Tag Archive for Baby Boomers

The Most Important Day of My Life: December 7, 1941

From our All History is Personal Dept.: I have said this before, but it cannot be said too often: All History is Personal.  Thus, I am able to identify December 7, 1941, as the most important day in my life, although on the calendar it occurred thirteen years before I was born.  The events of that day happened to me! They are the proximate cause of who and what I became.

In “macro-history,” on December 7, 1941, an ancient imperial power attacked a late-adolescent of a nation, sending the world spinning out of control.  In “meta-history,” everything that might otherwise have occurred did not occur, and a chain of events destined to occur, did.

Obviously, I was not killed or wounded or traumatized by World War II.  I was not held in a concentration camp by a demented dictator, nor was I interned by the frightened prejudices of my own democratically elected government.  Yet I am a product of the historical forces unleashed that Sunday in December 1941.  I am a “baby boomer” who grew up during the Jet Age, the Atomic Age, and the Space Age, watching television, and attending racially integrated schools.   I lived on or near military bases in a country that theretofore had eschewed a large standing military establishment.  Later, I myself served in the Strategic Air Command, the single most lethal combat force in human history.  I could be a Cold Warrior only because of December 7, 1941.

On this Pearl Harbor Day, do these things, especially if you are a “Baby Boomer” (born between 1946 and 1964): (1) remember and honor the members of the Greatest Generation who fought the war, and who are just about all gone; (2) think about how that day, December 7, 1941, changed your life, even though it occurred before you were born; (3) think about whether we as a generation about to be ushered out of the spotlight of history have used our December 7, 1941 birthright in  the best way we could.  That is, what sort of historical legacy do we leave, given where we started?  Because, make no mistake about it, the bells are beginning to  toll for us.

Baby Boomers Reach Social Security Age

According to news reports, Kathleen Casey Kirschling of New Jersey will apply for Social Security benefits today, in anticipation of turning 62 on January 1, 2008. In a 1980 study, researcher Landon Jones tagged Kathleen Casey as the iconic “first Baby Boomer.” The term “Baby Boomer” refers to those born between 1946 and 1964 in the population explosion that followed World War II. Kathleen Casey was born one second after midnight on January 1, 1946, in Philadelphia.

I’m eight years younger than Kathleen Casey, putting me in the midst of the “Boom.” My generation has been probably the most studied, most written about, and some say, most indulged, generation in history. Much of postwar culture was shaped for us or by us. It was during our lifetimes that the H-bomb was produced; the Cold War started, raged for forty-five years, and ended; rock’n'roll, Barbie dolls, and McDonald’s became American icons; hippies, “Weathermen,” and Black Panthers scared the daylights out of America; men walked on the moon; tens of thousands of Boomers lost their lives in Vietnam; the Civil Rights Era shone; personal computers were invented; the Internet and I-Pods came along.

This weekend we were down south in Ventura, California, to witness the baptism of our niece’s son. It occurred to me that by the time he’s my age, it will be over hundred years since my birth. World War II will be distant history; the Internet and I-Pods, long obsolete. I wonder what he will see in his lifetime.

Coming Tomorrow: Another Law Lesson–Defamation and Invasion of Privacy in Genealogy.