Yep. Doors were definitely locked in my neighborhood. It was so common there was even had a name for it in the 70's and 80's. "Latch key kid."
I had to enter through the garage and use the key (which my mother made we wear under my shirt around my neck) when the bus dropped me off from school.
Yeah what do people think the "latch key" part meant? How else were we going to get in when we came home from school a couple hours before our parents got home from work?
Grew up in the 60's-70's on a farm in the Midwest. Neither Front or back door had locks installed in the doors. Tool shed, barn, various animal buildings with doors, no locks. Parked the cars and trucks in the yard, keys in the ignition. Rifles hung in the back window of the truck (which we occasionally drove to school)
Nobody even thought of touching someone else's rifle without permission - and the owner being present. Wasn't unusual for a kid to take a new shotgun/rifle into school to show a teacher.
I'm not going to say that we would shoot arrows straight up over our heads with bows and then run to get out of the way of the descending return flight of the sharp metal-tipped arrows...
... cause no one in their right mind would have ever done that.
Survival of the fittest they say.
Well, I'm still typing today. πΉπ€¦π»ββοΈ
Yep. Doors were definitely locked in my neighborhood. It was so common there was even had a name for it in the 70's and 80's. "Latch key kid."
I had to enter through the garage and use the key (which my mother made we wear under my shirt around my neck) when the bus dropped me off from school.
Yeah what do people think the "latch key" part meant? How else were we going to get in when we came home from school a couple hours before our parents got home from work?
In the 60s ----- we had a mom at home full time
We made our own skate boards ---- and lawn darts.
Grew up in the 60's-70's on a farm in the Midwest. Neither Front or back door had locks installed in the doors. Tool shed, barn, various animal buildings with doors, no locks. Parked the cars and trucks in the yard, keys in the ignition. Rifles hung in the back window of the truck (which we occasionally drove to school)
Nobody even thought of touching someone else's rifle without permission - and the owner being present. Wasn't unusual for a kid to take a new shotgun/rifle into school to show a teacher.
Celebrate diversity ....
Speaking of lawn darts...
I'm not going to say that we would shoot arrows straight up over our heads with bows and then run to get out of the way of the descending return flight of the sharp metal-tipped arrows...
... cause no one in their right mind would have ever done that.
Survival of the fittest they say.
Well, I'm still typing today. πΉπ€¦π»ββοΈ
you're supposed to catch them before they hit the ground :0
I walked through the unlocked door and locked it behind me.
Hence the "latch key" kid
I was gonna say the same thing.