Time marches on. It was a terrible year for me. We lived in Gallup New Mexico close to the Navajo Indian reservation. I had every disease known to mankind in the 2 years that we lived there. I was 8 years old. I was so happy when we left that town.
This was the year that I moved to southern California as a 2-year-old toddler - just a week after the Cuban Missile Crisis - and where I would spend my most cherished years growing up. Thanks for bringing this retrospective to RUclips.
I was born in 1962 and live just a few miles from that first KMart, which was just recently torn down and is destined to be an LA Fitness supposedly...progress. I guess... BTW, this is now my favorite YT channel and your quiet, understated pacing of these videos is amazingly perfect!
I was 15 in 1962. We had been practicing emergency alert drills for several years where students moved under their desks and covered their heads in case of incoming bombs from Russia. It was during the time of the Cold War and some people built underground bomb shelters in their backyards. But no one locked their front doors at night, the car keys were left on the floor of the car so we always knew where they were, every kid on the block played kick the can in the street until the street lights came on, we walked to school rain or shine, and if you were out walking around town during school hours any adult felt it their responsibility and duty to stop you and ask why you weren’t in school. We had dress codes in school, girls were not allowed to wear pants except our gym shorts which were required, too short of a skirt would get you sent home to change along with too low of a neckline. No one wore logo clothes, they didn’t exist, neither did panty hose, hot rollers, curling irons or personal hair dryers. We went to the library to do research for school papers and hand wrote them using cursive handwriting that we had learned in grade school. Literally like another world.
I was born this year and I sure remember the nuclear drills at school as you described. I remember that our doors were almost never locked . We had a dress code as well and I had trouble in grade School with my long hair and hippie cloths as a 3rd grader ? still a hippie at heart all these years later . God Bless
@@balerjohnson3099 I was born in 1962 and we never had nuclear drills those were in the fifties and early sixties so you must be older than being born in 1962 and yes my parents locked their doors every single night
Jethro Bodine remains one of my two favorite TV characters of all-time (The Reverend Jim Ignatowski from Taxi being the other). Whether he was playing a double-not spy, serving up meals at The Hungry Gizzard, or flashing that sixth grade education with his siphering skills, there will never be another one like Jethro. And hanging by the cement pond with Elly May was every young boys fantasy. 🤤 What a great show!
I'm so glad you included Vaughn Meader's success with his unprecedented, audacious First Family album. I researched his life and got to know him in the 1990s. His story was amazing. So was he.
I don't know if you ever got to hear Rich Little's 1982 homage (or is it rip-off?) of Vaughn's first Family, entitled The First Family Rides Again, but it pales badly in comparison to the original. Meader makes a guest appearance, but it doesn't help.
@@ernestcruz6316 Yes. I was puzzled about why his presence on the album was so played down, as though Vaughn Meader were an obscure person who had no significance in the history of The First Family. He was nonchalant in his answer, giving no real reason. Earl Doud, the producer of his seminal '62 First Family album, called him and said essentially, hey we're in L.A. to make this album, want to drop by? As though it were a skit at summer camp! I wonder if Little wanted Meader's involvement minimized.
@@brianarbenz1329 I hadn't thought of that, but it's a shame that he was given the same treatment as former Playboy Playmate Susan Lynn Kiger, who only got one line of dialogue on the album.
Hi Recollection Road, I just wanted to thank you for the producing this touching "Timeline of Life in America". Your narrative is meaningful, your picture selection germane to milestones of our history, and the musical background reflects the nostalgia of an era long gone. Thank you for the memories, thank you for bringing me back "home" to a time of innocence, freedom and hope - Our society was not perfect but it was slowly getting better. Optimism was in the air. May God bless America and may Peace be with you. Ciao, L (Veteran)
Loved 1962 A Jr in high school, being taught by teachers that loved to teach and loved us. No social media and main stream media was about reporting. I got to live during a growing America.
Wow a lot happened... Plus I graduated HS, took summer classes at UofM, got into a boat accident and had two operations and had to drop out of collage.... Busy year alright.
I had forgotten about Vaughn Meader. I watched him on Ed Sullivan with my parents. His career sure took a hit when President Kennedy was killed, never to rebound.
@@nonamegame9857 In November 1963, Vaughn Meader recorded his first beyond-JFK album of humor called "Have Some Nuts." It was topical political and social satire, but no references to Kennedy. Two weeks later, the tragedy happened in Dallas and the tapes were shelved, then released in mid-1964. Have Some Nuts is still obscure, but filled with clever skits.
I was tempted to complain that you didn't mention the first James Bond movie "Dr. No" which was released in October 1962, but then recalled that it wasn't released in the U.S. until May 1963.
We moved into our home during the height of the Missile Crisis. Mom, a single-parent, said she was so worried about whether she would be able to make the payments (particularly in view of banks that were not helpful to a woman head of the family) that she was the only person in the nation not completely wrapped up in the possibility of a nuclear war. We did just fine with the home. I lived there 20 years, moving out in October 1982 as a 24-year-old.
