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Tag: vintage blogger

Vintage Photo Tuesday: Grandmothers

Today’s Vintage Photo Tuesday is a special post in honour of an amazing woman that I recently lost, my grandmother (or as I called her, my Omi). She was a one of kind woman, who I was very close too and I’m going to miss her a lot. So for today’s post, it is going to be all about photos of Grandmothers with their families, from the 1920s-1960s.

Let’s browse the photos.

1940s photo of 2 young women looking at photos as grandmother sits nearby

Source: Etsy

Disclosure: Some of the links on my blog from Etsy , eBay are Affiliate Links, meaning, at no additional cost to you, I will earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase. 

4 Generations in this 1920s Photo. Great 20s Fashions pictured.

1920s vintage photo of women dressed as flappers 1920s photo

Source: Etsy

1920s Family photo in the garden. Grandmother with new baby, daughter and grandson. Hugs for baby.

1920s photo of a family in 1920s fashion posing together with grandmother.

Source: Etsy

1940s photo of grandmothers and great grandmothers, kids and 1 man (hi man in the back) in their Sunday best for a big group photo. Fantastic!

1940s photo of grandmothers and great grandmothers in 1940s fashion

Source: Etsy

1940s Family Beach Vacation. Sitting on bench, Grandmothers, Parents & Toddler in cute lederhosen (just like my dad when he was 2).

1940s Family Beach Vacation Sitting on Bench Grandmothers Parents Toddler 1940s photo

Source: Etsy

1940s Happy Family with big smiles. Such a wonderful moment in time.

1940s vinage photo of a family in 1940s fashions posing together for a photo.

Source: Etsy

1950s photo of a Mother and Grandmother and Baby in the Stroller (1959). I just adore this photo, it looks like it’s right out of a magazine.

1950s photo of a Mother and Grandmother and Baby in the Stroller (1959).

Source: Etsy

Just hanging out with grandma and posing for pictures. 1950s photo.

1950s Photo of an african American grandmother and grandchild posing together on the couch.

Source: Etsy

Nana and Suzanne-1950s photo on the front lawn in the warm summer months.

1950s Photo of a young girl and her grandmother on the front lawn

Source: Etsy

1956 New Baby, Grandmother & Big Sister vintage photo.

1956 New Baby Grandmother Big Sister 1950s Kodacolor photo.

Source: Etsy

Grandma in the 1950s having a picture taken with all her grandchildren in the park. More happy smiles!

1950s vintage photo of a Black Grandma in the 1950s having a picture taken with all her grandchildren in the park.

Source: Etsy

1960s Photo. Dinner is served. Hopefully it’s not as unappetizing as these faces are making it seem like it’s going to be.

1960s Family Photo sitting around the kitchen table with kids, grandmother

Source: Etsy

Family fun with grandmother at the playground-1960s Photo.

1960s photo of grandmother with her kids at the playground

Source: Etsy

I hope you have enjoyed this weeks ‘Vintage Photo Tuesday’ and friends if your grandmother is still alive, can you give her a big hug. I would give anything to be able to do that with mine right now (the below photo is my 1st Christmas 1977 with my Omi).

1970s Photo of the vintage inn blog with her grandmother

Liz

The Biggest Rock n Roll Show of 1956 Performed at Maple Leaf Gardens Toronto

In 2019 I was Djing at a vintage Rock n Roll night and during 1 of my 2 sets I played a special group of songs around a particular Rock N Roll Show that happened on April 30th, 1956 at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto. This tour is going to be the subject of my blog post today.

It was a 45 date tour and labelled the “Biggest Rock N Roll Show of ‘1956” featuring:

  • Bill Haley & Comets (Headliner)
  • Platters
  • Bo Diddley
  • Drifters
  • LaVern Baker
  • Clyde McPhatter
  • Big Joe Turner
  • Red Prysock
  • Shirley & Lee
  • Roy Hamilton
  • Five Keys
  • The Turbans
  • Frankie Lymon & Teenagers
1956 Rock and roll show program of performers- 1950s music.
1956 Rock and roll show program of performers- 1950s music.

Source: WorthPoint

What was different from other shows like this? It was the ONLY one that featured all African American acts with the exception of the headliner Bill Haley.

1950s Music 1956 Rock n Roll Party Poster for Bill Haley and his Comets -May 6th.

However…..the blog, ‘A Rock n’ Roll Historian‘ shares: “As racial tensions are peaking throughout the country, the potential for trouble exists at every tour stop.  Several shows are cancelled because of racial troubles including bomb threats, protests, pickets, and violence.”

AND add in parents and religious leaders across the country who were up and arms over this new “craze”sending their kids into hysteria.

“1 have met a lot of young people, and older people too. who have learned the three Rs—Rock. Roll and Regret . . . Have you ever felt that way after a session of rock ‘n roll? When you tried to get to sleep, you couldn’t because deep down in your heart you felt that the whole business of pleasure-seeking and self-indulgence was a mockery and a sham . . . Sorry, young reader. I can’t promise you that there is any easy way out of this situation.”

– Jane Scott, a Toronto Telegram religious columnist-

But among all of this, the tour is a resounding SUCCESS! and winds up with two dates being added, making it a 47-date tour.

1950s Vintage Photo of Bill Haley and the Comets performing on stage in 1956.

