One aspect of life in Mayberry that we saw little of was what it would be like 
to be a teenager in Mayberry.  We had just a short glimpse of it in the final 
season when Opie began go to boy girl parties and when he became a professional 
musician with the "The Sound Committee".  We also saw a few teenagers in 
"Helen's Play".  Then Andy and Opie left Mayberry just as Opie was about to 
enter high school.  So what would the teens in Mayberry do? Probably the same 
things I did growing up in a small town in the '60's.  I would imagine the 
hangout after school would have been the drug store where the kids would stop 
off for their cokes, root beers, and malts.  After basketball games and 
football games they would most likely have headed to the diner for their 
hamburgers and fries and cokes.  One thing that was really missing from 
Mayberry was a drive-in with car hops.  Back in the 60's just about every small 
town had at least one drive-in where teens would hang out on warm summer 
nights.  But it would appear that Mayberry did not have one at all.  The school 
would have been the center of activity for the young people of Mayberry but 
certainly not to the extent that it is today.  Most likely they would have an 
occasional school dance, including an annual Homecoming dance and parade, and 
of course spring would bring in the Junior Prom.  But for the most part the 
teens of Mayberry would have had to create their own fun.  Part of that fun 
would have been cruising around town in the convertibles and hardtops on 
weekends and especially Saturday night.  Summer would bring trips to Myer's 
Lake for swimming and picnics and I would imagine the boys would do a lot of 
fishing.  Winter would most likely usher in the ice skating and those wonderful 
hayride parties that were so popular back then.  Being a teen in a small town 
back in the '60's wasn't very exciting, but then those of us who grew up at 
that time weren't really looking for excitement.  Perhaps the most common 
pastime growing up in a small town was walking.  Not just the fun of walking to 
and from school, but just the enjoyment of walking around town with friends and 
talking about our hopes and dreams.  I would imagine for many of us those many 
of our hopes and dreams did not come to pass.  But I do have some wonderful 
memories of the slow, quiet, and friendly small town where I grew up.  And I 
would imagine those kids who were lucky enough to grow up in Mayberry are now 
saying the very same thing.

Ken Anderson
2906 May Street
Eau Claire WI 54701
715-839-8470
[email protected]
www.mayberryreflections.com
_______________________________________________
WBMUTBB mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.mayberry.com/tagsrwc/wbmutbb/

Reply via email to