Speaking of days gone by... first jobs

Aunt Marg

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  • Do you recall what your first job was?
  • Remember what you got paid?

As for myself, as much as I think of my first job as being a side-gig more than a job, I started earning money babysitting. Babysat for an aunt for a number of years, and had a ton of babysitting jobs in and around the neighbourhood for mothers of little ones.

When I first started, I made a whopping .25¢ an hour, and was thrilled, and being that moms around the immediate neighbourhood knew that I had hands-on experience helping my mom care for baby siblings, the phone rang off the hook.

I made the same .25¢ an hour for years, right up till I started high-school, at which time I started making .50¢ an hour. Still, it was enough where I was able to buy myself special or needed things, and being that mom and dad were poor and didn't have extra money to handover to us kids, having a job or side-gig where one could earn a little money was a necessity for me and my siblings.

Also did a little dishwashing for a family that owned a European restaurant, which was a huge pay raise for me from the .25¢ and .50¢ an hour I had become so accustomed to making, plus I ate for free when working at the restaurant.
 

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My first job was mowing lawns for several elderly neighbors....started doing that at about age 12. I made 1 or 2 dollars...depending upon if I needed to do trimming. Then, in high school, I started working at a gas station, evenings and weekends...pumping gas, etc., for about $1/hr. After high school, I joined the USAF, and that put me on track for a nice career in electronics.
 
My first job was mowing lawns for several elderly neighbors....started doing that at about age 12. I made 1 or 2 dollars...depending upon if I needed to do trimming. Then, in high school, I started working at a gas station, evenings and weekends...pumping gas, etc., for about $1/hr. After high school, I joined the USAF, and that put me on track for a nice career in electronics.
That's exactly how my baby brother started out, cutting lawns, snow-shovelling, sweeping lots, delivering newspapers and directories, and whatever else he could find in the way of man-type work.
 

My first job was as a milk delivery girl...delivering milk to doorsteps at 4am until 7am 7 days a week .., I was 12....

At 15 I started training while still at school to be a nurse... ( my mother was already a nurse)...but me and nursing were not good bedfellows...

My first job after leaving school was as an Office Junior in a Punch tape operating pool.... .... The money was terrible £4.10 for a 40 hour week (there was no minimum wage law in those days) ....that's just about £75 today... In actual fact these days the under 18's get paid per hour, what I got paid back then for 40 hours...

In those days factories paid almost twice as much as office work but I didn't want to work in a factory, I'd have a month's trial and I hated it...and office juniors under 18 were paid dire wages... but anyway I moved on to bigger and better things quite soon after..
 
Started off baby sitting for a long time for 25 cents a hour. Started working after school at the Dime store for a few hours each day. Don't remember how much.
 
My first job was as a milk delivery girl...delivering milk to doorsteps at 4am until 7am 7 days a week .., I was 12....

At 15 I started training while still at school to be a nurse... ( my mother was already a nurse)...but me and nursing were not good bedfellows...

My first job after leaving school was as an Office Junior in a Punch tape operating pool.... .... The money was terrible £4.10 for a 40 hour week (there was no minimum wage law in those days) ....that's just about £75 today... In actual fact these days the under 18's get paid per hour, what I got paid back then for 40 hours...

In those days factories paid almost twice as much as office work but I didn't want to work in a factory, I'd have a month's trial and I hated it...and office juniors under 18 were paid dire wages... but anyway I moved on to bigger and better things quite soon after..
I feel somewhat embarrassed reading everyone's replies. You guys all had fun and exciting jobs!

Gosh, I remember milk delivery so well! Still remember how friendly the milkmen were, never driving past without a wave, and on good days, stopping for a moment to talk with us kids.
 
I feel somewhat embarrassed reading everyone's replies. You guys all had fun and exciting jobs!

Gosh, I remember milk delivery so well! Still remember how friendly the milkmen were, never driving past without a wave, and on good days, stopping for a moment to talk with us kids.
oooh lol..I don't know about fun and exciting, it was very hard work, and especially rotten in the icy winters of Scotland on dark mornings with 3 inches of snow, and then to have to go to school afterwards... but hey... all a learning curve for sure.. :D
 
oooh lol..I don't know about fun and exciting, it was very hard work, and especially rotten in the icy winters of Scotland on dark mornings with 3 inches of snow, and then to have to go to school afterwards... but hey... all a learning curve for sure.. :D
Did you have a cart on wheels that you had to push from house to house?
 
