Submitted by GlobeOpinion t3_126o7u6 in Maine
By Liz Brown in Globe Ideas:
In the summer of 1955, when my father was 8 years old, he won 5 acres of lakefront property in a Davy Crockett cartoon coloring contest.
The contest was sponsored by Hood Milk and the now defunct Boston Post and was open to children ages 13 and under. Weekly winners, announced throughout the summer, were offered a variety of smaller prizes, including flannel shirts and Little Golden Books. Second place was a set of dinnerware by “unusual ceramicist” Sacha Barton, and third was an 8mm camera. The grand prize was the land on Lake Mooselookmeguntick in Rangeley, Maine, and it came with a prefabricated Davy Crockett cabin and playhouse to be delivered to the property by flatbed truck.
My grandmother, a visual artist with a degree in painting and drawing from Boston University, had reportedly frowned at my father’s entry, saying it was too plain and not flashy enough to catch the judges’ eyes. “Some kids put glitter on theirs,” my father said, recalling his competitors’ desperate moves. “Davy Crockett didn’t wear glitter.”
Upon hearing the news of my father’s impressive win, a neighbor offered $50 for the property — or about $485 today. My father said no.
At such a young age, my father already knew what it meant to own a piece of property — and what it meant not to.
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https://www.bostonglobe.com/2023/03/28/opinion/coloring-contest-that-changed-my-fathers-life-didnt/
baxterstate t1_jea7hjf wrote
$485 in today’s money for 5 acres of lakefront property sounds very very low.
Almost like taking advantage of an 8 year old kid.