Pappy, you sure had to pay a lot to see movies. It only cost me 9 cents. When it went up to 11 cents, I was dismayed because I only got 15 cents a week for my allowance, and that didn't leave a nickel for a candy bar or some popcorn. My grandfather was a painting contractor and my dad and uncles all worked for him. One summer they were painting at the theatre, and I got to go to the movies every afternoon for free. Free! The one movie that I remember all these years later is "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court".
Summers were a lot of work when I was a kid, but at least it could be done in the morning, leaving afternoons free to go swimming. During the school year, small jobs that needed to be done were done after school and the big stuff saved for Saturday.
In summer, my older brother chopped the wood, pitched it through the basement window, and I stacked it. Had to hurry to get it chopped when the weather was dry. We also had to hoe and weed the garden...a BIG garden...and feed the chickens and ducks and gather eggs. We had a wringer washer that I used to do the laundry and two galvanized tubs for rinse water. It wasn't hard to fill the washer with cold water, but hot water was heated in a copper boiler on the stove. It took both my brother and me to hoist that thing off the stove and pour the water into the washer tub. After that, he was free to go because, after all, doing the laundry wasn't work boys were expected to do.
Then there was the ironing. Nope. Not so old that we had flat irons to heat on the stove, thank heaven. We had an electric iron. As soon as the clothes were off the line, the things that needed starch were dunked in starch that had been cooked on the stove. Ugh. Next morning was when the ironing got done.
Holy cow...I remember playing kick the can and tag and baseball and going swimming but wonder how we found the time! I had to be home in the afternoon in time to pick whatever vegetable was going to be eaten for dinner and cooking dinner.
Sundays were the best. The. Best. That's when we went to my grandparents' cottage and spent the entire live long day. It was heaven. Cousins, aunts and uncles and fishing, swimming, picking berries for Gramma to make into pies for dinner. Sometimes we got lucky and got to spend a whole weekend there or even a whole week. Gramma would give us lard buckets that she'd saved and send us out right after breakfast to pick berries. There was lots of work to do at the cottage, too, but it was work that we thought was fun, maybe because there were so many of us to do it.
Breakfast at the cottage was even fun...we got up early and fished from the dock to catch our breakfast!
Neither we nor any of our friends ever got into any kind of mischief; we were too busy
