A Bomber General
New in Town
- Messages
- 29
- Location
- Whitehouse, Ohio
I was thinking about this idea the other day and would like to hear some thoughts from the group. Let's suppose that you could go back in time to 1940, to your hometown or a place that you know intimately. Toledo, Ohio in my case.
What would be the first thing that you noticed that clued you in that you were in 1940?
For me, I think it would be the smell. Think on it- in 1940, people smoked and smoked nearly everywhere. Automotive exhaust was essentially unbridled, and the gas was leaded and had a distinct smell. Many homes burned coal, as did most industries with nothing like scrubbers to filter the exhaust. Remember the Donora smog of 1948? The St. Louis smog incident of 1939? The air would reek depending on where you lived. My home growing up would have been two blocks south of New York Central's Air Line Yard in south Toledo; it had two roundhouses, a coaling tower, and was one of the busiest yards in the system. The whole area had to smell of coal smoke. Jennison Wright was a few blocks away; you'd smell creosote most of the time.
But once I got past the smell and realized where I was, I'd start smiling from ear to ear.
What do you think?
What would be the first thing that you noticed that clued you in that you were in 1940?
For me, I think it would be the smell. Think on it- in 1940, people smoked and smoked nearly everywhere. Automotive exhaust was essentially unbridled, and the gas was leaded and had a distinct smell. Many homes burned coal, as did most industries with nothing like scrubbers to filter the exhaust. Remember the Donora smog of 1948? The St. Louis smog incident of 1939? The air would reek depending on where you lived. My home growing up would have been two blocks south of New York Central's Air Line Yard in south Toledo; it had two roundhouses, a coaling tower, and was one of the busiest yards in the system. The whole area had to smell of coal smoke. Jennison Wright was a few blocks away; you'd smell creosote most of the time.
But once I got past the smell and realized where I was, I'd start smiling from ear to ear.
What do you think?