This is the Houston of my childhood. I remember walking with my parents downtown around Christmas time. It was magical. At night the sidewalks glittered like diamonds (I guess it was the sand in the concrete) and the ladies' high heeled shoes tap, tap, tapped. And the store windows were beautiful! I miss those days.
I Was Born In Houston Texas On August 23,1960 ...Houston Has Changed a Lot since Then...Here We Are In 2012 Going On To 2013 It's A Mega City Today ...Freeways Are Jammed With Traffic...But Downtown And Mid-Town Are Wonderful Comeback Areas Of Houston...I Grew Up On Allen Parkway Village From 1964 To 1967..I Went To Dial Elementary School Along With Henrietta.
I was born in 56' in the Heights Hospital. My dad was smart and had us out there by 64'. Spent every weekend and any vacation time near Friday Tx on their country place, then grew up after 64 We moved altogether in 64-65 to Crockett and finished school. Everything has changed-- even Crockett-, now we are way out in the woods-
How cool! My husband and I had dinner at Gaido's on our first date in 1969. Houston had plenty to offer for night life back then. Thanks for the glimpse back to the beginning of a very dynamic decade.
Born in 1963 in Houston, we lived off of Hiriam Clark at the end of South Main. I remember all of these places. My Mom worked at the "Gay Dot" at Westbury Square and my Dad hung out at the "Chez Lounge" off of S. Main. Learned to swim at Gateway. Favorite Chinese food was "Lee's Den" the absolute best ever. We moved from Houston in 1975, but it will always be my hometown.
in 1960 I was 2 yrs old .. born in Memorial Hospital downtown, this clip made me smile. I miss HOME.. even saw where you slipped in Cokin's ? the only cafe in town that had the mini juke boxes on the tables.. My mother ran Stubby's on Chenevert.. Where you could find any TV or radio personality at any given time... When 'air conditioning was chill water' yes those were hard times, yet MUCH simpler.. Thank you for this big ol' Valentine's Grin!
Thank you for this beautiful Houston. I remember well of the Red Lion I use to love seeing it, even now when I pass by where it used to be I take a glance over and remember the cars being in the parking lot. Thank you.
This was about the time that life in Houston was becoming bearable throughout the year and not just the months of November through February unless you had poor circulation in your body and loved hot weather. Homes and small businesses started getting air conditioning. Imagine life in Houston or most of Texas itself before then!
@@cavitycreep my folks had a window ac in their bedroom. The other was in the den where they spent their evenings. At 8, my bedtime, I would sneak in and holding up my pillow, cool it to sleep. Just sharing… Southwest Houston, 1957-1975
My dad moved to Houston in the late 1940’s. He always said that Houston would not have grown into the giant city it became, without the advent of air conditioning.
@@debbieweicht3139 I know what you mean. As a little kid, I hated going to my grandparents home in the summer in south Texas near Corpus Christi, but didn’t realize it was the heat and why I loved their bedroom the most. It was the only air conditioned room in the house with a nice cold window unit.
@@Mistydazzle my mom had many stories growing up in Katy on Bartlett St. near the high school. She and her brother would fight over the fan at night and around 1959 they got a window A/C and she wanted to sleep in the living room. They only ran it at night to save on the light bill.
Wow! I was born in Houston . Only recognize a couple as a child that were still open when I was a kid. Gaidos, and Toddle House. Old school Houston. Thanks for sharing!
Just ran into this video and I remember many of these landmarks, many of which no longer exist but memories are forever. I was just a kid but I remember.
Thank you so much for this video and for the music. I just got turned on to the music Dave Brubeck -- perfect music for the video! My first memory was as a 2- or 3-year old pudgy kid watching a Houston TV commercial for Heart's (sp?) Restaurant.
That's also Galveston. (Gaido's) Thanks so much for posting. I've been trying to remember College Inn Pizza for years, but didn't see a pic til just now. (roughly Chimney Rock and Westheimer Road)
The best thing about being alive in this era that nobody realized would ever change is the ability to go to another city and find completely different restaurants. Nowadays everybody just goes to Applebees.
Yuck. I hate Applebee's because my ex-wife used to love it. I went there at Christmas 3 days ago and it's gotten worse. Dennys or Waffle House would have been better.
Somebuger best Burger,French,Fries, Onions Ring and Malted. I miss it there was one at Wayside and Avenue P. Always go there it was a small shack. Love them 60's.
Can someone help me. There is a restaurant sandwiched in between the Red Lion and Y Olde College Inn. If I remember right it was called the Polynesian Gardens. It was on South Main. I was very young when I went there with my parents. Can anyone confirm the name, or tell me the correct name if I am incorrect? Please.
I don't think it was, I have been looking up info on the history of the hotel (my mom was a switchboard operator there in the early 70's) I have seen no mention of a "chain" hotel in Dallas.
Not likely. Jack Ruby ran the Dallas Carousel burlesque nightclub until he murdered Lee Oswald. Even before then, he wasn't worth a flip at running businesses or nightclubs. Plus, Ruby had hardly no ties to H-Town.