The Old Coot + a cardboard
box = fun.
By Merlin Lessler
A recent “Family Circus”
comic strip pictured 2 kids and a dog hanging around a huge cardboard box. The
caption said, “Mommy got a new washer, and we got a new clubhouse.” It reminded
me of the day my mother got her new AUTOMATIC washing machine; it was in the early
1950’s. It was a big day at our house. That dinged up old ringer washer was
moved aside, and a sparkling new Maytag took its place; it was connected to the
faucets in the nearby stationary sink that she used to soak clothes in to start
her usual cleaning process. My mother didn’t trust the new machine that hid what
it was doing under the lid, so she continued to soak everything before loading
it into the Maytag. She even continued to use the scrub board and bar of yellow
soap to remove the grass stains on the knees of my jeans, which we called
dungarees in those days. Jeans were what girls wore.
My sister and I garnered
the box and turned it into a club house. My friend, Woody, and I added a “No
girls allowed,” sign on the flap and took possession. First, in the basement
and then outside. We used it to slide down the steep, snow covered hill in my
backyard. Cardboard was quite durable in those days, much more rugged than it
is now. That box stayed intact for weeks, getting soggy, but maintaining its
size and shape as it dried out on the back porch, awaiting the next snowfall.
Eventually, we cut it into
4 pieces, giving us 4 sleds so some neighborhood kids could join us. It didn’t
take much to entertain kids in those pre-TV days. We spent most of our free time
outside. Through snow, sleet, rain and the dark of night. We would have made
excellent postal carriers.
Those old cardboard boxes added
to our supply of toys shared in the neighborhood: stilts, pogo sticks, trikes &
bikes, sleds, balls, bats & gloves and roller skates. If we didn’t have the
right equipment, we borrowed it, sometimes without asking. It was a bonanza era
for cardboard boxes; ringer washers were replaced by automatics, old gas stoves
with new electric ones and ice boxes replaced by electric refrigerators. The
recycling was handled by us kids, using, and wearing out all those boxes. We
cut the scraps into small squares and fastened them to the fender braces on our
bikes with a clothes pin to make a motorized sound. Sociologists should refer
to the span of time between the end of World War ll and the 1960’s as the
cardboard box era. I’m so glad I was there.
Comments, complaints?
- Send to mlessler7@gmail.com