My first job was mowing lawns for several elderly neighbors....started doing that at about age 12. I made 1 or 2 dollars...depending upon if I needed to do trimming. Then, in high school, I started working at a gas station, evenings and weekends...pumping gas, etc., for about $1/hr.
About the same here... shoveling snow in the winter.... 1st tax paying jub was at the local Sunoco... IIRC $.2.35 Hr, gas was .54 a gallon.
 
I was paid $1 per hour for babysitting when I was 16. Sometimes, people decided they wanted to stay out much later than they'd said - that's when they'd empty out their piggy bank to count all the coins.

My first "real job" was as entry-level clerk typist position at an insurance company, which paid all of $85 per week, if memory serves me correctly.

Once I moved across country and started working for the government, the pay-scale was better, and the benefits were extremely good. Accumulated sick days could be used for vacation days. Three guaranteed raises per annum, etc.

Wanted to train as a court typist, but that didn't pan out. Mostly I worked in data processing. It was interesting work, typing up incident reports for the police.
 
About the same here... shoveling snow in the winter.... 1st tax paying jub was at the local Sunoco... IIRC $.2.35 Hr, gas was .54 a gallon.
.54¢ a gallon, wow! I know they say everything is relative, but without a doubt the dollar went farther back in the day than it does now.
 
Did you have a cart on wheels that you had to push from house to house?
hahaha... :ROFLMAO::LOL: where did you think we lived ? in the caves in roman times? it was 1969 AD ... not 69BC :ROFLMAO:... no we had an electric milk float...like this... with a steering wheel and everything... :sneaky: The white box at the back was the fridge that held the chilled goods like yoghurts, cream and butter

another-real.jpg.653x0_q70_crop-smart.jpg
 
I was paid $1 per hour for babysitting when I was 16. Sometimes, people decided they wanted to stay out much later than they'd said - that's when they'd empty out their piggy bank to count all the coins.

My first "real job" was as entry-level clerk typist position at an insurance company, which paid all of $85 per week, if memory serves me correctly.

Once I moved across country and started working for the government, the pay-scale was better, and the benefits were extremely good. Accumulated sick days could be used for vacation days. Three guaranteed raises per annum, etc.

Wanted to train as a court typist, but that didn't pan out. Mostly I worked in data processing. It was interesting work, typing up incident reports for the police.
$1 an hour babysitting? You did well! Was that back in the 70's?

Got to love the option of transferring accumulated sick days into vacation days! :)
 
J.C. Pennys, shoe dept. age 18. I had my own apt. in another state., thousands of miles away from my parents. I loved my parents but was anxious to be out on my own and experience whatever possibilities presented themselves.
 
hahaha... :ROFLMAO::LOL: where did you think we lived ? in the caves in roman times? it was 1969 AD ... not 69BC :ROFLMAO:... no we had an electric milk float...like this... with a steering wheel and everything... :sneaky: The white box at the back was the fridge that held the chilled goods like yoghurts, cream and butter

another-real.jpg.653x0_q70_crop-smart.jpg
Excuse me while I remove my sabre-toothed tiger skin! ROFLMAO!

In my mind I was thinking, no way, Holly, would have been too young to drive. :)
 
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J.C. Pennys, shoe dept. age 18. I had my own apt. in another state., thousands of miles away from my parents. I loved my parents but was anxious to be out on my own and experience whatever possibilities presented themselves.
Good on you! I admire you for venturing out on your own at such a young age!
 
Holly. I'm laughing so hard right now I can't stop! :ROFLMAO:

Boy, would it ever have been one long day for you delivering all that milk using a push-cart! :unsure:
 
I had a summer job as a cashier in a sleazy loan company the summer I graduated from high school. I was 17 and made $50 a week.

One day we were robbed while I was in the restroom primping for an after-work date.

My dad made me quit.
I would have stood behind your dads decision to see you out of there had I been his wife. No amount of money is worth a life.
 
Growing up in Indiana farm community, it was, baling hay, working fields, and assisting various other farm type activities! $1.00 per hour! Would love to hear complaints from kids nowadays having to do that kind of labor! lol
 


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