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re: What was Baton Rouge like in the 1970s?

Posted on 1/18/21 at 6:33 pm to
Posted by NWarty
Somewhere in the PNW
Member since Sep 2013
2181 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 6:33 pm to
quote:

Yes, independence Airport was a small airport between Florida Blvd and Goodwood where the state police complex is.


I remember watching the old Kurt Russell film about the UT sniper and seeing Independence Airport in the movie before it was demo’d to make room for the park system.
Posted by MiDixon Yermouth
Member since Sep 2018
295 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 6:34 pm to
quote:

Like Baton Rouge in the 1990s, but smaller.


Definitely a LOT smaller but I would say you would've found BR unrecognizable in contrast with what it is like today. Whoever said the vibe was heading towards that of Austin is partially correct. BR had a strong "college town" feel and LSU was the hub of a much larger part of the overall "vibe". I would say the majority here would have considered BR lifestyle as that of a town, not a city.

I remember the day they removed the saw horses blocking the opening of I-10 at College Drive and was one of the first to drive the distance to Prairieville where it once came to an end. Perkins was still gravel past Seigen.. Essen was just being widened from a single lane with virtually no commercial or business property. Not sure what went up first but I remember Ch 33 building, that had just begun broadcast, still surrounded in uncleared land. ...and this finally gave us 3 TV stations. Cable didn't get here until very late 70's and cable was simply a few extra mainstream broadcasts from Chicago, Atlanta, and a couple of early cable based ventures ... so until early 70's we had 2 TV stations only until midnight... nothing until the local morning shows began. IIRC except for bars, BR did not yet have any businesses or stores open past 9 or 10pm. I'd have to think a while about when BR first had 24 hr options. By t mid 70's BR was still essentially motionless on a weekday after midnight. On a weekday night in late 60's, we'd sneak out and ride our bikes to a breakfast diner on Perkins called the Dobbs House. We's ride the center line on Highland, down Lee Dr., then down Perkins without ever seeing a car. First half of the 70's wasn't much different.

Florida Blvd and Airline were the only real thoroughfares in BR with stretches of restaurants, nightclubs, car dealerships, department stores. Most of BR's best restaurants were still on Airline, a few on Florida, maybe 3-4 more spread around elsewhere. Downtown was slowly becoming a ghost town.

To illustrate how different NR was, imagine doing this and being the only ones to do it. Me and four friends rented the entire Abadie Buillding's top floor... in the first block of Third St... right across the street from where Happy's (was?)..one or two doors down from where Stroube's is now. We rented it for seven years from early 70's until about 1978-9 as a place just to hang out, jam, drink, crash, etc. We had the entire top floor of a prime downtown building that spanned 1/2 the block spanning to the back of the buildings (now Tsunami and Captial City Grill) that faced Lafayette St. Our floor had seven large office suites, windows overlooking Third St. below, a long, very wide, L shaped hall, (all with 20' ceilings) that led to a stairway to the rooftop. We had our own private downtown rooftop deck at night with a great view of the river. downtown BR was becoming a ghot town but There were still offices downtown during the day. But, at night we almost had downtown BR to ourselves. I mention this to show how different BR was in the 70's. We never could understand why nobody else did this. It cost the five us a whopping $175 a month, total... $35 each and we got our money's worth times over. Downtown was so abandoned that the agency that rented to us never even bothered to see what we were doing for the entire 7 years... and we did some major re-arranging of rooms, walls, doors, etc... no one cared.

BR had a well defined boundary between North and South "types"... but then, the difference that determined the stereotyped ideas was not racial... but rather, south B.R had the "long hairs, mainstream, and preppy".. .(In 1970, south BR high schools were Lee, U-High, Broadmoor, Catholic, and Baton Rouge High. *Tara opened in early 70's... North BR had what was called the "greasers", Istrouma, Woodlawn, Glen Oaks... which seemed like the tail end of the 50's lifestyle..The Fonz, greased back hairdos, blue collar culture). The 1970 US Census lists the entire population of EBR Parish at 385,000...with 81,000 listed as African American.

