Fletch
I'll Lock Up
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- Iowa - The Land That Stuff Forgot
Now and then in the media we encounter human encyclopedias - people with prodigious memories. Traditionally, they are solitary, obsessive, often from exotic cultures or religions, with a deep focus on one topic. You know: math, chess, baseball. They are such a stereotype that you might think it's all in their genetic codes.
But in 1954, things were different for at least one couple. About all the middle-aged, middle-class, very married VanDeventers had in common with any other intellectuals was that they lived in Princeton, NJ.
Fred owned a printing company and Florence was a housewife and volunteer. What they did that made them so unusual was read - two hours or more every night - together - polishing off anything that interested them.
Through this free-feeding from the trough of general knowledge, they'd made a nice second career in the radio and TV quiz show field. (The picture shows them on the panel of the very popular Twenty Questions).
It was a far cry from what got them interested in quizzes and such: raising two young kids in the early '30s, the college-educated couple had been "too poor to go to the movies," and made their own entertainment.
To us today, it's an odd perspective on the life of the mind. Nice married middle-class folks don't become human encyclopedias in our era (and it was very rare in 1954). But it suggests that book-learning didn't carry quite the same markers of social aberration in years gone by, even if fewer people aspired to it.
Read about the VanDeventers in the Reading, PA, Eagle, May 2, 1954
But in 1954, things were different for at least one couple. About all the middle-aged, middle-class, very married VanDeventers had in common with any other intellectuals was that they lived in Princeton, NJ.
Fred owned a printing company and Florence was a housewife and volunteer. What they did that made them so unusual was read - two hours or more every night - together - polishing off anything that interested them.
Through this free-feeding from the trough of general knowledge, they'd made a nice second career in the radio and TV quiz show field. (The picture shows them on the panel of the very popular Twenty Questions).
It was a far cry from what got them interested in quizzes and such: raising two young kids in the early '30s, the college-educated couple had been "too poor to go to the movies," and made their own entertainment.
To us today, it's an odd perspective on the life of the mind. Nice married middle-class folks don't become human encyclopedias in our era (and it was very rare in 1954). But it suggests that book-learning didn't carry quite the same markers of social aberration in years gone by, even if fewer people aspired to it.
Read about the VanDeventers in the Reading, PA, Eagle, May 2, 1954
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