Tag Archives: Baby Boom

Baby Boom Toys (Part Two!)

A few weeks ago, in honor of the season, we looked at inductees to the National Toy Hall of Fame, which is at the Strong National Museum of Play in Rochester. (Worth a visit – you should go!) We focused ourselves on Baby Boom toys, released no earlier than 1946.

But I’ll make an exception for the SLINKY, introduced for Christmas in 1945. The manufacturers brought their first batch of 400 to demonstrate at Gimbels in Philadelphia, and sold out the stock in minutes.

I well remember being flabbergasted by the thing in the mid-fifties, as it “walked” its way down the stairs. Clearly it wasn’t magic, but it darned well looked like it. The down side was that Slinkies easily got twisted or tangled. (Still do, I suppose.) But the lifelike movement was compelling.

I was about 13 when G. I. JOE burst onto in the scene, so I didn’t get caught up in the enthusiasm. My younger cousin did, though. And so did millions of others.

G. I. Joe was sort of a male counterpart to Barbie, with all the changes of costume and paraphernalia. He was billed as an a-c-t-i-o-n f-i-g-u-r-e, and not as a (heavens!) d*o*l*l, so boys could enjoy him with impunity. And they did! He became the progenitor of acres of action figures, from Star Trek to Star Wars to He-Man and She-Ra, and he himself is still going strong.

Not without a few hiccups along the way, especially as Vietnam provoked Americans to re-evaluate their love affair with war. He disappeared for five years or so beginning in 1978, and he shrank in size from 11 ½ inches to eight inches to 3 ¾ inches. He also diversified, becoming an astronaut, an explorer… an adventurer. Even today, he’s always ready for the next mission or the next challenge, and the next kid with dreams.

I also had only a nodding acquaintance with the EASY-BAKE OVEN, originally available in such modern designer colors as turquoise and pale yellow. It’s very fondly remembered and still sells up a storm. The elementary-school girls in Jimmy Gownley’s Amelia Rules graphic novel series speak of it with awe as the “holy grail” of Christmas gifts. Hats off to the designers who discerned the brilliant and elegant simplicity of a pair of hundred-watt light bulbs making a safe yet functional oven for kids.

Oh, yes, the SKATEBOARD, or, in the early parlance of the day, the “sidewalk surfer.” Not being very good (even today) at fine-motor coordination, I couldn’t use the thing for beans. But they sure were popular! And still are today! And good for them (assuming you take safety precautions), for giving the kids fresh air and exercise.

Kudos also to the BIG WHEEL, first introduced by Marx. By the time it came out I was far too hulking to use it, but it transformed the venerable tricycle into a far safer (but even faster!) vehicle, mainly by lowering the rider, lowering the center of gravity, and replacing sharp-edged, unyielding metal with molded plastic. More fun, more safe. Love ’em both.

Even adding this second blog doesn’t exhaust the Baby Boom contributions to the National Toy Hall of Fame! We’ll add some more another time.

“Back to the Baby Boom”

On one day in 1946, there were 32 infants in the maternity ward at Corning Hospital… part of the first cohort of Baby Boomers. What was our region like in the days of the Baby Boom?

*The period of the 1950s saw monumental changes in our area.  More changes would come following the 1972 flood, and still more as Corning Incorporated changed the focus of its local activities.  But in many ways, the area we know was largely formed in this period, by such significant events as these.

*Corning introduced zoning of January 1, 1950. Painted Post Indian statue installed, 1950.  The current statue in Painted Post is the fourth in a series — the first two were flat sheet metal.  A fully-rounded statue was blown down and broken during a 1948 windstorm, and the current statue installed two years later.  All three earlier Indians are at the Erwin Depot Museum.

*Corning Glass Center/Corning Museum of Glass opened, 1951.  It’s been through several major revampings and expansions (not to mention a major flood), but the Museum of Glass came in with the new decade.

*Erie Railroad tracks moved north Corning, 1952.  Until than, multiple tracks ran right through the city.  People in Corning lived with the noise, the smoke, the danger, and the snarled traffic until the lines were moved to what’s essentially their current routes.  The yards were moved down to Gang Mills at the same time.

*In 1953, polo was epidemic in Steuben County.

*Erie Avenue becane Denison Parkway in 1954.  With the tracks all torn up and removed, the street was renamed to fit with its new identity as a business district.  Governor Tom Dewey came for the dedication.

*Corning-Painted Post School District was approved in1954.  The proposal sparked fierce controversy, but the area was still served by 62 districts, most operating a single one-room school… and scarcely half the one-room students went on to high school. Even the referendum sparked bitterness.  Because of a quirk in the law, folks in the Southside District 9 were not allowed to vote.  Folks in the rural towns were angry that there was only one polling place, and they had to come into the city in order to vote.  Then it snowed.  But the proposal passed, new modern facilities started going up, and the last set of one-room schools finally closed in 1957.

*Watkins Glen International opened its dedicated track in 1956.  After an accidental death on a crowded sidewalk, the auto races moved for several years to rural roads in the Town of Dix.  In 1956 the new closed course was opened, with enthusiastic drivers voluntarily taking their chances on a surface that was not yet cured.

