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Just Leave the Dishes | “Granny's Notes” | My First 84 Years |
During war,
rec center gave teens a refuge By Sue Gerard First published in Columbia Daily Tribune on 1999-11-02 During World War II, Columbia’s streets had mostly older
people and young women and girls. There wasn’t much to do
with the men and boys away in training camps or in various parts
of the world with the armed forces. Doctors and teachers went to war, technicians of all kinds and
skilled craftsmen were sent away, on short notice, to build
ammunition plants and factories where parts for planes, guns,
landing craft and endless war equipment would be manufactured.
Whole families and family pets moved elsewhere. They lived in
crowded apartments while working at temporary jobs to help the
war effort. Our fighting men were sent all over the world, and the home
front was left with a shortage of all of the materials needed to
feed, clothe, arm and entertain the men and women in uniform.
Retired people went back to work, often learning new jobs,
filling in for those who were needed elsewhere. Women and girls
learned first aid, knitted wool mittens and socks for people in
foreign countries, wrote letters and sent goodies to relatives
and friends in training camps and on war fronts. We gradually
adjusted to the restlessness caused by many changes. Suddenly, Columbia underwent another surprising transition.
Uniformed Army Air Force trainees swarmed the streets on weekends
and late afternoon hours when local young people were also
seeking ways to enjoy their after-school freedom. Many people saw
a potential problem as the fellows in uniform sought not only
college girls, but high school girls and even some junior high
girls, in restaurants, stores and on street corners. Parents,
storekeepers and others, including former coach W.C. Harris, saw
the need for a recreation center for young students. The vacated Methodist church stood at the corner of Dorsey
Street and Broadway directly across from the present First
Baptist Church. The basement of the unused church was accessible
from a Dorsey Street entrance on the west. Parents, city
"fathers" and Harris persuaded the church owners to
allow Columbia’s young people to use the basement as a
temporary gathering place after school and on weekends. Young people loved the idea. Everybody did. Getting the center
cleaned, decorated and comfortable was a youth effort. They
scrubbed and painted, were given a jukebox, games, records,
magazines and books, and they rented a pop machine. It was great
fun to work together on this project. Parents gave discarded
chairs, couches and other furniture. Merchants donated paint and
other supplies for renovating and equipping the area. Columbia
teens came often to help and to enjoy working hard on their own
place to get together. They’d have minimal supervision by a
friendly young couple that Harris chose to help coordinate the
renovation and be around during the center’s open hours. Harris suggested that the teens establish a system of
self-government. The center needed a name and someone won $5 for
suggesting Teen Town. Today this term is widely recognized
because of the visit of Eleanor Roosevelt. Eleanor Roosevelt was very active and much in the news when
her husband was president. She traveled all over the nation and
wrote a column syndicated as "My Day." She was
fascinated when Harris mentioned Teen Town. He took her to visit
the kids when the place was alive with activity, and she told
about it in her column the next day. Requests came from all over the nation asking when? who?
where? how? I was employed to write a brochure to reply to the
questions and also to help when Teen Town moved to the south side
of Broadway to larger quarters. As the saying goes,
"Necessity" a youth center "was the
mother of invention!" |
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