With the news full of patriotism and the air full of optimism, being a kid totally ruled in the mid to late '70s.
By Daniel Bonfiglio
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It's true that life is hard right now, but life in the past wasn't any better.
Back before the days of "stranger danger" and "true crime documentaries," humans actually trusted one another.
If you grew up in the late 1970s, there's a good chance you consider that period America's golden age.
Many people look at the late '70s as the America's golden age, which makes 1979 the greatest year ever.
The 1980s took getting after it to its logical conclusion.
Dorothea Lange worked to expose injustice with her camera.
Time to grab some drinks, call your friends, and head out for a night on the town.
With World War I finishing up, the Spanish flu took its place.
1963 will be remembered for the start of Beatlemania, but those who lived it experienced much more.
Nothing measures up to cracking open a cold one and having a good time with the lads and ladies.
From "Stairway to Heaven" to "Kashmir," few musical groups left a bigger impact on their genre than Led Zeppelin.
While America sent its young men to fight in a jungle half way around the world, everyone else lived their best life.
From inner city tenements to dust bowl remnants, hard working Americans found themselves kicked to the curb while elites laughed all the way to the nonexistent banks.
With the war to end all wars finally over, normality reigned supreme again in 1920.
The United States pulled out of the Vietnam war in 1973, allowing many young Americans to experience their adult freedom for the first time.
Life in 1917 was life in a world at war.
After the horrors of World War I, peacetime came as a welcomed relief throughout the '20s and '30s.
From the draft to popular anti-imperialist sentiments, the Vietnam War's impact is still felt today.
Harry Houdini captured hearts around the world like no magician in history, and he captured them in throats.
Despite its hardships, people yearn for the freedom of the frontier.
The 1920s were so cool that the term "roaring" burst into colloquial usage before the decade even finished.
Scarcely taught in schools, America's fifth deadliest conflict saw allied troops bolster South Korean forces in their fight against North Korea, and communism in proxy.