02-17-2006, 11:08 PM | #1 (permalink) |
Fireball
Location: ~
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How Much Did Penny Candy Cost: Historic Value of Money
Sending a letter via Ponny Express in 1861 cost $1. (http://www.nps.gov/poex/hrs/hrs3e.htm)Cheap right?
In 1914 car manufacturers were paid $2.34 for a nine hour day until Ford raised it to $5 and hour A bargain, right? So, how much did your grandparents penny candy really cost? In my economics class, my proffessor showed us a site that converts money in the past into its value today. http://eh.net/hmit/compare/ I want to look at some of the historic photos at work and see how much a shake really cost. Try it next time old people complain about how high prices are. I'll post back when I talk to my grandma and see how much she made an hour and see how much it is in todays dollars. What interesting figures can you come up with? (There is one for British pounds too) How much did a ticket on the Titanic cost? BTW - Mailingthat letter in 1861 cost $21.31 using the Consumer Price Index In 1914, the auto workers wage of works out to $21.81 an hour for a nine hour day. |
02-17-2006, 11:26 PM | #2 (permalink) |
Adequate
Location: In my angry-dome.
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A first-year (1953) Corvette? ~$3100.
In 2004 dollars: $21,886.39 using the Consumer Price Index $18,537.10 using the GDP deflator $32,329.79 using the unskilled wage $47,712.34 using the GDP per capita $95,878.57 using the relative share of GDP More evidence demonstrating that classic cars are a bargain and wonderful investment.
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There are a vast number of people who are uninformed and heavily propagandized, but fundamentally decent. The propaganda that inundates them is effective when unchallenged, but much of it goes only skin deep. If they can be brought to raise questions and apply their decent instincts and basic intelligence, many people quickly escape the confines of the doctrinal system and are willing to do something to help others who are really suffering and oppressed." -Manufacturing Consent: Noam Chomsky and the Media, p. 195 |
02-18-2006, 07:08 AM | #3 (permalink) |
Junkie
Location: Chicago
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I remember as a kid having to pick up dog crap in my grandmother's backyard - which was landscaped using rocks...ROCKS! - for $1, one stinky, smelly, ugly, corrupted, joyous, spendable dollar.
I could go to the local corner market and with that dollar buy a snickers bar, a can of coke, and two packs of baseball cards. You can't buy THAT for a dollar anymore. /grizzled, cynical old man voice.
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"I can normally tell how intelligent a man is by how stupid he thinks I am" - Cormac McCarthy, All The Pretty Horses |
02-18-2006, 08:11 AM | #4 (permalink) |
peekaboo
Location: on the back, bitch
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Frank, the ice cream man would stop in front of our house almost every summer night and ice cream bars were 15 cents.
Mahady's had those big glass jars of 'penny candy', but some of it was a nickel-still it was great going there and getting gobs of wax candy, jawbreakers, etc for a quarter. Bet only the oldsters would remember this-even I was really little-Wonder bread used to sell these itty bitty solid loaves for a quarter-not much bigger than a Twinkie. Mom would get that, hand it to us as she continued shopping and we'd munch on it as we shopped. My parents bought their first house in 1956-the monthly mortgage was $76 a month-dad made $72 a week and fretted that he wouldn't be able to meet the mortgage. They sold that house about 6 years ago for $139,000.
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Don't blame me. I didn't vote for either of'em. |
02-18-2006, 12:51 PM | #5 (permalink) |
Knight of the Old Republic
Location: Winston-Salem, NC
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This issue affects the videogame industry a whole lot and many consumers refuse to believe it. The XBox 360 recently debuted for $400. People thinking that this is an absurd price for a gaming console and that prices have increased soo much since videogames first came out. If you use an inflation calcuator, the NES that came out in 1983 was actually right at the same price as the XBox 360. Videogame prices have went down, rather than up in the past decade.
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"A Darwinian attacks his theory, seeking to find flaws. An ID believer defends his theory, seeking to conceal flaws." -Roger Ebert |
Tags |
candy, cost, historic, money, penny |
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