The Sears Christmas Catalog

I was lucky enough to have two things going for me as I was growing up:  (1) I was raised in Chicago in the 1960s (no better place for a kid, but alas times change) and (2) My Dad worked for Sears and got great employee discounts which made Christmas even more fun – at least in the good years.

Chicago in the 1960s meant all day field trips from school to some of the coolest places on the planet, at least from a young boy’s perspective.   Places like the Museum of Science and Industry with all those buttons to push and make things go.   Not to mention the underground coal mine and a German U-Boat.

Chicago was also home to Bozo the Clown and the Riverview Amusement Park near the Chicago River.   It died in 1967 like so many of the old amusement parks, a result of gangs and crime in and around the park which (unlike Disneyland) had no admission charge. 

Although you likely didn’t live in Chicago at that time, one thing I can say for sure is that if you were a kld in the 1960s at one time or another you got your hands on the Sears Christmas Catalog.  And, hopefully the catalog arrived a few weeks before Christmas so you could sit on the living room floor and mark your favorites (not so surreptitiously) so your parents would know – or pass along to the guy with the white beard at the Department Store.

In the catalog was nothing less than the lives and dreams of boys and girls during a time when America seemed a little more innocent and more in control of itself, if only the visible part that kids see.

You either got the Christmas Catalog in the stores (of course, you had a Sears store in your town) or in the mail.   Now, if you can find one of these old catalogs, they go for good money.   Why?   It could well be the ultimate source of good times nostalgia for us baby boomers.

So, without further ado, I give you a few trips down memory lane, from the eyes of an old kid:

I did have sisters ……

 

Yes, a different time, a different place.

Which ones did you mark in the catalog?

Sic Semper Tyrannis

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5 thoughts on “The Sears Christmas Catalog

    1. I say This Quote “every day” ESPECIALLY since 1-20-2008, Minus 1-20-2016 thru 1-19-2020.

      “Yep, “I miss the America I grew up in” as well.”

      I am 61 now & glad I had a chance to be with true Americans to answer my questions without the know-it-all attitude. People had respect & got along, no worries and made amends without computers telling you what to do @ a fast-paced level. People helped one another and there was no me, me, attitude either. You were allowed to view & finish a sentence in conversation. Times are changing & “sad hill” for our future generations that will NEVER know what America was really about. This sears catalog brought back many good memories for me. God Bless the United States of America & “We the People.”

      Liked by 1 person

  1. So do I.

    I remember essentially everything in here excpet the section for the girls, and I had three sisters. I had erector sets, Lionel trains, tons of toy guys, the race track sets; the works. Hell, we’ve sunk so low that this country couldn’t even make the toys illustrated in this catalog any more …

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