When Did You First Get Your Social Security Card?

Paladin1950

Still love 50's & 60's music!
Although I live in New York, I got mine while living in Florida. My homeroom teacher passed out the applications to all of the boys, during the 1964-1965 school year, in 8th Grade. Being the South, and in the 60's, only the boys got them. The logic is in a few years, they may be the "breadwinner" in a new family. If a girl needed one sometime, she would have to apply for one by herself.

I just came to school, sat in my desk, and had the application handed to me. How easy was that?:)(y)
 
I applied for my Social Security card during the Summer of 1960 at the local post office in Brooklyn, NY. It was in preparation for obtaining working papers when I turned 14 in the Fall.

Being the South, and in the 60's, only the boys got them.
We visited my brother in Florida in the 60s. That was my first experience of a lot of things done so differently in the South. It was eye opening. Especially the segregated rest rooms at the zoo.
 
I first got my social security card when I started high school at age 14. 1974. The school office contacted my mom and told her they needed that info. She was shocked. She didn't even know where to get that info at first. She made a big deal of it, which is why I still remember the incident.
 
Near the end of my freshman year of high school, so I was 14.
The school I attended, and another nearby school, had French club for students who took French classes in school. The teacher arranged for us to go to Canada.
She said there wasn't likely to be any problems, but in case we were asked for I.D. at the border it'd be easier and more convenient to have Social Security cards than to be carrying around our birth certificates. So I, and other kids who wanted to go on the trip, went to the local Post Office, filled out a little card and mailed it in, and the cards soon arrived in the mail.
 
We visited my brother in Florida in the 60s. That was my first experience of a lot of things done so differently in the South. It was eye opening. Especially the segregated rest rooms at the zoo.
Having lived in Florida for most of the 60s the only thing that surprises me about this was that black people were allowed into the zoo. Don't think they were in our town...
 
I was in high school in Tampa, and I got one during the summer of '66 for a part time job. Next year I got my first passport to go to Germany after graduating and getting married.
 
Around '62, when I was 15 .. had part-time jobs around Xmas, sorting mail at a postal outlet, and pricing
boxes of ornaments for a department store. The sales job at the blouse store didn't last .. I'm the worst
salesperson in the world :(

I got a new card when I moved from B.C. to Ontario in '67, when I was 20, and got my first job government
job at Queen's Park.
 
In Canada it's called a Social Insurance card. I started working full time at age 16. I can't remember how I got it. Maybe my employer provided the application.

Not long after, a government employee commented that the number was not a local one, that local Social Insurance Numbers started with a different set of numbers. No idea what that was about.

In Mexico, I needed a national number for something or other. I didn't have one, so the clerk figured mine out for me. It included my birthdate, letters from my name, place of birth, and gender. Nice that it was ready made and I didn't have to wait!
 
My Sister and I both sent to SS for a card as we had to have "Work permits" in Oregon in 1973. The funny thing was, our numbers are 11 apart. Yet we're born 1958 and 1960.
 
Not really sure when I got my first SS card, but remember getting my first Military Dependents ID card
with my picture on it.

Very official looking, with my Dad's info on it.

Carried it in a wallet I made at Camp one summer ( the leather ones you pound designs on it and lace it up ).
Mom would only allow me out of the house with it on special occasions.

Man, did I feel important when I had that in my back jean pocket...
 
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