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Bicentennial 1976 almost 50 years now

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rsmith

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Wrote this for another site but people on here that remember the old Lauderdale might appreciate it. My dad bought the Endless Summer June 76 in Lauderdale almost 50 years and 20,000 hours later I still have her.


Its been almost half a century, and if there was a better summer than 1976 I'll eat my Jethro Tull tour shirt. We had it all; the Bicentennial, Tall Ships in Newport, the Olympcs in Montreal when Bruce Jenner won the Decathalon, The Ramones began their trip into Punk Rock glory with their first albulm, Zeppelin was still together, you could buy an ounce of "gold" for forty bucks and every girl wore her hair long, went barefoot and wore jean shorts and not much else.

Boston and Peter Frampton dominated the airwaves, and everybody was on board - the jocks, the brains and the burnouts. Nobody wanted to kill anybody, we just wanted to live as if every minute of that summer held a special kind magic, enough to last a half a century in an old man's mind, and make him roll down the windows and turn the radio up all the way when Cheap Trick comes on and blast it like it was coming from a Pioneer Supertuner with a power booster and Jensens in the back...
The Endless Summer was finally ours and docked at Pier 66. Pier 66 changed the outside lights and was red white and blue. I put an 8 track on the bridge with Jensen coaxials (no one could afford triaxials) and had 3 tapes Boston Frampton comes alive and ELO. I think I bought Foghat at Peaches records and tape which is a porn shop now. WSHE was the go to music station in the greater Ft Lauderdale Miami area and the DJ’s had that bass monotone delivery. Afternoons started at Uncle Phil’s prop club. A little bar by the swimming hall of fame. Airplane propellers on the walls and a giant parachute hanging from the ceiling. 3:30-4 all the charter captains would start coming in and I’d pick their brains for fishing updates. Bartender was a 27yo braless beauty. First time I was told “my eyes are up here” From there I’d wander over to the Button on the beach. The Lauderdale art institute was on the second floor and by 5 the classes would let out and the girls would start filling up the bar. As Tom Cruise said it was a target rich environment. You could sit at the bar and had a panoramic view of the ocean. I remember remember sitting there one thanksgiving after a front came through watching the breaking waves offshore listening to Gordon Lightfoot sing about the gales of November
I guess it really was magic, because I remember it like yesterday.
 
I remember it well, well said, I had one other thing being from the west coast and that was California Girls!!!!
 
I read an article where the author had conducted an extensive survey to define what people mean by "the good old days." The goal was to identify a period of years most people thought were the good old days. The author was surprised that the study revealed most people regarded the "good old days" as the years they were 11-15 years old. Those are the last years of parental security and before the adulthood years of uncertainty.

Regardless, your description of 1976 captured my "good old days" (age 12) and I had never been on a boat yet by then.

Thanks.

Is there going to be a tall ships parade in 2026? That would be worth an NYC cruise.

Bruce

Freestyle
1986 62 CPMY (54MY with ext)
Tampa
 
I graduated from high school in 1977.... teenage years as a misspent youth... only boats I knew where small lake and river boats... water skiing and setting trot lines for cat fishing.

Moved to Wilmington, NC (Wrightsville Beach) a few years later when they still had a marlin tournament. Remember walking to the docks and peering into some very nice sportfishing rigs and wondering what you had to do to own a boat with a couch in it bigger than the one I had in my apartment.

Relived a very cool moment at the Wrightsville Beach bridge some 30 years after that moment. I had taken my sportfish (44 Ocean SS) from Connecticut to Morehead City for Winter Bluefin season. Got a call from some of my local NC friends that the bite was hot in Southport. Ran down to Southport on the outside at night and then the weather blew up. We tried for three days to get a bite, but nada. As the weather still was terrible offshore, we went up the ICW from Southport to Morehead. Once we got to Wrightsville Beach, had to wait for the bridge about 15 minutes. I went down from the flybridge to make a pot of coffee. I was standing in the cockpit as we were waiting for the bridge and in that moment, the memory came flooding back as I looked in my own boat at the salon couch and thought to myself, well son, guess you figured it out. Still feel that moment like it was yesterday.

