Not have missed it
Jersey trip, some tips please.
How do I bring this issue up with our neighbours?
I was born in 1963 so was only 7 by the end of the 60’s - but I love the music, fashion, & the sense of ‘freedom’ & change that came out of that era. There really doesn’t seem a decade like it in terms of excitement.
Was it really that good actually living through it?
Not have missed it
Fantastic time, I was born in 48, would bot have missed it
Oh that reminds me of my first teaching job, the message went round that we needed to cover for a colleague who was skiving off to get tickets for us all to go to a gig at the university, half a crown each. It was Elton John!
When I look back I feel really sorry for today's teenagers who seem to be so infantalized by their parents, the other site often has questions about Can I leave by 14 year old in the house for an hour?. I don't see them being allowed to wander round London, Manchester etc at 14 or 15.
Oh thank you.
I'll enjoy that 
MissAdventure
I'm intrigued by eel pie island.
I didn't know it existed until I was in my 40s.
Would love to see it.
Well it's still there but where the old hotel and dance hall used to be there's a '70s housing development. If you google Eel Pie Island there is a lot of info plus a film with many of us who used to go there talking about it. The music was mainly blues orientated, though I did see Pink Floyd there in 1967. In today's Guardian there is a little piece about it in an article about favourite museums: the Eel Pie Museum gets a write-up. Happy times!
The question of trousers was brought up in the school where I taught in the early '70s, Senior Mistress, great job title, thoroughly disapproved, twin sets and pearls for her. One colleague decided to challenge this and wore trousers, in the Staff Room she asked the Head Shall I wear them or take them off?, it was never an issue after that!
It is interesting Dinahmo my parents were in their early 30's when I was born after the war I however, as I said earlier had my daughter at 21. The GC arrived when their parents were in their late 20's to early 30's. I do like to be different!
That time was the most wonderful. ..Everything was new and the Clothes were so Hip. I went to school in Chelsea and bought a trendy tweed Pinafore dress in Biba ( when it was a room in an ordinary house ) I loved that dress and went crazy when my Mum CUT OUT THE LABEL as she said it looked scratchy!
Lovebeigecardigan1955 It's interesting the varying age gap between children and their parents. My parents were 21 in 1947 when I was born. My Dad was too young for WW2 but old enough to be called up as part of the peace keeping force in Palestine - based in Jerusalem.
Kate1949
I saw the Beatles in Wolverhampton and The Hollies at Trentham. Oh, and I saw Manfred Mann walking through Trafalgar Square (thin, pale and not at all inspiring, unlike Paul Jones!)
My cousin lived round the corner from John Lennon but she wasn't interested in the Beatles. She said girls used to hang around outside the house.
C&A was wonderful for those of us not London-based because before then, in the 1950s, we wore clothes similar to our mother's.
I was born in 1950 so the 60s was a great time for everything. It was so forward looking with great music, fashion, opportunities. I loved Twiggy. Went to see The Beatles, The Rolling Stones etc. I would save up my hard earned money and shop in London at The Bus Stop, Biba, Ravel sales. I wore mini skirts, hot pants, left home at 17 to be a nanny then to teacher training college at 19. It was a glorious time to be involved in everything.
I'm intrigued by eel pie island.
I didn't know it existed until I was in my 40s.
Would love to see it.
In 1962 I was twenty years old and had 3 children. While I loved the music and loved to dance I was tied to the home so did not have much chance to get out and about.
I was born in 1950 so my teens were in the mid-late 60s. Loved it all. Early on in the 60s I was a mad-keen Beatles fan (still have my fan club membership card) and then later discovered Stones etc. I had a Saturday job in a library so read everything going. Bought clothes from Biba and Bus Stop, shoes from Anello and Davide (quite cheap Mary-Janes, dancers' character shoes). Spent Sunday & Wednesday nights on Eel Pie Island watching blues bands. Sometimes went to the Arts Lab in Covent Garden. Great times. I was living in SW London but for my cousin who lived in the north - all this totally passed her by!
I can remember queuing for Beatles tickets with my heart in my mouth in case I didn't get one. Playing truant from school to hang around outside Birmingham Town Hall to try to see them arriving. We saw Paul on a coach and chased it through the streets. George (my hero) coming to a window to talk to a few of us.
At 16, I got on a train to London with my friend to try to find Carnaby Street. We didn't find it but did find Kings Road, Chelsea. Oh what sights we saw. Happy days.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=tBq7icqGxB4
London 1960s video thought everyone might find it interesting
I was born in 1957 so a child in the 60s but loved the music of the time and C&A in Oxford Street stocked mini versions of the 60s fashion for children which was a big change to the girls clothes of the 1950s which we still wore in the early 60s.
Oh I loved the 60s, wonderful times, loved the music and the clothes. It was the start of something different, I met my dh at a party and we had 2 great years of clubs, pubs. We got married in 1968 and until we had our children we continued to enjoy ourselves with our friends. We both also think we had the best life. Coming home from a pub or club on Christmas eve or new year greeting strangers in the street and laughing. Can’t do that now. Lovely memories..
lovebeigecardigans1955
I was born in '55 so just that little bit too young to be a hippie but loved the music and fashion like you Kandinsky - I think they seemed to be exciting times with new ideas and technology coming along.
My parents were 20 when WWII broke out and I think the war knocked the stuffing out of them when it came to any enthusiasm about new ideas. It was felt that the new freedoms were all right for the rich and famous down South but not for the likes of hard-up ordinary folk in the Midlands. Those ideas sounded all right on paper but weren't really practiced - you still had to worry about what the neighbours thought.
My Dad was very 'old school' and thought that much that was wrong with the world started off in the 60s. Mum still remembered that women had to leave their jobs when they married. Women still didn't have equal pay and had to choose between marriage or a career - you couldn't have both. Dad wouldn't have been seen dead pushing a pram or changing a nappy - he smirked about young men who did. Things were changing, but very slowly.
Absolutely on the nail LBC55! For soppy southerners with too much money (even then) it may well have been one long hurrah but for most youngsters and teens it was dismally boring! The only highlights for us (at 7&10 in 1963). Was the pop music! Amazingly exciting even more than usual because? THEY WERE ALL FROM THE NORTH WEST HURRAH INDEED!!!!??
I lived on the outskirts of London so only a few stops on the train. A friend and I would go dancing every week at Hammersmith Palais dancing to Joe Loss and his orchestra. Wonderful times. Ice skating at Wembley with all the girls I worked with on our Weds afternoons off. Great fun. We used to pile into the back of the boss's daughters mini van. Wouldn't be allowed to do that today.
As the saying goes “ 60s was the party” 70s was the hangover”.
I loved the music cloths make- up the whole vibe. Visits to Mary Quant shop in Kensington to get my false eyelashes.
I was born in 1944 and went to art school in 1960. Loved it, jazz clubs, folk clubs , dances. Beatniks etc. Was it swinging , Yes !
Yes it was.
I was born in 1957 so was still only a child in the 60s yet even I can remember it as being a new and exciting time. Probably because my parents who had lived through the war etc were enjoying the era so much. The radio was always on and I think I can still sing along to every 60s song when they come on the radio these days.
Wakefield was stuck in the 1930s, I think.

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