• Sign Up
    • Monthly Recurring
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Corrections
  • Account
  • Donors
  • Hendersonian people
  • Log In
The Hendersonian
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Agriculture
    • Business
    • Local
    • Police
    • Politics
    • Schools
    • Science
    • Sports
    • State
    • World

    Lawsuit says actions of law enforcement led to shooting and injury. Defendants say the deputy shooter acted in self-defense.

    ‘Super deep’ Flash look to get back to winning ways this summer

    ‘Super deep’ Flash look to get back to winning ways this summer

    Data center investment, ratepayer protections can both happen, state report argues

    Data center investment, ratepayer protections can both happen, state report argues

    HCS hires Morris as director of finance

    HCS hires Morris as director of finance

    BRIEFS: Matthew 25 celebrates 30 years with HIV testing days; Speed limit decreased near Walmart; RVBH wins funding to help drug endangered children; Handy juried art exhibit; Audubon twilight hike; Audubon photography contest opens

    Kentucky community colleges working to meet students’ ‘severe’ need for mental health support

    Trump appoints former Kentucky GOP Senate candidate to become ambassador to Colombia

    Trending Tags

  • Tech
    Blazing-fast broadband services now available to the majority of homes in the city and county

    Blazing-fast broadband services now available to the majority of homes in the city and county

    HMP&L signs initial agreement to build a battery energy storage system on South Green Street

    HMP&L signs initial agreement to build a battery energy storage system on South Green Street

    In some parts of the U.S., the grid of the future might be closer than you think

    Trending Tags

  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Sports
    Lady Cols fall in state quarterfinals

    Lady Cols fall in state quarterfinals

    Belt named Athlete of the Month for May

    Belt named Athlete of the Month for May

    ‘Sunset Flip’

    ‘Sunset Flip’

    HAAA announces another eclectic season

    HAAA announces another eclectic season

    Auto Draft

    Six straight, on to state!

    Poor shooting leads to Lady Cols’ Sweet 16 loss

    A’Tylia Green selected to Kentucky All-Star Team

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    Military medical mission is a go at North Middle School June 11-21

    Official release from Delta Regional Authority about IRT medical mission that begins June 11

    Gov. Beshear calls for keeping American Dream alive, as GOP largely skips annual speech

    Governor moves to add qualifying conditions to medical cannabis

    Wake up to this delicious Egg & Potato Bake

    Wake up to this delicious Egg & Potato Bake

    Military medical mission is a go at North Middle School June 11-21

    Military medical mission is a go at North Middle School June 11-21

    Kentucky overdose deaths declined in 2025 in four-year downward trend

    Kentucky overdose deaths declined in 2025 in four-year downward trend

    Railmark will re-open subsidiary company, Train Travel, Inc., in Henderson

    Railmark will re-open subsidiary company, Train Travel, Inc., in Henderson

    Trending Tags

  • Public Notices
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • All
    • Agriculture
    • Business
    • Local
    • Police
    • Politics
    • Schools
    • Science
    • Sports
    • State
    • World

    Lawsuit says actions of law enforcement led to shooting and injury. Defendants say the deputy shooter acted in self-defense.

    ‘Super deep’ Flash look to get back to winning ways this summer

    ‘Super deep’ Flash look to get back to winning ways this summer

    Data center investment, ratepayer protections can both happen, state report argues

    Data center investment, ratepayer protections can both happen, state report argues

    HCS hires Morris as director of finance

    HCS hires Morris as director of finance

    BRIEFS: Matthew 25 celebrates 30 years with HIV testing days; Speed limit decreased near Walmart; RVBH wins funding to help drug endangered children; Handy juried art exhibit; Audubon twilight hike; Audubon photography contest opens

    Kentucky community colleges working to meet students’ ‘severe’ need for mental health support

    Trump appoints former Kentucky GOP Senate candidate to become ambassador to Colombia

    Trending Tags

  • Tech
    Blazing-fast broadband services now available to the majority of homes in the city and county

    Blazing-fast broadband services now available to the majority of homes in the city and county

    HMP&L signs initial agreement to build a battery energy storage system on South Green Street

    HMP&L signs initial agreement to build a battery energy storage system on South Green Street

    In some parts of the U.S., the grid of the future might be closer than you think

    Trending Tags

  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Sports
    Lady Cols fall in state quarterfinals

    Lady Cols fall in state quarterfinals

    Belt named Athlete of the Month for May

    Belt named Athlete of the Month for May

    ‘Sunset Flip’

    ‘Sunset Flip’

    HAAA announces another eclectic season

    HAAA announces another eclectic season

    Auto Draft

    Six straight, on to state!

