When and did you make your very first money? What, why and how did you use it?

i had a summer job babysitting for a family five days a week. My mother would drop me off at the family’s house on the way to her job then pick me up on her way home.
During the school year, I left school every afternoon and went to work at the textile plant for about a 4 hour shift.
It meant I couldn’t be involved in any after school activities but I needed the money worse.
 

My first paying job was at the Dole pineapple cannery in Honolulu and it paid me $1.65 an hour. That was 1970 and I was 17 years old.
I saved it and didn't spend any appreciable amount of it until my freshman year of college in California. That was 1971 and I probably spent it on beer and cannabis.
 
picking fruit or weeding row crops using the infamous back breaking short handled hoe along side braceros (Mexicans imported by growers).
The money was a "nice to have" for me ..... "must have for food" to them.
They worked their azzzzs off in 100 degree heat for 12 hours a day.
I usually quit at noon
 

My first money was made in my teens. I mowed the neighbors' lawns. Then I moved to washing/detailing cars. My father was with a brokerage firm and he used to bring his co-workers' cars to the house. I would wash/wax them and make them look like new. I received $50 per car. I still lived it home, so I used the money to party on weekends. My mother put an end to it due to the water use and dirty towels and I had to get a "real" job at Sears.
 
I posted this back in 2019, so this is just a copy and paste effort.

My first real job was as a bag boy at Publix. Publix is a grocery store chain that originated in Florida. I say real job, because it was one that required me to get a Social Security card. Back in those days that's when you got you Social Security Card. For your first job. I was 16. Nowadays I think they sign you up in the Hospital as soon as you are born.

$1.00 buck an hour. It started in June of 1963 at the grand opening of the Publix on Belcher Road and Gulf to Bay blvd, in Clearwater. They hired a whole bunch of us for the grand opening, gave us about a 1/2 hour orientation and then told us to show up in time to clock in before 9:00 am when the doors opened. We had to wear white shirts, black pants, black shoes and a black tie. You could bring your own tie or you could wear one of theirs which were clip on bow ties.

I thought the bow ties looked gay, so I brought my own 99 cent clip on regular tie. You had to be all ready to go before you clocked in. One time a couple of us clocked in and then went into the back and put on our ties and then went to work. That probably took two or three minutes. But as soon as we got back up front the assistant manager was there and chewed us a new one. "We're not paying you to get dressed!".

Anyway, back to day one. When those doors opened at 9 am the customers just streamed in. I had never seen a store so busy in my life. It was a baptism under fire. They had given us a few instructions on bagging during the orientation. Cans on the bottom, lighter stuff on top, wet and cold stuff in a separate bag. They were real anal about bag use back then. We were not allowed to double bag anything except for frozen stuff.

They used the brown paper bags then. The biggest size were the "50 lbs bags" Next the 25 lbs, the 10, then 5's. We were supposed to economize to the max on the bags. Which was BS because if you put very many cans into a single bag it was gonna tear. But if we double bagged them you would get your butt chewed a new one by one of the assistant managers.

There was one exception. If the customer asked for double bags we could do it then. I used to pray for customers that had gotten wise to this and asked for double bags so I wouldn't have to worry about them tearing. Somewhere around the 1980's Publix got wise and quit trying to nickle and dime on the bags and they started to double all bags. But not while I was working there.

But I digress. Back to day one. It was on a Thursday. The Grand Opening was to run Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. Back then Publix closed on Sundays. They didn't tell us nuthin. So we just started bagging groceries non stop. I was wondering if that was going to be it for my life. Just non stop grocery bagging till the end of time. Back then the average grocery order came to about $25 bucks which would be four of the big 50 lbs bags filling up one grocery cart. That probably represented about a weeks groceries for an average family.

But then around noon they started telling us in shifts that we could take a lunch break now. That was the first time I found out that we would get a break. I can't remember how long we had. I think a half hour, but it might have been more. But you had to clock out of course and then clock back in when you were done. I remember what I got for lunch though. I went back to the cold case and got a cuban sandwich and then a quart of skim milk form the dairy case. The cuban was 25 cents. The milk was the same. So 50 cents plus two cents tax for lunch. I ate it in the back of the store, then clocked back in.

