'79 Magnum GT
Member
He'll probably still be alive too!LOL when they arrive they will find Capt. Kirk there to greet them!
Rick
He'll probably still be alive too!LOL when they arrive they will find Capt. Kirk there to greet them!
I’m thinking muslims have not been the only ones to wipe their behinds with their left hand only.Lotsa toilet paper!!! You'll really need that.
Rick
I have some life experience that might have a bearing on this. Around 50 years ago I had a summer job with the township road department. Part of my duties were to help with maintenance of an old cemetery that had Revolutionary War veterans buried there (just to establish a historical reference). Out of curiosity I looked at the inscriptions on the tombstones. I noticed that there were family groups that were buried together, and sometimes had small tombstones for young children who had died within weeks of each other. Perhaps there was an epidemic going on at the time. There were a lot of graves of people who died in their 70s and 80s. What was striking was the apparent lack of people who died in what we would consider middle age. So according to my somewhat unscientific survey, it seemed that if you were born and made it to around age 15, you had a pretty good chance of making it to 70 or 80.One of the advantages of being wealthy, or at least pretty financially secure was that you ate better, had a warmer house to live in during the winter, and a little more sanitary living conditions. Lots of the things that promote longevity.
Even though lifespans were, on average, significantly shorter than now, it was not that unusual for the better-off to live into their 60’s and 70’s.
The appalling infant and younger child mortality rates brought the overall averages down a lot. A woman giving birth to 5 kids would reasonably expect only 3 or less to make it to adulthood.
As much as I think it would be neat to be able to transport back in time 2, 3, 6 hundred years ago for a few days to experience what society was like, I’m afraid I would be so disgusted with the stench and general unsanitary conditions of the people, food, eating utensils, plates, and bowls that I would be done in about 24 hours.
That was very true.I have some life experience that might have a bearing on this. Around 50 years ago I had a summer job with the township road department. Part of my duties were to help with maintenance of an old cemetery that had Revolutionary War veterans buried there (just to establish a historical reference). Out of curiosity I looked at the inscriptions on the tombstones. I noticed that there were family groups that were buried together, and sometimes had small tombstones for young children who had died within weeks of each other. Perhaps there was an epidemic going on at the time. There were a lot of graves of people who died in their 70s and 80s. What was striking was the apparent lack of people who died in what we would consider middle age. So according to my somewhat unscientific survey, it seemed that if you were born and made it to around age 15, you had a pretty good chance of making it to 70 or 80.
Wow, I hadn't thought of that. I'm going up to a class reunion where that old cemetery is located. I'll have to stop there and get some pictures and check that out.That was very true.
I too am an old tombstone reader.
Ever notice that prior to about 1925 almost all deaths were in the wintertime?