Posted by lsusteve1
Member since Dec 2004
41961 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 6:38 pm to
It was the summit of it's existence
Posted by Skillet
Member since Aug 2006
107823 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 6:49 pm to
We only had 3 TV channels
Glen Oaks was mostly Caucasian
Broadmoor & Tara were too uppity for us North Baton Rouge'ns
Istrouma had some hot arse chicks
Catholic school chicks were ready, willing and religiously confused
Delmont Village was awesome
Doritos were the chip of choice, obviously
Acne medicines were still in their infant stages


Posted by Boo Krewe
Member since Apr 2015
9810 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 6:51 pm to
Like those schools from grease
Posted by Skillet
Member since Aug 2006
107823 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 6:57 pm to
quote:

Like those schools from grease



No, that was the 60's.
Posted by fallguy_1978
Best States #50
Member since Feb 2018
48642 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 6:57 pm to
quote:

We only had 3 TV channels

We didn't get Cablevision in Central until the late 80s. I grew up off of Hooper in the 80s and Plank Road, North Airline and Greenwell Springs were the centers of commerce for us.
Posted by Otto Scorzany
Member since Nov 2020
1027 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 7:04 pm to
quote:

When did they change the driving age? I got my license at 15 in 1993.


I think you could drive back then even at 14 with an adult in the car. I think.

Hell, you could buy beer at 15 and get in bars at 16 easy almost anywhere. No one really cared unless you were younger than that or didn’t act right.
Posted by 14&Counting
Eugene, OR
Member since Jul 2012
37666 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 7:04 pm to
Trashy same as today
Posted by Lago Gato
Member since Dec 2018
2019 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 7:09 pm to
Spent many days dove and squirrel hunting around the mall of La. before the interstate. We used to ride Honda 70s in Fords pasture behind Pollard . We spent the summers partying and whatever. Hard to believe life was that good . Can’t imagine a better place to grow up .
Posted by fallguy_1978
Best States #50
Member since Feb 2018
48642 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 7:10 pm to
quote:

Hell, you could buy beer at 15 and get in bars at 16 easy almost anywhere. No one really cared unless you were younger than that or didn’t act right.

We used to go to a bar called The Silver Moon in Central when I was 15-16 pretty regularly. Most places didn't really care back then as long as you looked close enough and didn't start trouble. We went to the Bengal underaged a lot as well for drinkin with Lincoln.
Posted by LSUDAN1
Member since Oct 2010
8987 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 7:13 pm to
What was the name of the Hotel on Airline where Home Depot is today. The Village was across the street close to where Academy is today.
Posted by Paul Allen
Montauk, NY
Member since Nov 2007
75228 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 7:13 pm to
Rockets Roadhouse on Sherwood Forest GOAT
Posted by Otto Scorzany
Member since Nov 2020
1027 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 7:14 pm to
Yeah just act older and they would let you in. Got some basic fake IDs with just rub on numbers. That was back in the day when the Driver’s License was done with typewriter. Bouncer would just roll their eyes and let you in if you looked close. LOL
Posted by fallguy_1978
Best States #50
Member since Feb 2018
48642 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 7:19 pm to
quote:

What was the name of the Hotel on Airline where Home Depot is today. The Village was across the street close to where Academy is today.

I don't remember that one. That little strip between Greenwell Springs and Florida always had some interesting hotels and motels though.
Posted by ThuperThumpin
Member since Dec 2013
7342 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 7:21 pm to
quote:

remember when someone died on the Wild Mouse ride.


I thought that was just an urban legend.
Posted by Lago Gato
Member since Dec 2018
2019 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 7:21 pm to
The Belmont was very nice in the 70s . My uncle ran it for AC Lewis . My cousin and I lifeguarded for several summers. We laid by the pool all day and ordered room service breakfast, lunch and dinner. The food was fantastic. Met a lot of nice ladies!
Posted by RogerTheShrubber
Juneau, AK
Member since Jan 2009
260958 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 7:23 pm to
quote:

What was the name of the Hotel on Airline where Home Depot is today. The Village was across the street close to where Academy is today.


When we played in the baseball semi's in 1980, we stayed at some place on Airline. Always wish I could remember which one it was. Had a foot of rain, we were supposed to play in Alex Box but ended up getting moved to some other field.
Posted by fallguy_1978
Best States #50
Member since Feb 2018
48642 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 7:23 pm to
Maybe you are right. I remember we were pretty scared of that thing as little kids.
Posted by TexasTiger89
Houston, TX
Member since Feb 2005
24333 posts
Posted on 1/18/21 at 7:28 pm to
quote:

Wasn’t that an AC/DC concert in the early 80’s?


Yes this is what AntiqueTiger is referring to but there was no destroying going on. The Advocate or State Times had a reporter at the concert and they wrote about all the kids drunk, high or passing out. The DA Ossie Brown shut down the concerts because of the evil of rock and roll. Bunch of bullshite.
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