Nobody drove their kid to school.

We walked a mile to school, a mile back for lunch, a mile back to school and a mile back again. We had a full hour for lunch.
Most kids walked to school. Our neighbours across the street got a ride to school and back everyday but they were the exception
 

I never ever rode a school bus.
When I was 11, I walked home for lunch and got sick. Instead of going back to school, I went to the hospital and had my appendix out. That was when I learned that bad things don't always happen to other people.
 
My elementary school was just two blocks away. High School was about a mile up a hill, back down for lunch then back up. In the '50s, guys had their Elvis style haircuts and we never wore hats. I remember a buddy who would wet his hair profusely to get it right, and in the winter the water droplets became ice droplets. When we got to school his hair was frozen.
 

When driving our grandson to school last week (his morning sitter was unable to be there that day), both my husband and I were telling him that we were never driven to school by our parents. My husband grew up in the Los Angeles suburbs and always lived within a mile of his school so he was a walker. I was raised in the NE US and walked to my first school, then caught school buses from 3rd grade until I started driving as a senior in HS. The bus stop was about 1/2 mile from our house. Everybody walked to the bus stops, regardless of the weather. Unaccompanied. God help any kid past kindergarten whose mother would have walked him to school or the bus stop.

Our grandson's eyes were as big as saucers. He couldn't imagine being that independent. Kids are always within arm's reach of an adult these days. Big Brother will be a seamless transition from Big Parents.

It was a different era. I drove my kids to school, but we lived 7-8 miles from their (private) schools, so walking wasn't an option.
 
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Never walked to elementary school, jr. high or the high school. No heroic stories from here and I would guess that I started school at an earlier year than some of you.

We lived 4.5 miles from the elementary school, 5 from the Jr. High and 11 from the high school. I started school in 1939 and there were no school buses as we know them today. A smaller city bus picked us up and delivered us home at the end of school. It was used exclusively for the elementary school kids. For Jr. High on through high school we used regular city buses with the tickets supplied by the school system. As with many of you, kids less than a mile from the schools had to walk.
 

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