Kmart came to Winnipeg in ‘66. My parents used to take us there on Saturday nights just to look around because that was the only major store open on Saturday night in that era. First sub sandwich I ever had was from the Kmart cafeteria. The Kmart auto centre had a giant sign advertising ‘Fisk Tires’ above it.
Winnipeg Canada? We Had Woowards Department Store Vancouver B C The Best Apple Pie 19 cents a slice, 21 cents if you wanted a Scoop of Vanilla Ice cream on top. I sure do miss the 60's 🤗
I remember watching The Jetsons premiere episode, but I can't remember exactly where, but not at home, on a color television set. It was beyond wow! I was told that I didn't watch Captain Kangaroo for the next few days because we didn't have a color TV. Also, the Captain Kangaroo show was not a color production at the time.
I was 6 years old but I remember Dad building a bomb shelter i off the basement and stocking it. Then came the Missile Crisis. Afterwards we played in it for awhile.
After starting H/S in a small rural Rockwood, Tennessee, my family moved to a much larger Chattanooga, Tennessee, in 1962 where my graduating class of over 500 was much larger than the four classes of my initial school. Much adjustment involved with Chattanooga City H/S (one of 17 Chattanooga high schools at the time) with no longer walking to/from school, but rather catching a city bus. Mandatory ROTC posed quite a distinction as well!!! Hated it at the time, but now look back fondly on the experience!!! VW Beetles were under two grand, and "The Monster Mash" was a smash!!! Great time to be alive!!!
Yeah, where were you in '62? I was 6 years old. And my only thoughts were what for Christmas would be my toy..... And I thought that by the time I was older I would be traveling to the moon regularly. 59 years ago.... ✌
Vaughn Meador's fame was short-lived. After the JFK Assassination, the country was no longer in the mood for Kennedy impressions. On the day JFK was shot, Meador was on a plane to Las Vegas. When he was met at the airport, somebody asked "Do you know JFK was shot?" Thinking it was a joke, Meador replied in Kennedy voice "No, but if you hum a few bars, I'll try to fake it."
@Dapper Canuck Yep...the election was stolen. A known fact now. Frank Sinatra and the mob helped him steal the election. Frank later admitted it. It became common knowledge and is in the history books now. Frank later admitted he was sorry he fell for it after he found out how big a racist Kennedy was. A true fact. Its in Frank's documentary right here on YT. Frank told Kennedy that Sammy Davis Jr would assist in Campaigning for him. Kennedy told Frank no, he did not want to be associated with Sammy as Kennedy was pandering to the racist south which was Democrat. Frank later said he had enough of Kennedy when he did not want to be seen with Sammy and outwardly objected to Sammy marrying the white Swedish Actress. Frank is said to have cursed out Kennedy as he broke friendship.
@@21stcenturysucks54 Lets see, the lowest unemployment in 60 years, the lowest black unemployment in history, He cut double and triple unneeded regulations to free up business so they could breath. He brought businesses back to America. Made us gas independent. Started the Pipeline, was sealing the border. He did everything he campaigned on doing all while the Socialist Dems were throwing the kitchen sink at him on a daily bases. Biden cheats his way in and destroys the country as we know it in 6 months. He stops the pipeline and kills 30k jobs in his first week. Makes us gas dependent again as prices skyrocket. Inflation going through the roof as we speak, borders wide open as South American countries are opening their jails and releasing the criminals at the border so they walk right in. DemocRATS openly pushing for Socialism as they literally try and turn America into the next sh!thole. You are one of the few brainwashed fools who are all in on it.
@@matrox If your definition of a “few” is 81 million people then you are a “fool”. But probably just “brainwashed” by Fox, OANN, and Newsmax. And The Cultural Civi War continues to rage on in America and, especially, on social media. Ain’t no stinkin’ COVID pandemic gonna get in the way of it.
I remember what a big deal the Jacqueline Kennedy "Tour of the White House" was on TV, but I wasn't aware that it had aired on both CBS and NBC (live), and several days later on ABC. Now THAT was a big deal! (By the way, she was a national treasure)
On Thanksgiving Day, 1962, TV star Lorne Greene (from "Bonanza") and his longtime best friend & co-hostess Betty White became the hosts of "The 1962 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade" in New York City, New York State on NBC-TV. Ten years later when they did their final hosting job, they weren't just calling it quits, but it was also their very own swan song. Good times, baby, good times.
Those men were not known as SEALS yet. They were UDTs Under Water Demolition Teams also known as Navy Frogmen. The transition to SEALS was much later. I arrived at NAS JAX FLA 4/74 where a shipmate was in training as a UDT frogman. SEALs formed sometime after. ✌🇺🇸
I was seven. A first grader. I don't recall any of these events until much later in life. I was a firecracker then. And I don't remember much of daily life. I do remember playing 2nd base on my "T" ball baseball team though. And I remember hunting for poly-wogs down at the big drainpipe "pond" near our house.
In '62, the Beatles walked out of the studio after recording their first songs and were just four guys, not turning heads or mobbed. That would soon change!
One important happening in 1962, was the opening of the Seattle World's Fair, on the 21st of April... The most iconic world's fair structure The Space Needle was built for the fair. The Seattle World's Fair was one of the most successful world's fairs. Elvis Presley was filmed during the fair, for the Movie " It happened at the World's Fair" realeased in 1963.
