dirtydeed
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We had all of those in a local park, circa 1955. Also had a really high metal (of course) slide - probably 14~15 feet - with no rails. All of them were installed atop an asphalt surface.There may be some actual pictures somewhere in boxes we move as generations die off, but here are some pics that resemble the equipment in the "town" playground when I was a kid. The volunteer fire company maintained a small park for the kids in that end of town. There was a baseball field and a few pieces of equipment.
The jungle gym was a pipe assembly very much like the one in the picture below. It could get slippery when wet and there were a few bruises and damaged teeth.
The merry-go-round was just like the picture below. A kid with strong legs could stand in the center and get it going fast enough to make the kids on the seats scream (and a few times even fall off).
The swingset in the picture looks like a smaller model from the same manufacturer that we had. Ours had the slide at one end, three swings next to that, then a fixed pipe bar at around 6' off the ground and finally two see-saws. the swing seats were made of 2x8's with metal plates top and bottom so they wouldn't split. They were a lot easier to jump from that those newfangled rubber ones. The see-saws were maybe 2x12's with pipe T handles and metal scalloped gadgets on the bottom to allow for some adjustment. Smarter kids didn't use the sandbox because the cats did
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Looks just like what we had when I was in elementary school in the late 50s.There may be some actual pictures somewhere in boxes we move as generations die off, but here are some pics that resemble the equipment in the "town" playground when I was a kid. The volunteer fire company maintained a small park for the kids in that end of town. There was a baseball field and a few pieces of equipment.
The jungle gym was a pipe assembly very much like the one in the picture below. It could get slippery when wet and there were a few bruises and damaged teeth.
The merry-go-round was just like the picture below. A kid with strong legs could stand in the center and get it going fast enough to make the kids on the seats scream (and a few times even fall off).
The swingset in the picture looks like a smaller model from the same manufacturer that we had. Ours had the slide at one end, three swings next to that, then a fixed pipe bar at around 6' off the ground and finally two see-saws. the swing seats were made of 2x8's with metal plates top and bottom so they wouldn't split. They were a lot easier to jump from that those newfangled rubber ones. The see-saws were maybe 2x12's with pipe T handles and metal scalloped gadgets on the bottom to allow for some adjustment. Smarter kids didn't use the sandbox because the cats did
View attachment 169634 View attachment 169636 View attachment 169637
Back then most kids were smart enough that if they did something stupid on the playground equipment and got hurt, they usually didn't do it again. Unless they were double dog dared to do it.We had all of those in a local park, circa 1955. Also had a really high metal (of course) slide - probably 14~15 feet - with no rails. All of them were installed atop an asphalt surface.
Saw a bunch of kids fall. Took a few falls myself. Never saw a truly serious injury, though. Just some cuts, scrapes, and bruises. We survived.
There was no "Playground Monitor" either.
My school had two play grounds one on each end of the school. A smaller one for the younger kids whose classes were on the north wing, and for the older kids whose classes were on the southern wing. The southern side had one like in your picture, plus a longer one.There may be some actual pictures somewhere in boxes we move as generations die off, but here are some pics that resemble the equipment in the "town" playground when I was a kid. The volunteer fire company maintained a small park for the kids in that end of town. There was a baseball field and a few pieces of equipment.
The jungle gym was a pipe assembly very much like the one in the picture below. It could get slippery when wet and there were a few bruises and damaged teeth.
The merry-go-round was just like the picture below. A kid with strong legs could stand in the center and get it going fast enough to make the kids on the seats scream (and a few times even fall off).
The swingset in the picture looks like a smaller model from the same manufacturer that we had. Ours had the slide at one end, three swings next to that, then a fixed pipe bar at around 6' off the ground and finally two see-saws. the swing seats were made of 2x8's with metal plates top and bottom so they wouldn't split. They were a lot easier to jump from that those newfangled rubber ones. The see-saws were maybe 2x12's with pipe T handles and metal scalloped gadgets on the bottom to allow for some adjustment. Smarter kids didn't use the sandbox because the cats did
View attachment 169634 View attachment 169636 View attachment 169637