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Old gas stations

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
. View attachment 82176
And the truck in the foreground is, IMHO, the iconic pickup truck - those lines say GE pickup truck to me.

In the back of the “iconic” truck with my sisters and cousins on a Sunday ride.
Bored and wishing I was somewhere else! :cool:
IMG_3100.JPG
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
Desktop.png

When the truck was in motion...I had to face forward, otherwise I’d get carsick
“faster than a speeding bullet”....no kidding!



Btw: It was around this time period period on a
typical Sunday ride, My mom noticed flying disks way up in
the sky.
I saw them too. There were three back to back.
Within less than a minute they picked up speed and vanished.
No sound.
This was in ’49. We didn’t own a television set and flying saucers
was words that were unknown to us or for that matter, science-fiction
movies until the 50s.

;)
IMG_3100.JPG
 
Last edited:
Messages
17,181
Location
New York City
7 Elevens are all gone in my area.

Thing is.... I can't recall when they arrived or left.

Similar to Stop-n-Go.

No pun intended! :(

The timeline of that shot is getting pretty close to my childhood as that picture could have been lifted out of my, very early, memory.

As to 7 Elevens - they have been moving in (yes, in) to NYC over the past ten or so years and knocking out the generic "bodegas" and mom-and-pop old-style small grocery stores. The 7 Elevens aren't so much stealing business, but locations as they can pay higher rents and the mom and pops are closing as the lease renewals come up. I have nothing against 7 Elevens, but it is sad to see more local business get pushed out.

One small positive is that they say the 7 Elevens are helping the working class in the city as they are much more affordable than the old generic groceries. I go into the 7 Elevens regularly and am surprised by how reasonable the pricing is. And they are crowded with regular people like me, not the New Yorkers who "lunch."
 

EngProf

Practically Family
Messages
608
Sometime in the Sixties. I vaguely remember gas prices like that when I was in junior high, and cars like that Buick, Corvair, and wagon.
Those were the prices when I was in high school - ~1966. Even with my hot-rod 1965 Chevy I could buy $1 worth of premium and get by for date night.
 

2jakes

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,680
Location
Alamo Heights ☀️ Texas
I miss Woolworth’s and Sears Roebuck
and a time when downtown had clocks on the street corners.
The main street was decorated with Christmas lights but
only after Thanksgiving not before and Christmas trees were
real and not expensive.
647a0e9ca392dd4975e983989c1d574e--garage-signs-old-gas-stations.jpg


H-D-I.jpg


9d3f6c8041dae6e4892ad80f9ff94a2e--harley-davidson-history-vintage-bikes.jpg

I have a coat similar to this one.
Made by Woolrich Woolen Mills, Woolrich, Penna.
 
Last edited:
Messages
17,181
Location
New York City
I miss Woolworth’s and Sears Roebuck
and a time when downtown had clocks on the street corners.
The main street was decorated with Christmas lights but
only after Thanksgiving not before and Christmas trees were
real and not expensive.
View attachment 82768

There's a very iconic, very representative-of-the-period feel to this shot.

Also, how perfect that it captured both Woolworth and Sears.

And I have no idea why, but I love seeing casement windows opened. I know of only one building that put in new windows in my lifetime that put in casements. I don't understand why as they are much, much more functional than up and down windows.
 

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