Anonymous wrote:Houses did not cost $800,000 and college was not $240,000 per kid. When all the Mrs. Brady's of the world got in the workforce, that drove up the cost of housing and education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
first poster here--I know the maid's quarters were downstairs. My point was that they ONLY has 3 bedrooms in such a huge house. How does one have room for maids quarters, but only 2 bedrooms and 1 bathroom for 6 kids?
Actually I knew a lot of real actual (not sitcom) families during the Brady Bunch era where the kids shared bedrooms and bathrooms. In fact, in most families I knew, everybody used the same bathroom, including the parents. Though these families did not have live-in housekeepers who wore uniforms.
Yeah, I'm wondering how young all the posters marvelling at the kids sharing rooms and bathrooms are. My dad designed and built our house, and we had 8 kids in 4 bedrooms, and all shared one bathroom. (My parents did have their own, but it had to be a MAJOR emergency for us to be able to use theirs! There was a half-bath downstairs for regular emergencies --- or you just barged in on your siblings and told them to hurry the hell up.).
We did not have a maid, nor did anyone I knew. But I think that live-in help was just a lot cheaper because there weren't that many work options for women. Alice would have been born in the 1920's or so, right? So if she did not become a teacher or go to secretarial school, and didn't get married.....her options were pretty limited. Room, board, some spending money, and an employer that wasn't a total a-hole were probably enough to keep her. I'm seeing a great TV special with Alice's back story:
Alice dropped out of school early to work in the factories during WWII. She fell in love with the boy next door, who then went off to the Korean War to fight and die (M.A.S.H. tie-in). Alice always stayed close to her true love's family, particularly his little brother Mike, who she always treated like her own little brother. After Mike's wife (Roberta) had Peter, her health suffered due to problems with a difficult delivery. Alice was sick of factory work (particularly he sexist idiot of a boss--Laverne and Shirly tie-in), She saw Mike and Roberta were struggling --- they all agreed Alice would move in and help Roberta with the new baby and little Greg. Sadly, because adequate birth control wasn't available in many states in the '60s, Roberta got pregnant again and did not survive childbirth when Bobby was born. And that's the story, till the one day that that lady met this fellow....
Is this fan fiction or her real backstory??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
first poster here--I know the maid's quarters were downstairs. My point was that they ONLY has 3 bedrooms in such a huge house. How does one have room for maids quarters, but only 2 bedrooms and 1 bathroom for 6 kids?
Actually I knew a lot of real actual (not sitcom) families during the Brady Bunch era where the kids shared bedrooms and bathrooms. In fact, in most families I knew, everybody used the same bathroom, including the parents. Though these families did not have live-in housekeepers who wore uniforms.
Yeah, I'm wondering how young all the posters marvelling at the kids sharing rooms and bathrooms are. My dad designed and built our house, and we had 8 kids in 4 bedrooms, and all shared one bathroom. (My parents did have their own, but it had to be a MAJOR emergency for us to be able to use theirs! There was a half-bath downstairs for regular emergencies --- or you just barged in on your siblings and told them to hurry the hell up.).
We did not have a maid, nor did anyone I knew. But I think that live-in help was just a lot cheaper because there weren't that many work options for women. Alice would have been born in the 1920's or so, right? So if she did not become a teacher or go to secretarial school, and didn't get married.....her options were pretty limited. Room, board, some spending money, and an employer that wasn't a total a-hole were probably enough to keep her. I'm seeing a great TV special with Alice's back story:
Alice dropped out of school early to work in the factories during WWII. She fell in love with the boy next door, who then went off to the Korean War to fight and die (M.A.S.H. tie-in). Alice always stayed close to her true love's family, particularly his little brother Mike, who she always treated like her own little brother. After Mike's wife (Roberta) had Peter, her health suffered due to problems with a difficult delivery. Alice was sick of factory work (particularly he sexist idiot of a boss--Laverne and Shirly tie-in), She saw Mike and Roberta were struggling --- they all agreed Alice would move in and help Roberta with the new baby and little Greg. Sadly, because adequate birth control wasn't available in many states in the '60s, Roberta got pregnant again and did not survive childbirth when Bobby was born. And that's the story, till the one day that that lady met this fellow....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The real question is how did they have that big house with maids quarters, yet only 3 bedrooms upstairs.
I just thought this same thing. I was originally thinking it was a modest house with only 3 bedrooms, but then I remembered Alice's quarters, the den, the attic space...the LARGE family room, dining room, eat-in kitchen AND tv-watching room; oh and large foyer area...so it wasn't so modest maybe.
Don't architects make a lot of money?
Anonymous wrote:Yep. He was an architect, which was a big deal back in the day. That's how he afforded to raise 6 kids in a huge house in California (No. Cal right?) with a wife who didn't work until long after the last kid was gone (then she became a real estate agent) and a live in housekeeper. And since he likely designed the house -he built it to have a room downstairs behind the laundry room (and likely a bathroom bc you rarely saw her go upstairs) for Alice.
Anonymous wrote:no minimum wage laws, we lived like kings over seas but here the lowest paid has a lot of upward mobility. On the opposite end the higher you are paid the less you are able to move up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
first poster here--I know the maid's quarters were downstairs. My point was that they ONLY has 3 bedrooms in such a huge house. How does one have room for maids quarters, but only 2 bedrooms and 1 bathroom for 6 kids?
Actually I knew a lot of real actual (not sitcom) families during the Brady Bunch era where the kids shared bedrooms and bathrooms. In fact, in most families I knew, everybody used the same bathroom, including the parents. Though these families did not have live-in housekeepers who wore uniforms.
I actually grew up in a house with (gasp!) ONE BATHROOM.
Perhaps that should be a new thread. "I grew up in a one-bathroom house. Ask me anything."
Grew up in a family of seven with one bathroom and three bedrooms. We lived.