exist. Every Summer there was the looming fear of another epidemic of Polio, a disease that is rare today thanks to two men names Salk and Sabin.
I could tell you more stories of my childhood in the time-warp Valley where the modern world collided with earlier days when everyone knew everyone else, your child’s milk came to your door in glass bottles and three cents would send a letter across the country.
Perhaps I will. Let me know what you think I should do.
I vote “yes” for more stories. I have the privilege to hear so many. Others would enjoy, too. Write on, babe.
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It’s wonderful to read these memories, John–which for some reason are remarkably like my own. Only our tinker had a chain-drive tricycle, with the two wheels in front supporting his little work table, which had a framework strung over it from which hung an assortment of knives, scissors, and small pans. I suppose some of them might have been for sale. But as he rode down the street, his hanging cookware and cutlery clanged together like wind chimes. So we could tell he was coming before he ever shouted his trade call.
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These stories are great to read, I think you should continue sharing them. I lived a “little house on the prairie” life growing up. We had the Watkins man and the Fuller Brush man who would stop in about every three months. Mom would keep a list of the things she needed. They would always stay for tea/coffee and homemade pastries and share gossip with mom. They always gave us kids candy so we looked forward to the visits.
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Oh, the diverse backgrounds we have.
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Darlene, what’s the Watkins man? I’m not familiar with that one.
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Mom bought all her spices and baking supplies from him. Watkins vanilla was the best. I was pleased to see Watkins is still in business. Of course, now you would buy the products online instead of from a door-to-door salesman. Thanks, Dawn. https://www.watkins1868.com/
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Thanks!
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I remember the Fuller Brush Man!
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I love reading about these times, especially since the 50s intersect with my own childhood:)
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I definitely enjoy reading your stories. My mom and dad passed away this year but at the time of their deaths they lived in Britt, Iowa, the Hobo Capital of the World. Alas, I didn’t meet any hobos during my childhood in Seattle, but my parents’ stories caught my imagination.
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I think these stories register with some of us who are a little more, ahem, mature. There is a tradeoff with “progress.” It is hard to argue with the simplicity of particular inventions such as a cellphone, but we lose some of the beauty of human interactions. Visits with the milkman—haven’t thought about that in decades. Thanks for that memory, John.
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We who are more, ahem, mature know tbe special value of our childhoods back in a quieter and less technical era.
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Keep the stories coming. Good stuff
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John, this was absolutely wonderful! I remember most of this. Great memories. I was in that long line of children to get the polio shot when it first came out. My brother got German measles, and they were also called ‘hard measles’. Yes, please PLEASE post more. This was delightful!
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Thank you for your kind words , my friend. I’m sure that there will be more. 👍
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That is good news to hear! On a side note, my read-aloud at the library starts this coming week. The first session everyone brings their favorite book they read over the summer, me included. I’m bringing an old book I read, “The Family Under the Bridge.” I get to tell children about hobos!
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For several years I recorded a bunch of children’s books for the Library of Congress Talking Book Program. That was back in the 70s.
Have fun with your kids. 📚
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That is wonderful, John!! Do you recall what books you recorded?
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I don’t recall the titles. It was some time ago. 🗓. I recorded all sorts of things. I was told by the Library that I had half a million listeners a month, worldwide 🌐.
These days I do the occasional TV commercial voiceover and scribble the odd blog.
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Really? A half a million listeners a month? You are doing wonderful things, John.
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