Imogene
Senior Member
- Location
- Middle Tennessee
I was 15 when I left school... made to leave..I never drove to school because I left at 16, too young to hold a licence
Same here. I walked or took the bus from kindergarten through high school graduation.Drove to school?... not a chance, not one of us could have afforded driving lessons much less a car.... ....only one pupil drove to school when I was there.. and he was the headmasters' son
In my case I chose to leave as soon as I was legally able to, which was when I was 15 1/2.I was 15 when I left school... made to leave..
my father couldn't wait to get his hands on my wage packet... .. I wouldn't have been allowed to stay on at school...In my case I chose to leave as soon as I was legally able to, which was when I was 15 1/2.
same.. same... and never once was me or my siblings taken to school by car. My father would have been absolutely horrified if we'd even suggested it..Same here. I walked or took the bus from kindergarten through high school graduation.
My sister got a 2cv when she was 19. My dad made it from 2 2cv's he got at the dump. A fabulous car it was, also called a duck. Truck drivers would at times throw bread on the street: feed the ducks. You could roll up the roof.My senior year (1965), my dad bought a 1955 Dodge station wagon for $100 from a neighbor. It had a Police Interceptor engine in it and guzzled gas like there was no tomorrow. Gas was 25 cents a gallon.
I had the car because my mom had gone back to work and someone had to pick up the younger kids and get them to dance lessons, Girl Scouts, etc after school. That was me, but I had one hour before I had to pick them up so I "cruised" with my friends.
The guys loved to look at the engine.