We got another break around dinner time. Then it was non stop bagging till closing time. They locked the doors at 9 pm but there were still customers in the store. So a few of us kept bagging while the rest started clean up. First you swept the aisles. Lot of cigarette butts on the floor because smoking was allowed in the stores back then. Then we wet moped, followed that up with a dry mop, then a wax mop, and finally we ran the buffer. And of course some unlucky dude got to do the bathrooms. Scrubbing out commodes and picking cigarette butts out of the urinals was not the greatest job in the world.


I got home but I could not sleep. I would close my eyes and all I could see was an endless stream of groceries coming at me that I had to bag. And I'm wondering if this is going to be it for the summer? Thirteen hours a day six days a week? I kind of complained to my mom that night about how they hadn't given us a clue as to what our schedules were going to be and what if this is it? Thirteen hours a day six days a week? And all she said back to me was "Think of all the money you will make".

Anyway, Saturday was a repeat of the first two days. By now I've got the process down pretty good. I'm just a grocery bagging robot. One of my favorite assignments was if I could be lucky enough to be the guy that the assistant manager picked to go out into the parking lot and round up all the carts and bring them back in. That was a plum assignment to me. Fresh air and freedom from those groceries, even if just for a little while.

A lot of the other guys didn’t like that because they wanted to keep bagging so that they could make tips. Publix had a no tipping policy but during our orientation they had told us that it was OK to take them if the customer offered. Being an introvert I didn’t get as many tips as some of the other guys because I was not one to smile or strike up a banter with the customers. I was much happier out by myself rounding up carts in the parking lot.

I still shop at Publix to this day. It’s a nice clean store and they are big on customer service. But it’s a little more casual. Back in the day we were expected to treat customers like they were Gods that had descended from heaven to walk the earth.

As for what I did with the money I made, I don't remember.
I grew up in Tampa and worked at Countryside Mall in Clearwater in the late 70's. I had a house in Largo in the early 80's so I know the Clearwater area quite well and remember the Publix where you worked. Small world.

Yes, Publix was the "upscale" grocery store when I lived in Florida. Winn-Dixie was the pits. :ROFLMAO:
 
My Dad would give me a crisp 2 dollar bill for cleaning his golf clubs when I was a little boy.

Oh man, I could go to town at the local convenience store. Mojos, chocolate, potato chips, ice cream bars, pop...and on and on. Two bucks went pretty far for a little boy in 1973.
 
My first money was made in my teens. I mowed the neighbors' lawns. Then I moved to washing/detailing cars. My father was with a brokerage firm and he used to bring his co-workers' cars to the house. I would wash/wax them and make them look like new. I received $50 per car. I still lived it home, so I used the money to party on weekends. My mother put an end to it due to the water use and dirty towels and I had to get a "real" job at Sears.
I wish more jobs like that—mowing lawns, paper routes, washing cars, shoveling snow—were still available for kids. I think it would do them a world of good. Perhaps they still are available in some places. Where I live, newspapers are delivered by adults in cars, or via the mail. Most people hire a company to take care of their lawns and take their cars to drive-thru places. And we get so much snow, and such strong winds, that shoveling isn't really feasible; everyone has a snowblower.

Several years back a neighbor came by to ask if my son could mow her lawn one week because her regular lawn person was on vacation. She'd seen my son walking our dog and thought he seemed like a nice young man. <insert proud, rather boastful, mom smile here> I was thrilled; it was good experience for him. Of course, I've always encouraged all three of my kids to volunteer and to work at paying jobs when they were old enough.

Sorry, guess I strayed a little off topic!🫣
 
I worked in my mom's salon on Saturdays, cleaning brushes, combs, and rollers; sweeping up hair off the floor; getting customers' coffee and magazines; and working the register. I'd load the washer with towels and capes and fold them after drying. She paid me $5.00 for the day. Florence, who worked for my mother, would often slip me another $5.00, motioning with her finger to her lips, “Shh.”🤫 She was a sweet lady.
 
