These days, children are more likely to find an electronic gizmo like an iPod or a Nintendo Wii under the tree instead of the simpler presents that awaited their baby boomer parents or grandparents on Christmas morning.
Was your special gift a Colorforms set, Baby First Step, Pebbles Flintstone doll, Erector Set or maybe a Mr. Machine?
Boomer Terry Harrison’s favorite childhood Christmas present was a teddy bear.
Harrison, 57, was barely 2 months old when he was given the bear by his grandparents in 1950.
His father was in Korea and Harrison, his mother and older sister lived next door to his Grandpa and Margaret (his mother’s stepmother).
“Margaret ordered the bear and when it arrived, she left it on a kitchen table. Their dog promptly tore the package open, but my mother rescued Teddy before the dog could do him in,” Harrison said.
The well-loved teddy bear was repaired many times.
Harrison said his mother even made a pair of gray bib overalls for the bear so he wouldn’t have to run around bare.
Teddy now lives with Harrison’s younger sister out-of-state.
Harrison also loved a little car he got from a relative.
“I did have a wind-up car that my cousin Johnny gave me,” Harrison said.
The car was built so while it would scoot across a table, it would stop itself when it reached the edge.
“As soon as it hit the edge it would turn and go the other way.”
Dwight Pierson of Clear Lake recalls a special Christmas when he was just 4 years old.
“My family would take our annual venture to Omaha, to shop. At Christmas time, the eighth floor of Brandies was completely devoted to toys. My parents would let me watch the Lionel train display for hours.
“I simply loved watching the Lionel trains run and, of course, a train set was my only wish from Santa Claus. I could not fall asleep Christmas Eve and during the night I thought I heard a train whistle,” Pierson wrote in an e-mail.
“When I woke up Christmas Day and found a train set, well, it was the most exciting day in my childhood.
“My dream of hearing the whistle in the night was actually my Father setting the train up and having a few practice runs. I still have my original train set from 58 years ago as do many other ‘children’ my age!”
Tim Walrod, 57, of Hanlontown recalled one special gift.
“My favorite Christmas toys was a BB gun ( I think it was a Daisy brand) that got a lot of us in the back pasture of our Clarion acreage,” Walrod wrote.





