Road in SD
One of our entertainments was reading the Burma Shave signs. We also visited Wall SD - we wanted to see Wall Drug Store. Wall advertised all along the road. They advertised ice water and ice cream. My mother had a thing about milkshakes which were relatively new at that time. She always asked the counter person if they were thick (very embarrassing - what could they say). In those days they made chocolate milkshakes with vanilla ice cream and chocolate syrup. My mother made them make chocolate milkshakes with chocolate ice cream and chocolate syrup. So I think I remember having milkshakes at Wall Drugstore.
Needles Eye - Badlands
Vampire Valley- Badlands
From an old postcard: The Bad Lands are the world's greatest example of the production of the weird, fantastic, unexplainable freaks of nature, through early erosion. Great mountains, deep canyons, little hills, castles, palaces, fortresses and figures of every shape stand silently, without a spear of vegetation, while at their feet is that nutritious grass...
Road around the mountain ahead of us
We camped at an overlook in the Badlands National Park. We would find a level spot and first move all the rocks and sticks from the area. Then we put the ground cloth out. We had brown kapok pads (non-waterproof) which went under each sleeping bag, and we put the sleeping bags on top. I thought the sleeping bags smelled sort of like turpentine. We had pillows and we would take off our shoes and put them under the sleeping bag (to keep them from getting wet with dew) and then get into the sleeping bag fully dressed. There was a flap on the bags to pull over our heads. A toad hopped across our sleeping bags during the night.
This particular morning, some other tourists came to the overlook very early while we were still sleeping. They didn't see us at first - our sleeping bags were camouflaged. When they did see us, they shushed themselves and started to whisper and left quietly.
In the morning, mother would make breakfast on the camp stove (she would rub brown soap over the bottom of the pan so that the pans wouldn't get sooty and hard to clean) and she would boil water for Daddy's coffee and so he could shave. He would hang a mirror on a tree so he could see to shave. My sister and I would sit on the front fenders of the car and eat our cereal out of little boxes.
Driving through the Badlands
Bluffs in SD
South Dakota
From the Badlands we visited
The Shrine of Democracy
Mt Rushmore
Rushmore Memorial, Black Hills, S. Dak.
and we saw (although we did not visit) Devil's Tower
Devil's Tower
Devil's Tower Closer
Road near Yellowstone
Driving through the west in the summer it was hot. We did not have A/C in the car of course. Not many people had A/C in those days. So we would have the windows open and we would stick our feet out of the windows. Daddy would also give us a piece of ice and tell us to put it behind our knees, or on our neck to cool the blood that was close to the surface there.
Hills and prairie - WY
Next - our adventures in Wyoming
My sister remembers this trip a little differently than I do - the heat seemed to affect her more than it did me. This is what she wrote