My first money was picking peas and making about 75 cents per basket. I was about 11 and thought that was a good way to make money. It didn't last long, so then I babysat a
cute little girl and made $1.00 an hour but I really liked taking care of her. I bought a small transister radio with the money and saved the rest.
 
Never got an allowance even tho I asked for one. My father looked at me like I was crazy.

Why I told my parents at about age seven: "Other kid get an allowance...why can't I have one too?".
They said: "You aren't other kids and I'm not other kid's parents".

Taught me self reliance.

Am rather glad they said that.
 
My first 'Proper Money' was from my first job after I left school to be an Apprentice Mining Surveyor. Growing up there were two things I was told I could never have 'as long as you live under our roof'. A gun and a motorcycle. When I got my first wage I moved out into a flat with some pals and bought a gun and put a deposit down on a motorcycle. Always was a cantankerous git 😇
 
At 15 years old traveled from where I lived in a special chartered bus to a fruit cannery 600 km …..from where I lived
to work ( they provided backpacker type accommodation ) right across the road from the factory .

The factory canned Apricots / Peaches / …..Fruit salad ….which was any good bits cut off rotting Apricots / Peaches

Tomatoes were canned after the fruit had finished

All my money earned from working the fruit season for 3 months went to my parents to buy cigarettes and alcohol

10 years latter @ 25 years old I moved from my home town to that same area , and only left the area when I met my DH in 1986.

We traveled right past the factory in May…. the buildings still standing however it’s a steel fabrication place now
And most of Australia’s canned fruit comes from China or Thailand :sick::sick::sick::sick:
I grow / bottle / preserve / dry my own home grown fruit 🍈
 
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I babysat for my next door neighbor when I was a teen. I remember saving up my money and I bought a blue paisley tent dress. They were all the rage at the time. It cost me $12.
I remember buying some flower patterned bell bottom jeans. I got a job as a waitress. I lied about my age but they knew i was only 15.
I loved buying my own clothes when I could.
 
When I was in 6th grade my parent's whet together with another couple to purchase a small cabin in the mountains. We already lived in the Colorado mountains, but this cabin was out in a wilderness area. A couple of miles from the cabin was a small mountain resort, they had a small restaurant serving people that lived in the vicinity. I got a job washing dishes at that resort. It paid minimum wage, that I think was $1.25/hr. It was good work, and I enjoyed the money. Plus, in the evening there was nothing for me to do, so earning money was good and kept me busy.
 
We collected golf balls that floated down the creek from a golf course, then went up to the club house and sold them for $3 a piece. Fun and easy. :)

Edit next day: We bought records with it.
Wow, I did the same thing. But golf balls don't float they sink! We had to pull them from under rocks and mud banks to get them. Even in rolling water they get stuck under rocks, sticks, or whatever, but they never float...we only got $1.50 for them...
 
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Wow, I did the same thing. But golf balls don't float they sink! We had to pull them from under rocks and mud banks to get them. Even in rolling water they get stuck under rocks, sticks, or whatever, but they never float...we only got $1.50 for them...
I agree. This was a pretty big creek with pretty strong water. It would deposit the balls for a good 100 yards past their property. But, your right. You had to search for them under stuff. I loved it. :)
 
We girls were 3, 6, 9 when we were cigarette butt picker uppers.
We three also were fruit pickers and sellers.
My mom would have my older sister and I save each milk carton we emptied; then she (and I) would have to cut milk cartons to use as fruit containers.
We would pick fruit from our trees in our yard: plums, peaches, lemons, limes and put them in the milk cartons and then load up our wagon.
Then we three little girls would go door to door until we sold all the cartons of fruit.

I think we are 11, 9 and 6 in this photo and no we did not wear those mom made school dresses doing work".
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if ever there was an All American photo from the 60's this is one.. beautiful photo..
 

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