@@geoben1810 she is resting comfortably because she told me so the other night in a dream. I am one of those people that actually remembers their dreams
You forgot to mention 1962 was the year The World's Fair opened in Seattle, Washington. I was 12 at the time and still remember how much fun it was to attend. It was my first visit to the famous Space Needle.
The woman playing Caroline Kennedy, on both the Vaughn Meader album and the cover, is Alison Anrgrim's mother. Alison was Nellie Olsen and her mother was the voice of Polly Purebred, Gumby, Casper and all his friends and Davey and Goliath, among numerous others.
Seeing The Jetsons makes me think of that band, "We Were Promised Jet Packs." I've never heard anything they've done but it's a great name. I mean, we were promised jet packs! I remember thinking by the year 2000 they would be standard issue.
It's funny because by now IPhones aren't enough. We want flying cars & all good to come in pill form. Jet packs? But of course. My friend's grandson asked his dad why there aren't real light sabers!
My dad turned 27 on Aug. 20, 1962. Already had a wife, 2 kids, a third on the way & a 4 bedroom 2 bath house. 1 car. I can't even tell you what my brothers & I were up to at that age.
I turned 16 that year. I lived within 50 miles of NYC so I was pretty worried during the Cuban missile crisis. I remember the Jetsons (and no, we didn't have a color TV) but must have skipped the White House Tour.
My birth year, a year I take great pride in. It reflects in my home my 62 Plymouth and my 62 Heilite camper filled with all the thing that were common place in that time line. You can say it's the only rolling time capsule going up and down the highways in my area. I have seen other display similar, but I take it a step further than most.
I was born in '62, so I can't say I actually remember any of this cause I was just too young... but, I miss Carson and Cronkite and was scared as hell of THE BOMB until the Iron Curtain fell!
I was in grade 3 in Alberta. We practiced nuke drills, going to the basement and getting under a bench in the lunchroom. LOL. I lived 3 blocks away, so I never did eat at school. That 1913 brick school is still in use. I got the measles that year, 10 days in bed. My dad traded in the 1952 Chev and got a yellow 1960 Olds 88. But I think we took the trailer and Chev to Vancouver, the Seattle World's Fair and Oregon, not mentioned here. Actually, we were driving in the mountains on the second last holiday, we heard the Monroe death announcement. Dad would always tell people that. The 1960s were idyllic heaven for kids, which sadly will NEVER be repeated. Patsy Cline and Dean Martin on the radio. Woodstock was the death nell of the 1960s for sure.
My dad had the Vaughn Meader album and I listened to it often. Some of it I was too young to get and my parents had to explain it to me. It was hilarious stuff for sure as I wasn't even born til 67.
The Pres. quipped that he thought Mr. Meader sounded "more like Bobby" to him. In Nov. of the next year I was standing about 6' from the Pres. at an event and 4 years later was having a sad conversation with Robt. Kennedy in Phila.
As an 8yo boy in 1962 my mom let us kids watch the 1962 movie "Gypsy" (drive-in). Pretty bold considering the movie was essentially about a stripper (played by Natalie Wood). And this was the year I was most scared of nuclear war. The school made us do weekly duck and cover drills. Even as a kid I knew going under a wooden desk was useless when the windows blow in and the building collapses. A lot of boys were obsessed with rockets/space. It was so cool. I read every Sci-Fi book in our schools library. My pee chee was covered with my doodlings of rockets and flying saucers.
Yep I remember...get under the closest desk. When all clear we would have our Milk and graham crackers. Then pull out our towels and pretend to take a nap. 1962 Kinder Garten.😝
I was 12 years old. First time i saw my parents really scared. We did not do much at school, think the teachers were all to depressed to do much teaching. Saw lot of adults crying,which for '62 was rather new for me. Very bad time in the world, but as bad as it was I can also remember when the news was all about the the agreement between the US and the USSR. There was a lot to celebrate and people began to talk about Thanksgiving and Christmas instead of nuclear war.
We couldn't wait to get to the weekly book mobile. The guys were into the planet's and the solar system. If you couldn't spit out facts and statistics about space you weren't considered intelligent.
Remember the Kresge stores, and there was Murphy's, Smith and welton, JM Fields but they may have opened later and possibly were local store names in not sure?
What a year. I remember seeing Mrs. Kennedy's tour of the White House. Later got my young middle brother out of bed early and we watched the launch of end of John Glenn's mission. And we weren't even late for school! Later graduated from High School and joined the Army, where I was during the Cuban Missile Crises. We almost lost the world then. Thankfully we and Russia had two leaders that had seen war up close and personal.
its holding the clear plastic you see rolled up as Glenn enters the capsule..it kept dirt and fingerprints off the windows ..its pulled off right before the support team exit the tower ..it'd suck to have smudges in space
Alan Shepard, the first astronaut in space, was once asked if he was scared going up in the first Mercury flight. He replied why wouldn't he be scared knowing he was about to be shot into orbit in a machine comprised of thousands of parts, each made by the low bidder of a government contract.