Source-Shorpy: Performance by Bill Haley and the Comets and LaVern Baker at the Sports Arena in Hershey, Pennsylvania.” From photos by Ed Feingersh for the Look magazine article “The Great Rock ‘n’ Roll Controversy

The tours rolls into Cincinnati, OH. “By the third quarter of the show, they were in the aisles, all over the floor and unaware of anything but the music.” -Cincinnati Post 5/10/1956

1956 Newspaper clip of a group of people who attended a 1950s Rock n Roll show in Cincinnati featuring Bill Haley

Source: Bill Haley Official

THE TOUR COMES TO TORONTO AT MAPLE LEAF GARDENS

A record setting crowd of 13,000 for a single show.  The press and TV are pressing Haley about whether rock and roll is dangerous (Source).

1950s vintage photo of Bill Haley and the Comets, 1956 Maple Leaf Gardens

Bill Haley and the Comets perform at Maple Leaf Gardens in Toronto

Clyde McPhatter, on stage.

(Note: this image at the Toronto Archives says it’s from 1960 at the Rock n Roll Show but I don’t think this is right unless the show came back. Anyone know?)

1956 vintage photo of Clyde McPhatter, on stage at Maple Leaf Gardens

Canada’s Maclean’s Magazine (Barbara Moon to be exact), attended the concert in Toronto and went on to write a review of what she saw in the below article entitled “What you don’t need to know about Rock n Roll“.

1950s Vintage Magazine Article: Canada's Maclean's Magazine (Barbara Moon to be exact), attended the concert in Toronto and went on to write a review of what she saw in the below article entitled "What you don't need to know about Rock n Roll".
1950s Vintage Magazine Article: Canada's Maclean's Magazine (Barbara Moon to be exact), attended the concert in Toronto and went on to write a review of what she saw in the below article entitled "What you don't need to know about Rock n Roll".

Source: Maclean’s Magazine

It is an EXTREMELY interesting read (this woman is very very against the music) and I recommend taking the time to do so. Here are some “snippets” of what was printed:

NOT LONG AGO a Toronto eighteen-year old was fined fifty dollars for riding his motorcycle with his hands in the air. “A car radio was playing a real gone rock ‘n roll song,” he defended himself, ‘i just had to keep time to that sound.”

“That sound” is the latest teen-age craze. And in the two years since it became epidemic rock ‘n roll has been responsible for more than mere careless driving. It has, for example:

Packed the biggest available arenas in the biggest cities of the continent for some ol the biggest gross revenues in entertainment history.

Pitchforked a raucous-voiced hillbilly named Elvis Presley into overnight stardom.

-Stimulated snake dances, cop-baiting and outbursts of vandalism and mayhem in many centres. (Teen-agers in Brooklyn tore up a subway car after a rock ‘n roll jamboree; in Minneapolis they pelted police with empty beer tins.)

Caused Variety to call it “the most explosive show biz phenomenon of the decade.” I he trade journal of the entertainment world added ponderously, “It may be getting too hot to handle.”

Induced amnesia in many adults: their alarm is such that they forget all inconvenient earlier parallels for the fad.

-Saturated the continent with songs whose hit parade ratings vary according to their decibel ratings. One deafening litany, called Blue Suede Shoes, invites the hearer to knock the singer down, step in his face, slander his name, burn his house, steal his car and drink his liquor as long as he, the hearer, stays off his, the singer’s, blue suede shoes. Ten thousand copies of Shoes were sold in one month in Ontario alone.

For such reasons as these I was assigned recently to investigate the phenomenon for Maclean’s. “What is it and why is it?” the editors wanted to know……..

Fans watch Bill Haley and the Comets in concert at Vancouver’s Kerrisdale Arena on June 27, 1956.

Source-Vancouver Sun. Fans watch Bill Haley and the Comets in concert at Vancouver’s Kerrisdale Arena on June 27, 1956.

“There were twelve acts, twenty extra policemen on duty and 12.764 young people in attendance. They seemed to be a cross-section, everything from blackleather windbreakers to Harris tweeds and from tight jeans to tulle frocks. Proceedings began at 8.30 and took two and a half hours with a truce at halftime to remove the wounded. The smattering of adults included a skinny grey-mustached man sitting beside me with a young girl.”

-Barbara Moon-
Young people dancing — despite police efforts to stop them — at Bill Haley and the Comets’ concert at Vancouver’s Kerrisdale Arena on June 27, 1956.

Source-Vancouver Sun. Young people dancing — despite police efforts to stop them — at Bill Haley and the Comets’ concert at Vancouver’s Kerrisdale Arena on June 27, 1956.

Curious on what would of been played at the concert that caused all this hysteria? Here are some of the songs that you would of heard.

Frankie Lymon & The Teenagers-Why Do Fools Fall in Love

The Platters – You’ve got the magic touch

LaVern Baker – Jim Dandy

The Five Keys – She’s The Most I LOVE THIS SONG!

SO GOOD!!!!!!

Friends, I hope you enjoyed a look back at this outstanding and historic musical tour of 1956. If any of my readers happened to of attended this concert, whether in Toronto or somewhere else please share in the comments below! And even if you were not, who would you have been excited to have seen at the show?

FURTHER READING:

Liz