11 Skills Your Great-Grandparents Had That You Don’t
Our parents and grandparents may shake their heads every time we grab our smart phones to get turn-by-turn directions or calculate the tip. But when it comes to life skills, our great-grandparents have us all beat. Here are some skills our great-grandparents had 90 years ago that most of us don’t.
(Image courtesy Library of Congress)
1. Courting
While your parents and grandparents didn’t have the option to ask someone out on a date via text message, it’s highly likely that your great-grandparents didn’t have the option of dating at all. Until well into the 1920s, modern dating didn’t really exist. A gentleman would court a young lady by asking her or her parents for permission to call on the family. The potential couple would have a formal visit — with at least one parent chaperone present — and the man would leave a calling card. If the parents and young lady were impressed, he’d be invited back again and that would be the start of their romance.
2. Hunting, Fishing, and Foraging
Even city dwellers in your great-grandparents’ generation had experience hunting, fishing, and foraging for food. If your great-grandparents never lived in a rural area or lived off the land, their parents probably did. Being able to kill, catch, or find your own food was considered an essential life skill no matter where one lived, especially during the Great Depression.
Postcard printed by V.O. Mammon Co. (Ancestry)
3. Butchering
In this age of the boneless, skinless chicken breast, it’s unusual to have to chop up a whole chicken at home, let alone a whole cow. Despite the availability of professionally butchered and packaged meats, knowing how to cut up a side of beef or butcher a rabbit from her husband’s hunting trip was an ordinary part of a housewife’s skill set in the early 20th century. This didn’t leave the men off the hook, though. After all, they were most likely the ones who would field dress any animals they killed.
4. Bartering
Before the era of shopping malls and convenience stores, it was more common to trade goods and services with neighbors and shop owners. Home-canned foods, hand-made furniture, and other DIY goods were currency your great-grandparents could use in lieu of cash.
5. Haggling
Though it’d be futile for you to argue with the barista at Starbucks about the price of a cup of coffee, your great-grandparents were expert hagglers. Back when corporate chains weren’t as ubiquitous, it was a lot easier to bargain with local shop owners and tradesmen. Chances are your great-grandparents bought very few things from a store anyway.
6. Darning and mending
Nowadays if a sock gets a hole in it, you buy a new pair. But your great-grandparents didn’t let anything go to waste, not even a beat-up, old sock. This went for every other article of clothing as well. Darning socks and mending clothes was just par for the course.
7. Corresponding by mail
Obviously, your great-grandparents didn’t text or email. However, even though the telephone existed, it wasn’t the preferred method of staying in touch either, especially long-distance. Hand-written letters were the way they communicated with loved ones and took care of business.
Celina Anzalone, 2264 First Ave. making lace for Cappallino’s factory near by. (Library of Congress)
8. Making Lace
Tatting, the art of making lace, was a widely popular activity for young women in your great-grandparents’ generation. Elaborate lace collars, doilies, and other decorative touches were signs of sophistication. However, fashion changed and technology made lace an easy and inexpensive to buy, so their children probably didn’t pick up the skill.
9. Lighting a Fire Without Matches
Sure, matches have been around since the 1600s. But they were dangerous and toxic — sparking wildly out of control and emitting hazardous fumes. A more controllable, non-poisonous match wasn’t invented until 1910. So Great-grandma and Great-grandpa had to know a thing or two about lighting a fire without matches.
Clothesline, Winton, Minnesota. Photograph by Russell Lee. (Library of Congress)
10. Diapering With Cloth
Disposable diapers weren’t commonly available until the 1930s. Until then, cloth diapers held with safety pins were where babies did their business. Great-grandma had a lot of unpleasant laundry on her hands.
11. Writing With a Fountain Pen
While it’s true that your grandparents were skilled in the lost art of writing in cursive, your grandparents probably were, too. However, the invention of the ballpoint pen in the late 1930s and other advances in pen technology mean that your great-grandparents were the last generation who had to refill their pens with ink.
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The Principle of Least Interest: He who cares least about a relationship, controls it.
2. Hunting, Fishing, and Foraging - I can get in my nice warm car and drive to the grocery store and buy whatever I want to eat. I dont' have to "forage". Thank God.
3. Butchering - No thanks. Not interested. Glad I Don't have too. But, if I had to cut something up to eat it, I think I could figure it out.
4. Bartering - Not a lost art at all. People barter all the time still. In different ways. There are yard sales, online trades and on and on. Lots of bartering going on.
5. Haggling - I have done my share of haggling buying cars, homes, negotiating contracts, working with contractors and on and on.
6. Darning and mending - Time is a commodity. Socks are cheap.
7. Corresponding by mail - Email, texting, IM, etc. We are far more in contact now than we ever were.
8. Making Lace - I am not a girly girl sooo that doesn't appeal to me much.
9. Lighting a Fire Without Matches - It's called progress. Progress is often a good thing.
10. Diapering With Cloth - Loved the Pampers Comfort Cruisers.
11. Writing With a Fountain Pen - Dipping in ink? Why? Pens that already have ink make much more sense
Courting is no longer necessary or wanted...lol. Making lace is a nice hobby but not for me. 2, 3,4 5, 6, 7, 9, and 10 I can do pretty well. 11 I'm sure I could do with some practice so 3 out of 11 I'm not worried.