Very nice series. Thanks for including Marilyn Monroe, an International Star to this day. This isn't the place for controversy, but MM couldn't possibly have committed suicide, she was a murder.
So was Kennedy. Nellie Connelly, wife of Gov. Connelly, both of whom were in his motorcade, said there was a shot from the other "official" direction. If you doubted her, she'd say she was there. We still don't know.
@@neildickson5394 If you so much as hinted at the time that Oswald might not have acted alone, or even wasn't the perp at all, that made you a conspiracy theorist nut. Of course Nellie was right. How she survived, I don't know.
It was a good year to be born. I grew up with all of this. I am truly blessed.
The year I was born 1962. I will be 62 this year. I love watching these shows. Love from Marysville California
Would go back to 62 in a heartbeat! the best of the best times for me the mid 60's
Time marches on. It was a terrible year for me. We lived in Gallup New Mexico close to the Navajo Indian reservation. I had every disease known to mankind in the 2 years that we lived there. I was 8 years old. I was so happy when we left that town.
The mid sixties were the best of times for you and me, because we were still young and we were not snared by the Green Machine.
I graduated from High School in 1962..those were great years to be a teen..
That was the year that the movie "American Graffiti" was to have taken place.
This channel is a breath of sanity.
Until you encounter a person like Brian Arbenz.....
@@drizzt8965 Whoever that person is, if he is negative, then let's forget about him.
@@Qingeaton Amen!
Yes, even the Cuban Missile Crisis seems like the 'good old days', when I was 9. The country could get back to normal back then.
This was the year that I moved to southern California as a 2-year-old toddler - just a week after the Cuban Missile Crisis - and where I would spend my most cherished years growing up. Thanks for bringing this retrospective to RUclips.
I was 6 at the time, I remembered hiding under the couch in fear watching the news with my parents.
What city did you live in?
@@azmike1 Tustin, California, in Orange County, close to the county seat of Santa Ana and only 15 minutes away by freeway at the time from Disneyland.
@@ATSFVentaSpurNscaler Vintage '62 here...and a graduate of Foothill High. Go Knights!
These trips down “Recollection Road” are fantastic. They’re informative as they are tranquil & sublime. Keep ‘em coming 👍. Thank you!
I’m So thankful I lived and grew up through 60s 70s 80s era. Great times in America. 🇺🇸❤️
And Also Canada 🤗🤩
Thank you! 😀 very much appreciated... I was 10 years old too.. good times 👍
I was born in 1962 and live just a few miles from that first KMart, which was just recently torn down and is destined to be an LA Fitness supposedly...progress. I guess... BTW, this is now my favorite YT channel and your quiet, understated pacing of these videos is amazingly perfect!
@C. Robert - Me too … but on the other side of the Pacific.
I was 15 in 1962. We had been practicing emergency alert drills for several years where students moved under their desks and covered their heads in case of incoming bombs from Russia. It was during the time of the Cold War and some people built underground bomb shelters in their backyards. But no one locked their front doors at night, the car keys were left on the floor of the car so we always knew where they were, every kid on the block played kick the can in the street until the street lights came on, we walked to school rain or shine, and if you were out walking around town during school hours any adult felt it their responsibility and duty to stop you and ask why you weren’t in school. We had dress codes in school, girls were not allowed to wear pants except our gym shorts which were required, too short of a skirt would get you sent home to change along with too low of a neckline. No one wore logo clothes, they didn’t exist, neither did panty hose, hot rollers, curling irons or personal hair dryers. We went to the library to do research for school papers and hand wrote them using cursive handwriting that we had learned in grade school. Literally like another world.
Yes, I remember it well!!!!
I was born this year and I sure remember the nuclear drills at school as you described. I remember that our doors were almost never locked . We had a dress code as well and I had trouble in grade School with my long hair and hippie cloths as a 3rd grader ? still a hippie at heart all these years later . God Bless
Part of that soliloquy was good. The other part was regressive bs.
Precious time wasted...😔
@@balerjohnson3099 I was born in 1962 and we never had nuclear drills those were in the fifties and early sixties so you must be older than being born in 1962 and yes my parents locked their doors every single night
Also: In September 1962 The Beverly Hillbillies debuted on CBS running until 1971.
Jethro Bodine remains one of my two favorite TV characters of all-time (The Reverend Jim Ignatowski from Taxi being the other). Whether he was playing a double-not spy, serving up meals at The Hungry Gizzard, or flashing that sixth grade education with his siphering skills, there will never be another one like Jethro.
And hanging by the cement pond with Elly May was every young boys fantasy. 🤤 What a great show!
Dad loved Bev Hilbillies We had to be quiet when it was on😁
@@itinerantpatriot1196 Jethro the lone survivor of the show.
I "debuted" in September 1962, too. That's when I was born. :)
So popular they played the theme song on the radio .. or the "talking box" as it were.
Wow, and I was here for all of it! (But I was only a year old and don't remember it) 🙂👍
Same.
No matter how much I hear about it, the death of Marilyn Monroe always gets to me. Great video!
I’m so happy that I stumbled on this channel,beautiful.
I'm so glad you included Vaughn Meader's success with his unprecedented, audacious First Family album. I researched his life and got to know him in the 1990s. His story was amazing. So was he.
