<p>This book was written as an archive of the Schroeder Family&rsquo;s history from 1900 to 1959.&nbsp; It is not intended to appeal to other than family members and a few close friends. &nbsp;</p><p>It is hard for some to picture a time when only a few people had a telephone.&nbsp; It was an expensive luxury hard-wired to the wall and located in one room of the house.&nbsp; New cars came with the options of radios and heaters. Gasoline was under 20 cents a gallon and a dollar-an-hour was a living wage.&nbsp; Until the late 1950s if you had a TV set it had a snowy black and white 12-inch screen with a selection of three channels.</p><p>College educations were limited to school teachers doctors and lawyers &hellip; usually the children of comparatively well-off families.&nbsp; WWII and the GI Bill of Rights changed our world making social mobility available to virtually everyone.&nbsp; Taking over my father&rsquo;s gas station would have been my likely life option.</p><p>In this book I have tried to illustrate that pre- computer life was interesting and worth living.&nbsp; There are few places you will find the first-person narration of daily life in the 1930s through 1959. &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp;</p><p>Part Two deals with aspects of modern life my children and grandchildren will find more familiar. Personally life became more interesting and rewarding after Pat and I were married.&nbsp; Our children lived more than average lives parts of which I will illustrate in Part Two.</p><p>Enjoy your trip through time.</p>