Nagora said:
Curse this timezone difference! Your longest reply yet (is there a prize for eliciting such verbosity?) and it arrives as I'm going to bed!
Thank you very much for taking the time, it was very interesting. I'll not quote the whole thing.
The benefit to me of being semi-retired is being able to post more without feeling guilty for not working
Think nothing of it. My pleasure to be of service.
That's interesting: I hadn't realised that blackouts were nationwide in the US - I had thought it was only a costal thing.
We had blackout shades and heavy curtains on all the windows of our place in Chicago. I don't remember that being the case at my grandparents house in Lake Geneve where we spent a good deal of each summer.
What's a "Class A" gas ration and was there any particular reason your father had one?
Class A was the ordinary gasoline rationing sticker. It allowed only a low number of gallons per month. I know that Class B allowed a greater quantity, and I believe that there was also a Class C. IIRR farmers were not rationed. I was too young to know the number of gallons each sort allowed.
What was a gold star for?
Family member killed in service. All of us boys were very respectful to the householder or apartment tennent that had one of those in the window.
That's a shame; chimps can be very long lived and one of Weissmuller's "Cheetas" is still alive and well at the age of 75!
Indeed, and I feel regret even though I do not know for sure that I was the cause.
BTW, if you look up the gorilla, Bushman" now mounted and on display at the Chicago museum of Natural History, you'll see what he looked like. We got to go back to see him as well, as Ed Robinson was the only one that dared go near him as he got older. He was the same age as my sister, 11 years older than I, and my brother always kidded her about being Bushman's twin. that was one strong ape! He could burst a footballby squeezing it and pull a car tire into a long oval
That quickly!? Rationing ended here in July 1954, although by that time it was down to just luxury items like sweets. Britain was basically bankrupted by the second war and it took a long time to recover.
The end of rationing was astonishingly rapid, although there were a few shortages for about a year after the war ended. Oddly enough candy was never in short supply here, and all sorts of chocolate bars and like candy were on the shelves, most at 5 cents the bar. My parents didn't allow me much in the way of soft drinks or candy, but I managed to ahold of one or the other around once a month.
I had it in my head that you were in Chicago at that age; when did your family move to LG?
The neighborhood in 4100 North Kenmore Avenue was declining rapidly throughout the war. In the spring of 1945 our group of boys, about 10 in number, were attacked by around 30 kids from up the street a block or two, and thanks to Jerry Paul's BB gun, and his strong throwing arm we held them off by fighting from Jerry & jimmy Paul's back porch, and Jerry beaned their leader, one Rex, with a clinker that he had thrown up at us. That dropped Rex and his pals caried him off, the lot of them running away. Whenmy parents learned of this my father decided it was time to sell the two-flat and move.
He owned property in La Jolla, CA, and he planed tobuild a place there for us to live. We went to Lake Geneva in July 1946, just before my 8th birthday. We remained there bacause father was not willing to retire, and there would have been no work for hum in California. Being a foolish kid, I was delighted to remain in Lake Geneva with my friends there, able to see my Chicago buddies fairly often as well as the distance was only about 75 miles.
]One of my mother's neighbours was killed when a lone bomber dropped a rack of bombs on their area. The man heard it coming and lay on the ground and the shockwave coming up from the pavement killed him while others much closer to the explosion survived.
A couple of Irish lads I knew that moved from the UK after the war ended, Thomas and Michael Duffy, told me how that had beensent out of London to avoid the bombing. They were sent to Redhill, Surrey. One day a V1 rocket ran out of fuel overhead and cme down near where they were living. It missed the ammunition dump but hit the garbage dump
I also had not realised that rationing was such a widely enforced thing in the US.
Absolutely, and everyone watched out for hoarders as well. I am told that in small towns meat, diary products, and eggs were pretty to get from farmers selling on the black market, butt everyone was on rationing.
Well, I can understand that, but I was thinking more in terms of whether listening to stories from returning relatives had fired your military interests. I think all war gamers have been inspired by movies and suchlike. I was curious to know if it was more personal than that for you.
Actually, the only war stories I heard were from Mr. Joseph E. Dimery, my oldest friend's father, he being a Yorkshireman that fought in WW I, was breveted Captain all the wayt from private for his courage in combat, and given six months to live after being mistard gassed. He told us about the Germans with their tommyguns, flamethrowers, and "minnewerfer" bombs.
Of course watching war movies and seeing Victory at Sea did royse my interest in military history
Thanks again. It's interesting to get an American-eye view of the homefront for a change, even if you were only a lad at the time.
As it happens I have a remarkable amount of recall of that time, and what a time it was, especially after the war ended and the USA was on top of the world. Even the Korean War (or, according to HST, Police Action) didn't dismay folks much.
Cheerio,
Gary