*At this time there were 300 dairies in the Town of Bath, half-a-dozen of them within the Village limits.

*Watson Homestead opened in 1957.  A year before his death in 1956 Thomas Watson established a Declaration of Trust for the old family farm (his birthplace) and started working with an architect.  In 1957 the retreat and conference center opened its doors for the first time.

*In 1958 the Courier and Advocate newspapers merged in Bath and became a general newspaper, ending over a hundred years of partisan newspapers operated on behalf of political parties.

*Corning Community College opened in 1958.  The old School 3 on Chemung Street was home to 118 students and ten faculty (six of them full-time).  Also in 1958, the Davenport Home for Girls closed.

*At about the same time, Steuben County Fair switched from a September date to an August date.

*Southern Tier Library System opened in 1959.

*The sixties, of course, continued the theme of great change.

*Ira Davenport Memorial Hospital opened in 1960, helped along by assets transferred from the defunct Davenport Home.

*Reportedly the Gardiner Road School in Bath closed in 1961.  That’s the latest date I’ve seen for a one-room school operating.

*A 1962 meeting at Keuka College formed the Finger Lakes Trail Conference, and began building what is today a thousand-mile trail system.  That same year, Glenn Curtiss Museum opened up in the old Hammondsport Academy building.

*The Southern Tier expressway was coming into existence by fits and starts.  The Erie Railroad merged with the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad in 1960, and passenger traffic for Steuben County ended in the 1960s.

*In 1963 a multi-day forest fire raged above Bath between Cameron Road and Babcock Hollow Road.  In the following year the Village began the process of buying land and creating Mossy Bank Park.

*BOCES came into existance in 1965, and in 1968 we switched from a Board of Supervisors to a County Legislature.

*Much of that didn’t matter much if you were a kid. Life revolved around school – very likely shiney and new – Scouts, Little League, TV, drive-ins, toys, games, music on the radio – it was, in many ways, a very child-centered age. All in all, there were worse ways to grow up. We’ll be talking about those days in our September presentation, “Back to the Bay Boom,” 4 PM Friday, September 7, at Bath Fire Hall. It’s free and open to the public – we hope you’ll join us!

Baby Boom Christmas — Do YOU Remember?

Christmas is a lot of things to a lot of people, but for almost everyone Christmas includes nostalgia and memories. Sometimes they’re very profound, and sometimes silly and trivial… but even those can be heart-gripping.

Not too many of us actually remember the one-horse open sleigh days, but even memories from “modern times” can seem like another world. For instance, back in the Baby Boom of the 1950s and 1950s…

*You might have gone shopping at M. Cohn & Sons on Liberty Street in Bath, where “Kaynee Pigskin Parade Coordinates rate a rousing cheer” for scoring “another fashion goal with the boys!” These Coordinates were “ivy-neat,” and indeed the young lad in the ad looks like he belongs at Princeton, with jacket, flat cap, and knife-cut creases on his slacks.

*You might find a Dacron blouse and tweed skirt for $12.98 at Mary Kirkland Shoppe in Painted Post, and you might hope that they made you look as elegant as the ecstatic lady in the ad.

*To get the most from your new blouse and skirt you might need Spirella Foundations, custom-made for each individual, measurements taken in the privacy of your home by Mrs. Bertha Crippen of Bath. If you don’t know what we’re talking about, don’t worry about it. You probably weren’t there anyway.

*You might be getting a new hi-fi phonograph from W. T. Grant (in Bath and elsewhere), with four speeds, two speakers, and a hefty price tag of $49.95 (but with convenient terms and no down payment).

*You might be heading out to shop A&P for Holiday Foods and a Wide Selection of Festive Money-Savers, including Butterball and Blue Ribbon oven-ready turkeys at 36 cents a pound.

*You (or your mother) might be playing the Acme Cross-Out Game, with 3500 prizes worth $35,000! Mrs. Doris Doloisio of Cortland and Mrs. Elizabeth Anderson of Canandaigua each won mink stoles!

*If you saved up a hundred dollars in your Christmas Club account, you could make your Christmas “the merriest ever!”

*You could be financing your Christmas shopping by saving Triple-S Blue Stamps from Grand Union (turkeys 39 cents a pound), or with S&H Green Stamps from Cohn’s.

*You might be hoping for a Western Flyer bicycle from Western Auto… maybe accessorized with a Cadet speedometer advertised in “Boys Life.”

*You might be enjoying “the light refreshment” of soda (In glass bottles! Made with cane sugar!) from Pepsi-Cola Elmira Bottling Co., Inc.

*You might be shopping at Rockwell’s in Corning, or at Iszard’s in Elmira, or at Agway almost anywhere.

*You might be arranging special gifts for the milkman and the paper boy.

*You might be haunting the newsstand for “Archie’s Christmas Stocking,” or for the annual Christmas issues of Uncle Scrooge, Dennis the Menace, or Sugar and Spike.

*You might have ordered “A Christmas Carol” by Charles Dickens from the Arrow Book Club, and you might be sweating out a delivery before school lets out.

*You might be hoping to start vacation early with a snow day, and guarantee a white Christmas. What do YOU remember?