Anyway, apologize for the wandering rant. My point is that I too recall those days and they were some of my personal "good ole days". I feel like I've had several periods in my life that I can say were "the good ole days".
 
Thanks for bringing back a flood of good memories from the summer of 76. I was 15 about to be 16 in the fall and can say hands down the best summer of my life. The music ,the girls ,holy crap we had fun.
I lived in North Jersey me and my buddies would cut school (9th grade)and would jump on the train and hit NYC ( $1.50 round trip!!!) get out at Penn Station
and walk up 8th Ave to 42 st and can tell you it was a wild scene back then. Even in the middle of the day. Buy a Quart of Bud ,brown bag it and stroll around.
 
1976 summer was indeed memorable. H.S. graduation that year with a summer whithout further plans really, college was not in the forecast.

So - Seattle Seafair weekend, who hooo! Boats were still running Allisons and Merlins, the logboom was still up close right on the straightaways, and the Blue Angels flew A-4's low - loud and fast with recent Vietnam pilots who weren't shy. The same weekend was drag racing billed as "64 Funny Cars" out at S.I.R., again the stands were right along the track and by the finals you could essentially stand right on the track wall as the beasts roared down a full 1/4 mile. Afterwards, drive the '68 Camaro back to the lake and find a away back to the boat at midnight so Sundays Gold Cup.

No AC, payphones, no fashion outside of cut-off jeans, no disrespect for the law (no problem if you followed the basic rules), 8 tracks did suck though, at least mine did.


Great memories!!! Thanks!!
 
Great post. I have most of those same memories of growing up in that time period although I was only 16 in '76 ...already drinking beer but still a year or two from sneaking into a bar. We got most of our kicks then building chopper Stingrays, upside down bikes, mini bikes, go karts etc...

My best friend John Basile and I scrounged around our basements for some paint and brushes and set to work turning this ordinary run-of-the-mill fire hydrant in the middle of our block into this masterpiece!

IMG_7931 (1).webp


It lasted about a year before some grouchy neighbor dimed us out and they came around and painted over it. Something about it being illegal to paint a fire hydrant. Like if they were looking for it they somehow wouldn’t recognize what it was.

Good times, often wish I could go back.
 
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Great post. I have most of those same memories of growing up in that time period although I was only 16 in '76 ...already drinking beer but still a year or two from sneaking into a bar. We got most of our kicks then building chopper Stingrays, upside down bikes, mini bikes, go karts etc...

My best friend John Basile and I scrounged around our basements for some paint and brushes and set to work turning this ordinary run-of-the-mill fire hydrant in the middle of our block into this masterpiece!

View attachment 75187


It lasted about a year before some grouchy neighbor dimed us out and they came around and painted over it. Something about it being illegal to paint a fire hydrant. Like if they were looking for it they somehow wouldn’t recognize what it was.

Good times, often wish I could go back.

LOVE IT!

Also love the phrase "...dimed us out"... no one born in the last 20 years knows what a pay phone or telephone booth is... much less that you had to use coins ... and not a card... to make a call.. :)
 
".....The Ramones began their trip into Punk Rock glory with their first albulm,....

I found it interesting you included the Ramones from that time period. While I can't claim to be a hardcore punk rock fan I always admired what those guys, 4 misfits from Queens from broken families and no money, were able to accomplish. Against all odds they literally willed themselves to success by playing gigs at the same breakneck pace as their songs. I had opportunity to see them at the Passaic theater or even CBGB and lament the fact that I didn't.
All gone now, just like Skynyrd.
 
I was ten years, boasting I was a decade old! Tall ships on dad’s 52 Wheeler in boston harbor. First ‘girl friend’ Cecile at camp and the music was great. Thanks for a good read!
 

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