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Children of the 1930s & 1940s "The
Last Ones." We are the last to hear We saw the 'boys' home from the war build their Cape Cod style
houses, pouring the cellar, tar
papering it over and living there until they could afford the time and money to
build it out. We are the last who spent childhood without television. With
no TV, we spent our childhood "playing outside until the street lights came on." We did play outside and we did play
on our own. There was no little league. The lack of television in our early years meant, for most of us,
that we had little real understanding
of what the world was like. Our Saturday afternoons, if at the movies, gave us newsreels of the war and the holocaust sandwiched in between
westerns and cartoons. Newspapers and magazines were written for adults. We are
the last who had to find out for ourselves. As we grew up, the country was exploding with growth. The G.I. Bill
gave returning veterans the
means to get an education and spurred colleges to grow. VA loans fanned a
housing boom. Pent
up demand coupled with new installment payment plans put factories to work. New highways brought jobs and mobility. The veterans joined civic clubs
and became active in
politics. In the late 40s and early 50's the country seemed to lie in the
embrace of brisk but quiet order as it gave birth to its new middle class. Most of us had no life plan, but with the unexpected virtue of
ignorance and an economic rising
tide, we simply stepped into the world and went to find out. We entered a world
of overflowing
plenty and opportunity; a world where we were welcomed. Based on our confidence
and naïve belief that there was more where this came from, we shaped life as we
went. We enjoyed a luxury; we felt secure in our future. Of course, just
as today, not all Americans shared
in this experience. Depression poverty was deep rooted. Polio was still a
crippler. The Korean War was a dark presage in the early 1950s and by mid-decade,
school children were learning to Duck under their desks in case of a bomb
attack. We are the last to experience an interlude when there were no
existential threats to our homeland.
We came of age in the late 1940s and early 1950s. The war was over and the cold war,
terrorism, climate change, technological upheaval and perpetual economic
insecurity had yet
to haunt life with insistent unease. Only we can remember both a time of apocalyptic war and a time when
our world was secure and
full of bright promise and plenty. We experienced both. We grew up at the best
possible time, a time when the world was getting better, not worse. We are the 'last ones.' |