Deprecated: Creation of dynamic property ET_Builder_Module_Comments::$et_pb_unique_comments_module_class is deprecated in /home/csmediatexas/murphymonitor/wp-content/themes/Divi/includes/builder/class-et-builder-element.php on line 1425
Collin Fall 2025

2024 trip prices far from magical

by | Oct 3, 2024 | Opinion

Photo by Ricardo Guzman, Pixabay

As we left Ashdown, Arkansas, in my mom’s 1971 Buick Electra 225 Limited, my mom turned to my dad and asked, “Jimmy, are you sure we have enough money?”

He responded, “Well, Mary. If four hundred dollars isn’t enough to spend two weeks at Disney World, then we might as well stay home.”

It was 1973. That four hundred was to cover gas, hotels, meals, tickets to a relatively new Disney World, souvenirs, and incidentals. And it did. With some left over.

My wife and I just got back from a trip to Alaska. We spent almost four hundred to park our car at the airport.

Times and costs have changed a lot.

There’s a TV show called Larry’s Country Diner. They don’t make the show anymore, but I still watch the reruns.

Larry is a former disc jockey. Being one of those myself, I can relate to the guy.

One of the ways you get and keep listeners on a radio show is to have what are called “benchmarks.” Simply put, a benchmark is an interesting bit you do on-the-air at the same time every day.

It gives the listener something to look forward to, and with it occurring at the same time every day, it also tells them what time it is so that they know whether or not they’re on schedule.

Larry recycled an old radio bit at the beginning of each of his TV shows. It’s called, “On this date in history.”

Most DJs did the bit, but they talked specifically about events. Larry spun that by talking about what things cost. That reminded me of vacations past and present.

The Alaska trip brought to light just exactly how much everything has gone up in price.

My dad was born in 1938. So let’s compare.

According to BusinessInsider.com, the average income that year was $1,731. Granted, that assumes that in the middle of the Great Depression you had a job.

Other jaw-dropping amounts include a gallon of milk being fifty cents, a gallon of gas a dime, a movie ticket was twenty-five cents, rent averaged $27 a month, a postage stamp was three cents, a house went for $3,900, and you could send your kid to Harvard for $420 a year.

To clarify, no one in my family ever went to Harvard.

Disney World in 1973 wasn’t that cheap, but it still seems inexpensive compared to now.

In 1973, an adult ticket to Florida’s Magic Kingdom was $4.50. A kid’s ticket was $1.50.

That $400 suddenly seems plausible.

The Red Carpet Inn where we stayed in Kissimmee, Florida, was about $12 a night. We could’ve stayed at a budget hotel down the street for $6 to $10 a night. But the Red Carpet Inn had a Laundromat, which was a deal breaker for my mom.

In 1973 at McDonald’s, my dad paid twenty-eight cents for each of our hamburgers, and twenty-six cents for french fries. We didn’t eat much at Disney World, because burgers there cost more than a dollar.

My aunt, uncle and two of my cousins also went with us, so some of the costs, such as gasoline, were shared.

Each kid was allowed to pick one souvenir from the Disney World gift shop. I selected a wind-up Mickey Mouse watch. It cost around $8. It’s still around somewhere.

On our trip to Alaska, my wife and I took a cruise. Much of the outing was spent on board the ship and was all-inclusive, but suffice it to say, if we’d spent that same money in 1938, we could have bought each of our kids a house.

The excursions off ship (whale watching, riding the Yukon Railroad, looking at glaciers) were each akin to a 1973 week at Disney World.

Of course, I had to pick up the obligatory souvenirs for family back home. A jigsaw puzzle of a glacier for mom, Alaska ball caps for the men, T-shirts, etc. The cost of which would have fed us at a 1973 McDonald’s. For a year.

I know I sound like my grandparents when it comes to what everything cost, but I can’t help it. Because back in my day, we could go to Disney in Florida for a week for just $400.

And if we couldn’t, we just stayed home.

By John Moore, owner of One Moore Production

For more stories about the Murphy community see the next print, or digital edition of the Murphy Monitor. Subscribe today and support local journalism.

NTMWD 2025

0 Comments

Public Notice - Subscribe

Related News

A bit wordy

A bit wordy

Columnist John Moore doesn’t recall ever seeing gloves in a glove box. Courtesy John Moore English is a language full of leftovers. It’s like the bottom shelf of the refrigerator. Filled with things we just can’t seem to toss out. The difference of course is that at...

read more
True Grits

True Grits

Columnist John Moore loves grits. Real grits, that is. Photo John Moore Folks who aren’t from the South invariably aren’t familiar with grits. When they come for a visit, they often twist their eyebrows into a John Belushi-type look after they spot them on their...

read more
Double time

Double time

Columnist John Moore is on a mission to save old timepieces. He needs your help. Photo: John Moore My friend runs a precious metals shop, selling mostly gold and silver. I was there to discuss those very things when a pocket watch caught my eye. An Elgin. My buddy...

read more
A lot on the line

A lot on the line

Columnist John Moore keeps an old rotary phone around. Just in case. Photo by John Moore There are many once-common aspects of the telephone that are now gone. Keep in mind that those born in the 1990s likely have never heard a dial tone, dialed a phone, or talked to...

read more
Clutching the past

Clutching the past

Columnist John Moore learned to drive on a stick shift. He still uses a clutch to operate his tractor. Courtesy John Moore One of the necessities of my youth is now one of your best bets to prevent vehicle theft: a stick shift. I watch a lot of YouTube, and...

read more
Polished

Polished

Columnist John Moore still shines his own shoes. As long as he can find the polish to buy. Courtesy John Moore In some cultures, people wash the feet of guests who arrive at their home. At my parents’ house, I didn’t wash the feet of guests, but I did offer to shine...

read more
The chain gang

The chain gang

Columnist John Moore misses the old chain stores, one of which, Gibson’s, still exists in Kerrville, Texas. Courtesy John Moore Online shopping has turned us into couch potatoes who buy more than we ever used to. Adding items to an imaginary cart and clicking, “Buy...

read more
A free gift inside

A free gift inside

Columnist John Moore eats a lot of jelly, but not for the reason you might think. Courtesy John Moore My sister and I would make a beeline for the cereal aisle at the Piggly Wiggly while my mom did the shopping.  Decisions, decisions. Did we want to roll the dice...

read more
Jumping to conclusions

Jumping to conclusions

Columnist John Moore finds himself a little lost with new technology. Sometimes lost a lot. Courtesy John Moore Folks aren’t counting on each other like we were 50 years ago. And technology is the wedge that’s come between us. Our parents didn’t worry about us much...

read more
Public Notice - Subscribe