A Girl of the 1920s Grows Up: A Family Photo Album
 
Frameworks for America's Past
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Dorothy Arthur Burns photo 1927 Wilmington NC
Dorothy Arthur
Five years old - 1927


   Life was very different from today for girls and boys growing up in the 1920s.  They did not have TV, video games, home computers, or cell phones.  They played outdoors most of the time.

   Dorothy and her friend Bob probably wore those same clothes all week long.  In Wilmington, North Carolina, where they lived, many families kept chickens in the backyard for eggs and meat.  The children helped feed them as part of their daily chores.

   A movie downtown for 10 cents was an occasional treat.  Dorothy's favorite thing in the summer was the all day picnic trip to a nearby beach.  It was organized for the neighborhood children each year by a local church. 

  
Radios were the hot new item many families were buying in 1927.  Some neighbors had a car, but most did not.  There was a trolley that went downtown.  Horse drawn wagons could still be seen as well. 






Dorothy Arthur Burns photo Wilmington NC
Dorothy was a
teenager in 1939

  
The decade of the 1930s was not an easy time for Dorothy's family.  Money was tight.  The country was in a bad economic downturn called the Great Depression.  She always remembered a high school friend who would share a nice blouse or dress with her for special occasions.

   Dorothy loved acting in the school plays, and the library had shelves of books she loved to read.

   She graduated from high school just as World War II was beginning in Europe and Asia. 
An older brother joined the U.S. Army and was sent to fight in Europe.






Wilmington NC shipyard in WWII

Part of the war effort
during World War II

   Like most people in her home town, Dorothy wanted to support the war effort.  After graduating from high school she took a job as a clerk in the Wilmington shipyard.  The shipyard specialized in building cargo supply vessels called Liberty Ships.

   Dorothy was probably in the crowd watching this ship launching at the Wilmington yard.






Dorothy Arthur Burns photo 1948  Wilmington NC
A career girl in
the big city - 1948

   Dorothy was one of many young women who decided to move to a big city after the war - New York City in her case.  She landed a job as an office assistant at Seventeen Magazine.  Now and then she even got to write an article. 

   This is her official Seventeen Magazine photograph from 1948.  The hair and outfit were just the snappy style that office women of that time liked.  She was 26.

   A man she had met while working at the Wilmington shipyard also moved to New York City after the war.  His name was William Burns.  They ran into each other again, and were soon going together.






Married with children in the 1950s

   Dorothy married that man in 1949.  They moved to Virginia, where he found work as an engineer at the famous shipyard in Newport News.  They raised three children together through the 1950s and 1960s.
William J. Burns with boys NN VA
Mrs. W.J. Burns Jr with children Green Oaks NN VA

Left: Shipyard engineer Mr. William Burns with the couple's first two children.  Above: Mrs. Burns with the two boys on the steps of the family's first home.







Dorothy's family in
the 1960s

   Like most married women with children at that time, Mrs. Burns was a full time homemaker.  She kept active as a volunteer in church and community groups, however, as did most of the ladies she knew.  Her husband worked hard to support the family.

    Technology?  There were no video games, home computers, or cell phones in those days.  The family had a TV set, but there were only four channels.  The  children mostly played outdoors.

    One of the children - the younger boy in the photos above - was given the name David.  He grew up to become a history teacher and the creator of this web site!






Your family stories
are also part of
American history!

    Take a few minutes to consider how your family is part of America's story.  Although we are all individuals, in many ways our lives fit into the larger patterns created by those who lived before us.
 
   Ask your mom or dad about your family's past.  Look through old family photo albums and scrapbooks, or start a new one.  Write down your family stories so that someday, you can pass them along to your own children and grandchildren.  Let them know that their lives, too, will become part of American history!










The photos are from family albums of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Burns, Jr.
 


Copyright Notice

   Copyright 2009, 2018 by David Burns.  All rights reserved.  As a guide to the Virginia Standards of Learning, some pages necessarily include phrases or sentences from that document, which is available online from the Virginia Department of Education.  The author's copyright extends to the original text and graphics, unique design and layout, and related material.