Interviews with Local Residents
March 11, 2010

For the Our Community, Our History interview project, we interviewed Patricia Anne Richmond. We began our interview by asking her full name and her occupation. Patricia is retired from Pinelands Regional School District. She was born in the 1940s on August 12th in Pleasantville NJ and has lived in the Tuckerton area for 30 years. We asked her what it was like growing up in town in the 1950s and, from what we understand from her words, the town was very small, had a lot of local appliance stores and was a nice, regular town. Tuckerton has changed in many ways and we asked her if she thought the town has changed for better or worse. Patty thinks that Tuckerton has grown too vast for you to enjoy it. Patty remembers ice skating, horseback riding, roller skating and attending dance class.
When Patty was younger, there were fewer lights and schools were much smaller than today. Patty considers the roads were safer because there was less traffic but that our cars are much safer. The school systems were basically the same, with gym class and sports. High school sports were taken as seriously as today if not more. Patty was in Girl Scouts, dance and the girls’ softball team. The living conditions were very nice when she was growing up; her family owned a store that everyone went to during lunch. The music selections were rock-n-roll with Elvis and Bobby Garrett. The crime rate was zero and there were no games or acts against the law. The most dramatic change is the population explosion in the last couple of decades. If Patty could change one thing back to the way it was, the center of town was more built up than today.
Growing up Patty didn’t have the luxuries of microwave ovens, stereos and color TV. She didn’t have a cell phone but she had a telephone in her house. It was exciting watching all the new technology grow as she grew. The community Patty lived in was very mixed. Everyone knew everyone’s family and everyone’s business. She remembers buying penny candy at her family’s store and using a dime to get a whole bag of candy. Gas was also 25 cents a gallon. Patty earned 50 cents an hour for babysitting.
Patty always went to the Manahawkin skating rink every Friday. She also went to school dances. In the winter, she and her friends would ice skate on Tip Seaman Lake.
Patty got her first job at an insurance company in Manahawkin in 1970. Women married around the age of 18; men around the age of 21. The town had everything her family needed so they rarely had to travel out of Tuckerton. All the laws were the same back then as they are now. Tuckerton even had a taxi service. If she could live in the past, Patty would like to visit for a week and then return home.
When it comes to the environment, Patty feels that it’s a shame that the world is going through such turmoil. She thinks it’s sad to see trees being knocked down and highways built in their place. She knows the world, and Tuckerton, is expanding, so she understands.
Overall, Patty loved growing up in the era that she did. She often misses the simple, easy life of her old, little town. Patty still finds that the twenty first century is much easier to live in rather than the fifties. Patty Richmond loves the town she grew up to know and will always remember it. Our group also will remember our interview with Mrs. Patty Richmond. Her words struck us and made us fall in love with Tuckerton, the old town and people who inhabited this area.
Elyssa D, Nikki V, Jeffrey C