FedoraFan112390
Practically Family
- Messages
- 646
- Location
- Brooklyn, NY
If you were to put a definitive set of years to place the birth years of the "Greatest Generation" or the "Depression/WWII" Generation within, what years would it be? And why?
My own formulation is that the earliest GI Generation folk were born around 1908 and the youngest tier were born in 1927.
The oldest tier (1908-1918 let's say) I class as the 'older officers' of World War II; they were much more formal, they really grew up and experienced the core years of the Golden Era; these were the people who would've seen Gone with the Wind or the Wizard of Oz in theaters and been able to understand what them while watching it; These were people who would've been old enough to vote in the election of 1932, which decided the course of the rest of the Golden Era politically; these were the young brothers of the Golden Era stars and starlets; members of this age tier were too young to fight in World War I, but many fought in World War II in some fashion, and more often than not, they wore hats, and were more consistently formal in their dress than members of the other tiers of the GI generation.
The Middle Tier (1918-1923) were the foot soldiers of World War II (not in a literal sense, but an age sense). These were the hard core New Dealers; the wave of people who helped re-elect Roosevelt; these were the guys who did the brunt of the fighting in World War II in terms of age; they were generally moderate to liberal; many of the men of this age wore hats early on, but discarded them by the 1950s and were flexible in their dress, but not liberal in their fashion. This was the tier of youths who (if ladies) fawned over Gable and Bogart as teenagers in the theatre and if gents had their jaws drop at the likes of Vivien Leigh and Olivia De Havilland. You could call this age-tier the pin-up generation, the boys in WWII who'd hoot and holler the pin-ups in the magazines or painted on the sides of their warplanes.
The Last Tier (1923-1927) - the last wave of boys old enough to legally fight in World War II; an age-tier of people who would've voted for FDR but were decidedly more conservative than their older peers; This was the age group raised more on Bogart and Bacall and the Rat Pack rather than on Gable and Flynn, and even more liberal in their sense of fashion than their peers and likely did not usually wear hats for the most part. There is a slight bleedover from this generation to the Silent (1927-1940). The last group of people who would've experienced the 1939 World's Fair and remembered it in any mature way.
Of course, these are generalizations; no one size fits every individual, but my own personal way of grouping generally speaking the people of these age groups.
I'm curious about yours.
My own formulation is that the earliest GI Generation folk were born around 1908 and the youngest tier were born in 1927.
The oldest tier (1908-1918 let's say) I class as the 'older officers' of World War II; they were much more formal, they really grew up and experienced the core years of the Golden Era; these were the people who would've seen Gone with the Wind or the Wizard of Oz in theaters and been able to understand what them while watching it; These were people who would've been old enough to vote in the election of 1932, which decided the course of the rest of the Golden Era politically; these were the young brothers of the Golden Era stars and starlets; members of this age tier were too young to fight in World War I, but many fought in World War II in some fashion, and more often than not, they wore hats, and were more consistently formal in their dress than members of the other tiers of the GI generation.
The Middle Tier (1918-1923) were the foot soldiers of World War II (not in a literal sense, but an age sense). These were the hard core New Dealers; the wave of people who helped re-elect Roosevelt; these were the guys who did the brunt of the fighting in World War II in terms of age; they were generally moderate to liberal; many of the men of this age wore hats early on, but discarded them by the 1950s and were flexible in their dress, but not liberal in their fashion. This was the tier of youths who (if ladies) fawned over Gable and Bogart as teenagers in the theatre and if gents had their jaws drop at the likes of Vivien Leigh and Olivia De Havilland. You could call this age-tier the pin-up generation, the boys in WWII who'd hoot and holler the pin-ups in the magazines or painted on the sides of their warplanes.
The Last Tier (1923-1927) - the last wave of boys old enough to legally fight in World War II; an age-tier of people who would've voted for FDR but were decidedly more conservative than their older peers; This was the age group raised more on Bogart and Bacall and the Rat Pack rather than on Gable and Flynn, and even more liberal in their sense of fashion than their peers and likely did not usually wear hats for the most part. There is a slight bleedover from this generation to the Silent (1927-1940). The last group of people who would've experienced the 1939 World's Fair and remembered it in any mature way.
Of course, these are generalizations; no one size fits every individual, but my own personal way of grouping generally speaking the people of these age groups.
I'm curious about yours.
Last edited: