Y2K.....
Yep! When everything was going to collapse! Seems so silly now.
@BeeHappy Part of the reason nothing happened was a huge effort to stop it from happening. (I can still remember going to Skippers, of all places, and the receipt said 1994 instead of 2000. They just rolled the year back on the computers to be safe, lol.)
Cuban missile crisis. I remember how freaked out all the adults were and it scared me.
I only remember the drills at school.
@BeeHappy I was an Air Force brat and I remember those drills as well in school. My parents were very politically active and started talking to my sister and I at a young age about communism and politics in general. I believe it is why I have always paid attention to what politicians are doing and saying. The Cuban missile crisis was a big topic of conversation with all the adults around me, and I remember being really frightened about it.
@Redheadedgammy I don't remember my parents talking about it. Maybe they were sheltering us. I have to talk to my older sister, she will remember.
Fall of Saigon. The tank going through the gates of the Independence Palace. I was about 4.
You started young!
@BeeHappy I remember sitting on the floor in our house in Goulburn, enjoying the destruction without any understanding of the wider context via a black and white TV. The next was the Viking missions to Mars - I was fascinated by those grainy shots of the surface of another planet, and the Voyager fly byes of Jupiter and Saturn.
Once a geek, always a geek.
@MrBeelzeebubbles I enjoyed watching all the space related events, also on a b & w tv. Lol
john glen
I remember watching rockets during desert storm.
Yep, that had to be unsettling for someone so young.
Same here, JFK. It really did seem like the world stopped for a time with that.
Yes, I think it was one of the first times there was so much tv coverage. It seems that's all that was on and personally I don't remember there being anything like that prior. (Of course I was young so I suppose there could have been.)
i guess i never listened to the news as a child but i can remember a huge bonfire in a park not far from my house in toronto. the crowd was burning books which i assume had anything to do with germany or were anti-semitic.
also vaguely remember the VE celebrations when germany surrendered.
Our memories vary wildly from person to person. My older sister by 8 years remembers so much from a very young age and in detail. My next sister by 5 yrs, remembers little and often different from everyone else. For me certain things stand out but many things don't. Go figure.
@BeeHappy that is why identical twins aren't.
No details, but I remember how much of the news was dedicated to the Vietnam war when I was in 2nd or 3rd grade.
You're right... every night for years!
I remember JFK's assassination, but I also remember his election. I was 5. My family supported Kennedy. When My father carried me to bed on election evening, I asked if Kennedy won. He said, "yes." As close as they say it was, I am sure that no winner had been established. But it worked well for dad. I went right back to sleep and he never had to correct himself.
What I remember about the election was the controversy over him being a Catholic.
@BeeHappy ditto. . . . and could not understand it because I had not been exposed to religious prejudice.
My family did not watch much TV, but I do remember the assassination of JFK prompted the TV to be on for hours that day and the next. I remember my parents being very upset. I don't remember much else about that day...
Our memory is a funny thing. My younger sister and I are only 13 months apart. We were like twins. Went everywhere and did everything together. But we both have different memories on several events that happened in our lives.
The Civil War
Rudy? ? Really? ?
The start or you mean it is now over?
A book: FAMILY SECRETS by Russ Baker, a very interesting supposition about the assassination based on some very interesting facts.
Thanks!
It's odd but I remember Kennedy's inauguration, watching it in our basement as the babysitter ironed. My parents attended so I assume that's why it was so significant for a 3 year old to remember but I have no memory at all of the assassination 3 years later. No idea why. I was in school by then but there is not even a shadow of a memory. Maybe because it was so devastating. My little sister remembers.
We each remember things differently. For me it's the Cuban missile crisis... don't remember anything but the bomb drills in school.
Wow! I'd say that was quite significant.
@BeeHappy I was a child, but i remember the news and my parents' shock
@BeeHappy soon after the attack, the Japanese invaded Attu in the Aleutian Islands. My mother took instruction on spotting Japanese planes (we were in Oregon)
@TheDoubter I remember hearing about that... much later of course.
Martin Luther King, Jr assassination.
All of those murders in the 1960's bothered me.
Yes, it seemed every time we turned around there was another assassination in the 60's.
@BeeHappy So true. I recall the mourners on TV. King, Medgar Evers, Malcolm X, stood out. I’m not racist and never have been; it’s just not in me. I was bewildered by the violence, the attitudes, and later, the riots in Charlotte over busing to integrate the schools. Ours were desegregated in 1971-5th grade for me.