by JudyJB » Tue Aug 07, 2018 3:16 am
Growing up in Michigan, we had quite a few hot days each summer in the old days before air conditioning. Of course, "hot" was a lot cooler than your "hot," but it felt hot, nevertheless. We had one VERY BIG advantage than you folks in California or even in the desert or Florida--BASEMENTS!! On an 85 degree day, a basement would be a cool 65-70 degrees, even without fans or AC.
Many of us lived in houses with finished or semi-finished basements, and if we were not outside on hot days, we played in the basement, which was a lot cooler than outside. I remember that a lot of people also had canning kitchens in the basements. These consisted of a stove and sink down there because it was much too hot to cook or can vegetables upstairs. My parents and my aunts and uncles always canned pickles, beans, tomatoes, jam, and other things from the gardens. (This was before refrigerators had separate freezers.) My dad bought a farm and tried to raise race horses for a few years, and it came with an orchard with pears, apples, and crab apples, so all of my relatives canned those as well.
And of course, we did NOT have swimming pools because they were very expensive and could only be used a couple of months a year. I think I knew of only one family in those days with a real built-in swimming pool and they lived a couple of miles away. But, we did have sprinklers on our lawns.
And in the evening, we played outdoors after dark and often went for a drive in the car with all the windows open to cool off. The 50s were the heydays of small amusement parks and drive-in restaurants, so we often went out for ice cream or to an amusement park in the evening.
I have to say that I think the advent of AC ruined a lot of communities because people stayed indoors more and did not go for drives in the evenings. We kids were also what they now call "free-range" kids and would be gone from morning to night, riding our bikes or playing in the neighborhood, building forts in the woods, picking wild strawberries, and climbing trees.