Born late '68. I may recall Nixon’s resignation. I recall watching TV at my grandparent’s house, with maybe-kinda-sorta Nixon talking. Very dim, though.
Equally dim: Evacuation of the U.S. Embassy in Vietnam. Memory of helicopters. But this may be corrupted, maybe helicopters flew over our house for some reason.
Definite: '76 election. I remember telling my Dad that I was disappointed Ford lost, because he reminded me of Grampa. Dad replied that I was being silly should be thankful he did!
I must have about 3 at the time, but I remember the Reagan inauguration. I clearly remember see a man looking very crestfallen staring out into the rain towards a another man at a podium. The crestfallen one was Carter by the way. I also remember my mom saying something to the effect of, “Maybe now we’ll get the hostages back.” (Iran).
I was born in 1977 and can remember hearing about Nicaragua and guerrillas on the news a lot. I remember being puzzled as to why they kept talking about gorillas (!) and kept showing pictures of soldiers instead. For a finite news event, Challenger was definitely it.
I was born in March of 1973, so I was 4 when Elvis Presley died. I do remember it happening, though. Also remember (but not sure of dates or order) Charles/Di wedding, Regan winning the election, and St. Helens erupting.
It was the first moon landing for me. I was 5, and, I have to admit, I didn’t realize the significance of what I was seeing. I was irritated because I was missing the Beverly Hillbillies.
I was born in 1978, and I disctinctly remember hearing about the eruption of Mt. St. Helens. However, a few years ago I realized that this occurred in 1980 - a couple months before my second birthday. So I now kind of doubt that memory as false.
Other than that, I remember hearing about Nicaragua and guerillas, too, booklover. From 1984, when I was 5, on, I remember pretty much everything. The 1984 Summer Olympics made a big impact on me, and so did Reagan’s reelection (my parents hated him).
My first “big news” memory is of John Glenn’s flight in Friendship 7. Well, not the flight exactly, but the splashdown.
I had just barely turned 6 and was in pre-school, and it was after hours. My folks had called and I guess they had run into some kind of problem (probably with a piece of crap car they always had to drive back then), and they couldn’t pick me up right on time. The teacher’s knew my dad (he drove a bus for them as a second job) and I sat with a couple of them waiting for my parents to come get me.
I had a vague realization that something was going on, the teachers had been talking about it all day, and as we were waiting, they were listening to the radio. They told me that someone had been sent into space on a rocket, and now they were waiting to see if he could get back safely.
I honestly don’t remember if the teachers had said they knew there was a problem, or if it was just general anxiety about the landing, but the three of us sat there listening to the events described on the radio, and I remember being scared to death the man would die. When the radio said he made it down safely, I almost cried from the release of tension.
A few minutes later my parents came, and all everyone talked about was what had happened.
The next big thing I remember is JFK’s assassination, late the next year. I was in first grade by that time, and we got sent home a little early.
It would have to be the assassination of JFK. I should remember things from a bit earlier, but in my defence, at that time not many people had television and newspapers never seemed to leave the same vivid impression.
The Challenger disaster was mine, too. I was six, and I remembed it vividly. I feel like I should have some memory of news events before the age of six. I guess I must not have paid much attention until then. But Challenger made a huge impression on me.
Interesting thread. I know what I remember, but the thing is, my perception of events is off, so I’m not always sure when some things happened, and which happened first -my inital answer would be that the Iranian hostage crisis is the first thing I remember, and then the first shuttle launch. But I was amazed, a few posts back, to find out that the hostage crisis was in 1979 and Columbia in '81. I would have thought it was a few years earlier (I was born in '68). So, I went to the Super70’s.com timeline to double-check myself -
And the first thing I really remember was when the Concorde first started flying. That was in 1976. Also, I remember the Viking I mission to mars, and all the hullaballoo surounding the bicentennial (does anyone remember the Freedom Train?). After that, the first test tube baby, Jim Jones, Three Mile Island, Skylab falling…
It’s interesting to look at all this stuff -because I do remember it, but I wouldn’t have remembered that I remember it (does that make any sense?).