LostInTyme
Practically Family
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I was a child of the 1950's. I grew up and lived in and around Cleveland, Ohio for the first half of my life. Today while watching a program on the local PBS channel something profound occurred to me. The TV program was showing film footage of 1950's downtown Pittsburgh. It was all black and white.
That's when it dawned on me. My life, back then was essentially black and white. People didn't dress in outlandish colors. Downtown buildings were tall structures, mostly dark stone, or light stone stained dark by the smoke of industry. The streets were asphalt or brick, but both were dark. The quality of light was poor due to a lot of particulate matter that was a constant back then.
I have a vivid picture of my Mom and me standing on Ontario Street in downtown Cleveland, along side the Higbee building waiting for a bus. And we are in black and white along with everything else around us. I can't see any color in my mind. On the ride home, there are colors in my memories but not in downtown. I almost feel it's from a Twilight Zone episode.
We lived outside downtown, out in the suburbs, with green trees and houses of brick or wood, but nothing in the primary colors. There were only muted hues in everything I remember observing. Perhaps my mind was set to see only black and white and shades of gray, but that is how I remember it. My parents, and relatives and all their friends smoked, so, I was constantly looking at things through a haze of tobacco smoke.
I truly don't remember vivid colors until the very late 1950's and early 1960's. There is nothing about this observation that is earth shattering, but only how my mind recalls my childhood.
That's when it dawned on me. My life, back then was essentially black and white. People didn't dress in outlandish colors. Downtown buildings were tall structures, mostly dark stone, or light stone stained dark by the smoke of industry. The streets were asphalt or brick, but both were dark. The quality of light was poor due to a lot of particulate matter that was a constant back then.
I have a vivid picture of my Mom and me standing on Ontario Street in downtown Cleveland, along side the Higbee building waiting for a bus. And we are in black and white along with everything else around us. I can't see any color in my mind. On the ride home, there are colors in my memories but not in downtown. I almost feel it's from a Twilight Zone episode.
We lived outside downtown, out in the suburbs, with green trees and houses of brick or wood, but nothing in the primary colors. There were only muted hues in everything I remember observing. Perhaps my mind was set to see only black and white and shades of gray, but that is how I remember it. My parents, and relatives and all their friends smoked, so, I was constantly looking at things through a haze of tobacco smoke.
I truly don't remember vivid colors until the very late 1950's and early 1960's. There is nothing about this observation that is earth shattering, but only how my mind recalls my childhood.
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