In loving memory of Kenis D. Keathley 6/4/81 - 3/27/22 Loving father, husband, brother, friend and firewood hoarder Rest in peace, Dexterday

Old Timer Stories

Discussion in 'Everything Else (off topic)' started by Greenstick, Jan 30, 2015.

  1. Greenstick

    Greenstick

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    Another thread made me think of this and to not hijack the thread I am starting this one. What old timers stories do you remember being told?
     
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  2. Greenstick

    Greenstick

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    My wife's grandma told us how they were so poor they made underclothing out of the old cloth flour sacks. They just didn't want the one made with the companies name-"Occident". They were worried people might see that and think they were wearing it because they had accidents.
     
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  3. Grizzly Adam

    Grizzly Adam Guest

    Many flour sacks were actually printed with patterns because of people using them for clothing. They knew if the price was the same, the shopper/seamstress/tailor would select the one with the nice pattern.
     
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  4. Grizzly Adam

    Grizzly Adam Guest

    It was also common, at least in this area, for people to wear breadsacks inside their worn out shoes as an attempt to keep their feet dry and warm.
     
  5. Stinny

    Stinny

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    Dad was around 18 when the depression (1st one) started. All his life he would save things for re-use later in some form. A lot of things. Most everyone did if they wanted to survive. He told of riding the SR &RL 2 foot gauge railroad to basketball games. That experience today would be incredible. Back then, it was just how you got there. Unless by horse and carriage. Here is a pic I've posted before of Dad getting Blackout ready to go at the farm...

    Ben & Wynter @ McD's 1984 1.jpeg
     
  6. Greenstick

    Greenstick

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    My grandpa told how in winter so he could go to school he stayed with an old relative in town and only on bitter cold would he fire up the coal stove to save money. He woke many mornings and his glass of water was frozen. To stay warmer in bed his old uncle told him to collect old newspapers and line the mattress under the sheets. He claimed it was remarkable how much warmer he slept.
     
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  7. My IS heats my home

    My IS heats my home

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    My grandarents burned a coal stove back in the 50's (only because of a picture I have somewhere)
    and I think that is the only heat related comparisson I can make with them. I'll have to dig
    through the albums to find the shot. It was a parlor stove and there was a small door on the side of
    the house where coal was delivered and poured into a bin in the basement. In my early days of being
    their grandkid I would come up from the basement with black soot on my hands. :)

    It's not really an old timers story like the thread is asking for but more of a memory of mine
    that involved a stove and a coal bin
     
  8. MightyWhitey

    MightyWhitey

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    My Dad grew up in Chitcago. Both he and his brother slept together in a twin bed on the unheated porch when they were young, as the older brothers and sisters had all the indoor bedrooms. They both wore head covers to bed and used a heavy "feather tick" as a blanket/cover. Dad still swears that feather tick weighed about 100lbs. and once under it you couldn't move!!! They'd wake up on the porch in the winter mornings and there'd be frost on the porch windows from the moisture in their breath freezing on the inside of the windows overnight.


    My Mom grew up having to use an "outhouse" and a "bed pan" until they got an indoor terlit in the early '50's.
     
  9. My IS heats my home

    My IS heats my home

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    I believe it! Great story MW
     
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  10. jetjr

    jetjr

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    One of the funniest is why my great grandmother wouldn't eat boneless pork chops. Seems here dad was a butcher. Of course going through the depression you ate what you could get. One day her dad brought home boneless pork chops. Only thing was she heard him telling his brother they were sliced hog balls. Said she hadn't eaten a boneless pork chop since she heard that.
     
  11. jetjr

    jetjr

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    Not so much a story I heard as one I was involved in. We lived in a fairly populated area with some office buildings and a gym very close. The old man (great grandpa) had a big garden that groundhogs kept getting in. He got the idea to cut a hole in the shed and let me shot them with a .22. We waited til Labor Day when everything was closed to do it. I asked what we were gonna do if anyone called the cops. He said you play young and dumb and I'll play old and dumb. Killed 2 that day with no problems.
     
  12. Stinny

    Stinny

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    "He said you play young and dumb and I'll play old and dumb"... :yes: ... works for me ... ;):BrianK:

    Would have liked to have met your Great Granddad.
     
  13. jetjr

    jetjr

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    Best man I ever knew.
     
  14. wildwest

    wildwest Moderator

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    My father was born premature and extremely small. I was told they kept him in a shoebox in the wood fired oven to survive. I learned after I turned 40 he was delivered in a hospital :rofl: :lol:
     
  15. Gasifier

    Gasifier

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    I once heard that the people in Maine were so tough they would sit in nothing but their shorts in lawn chairs drinking their beers in the snow. I thought, what a bunch of bull___t!:picard:Then, I joined FHC. o_O Ya learn something new everyday.:cool:
     
  16. Stinny

    Stinny

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    :rofl: :lol:... we juz like to have a little stoooopid fun once n' a while, s'all...
    Here's cousin Biff enjoying his new flannel lined Fruit Looms... he said they were wicked warm.

    [​IMG]
     
  17. MightyWhitey

    MightyWhitey

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    Mom, what's for supper????:rofl: :lol::rofl: :lol:
     
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  18. Jack Straw

    Jack Straw

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    The guy on the left is my grandfather, his brother is in the middle and the guy on the right was a mechanic. This pic is from 1923 or 1924. They ran a Plymouth dealership in a small town . Gramps was always telling stories of times at the dealership.
    image.jpg
     
    Last edited: Jan 31, 2015
  19. yooperdave

    yooperdave

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    During the depression, people used to walk the train tracks for any amounts of coal that had fallen off the cars. They would also get out to the potato farms after harvest and before the ground froze for any leftovers in the fields-usually very small ones. And of course, lots of wild game.
    My BIL always says they were so poor that his Mom and Dad couldn't agree on his one gift from them. One wanted to give a toy, the other some clothes. They compromised and gave him a pair of pants with the bottoms of the pockets cut out!
     
  20. jetjr

    jetjr

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    The old man got caught playing dice behind a bar once. Well he swore he wasn't playing but I think otherwise. Said he was laying on the bilco doors to the basement sleeping when the cops showed up.