The 1970s were a whirlwind of groove and social changes. People from this decade witnessed many remarkable events, such as the gay liberation movement victories, the election of the first female Prime Minister in the U.K., and the rise of disco.
Alongside these successes, they were also a part of some unfortunate incidents like the Vietnam War, the Oil Crisis, and the loss of many icons like Elvis Presley, Coco Chanel, and Pablo Picasso.
The decade was an era like no other, and luckily the subreddit “The 70s are back!” has collected many images to preserve it. For Gen Z, they may already be mere relics from the past, but these images can reveal a lot about what was happening at the time. Let’s take a nostalgic journey by scrolling through the list and immersing ourselves in the spirit of the ‘70s.
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Early ‘70s / Early 70’s, Cheers
I love this. Seriously, I'm so in love with love. Look at them. They both found their Person. <3
Ahhh Always Best In The Tin
If You Ever Used One Of These Perpetual Towel Contraptions To Dry Your Hands In The 1970s You’re Probably Immune To All Forms Of Viruses And Diseases Now
Things got pretty weird in the 1970s, especially in the US, mostly because it came after the youth and change-driven 1960s and the incoming flashy styles of disco and punk. Even though people yearned for new social possibilities, they were faced with political division (Roe v. Wade, the Watergate scandal), hostility (wars in Asia), and rejection. As they started to lose hope of reuniting as a society with a common interest in goals, many focused on issues of subgroups they belonged to based on ethnicity, sexual orientation, gender, and religion.
I Can Smell This Picture- When We Got Bored With Our Cap Guns We Started Bashing The Whole Rolls With A Hammer! Fun Times In The 1970s!
Smallpox Vaccination Scar ! Who Has One?
Anybody Remember These Guys?
During this period, many American citizens witnessed indigenous people seeking to maintain their culture and improve their quality of life. For decades, they were living in poverty and discrimination. In the '70s, the average life expectancy for a Native American person was 46 years, compared to the national average of 69. Half of them lived on reservations, where employment reached 50%. After many struggles and protests, the US government restored millions of acres of tribal lands and increased funding for Native American education, healthcare, and housing.
Silly Putty ! Remember Copying The Funny Pages From The News Paper?
Only The Lucky Kids Got These In The Anonymous Christmas Gift Exchange In School
Live From N.y. 1976
The drive for gay and lesbian rights intensified as well. The activists called for any homosexual individuals to come out and reveal their orientation. Therefore, gay communities moved from the underground to the political sphere. They strongly protested against the American Psychiatric Association, which categorized homosexuality as a mental illness. This “diagnosis” often resulted in job loss, loss of custody, and other serious consequences for the LGBT community. By 1974, it was no longer considered a mental illness. The same year, Kathy Kozachenko became the first openly lesbian woman to run for office in Michigan.
If You Know, You Know. This Guy Was Sort Of Like The Steve Irwin Of The '70s
I Now Realize Everyone Was Drunk On This Show
Who Else Loved Underdog And His Villains?
Oh where oh where can my Underdog be oh where oh where can he be...
Women's liberation also continued in the 1970s. Feminists opened women’s shelters, successfully fought for protection from employment discrimination for pregnant ladies, reformed sexual assault laws, and funded schools that opposed sexist stereotypes. In 1973, the US Supreme Court, in Roe v. Wade, put in place several laws that made abortions during the first three months legal. This meant that women could seek help nationwide without needing to prove that the pregnancy was a danger to their health or that it was the result of a reported assault.
Remember When Dairy Queen Was A Takeout Stand? (1970s-80s)
Pizza Day Was The Best Day Of The Week In Elementary School In The 70s
My Dream Car And Bike When I Was 10
Growing up in the ‘70s amongst all of this was undeniably different from today. With the hippie movement in full swing and more women acquiring jobs, parents usually employed a “hands-off” approach when raising their children. Unsupervised play was still a thing, children of this era remember being told, “Be home when the street lights come on” or “Whose house are you going to, and when will you be back?” Kids between the ages of 5 and 13 would take care of themselves with no adult supervision before and after school on a regular basis.
Moon Boots. If You Lived In A Cold Climate, You Wore Them
With bread bags over your feet so your socks did not end up soaking wet if the snow was slushy.
What Were You Chewing Back In The Day?
Fruit Stripe Gum!! Does anybody remember how to create chains from the chewing gum wrappers? My older brother had a friend who actually used the gum wrapper chains for curtain dividers and he showed me how to make the chains.
I’m Feeling Really Dizzy And My Cheeks Hurt Real Bad
I remember that if you inadvertently got any of this on wooden furniture it would remove any varnish it made contact with.
One thing adding to the not-so-strict parenting was the lack of communication devices. There weren’t cell phones or smart watches back then. Getting hold of your child meant calling up your neighbors. Children would usually stay out all day, and if they needed to get in contact, they could use a payphone (ancient, we know). They got around without cell phones by making a plan days in advance and sticking to it. It’s hard to imagine doing all this planning just to go to a bowling alley with a friend after school. Nowadays, with nearly everyone having cell phones, we can make arrangements and know where someone is in an instant.
Lincoln Logs Arrived At The Thrift Store Today. Imagine How Long They've Been In Someone's Closet
Who Else Loved Watching, Kolchak: The Night Stalker, In 1974 & 1975 ?
Every single episode! 😍 It was being re-aired recently on Comet I think.
