I have LOVED this thread!
The thought of the frozen outhouse seat made me stand up and remember only too well! When we stayed at our summer camp in CT where there was no electricity or plumbing, we used a 'Popo pot" at night, and emptied it into the outhouse in the morning. Also had to walk to a nearby spring to get our drinking water in a bucket. First we had to scare off the frogs!
And I almost forgot about the Hurdy-Gurdy man who came down our street in Cambidge, MA with his hand-cranked organ and little monkey who passed the hat for donations! I LOVED to hear him coming! Then there was the rag man who bellowed "RAGS" as he passed with his horse-drawn wagon, and the ice man who kept our ice box cold. I still have dreams of his ice pick chipping off a block of ice to fit into our particular box---it was an art to me how he did that.
More terrifying there were the 'blackout' sirens that prompted us all to douse all lights, pull the blackout curtains in our houses, and wait for the 'all clear' sirens. My mother never even smoked during a blackout, for fear the lighted end of the ciggie would show the bombers where to aim. I would peek out of the windows behind one of the curtains and imagine 'bad men in planes' looking for a place to drop their bombs. Very scary times during that war.
Doesn't it just boggle your mind when you think how far we have come in some pieces of our life, but how constant the fears of war have remained? No more blackouts now----just strip searching at the airports, for instance. Party lines with operators to cell phones. Hand typewriters to computers. Foot-pedal sewing machines to automatic stitchers. Ice boxes to our own ice-making refrigerators. Huge floor-model radios with tubes to teeny, tiny little hand-held radios you can listen to anywhere. No TV to black and white TV to monster movie-theater-type TVs that fit against the walls. I can remember being excited to count the number of TV antennas on houses and buildings as we traveled by train (coal-burning locomotives) between places when TV was just becoming affordable for many people.
Ahh....sweet memories! And totally amazing changes in our ways of living!