I don't know if you ever got to hear Rich Little's 1982 homage (or is it rip-off?) of Vaughn's first Family, entitled The First Family Rides Again, but it pales badly in comparison to the original. Meader makes a guest appearance, but it doesn't help.
@@ernestcruz6316 Yes. I was puzzled about why his presence on the album was so played down, as though Vaughn Meader were an obscure person who had no significance in the history of The First Family. He was nonchalant in his answer, giving no real reason. Earl Doud, the producer of his seminal '62 First Family album, called him and said essentially, hey we're in L.A. to make this album, want to drop by? As though it were a skit at summer camp!
I wonder if Little wanted Meader's involvement minimized.
@@brianarbenz1329 I hadn't thought of that, but it's a shame that he was given the same treatment as former Playboy Playmate Susan Lynn Kiger, who only got one line of dialogue on the album.
Hi Recollection Road, I just wanted to thank you for the producing this touching "Timeline of Life in America". Your narrative is meaningful, your picture selection germane to milestones of our history, and the musical background reflects the nostalgia of an era long gone. Thank you for the memories, thank you for bringing me back "home" to a time of innocence, freedom and hope - Our society was not perfect but it was slowly getting better. Optimism was in the air. May God bless America and may Peace be with you. Ciao, L (Veteran)
Loved 1962 A Jr in high school, being taught by teachers that loved to teach and loved us. No social media and main stream media was about reporting. I got to live during a growing America.
Thanks for helping me to remember back then, when I was a child.
I was 14 during that year and entered 9th Grade in September. And Tommy Roe's "Sheila" was the #! song of that year.
Thank you ! I was born in 1952, your videos remind me how lucky I am to have lived during wonderful times !
I turned 15 in ' 62....it was a great time to be a teenager.
Thankyou for the memories….
Wow a lot happened... Plus I graduated HS, took summer classes at UofM, got into a boat accident and had two operations and had to drop out of collage.... Busy year alright.
I had forgotten about Vaughn Meader. I watched him on Ed Sullivan with my parents. His career sure took a hit when President Kennedy was killed, never to rebound.
Well, there were one hit wonders so I guess that would make him a one person wonder 😏
ruclips.net/video/Xwu8S6Ekx9w/видео.html
@@nonamegame9857 In November 1963, Vaughn Meader recorded his first beyond-JFK album of humor called "Have Some Nuts." It was topical political and social satire, but no references to Kennedy. Two weeks later, the tragedy happened in Dallas and the tapes were shelved, then released in mid-1964. Have Some Nuts is still obscure, but filled with clever skits.
"Took a hit"? Took a nuclear hit, maybe. His career ended with the assassination.
Yes a great time to be born with the 70s 80s ahead for us.
On October 1, 1962 , I turned 3 years old and I was blissfully unaware of anything in this video. I might have known about Campbell’s soups.
Happy Belated Birthday ❤🎃
REMBER ALL THE BOYS WENT DOWN TO THE POST OFFICE TO SIGN UP FOR THE DRAFT SOME CLASS
A flashback to a time when speech was measured, and a voice was calm.
I was tempted to complain that you didn't mention the first James Bond movie "Dr. No" which was released in October 1962, but then recalled that it wasn't released in the U.S. until May 1963.
I was 9 in 1962. Thank you for posting these memories!
Thanks for sharing😊
We moved into our home during the height of the Missile Crisis. Mom, a single-parent, said she was so worried about whether she would be able to make the payments (particularly in view of banks that were not helpful to a woman head of the family) that she was the only person in the nation not completely wrapped up in the possibility of a nuclear war. We did just fine with the home. I lived there 20 years, moving out in October 1982 as a 24-year-old.
Kmart came to Winnipeg in ‘66. My parents used to take us there on Saturday nights just to look around because that was the only major store open on Saturday night in that era. First sub sandwich I ever had was from the Kmart cafeteria. The Kmart auto centre had a giant sign advertising ‘Fisk Tires’ above it.
Winnipeg Canada? We Had Woowards Department Store Vancouver B C The Best Apple Pie 19 cents a slice, 21 cents if you wanted a Scoop of
Vanilla Ice cream on top. I sure do miss the 60's 🤗
I remember watching The Jetsons premiere episode, but I can't remember exactly where, but not at home, on a color television set. It was beyond wow! I was told that I didn't watch Captain Kangaroo for the next few days because we didn't have a color TV. Also, the Captain Kangaroo show was not a color production at the time.
So is that why it's on ME TV now an ABC affiliate? Pfft
@@runrafarunthebestintheworld Captain Kangaroo has been out production for a very long time. ME TV are leasing these old programs.
@@joelfrombethlehem yeah they even leased Loony Toons and Tom & Jerry.
I remember a classmate back then asking if my family had a color TV and I told him, sure the cabinet is blonde and brown 🤓🙄
@@nonamegame9857 Until about 1964, the only color programming was on NBC.
I was 6 years old but I remember Dad building a bomb shelter i off the basement and stocking it. Then came the Missile Crisis. Afterwards we played in it for awhile.
My Dad died in 1962...that was the biggest event in my history
After starting H/S in a small rural Rockwood, Tennessee, my family moved to a much larger Chattanooga, Tennessee, in 1962 where my graduating class of over 500 was much larger than the four classes of my initial school. Much adjustment involved with Chattanooga City H/S (one of 17 Chattanooga high schools at the time) with no longer walking to/from school, but rather catching a city bus. Mandatory ROTC posed quite a distinction as well!!! Hated it at the time, but now look back fondly on the experience!!!
VW Beetles were under two grand, and "The Monster Mash" was a smash!!! Great time to be alive!!!
Yeah, where were you in '62? I was 6 years old. And my only thoughts were what for Christmas would be my toy..... And I thought that by the time I was older I would be traveling to the moon regularly. 59 years ago.... ✌
7 years old...💜
Oh-oh. The picture of the Walmart store shows a Nova or Acadian model that wasn't introduced until 1968. CAUGHT YA!!
🦅👀's
That Walmart looked to be placed in a strip mall, as well?🤔
Vaughn Meador's fame was short-lived. After the JFK Assassination, the country was no longer in the mood for Kennedy impressions. On the day JFK was shot, Meador was on a plane to Las Vegas. When he was met at the airport, somebody asked "Do you know JFK was shot?" Thinking it was a joke, Meador replied in Kennedy voice "No, but if you hum a few bars, I'll try to fake it."
That,s so sad.
+@Dapper Canuck The biggest joke this country ever elected was Trumpachenko. A real stench left on America. D...head.
@Dapper Canuck Yep...the election was stolen. A known fact now. Frank Sinatra and the mob helped him steal the election. Frank later admitted it. It became common knowledge and is in the history books now. Frank later admitted he was sorry he fell for it after he found out how big a racist Kennedy was. A true fact. Its in Frank's documentary right here on YT. Frank told Kennedy that Sammy Davis Jr would assist in Campaigning for him. Kennedy told Frank no, he did not want to be associated with Sammy as Kennedy was pandering to the racist south which was Democrat. Frank later said he had enough of Kennedy when he did not want to be seen with Sammy and outwardly objected to Sammy marrying the white Swedish Actress. Frank is said to have cursed out Kennedy as he broke friendship.
@@21stcenturysucks54 Lets see, the lowest unemployment in 60 years, the lowest black unemployment in history, He cut double and triple unneeded regulations to free up business so they could breath. He brought businesses back to America. Made us gas independent. Started the Pipeline, was sealing the border. He did everything he campaigned on doing all while the Socialist Dems were throwing the kitchen sink at him on a daily bases. Biden cheats his way in and destroys the country as we know it in 6 months. He stops the pipeline and kills 30k jobs in his first week. Makes us gas dependent again as prices skyrocket. Inflation going through the roof as we speak, borders wide open as South American countries are opening their jails and releasing the criminals at the border so they walk right in. DemocRATS openly pushing for Socialism as they literally try and turn America into the next sh!thole. You are one of the few brainwashed fools who are all in on it.
@@matrox If your definition of a “few” is 81 million people then you are a “fool”. But probably just “brainwashed” by Fox, OANN, and Newsmax. And The Cultural Civi War continues to rage on in America and, especially, on social media. Ain’t no stinkin’ COVID pandemic gonna get in the way of it.
I remember what a big deal the Jacqueline Kennedy "Tour of the White House" was on TV, but I wasn't aware that it had aired on both CBS and NBC (live), and several days later on ABC. Now THAT was a big deal! (By the way, she was a national treasure)
1962 was the start of a whole new age that IMHO ended in the 90s.
On Thanksgiving Day, 1962, TV star Lorne Greene (from "Bonanza") and his longtime best friend & co-hostess Betty White became the hosts of "The 1962 Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade" in New York City, New York State on NBC-TV. Ten years later when they did their final hosting job, they weren't just calling it quits, but it was also their very own swan song. Good times, baby, good times.
ON THANKSGIVING DAY 1962 THE LIONS BEAT THE PACKERS 27 TO 14 THE ONLY LOSS FOR THE PACKERS THAT SESSON KENNETH O
Those men were not known as SEALS yet. They were UDTs Under Water Demolition Teams also known as Navy Frogmen. The transition to SEALS was much later. I arrived at NAS JAX FLA 4/74 where a shipmate was in training as a UDT frogman. SEALs formed sometime after. ✌🇺🇸
I was seven. A first grader. I don't recall any of these events until much later in life.
I was a firecracker then. And I don't remember much of daily life.
I do remember playing 2nd base on my "T" ball baseball team though.
And I remember hunting for poly-wogs down at the big drainpipe "pond" near our house.
Also in 1962, the Beatles scored their 1st number 1 hit, Please, Please Me!🎶🎶
I thought it was This Boy.
@@21stcenturysucks54 No This Boy was 1964, on the Hard Days Night Album in 1965. I have that Album.
+@@matrox I believe you but it was already on radio in 1963.
In '62, the Beatles walked out of the studio after recording their first songs and were just four guys, not turning heads or mobbed. That would soon change!
Terrific video. I turned 19 years old at Fort Ord April 12th, 1962. What a great year to be 19. JFK and Jackie Camelot.
A big year indeed.
I was 8. I was aware of some of these things.
Had no idea about that Kennedy impersonator guy though.
One important happening in 1962, was the opening of the Seattle World's Fair, on the 21st of April... The most iconic world's fair structure The Space Needle was built for the fair. The Seattle World's Fair was one of the most successful world's fairs. Elvis Presley was filmed during the fair, for the Movie " It happened at the World's Fair" realeased in 1963.
I was born in 1962.
My mother was born in 62.
My mom was born in 25 🤓
@@nonamegame9857
Yeah, my Mom too.
God rest their souls 🌹
@@geoben1810 she is resting comfortably because she told me so the other night in a dream. I am one of those people that actually remembers their dreams
Prior to 1962 we were basically still in the 1950s.
A night in 1962 was chronicled in the movie "American Graffiti"
Beautiful.
My mom was born in 1962. She passed away a couple of days ago and I'm watching this in memory of her
You forgot to mention 1962 was the year The World's Fair opened in Seattle, Washington. I was 12 at the time and still remember how much fun it was to attend. It was my first visit to the famous Space Needle.
You missed a major milestone. On Sept 30, 1962, radio passed the torch to television as the primary broadcast entertainment media.
My favorite year, and I have had 72 of them.
Thanks for including Marylin Monroe
The woman playing Caroline Kennedy, on both the Vaughn Meader album and the cover, is Alison Anrgrim's mother. Alison was Nellie Olsen and her mother was the voice of Polly Purebred, Gumby, Casper and all his friends and Davey and Goliath, among numerous others.
Seeing The Jetsons makes me think of that band, "We Were Promised Jet Packs." I've never heard anything they've done but it's a great name. I mean, we were promised jet packs! I remember thinking by the year 2000 they would be standard issue.
I saw a guy ride a JetPack at the New York Worlds fair in 65'.
It's funny because by now IPhones aren't enough. We want flying cars & all good to come in pill form. Jet packs? But of course. My friend's grandson asked his dad why there aren't real light sabers!
The year I was born " Aug 1962 "
My dad turned 27 on Aug. 20, 1962. Already had a wife, 2 kids, a third on the way & a 4 bedroom 2 bath house. 1 car. I can't even tell you what my brothers & I were up to at that age.
I turned 16 that year. I lived within 50 miles of NYC so I was pretty worried during the Cuban missile crisis. I remember the Jetsons (and no, we didn't have a color TV) but must have skipped the White House Tour.
My birth year, a year I take great pride in. It reflects in my home my 62 Plymouth and my 62 Heilite camper filled with all the thing that were common place in that time line. You can say it's the only rolling time capsule going up and down the highways in my area. I have seen other display similar, but I take it a step further than most.
One of the most common albums at thrift stores today.
I was 16 ☺️
Don’t know if I was “sweet” though ! LOL 😂
Must feel old. 😅
@@catherinebreitfeller669 that means you were 23 for Woodstock. Yeah baby 👍👍
Remember so well watching this on Television when l was 7 years old.
I loved K-Mart and was so angry when they closed. I liked White Front too. I HATE HATE HATE Walmart.
I remember the white front store on azusa ave in azusa can!
Golly, totally forgot about White Front.
I was born in '62, so I can't say I actually remember any of this cause I was just too young... but, I miss Carson and Cronkite and was scared as hell of THE BOMB until the Iron Curtain fell!
Isn't it weird that in 1962 Kmart, Walmart, and Target all opened their doors in 1962?
Like a script or something...
Yet Target and Wal-Mart are still competing against each other. What a coincidence. 😅👍
Just as imitation is the greatest form of flattery, if a business builds a successful model, there are many copies made 😉
@@nonamegame9857 Plus, it was the right time. Those people weren't dummies.
Weird because I never saw a Walmart until the mid 1980’s.
I was in grade 3 in Alberta. We practiced nuke drills, going to the basement and getting under a bench in the lunchroom. LOL. I lived 3 blocks away, so I never did eat at school. That 1913 brick school is still in use. I got the measles that year, 10 days in bed.
My dad traded in the 1952 Chev and got a yellow 1960 Olds 88. But I think we took the trailer and Chev to Vancouver, the Seattle World's Fair and Oregon, not mentioned here. Actually, we were driving in the mountains on the second last holiday, we heard the Monroe death announcement. Dad would always tell people that.
The 1960s were idyllic heaven for kids, which sadly will NEVER be repeated. Patsy Cline and Dean Martin on the radio. Woodstock was the death nell of the 1960s for sure.
The 1962, I just turned 5 years old. And, I started Kindergarten.
I was 5 then also.
*kiddygarten
Lol😋
Me too.
Great year I was born lucky you.now I'm 59 time flys most of my family's gone can't wait to see them again
You will,until then are all around you,and miss you.God Bless you all.
Loved the Beverly Hillbillies. Granny my favorite. Honesty the entire cast was good.........
I was 4 in 1962 and was unaware of much of this... still, this was cool...
Rest in peace Marilyn Monroe 1926 - 1962
My dad had the Vaughn Meader album and I listened to it often. Some of it I was too young to get and my parents had to explain it to me. It was hilarious stuff for sure as I wasn't even born til 67.