Spencer Gifts ! My Friends And I Would Head Straight To The Poster Rack
Some things that no longer exist in our current world but were useful in the ‘70s were services like milkmen, diaper changers, and television repairmen. Many people had metal boxes on their front porches, and the milkmen would pick up the empty glass bottles and leave milk on their doorstep. You could also leave a dirty bag of cloth diapers for someone to collect, and they would replace them with a stack of new ones. And if the TV broke, you would pay someone who came to your house in a van filled with parts and fixed it in your home. How ‘70s is that?
Pop Some Boston Into The Cassette Deck And Let's Cruise
Mom Thought She Was Doing Good
I Think These Were Created To Give 70's Children Nightmares
So many peeps think my user name is related to these guys, Sleestak, libstak...
Created by David Gerrold, the same guy who wrote the classic The Trouble With Tribbles episode of Star Trek.
Ya know they are actually living in the sewers in some cities and just waiting to take over the surface world. /jk
Sleessak!! Very freaky. You can still get the land of the lost episodes on YouTube.
I used to love Land of the Lost, except for these gecko-looking creatures. (shivers)
My mother watched this when she was young, she showed me it when I was a toddler or so, I don’t know what she was thinking because it gave me an irrational fear of these!
I wonder how long the person wearing those costumes had to take breaks to keep from passing out, etc.
The Land of the Lost! It came on Saturday mornings right after cartoons.
Isn't that from the movie? In the original series they were even stranger.
No. THIS was created in the 70's to give kids nightmares (and it worked!): terrordoll...ae3d34.png
Also, let's not forget that reading paper maps and looking for distinctive landmarks were the only ways to travel successfully. Watching your favorite television shows in the 1970s was like making an appointment. Recording devices didn’t exist yet, so if you missed a show, better luck next time! Even thinking about it sends shivers down your spine. Additionally, at the time, the nationwide highway speed limit was 55 miles per hour in the US (now it rarely ever goes below 65).
Me And My Little Brother. Halloween - 1973
You Are From The 70's. If You Remember The Soda Machines With The Cup And Crushed Ice Dispenser
Long John Silver’s In The Late 1970s Was Something Special
The era of the 1970s was multifaceted in many ways. From social and cultural changes to daily life without cellphones or GPS, it was a mix of challenges and significant achievements that left a lasting effect on the decades ahead. Reflecting on this period, we have to ask, dear Pandas, do you recall something from the ‘70s that no longer exists or was peculiar even to this decade?
Remember “Wacky Packages” Trading Cards From Topps? (1967-77)
So I Have An Awesome 70s Smoking Room. Tell Me What U Think
Barefoot Gas Pedal, Hurst Shifter, And Boston
If You Didn't Take Him Up On The Roof, You Didn't Truly "Live" The 70s
Water Rockets
Members Of A Cult Or A Flower Selling Cartel?
Am I The Only One That Had One Of These?
Who Remembers Digital Derby?
Bored Panda needs to publish a whole lot more of these kind of lists and a whole lot less of Am I The A.......
Yeah, I think this list is strictly for the US.
Load More Replies...70s for me was pinball arcades, H R PufNStuf, The Banana Splits, spirograph and star wars!
H R Puff n Stuff! That kid Jimmy (Jack Wild) had a pretty tough time in real life.
Load More Replies...What? No Clackers or Lemon Twists? (I remembered the toys but had to google the names). The Clackers would sometimes explode. Fun times. : )
This was definitely a Gen X list. If you were born in the 70's you were too young to remember half this stuff!
Load More Replies...Nostalgia is always good but can we have a UK in the 70s or Europe in the 70s as most of these were very American centred.
Maybe I am misunderstanding but the description for this post says "Gen Z". Gen Z is people born 1996 - 2010. I was born in 1970. This list is for Generation X and maybe older Millennials.
It was kind of a lost generation. I'm was born the last year of the Boomers & beginning of Gen X, so it was an interesting point of view.
Load More Replies...most of these are still alive and well in the rural parts of the midwest
We still had most of these things in the 90s (i was born in 1983, so that was my heyday, and I remember most) and some we still have today (walkup DQ, Long John Silver, Arthur Treacher's). Fun list though, I feel sorry for the kids these days - it's all screens.
Bored Panda needs to publish a whole lot more of these kind of lists and a whole lot less of Am I The A.......
Yeah, I think this list is strictly for the US.
Load More Replies...70s for me was pinball arcades, H R PufNStuf, The Banana Splits, spirograph and star wars!
H R Puff n Stuff! That kid Jimmy (Jack Wild) had a pretty tough time in real life.
Load More Replies...What? No Clackers or Lemon Twists? (I remembered the toys but had to google the names). The Clackers would sometimes explode. Fun times. : )
This was definitely a Gen X list. If you were born in the 70's you were too young to remember half this stuff!
Load More Replies...Nostalgia is always good but can we have a UK in the 70s or Europe in the 70s as most of these were very American centred.
Maybe I am misunderstanding but the description for this post says "Gen Z". Gen Z is people born 1996 - 2010. I was born in 1970. This list is for Generation X and maybe older Millennials.
It was kind of a lost generation. I'm was born the last year of the Boomers & beginning of Gen X, so it was an interesting point of view.
Load More Replies...most of these are still alive and well in the rural parts of the midwest
We still had most of these things in the 90s (i was born in 1983, so that was my heyday, and I remember most) and some we still have today (walkup DQ, Long John Silver, Arthur Treacher's). Fun list though, I feel sorry for the kids these days - it's all screens.