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“Until I discovered cooking, I was never really interested in anything.” ― Julia Child ―
1. That no one is listening in real time on voicemail. She often left me voicemails like this. "Rose, it's grandma. Rose pick up, I have something important to tell you. You better not be ignoring me"
2. That doctors always know what's best.
This was a hard one not only because it was common for people in her era to treat their doctor's words as if they came out of God's mouth but she was also a military child and wife. They do things a little differently in military hospitals and clinics. She decided to see civilian doctors in her late 50's.
3. All the forms of birth control and how to get them. And that the word "condrum" she used for condom was wrong!
4. To appreciate all forms of music not available on 8 tracks. She loved cleaning the house and jamming to Aerosmith. Which brings me to number 5.
5. How to work a CD player
6. How to search the internet.
7. How to work a cell phone (for the most part anyway)
My grandmother taught me many important life skills but not any of the ones listed in the first post. She taught me to be a rebel, to go against the "man". We protested together, baked together, did arts and crafts together, rolled down the car Windows and yelled out lyrics to Metallica and Itsy Bitsy Teeny Weenie Yellow Polka Dot Bikini respectively.
She taught me I could do anything I wanted, that a woman can be president of the United States and that what my grandfather called "disagreeable" and "strong willed" was actually called brave and individualism.
While the skills listed above seem fun, I'm very happy to have learned skills that were more tailored to my personality.
-- Edited by rose on Thursday 8th of January 2015 08:53:38 AM
My grandparents worked long and hard to create the kind of life that didn't require me to do the things listed above ! They worked hard so we didn't have to forage for food, butcher our own meat, etc. And I know for a fact that she wouldn't want me to do those things! Spending hours doing some of those things when you could pay a few dollars for the product is not a good use of my time!
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Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
My grandparents worked long and hard to create the kind of life that didn't require me to do the things listed above ! They worked hard so we didn't have to forage for food, butcher our own meat, etc. And I know for a fact that she wouldn't want me to do those things! Spending hours doing some of those things when you could pay a few dollars for the product is not a good use of my time!
I live in Pa. And, sorry, the whole "glorifying" of the Amish thing is a bit strange. NO, I dont' want to live like the Amish. And, no, they aren't somehow "better" people because they live the way they do.
Great people. My grandmother swooped me out of my crib and proclaimed my name. And guess what? That's my name! I was #7, my mother was over naming kids.
Great people. My grandmother swooped me out of my crib and proclaimed my name. And guess what? That's my name! I was #7, my mother was over naming kids.
Yeah, cool. Her brother was a hoot too. My great Uncle? So he had been thrown in prison due to IRA stuff. Anyway, a sweetheart. She saved up money, took a boat back and bailed his arse out. Then got him on a boat. He lived by a railroad and watched out for all the cats that lived there. We'd get dropped off and spent the day visiting the cats on the tracks. So funny.
I live in Pa. And, sorry, the whole "glorifying" of the Amish thing is a bit strange. NO, I dont' want to live like the Amish. And, no, they aren't somehow "better" people because they live the way they do.
Girl....
We have had an influx of Amish in the county where our lakehouse is in KY. They have to be THE rudest most hypocritical people I've ever encountered.
Do you know that they get foodstamps and welfare checks? Pisses me off to no end. They don't want to follow our laws, but they still benefit from our taxes. It's disgusting...
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America guarantees equal opportunity, not equal outcome...
I live in Pa. And, sorry, the whole "glorifying" of the Amish thing is a bit strange. NO, I dont' want to live like the Amish. And, no, they aren't somehow "better" people because they live the way they do.
Girl....
We have had an influx of Amish in the county where our lakehouse is in KY. They have to be THE rudest most hypocritical people I've ever encountered.
Do you know that they get foodstamps and welfare checks? Pisses me off to no end. They don't want to follow our laws, but they still benefit from our taxes. It's disgusting...
And the use iPhones. I want to know where they plug them in...since they don't do electricity and all.
They are SUPER hypocritical in my experience as well. I agree with you 100%.
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Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
1. Courting: I never picked up on flirting and was never interested in dating. I think I would've done well in a courting environment.
2. Hunting, Fishing, and Foraging: I can fish. I could learn how to forage and hunt if I ever needed to. However, while gutting a fish doesn't bother me, gutting any other animal would make me vomit. I don't do blood pouring out.
3. Butchering: I can break down a chicken and don't mind doing so as it's often cheaper to buy a whole chicken than it is to buy parts of a chicken. I could probably break down other animals too. I'm good at fileting fish.
4. Bartering: I would love to see bartering make a come back.
5. Haggling: This is still a necessary skill - buying cars and such.
6. Darning and mending: I don't know how to darn, knit, crochet, or sew. I'm glad I don't have to. I would love to learn though.
7. Corresponding by mail: I'd rather text.
8. Making Lace: This is not a skill I have but I think it'd be cool to learn.
9. Lighting a Fire Without Matches: I don't have this skill.
10. Diapering With Cloth: No thanks. I like disposable diapers.
11. Writing With a Fountain Pen: I would love to own a fountain pen and ink well. I know calligraphy and would love to expand my skill set.