The Pres. quipped that he thought Mr. Meader sounded "more like Bobby" to him. In Nov. of the next year I was standing about 6' from the Pres. at an event and 4 years later was having a sad conversation with Robt. Kennedy in Phila.
I have never heard of VM, but hear it is. ruclips.net/video/Xwu8S6Ekx9w/видео.html
@@matrox Awesome!!!! Just listened again! Thanks for your contribution!
@@joeheid4757 NP
@@matrox I hope you listened. And enjoyed!
As an 8yo boy in 1962 my mom let us kids watch the 1962 movie "Gypsy" (drive-in). Pretty bold considering the movie was essentially about a stripper (played by Natalie Wood). And this was the year I was most scared of nuclear war. The school made us do weekly duck and cover drills. Even as a kid I knew going under a wooden desk was useless when the windows blow in and the building collapses. A lot of boys were obsessed with rockets/space. It was so cool. I read every Sci-Fi book in our schools library. My pee chee was covered with my doodlings of rockets and flying saucers.
Yep I remember...get under the closest desk. When all clear we would have our Milk and graham crackers. Then pull out our towels and pretend to take a nap. 1962 Kinder Garten.😝
I was 12 years old. First time i saw my parents really scared. We did not do much at school, think the teachers were all to depressed to do much teaching. Saw lot of adults crying,which for '62 was rather new for me. Very bad time in the world, but as bad as it was I can also remember when the news was all about the the agreement between the US and the USSR. There was a lot to celebrate and people began to talk about Thanksgiving and Christmas instead of nuclear war.
We couldn't wait to get to the weekly book mobile. The guys were into the planet's and the solar system. If you couldn't spit out facts and statistics about space you weren't considered intelligent.
Remember the Kresge stores, and there was Murphy's, Smith and welton, JM Fields but they may have opened later and possibly were local store names in not sure?
I sure do miss K Mart, Johnny Carson and Walter Cronkite.
Me too!!!! ☮️💟
I loved the 60s
What a year. I remember seeing Mrs. Kennedy's tour of the White House. Later got my young middle brother out of bed early and we watched the launch of end of John Glenn's mission. And we weren't even late for school! Later graduated from High School and joined the Army, where I was during the Cuban Missile Crises. We almost lost the world then. Thankfully we and Russia had two leaders that had seen war up close and personal.
1:44 was that duct tape holding the door of Friendship 7 together ??
its holding the clear plastic you see rolled up as Glenn enters the capsule..it kept dirt and fingerprints off the windows ..its pulled off right before the support team exit the tower ..it'd suck to have smudges in space
Alan Shepard, the first astronaut in space, was once asked if he was scared going up in the first Mercury flight. He replied why wouldn't he be scared knowing he was about to be shot into orbit in a machine comprised of thousands of parts, each made by the low bidder of a government contract.
@@mattf49006
Thanks, would hate to think its held together with duct tape.
@@orangehoof
I do remember him saying that. I was 6 years old in 62 and these people were my heros.
I remember The Flintstones on tv with the Winston cigarette commercials. I don’t remember seeing the Jetsons until much later.
I was only 14 in 1962 and lived in Bridgeport Connecticut the best time of my life.
Ah, good old Uncle Commie!
1962 was the year I was born.
I remember as a 10 year old watching First Lady Jackie Kennedy give the tour of the White House with Charles Kuralt on CBS.
Also, Cape Fear, Hatari and Route 66. But best of all, the Tijuana Brass.
Target and Walmart founded together in the same year... way back when... five years before I was born.
They are still at it 60 years later.
And on August 11th 1962 i was born in Long Beach Ca, 6 days after Marilyn Monroe was Murdered!
If I had to go back in time. I'd want to be sent back to 6th grade. I'm 70 now.
And on March 14 1962 a bouncing baby girl was Born that baby girl was me😊😘
January 23, 1962 The year and month I was born. Now thanks by the grace of God I am 62 :)
Amazing Fantasy issue 15.
Very nice series. Thanks for including Marilyn Monroe, an International Star to this day. This isn't the place for controversy, but MM couldn't possibly have committed suicide, she was a murder.
So was Kennedy. Nellie Connelly, wife of Gov. Connelly, both of whom were in his motorcade, said there was a shot from the other "official" direction. If you doubted her, she'd say she was there. We still don't know.
@@akrenwinkle Of course she's telling the at the scene truth.
@@neildickson5394 If you so much as hinted at the time that Oswald might not have acted alone, or even wasn't the perp at all, that made you a conspiracy theorist nut. Of course Nellie was right. How she survived, I don't know.
@@akrenwinkle Many times, the so called "Conspiracy " is the truth!
Totally. Agree. I. Also. Think. She. Was. Murdered. Set. To. Look. Like. Suicide
In addition to Taco Bell opening its first restaurant in 1962, in the Pacific Northwest the first Taco Time was also opened that year.
We used to drive down to the taco time in tacoma the 2 summers we worked at longmire...Mt Rainier national park..1969 and 1970 😁😂
Finished High School in 1962 and joined the US Army that August. I loved the 60's.