Our
Memories Of Days Past
At the end of World War II, many American families rejoiced in the defeat of Nazi
Germany and the Axis powers. Others, however, were too busy being swept up in the
panic which would develop in regard to the potential cold war between the United
States and the Soviet Union.
With the threat of a nuclear war on the horizon, Americans looked for ways to protect themselves from the horrible destruction. Of these, many chose to fortress themselves inside of "bomb proof" fallout shelters.
We planned to use the underground drainage system under our back yard... it was the same one used in the movie about volcano's and Los Angeles!
Fallout shelters sprung up across the United States, with many citizens building
their own by hand and others purchasing commercially designed and built models from
catalogs.
Most looked like basic units, providing space only for necessities (which were generally only two-week supplies) while others looked like small guest houses, equipped with pool tables, paintings and wine cellars.
Interest in the fallout shelter reached its peak in the early 1960s as the Cuban Missile crisis loomed and gradually waned in the 1970s as various treaties and agreements by the super powers calmed American fears. The Fallout Shelter succeeded as a comfort to much of the population and as a money generator for an opportunistic new industry.

Dad had a plan... should a bomb be dropped we were to climb down into Ballona Creek which ran beneath our house in Los Angeles and wait!