    Poor shooting leads to Lady Cols’ Sweet 16 loss

    A’Tylia Green selected to Kentucky All-Star Team

  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    Military medical mission is a go at North Middle School June 11-21

    Official release from Delta Regional Authority about IRT medical mission that begins June 11

    Gov. Beshear calls for keeping American Dream alive, as GOP largely skips annual speech

    Governor moves to add qualifying conditions to medical cannabis

    Wake up to this delicious Egg & Potato Bake

    Wake up to this delicious Egg & Potato Bake

    Military medical mission is a go at North Middle School June 11-21

    Military medical mission is a go at North Middle School June 11-21

    Kentucky overdose deaths declined in 2025 in four-year downward trend

    Kentucky overdose deaths declined in 2025 in four-year downward trend

    Railmark will re-open subsidiary company, Train Travel, Inc., in Henderson

    Railmark will re-open subsidiary company, Train Travel, Inc., in Henderson

    Trending Tags

  • Public Notices
No Result
View All Result
The Hendersonian
No Result
View All Result
Home History

A lot has changed since the Bicentennial

Chuck Stinnett by Chuck Stinnett
January 15, 2026
in History, Opinion
0
A lot has changed since the Bicentennial

Rotary-dial coin payphones, like this one on display at the Auburn Cord Duesenberg Automobile Museum in Auburn, Indiana, could still be found when America celebrated its bicentennial in 1976. Some folks used to check the coin return, seen at lower left, to see if some previous customer had neglected to retrieve a dime or even a quarter if their call had failed to go through. (Photo by Chuck Stinnett)

0
SHARES
115
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

(This column first appeared in the January print edition of the Hendersonian.)

A new year is upon us and we’ll be celebrating the nation’s Semiquincentennial — the 250th anniversary of the founding of America by the Declaration of Independence.

Why, it seems like just yesterday we were celebrating the U.S. Bicentennial.

It was, in fact, a half-century ago. So time goes.

Back in 1976, I was one year out of high school with a head full of brown hair. In 2026, I’m eligible for Medicare and Social Security, and my hair is white. A lot more than that has changed, too.

Take telephones.

During the Bicentennial, most Americans had phones. Some of them were affixed to kitchen walls; others sat on desks and were plugged into wall sockets. A lot of them had rotary dials, though some folks had fancy phones with push buttons.

Those phones were so vital to life that every year, the phone company printed and delivered telephone directories with the phone number and address of every customer (except for a few who paid extra to have unlisted numbers) to every home and business.

In the unlikely event that you didn’t have a phone book, you could call 411; a woman would answer by saying, “Information.”

In 1976, you could dial a long-distance number directly, but most folks remembered when they had to dial 0 for an operator. The caller could specify that they wanted to make a station-to-station long distance call — which meant that if anybody on the other end answered, the caller would automatically be charged a fee regardless of whether the individual they wanted to speak to was available.

Or one could make a person-to-person call, which would cost even more, but only if the person the caller told the operator they wanted to speak with was available.

This option created an opportunity for a little larceny. If, say, a traveling salesman named Jack Clark wanted to let his wife back home know that he had reached his destination, he could dial 0, give the operator his home phone number and say he wanted to place a person-to-person call to … Jack Clark. His wife back home would answer the call and tell the operator, “I’m sorry, but Mr. Clark isn’t home.” The operator would terminate the call, the wife would know that hubby was safe in some Holiday Inn … and Mr. Clark would save, say, $3.45, back when $3.45 amounted to something.

You could even place a collect call, hoping someone on the other end would pay for it.

In that same era a half-century ago, one didn’t absolutely need a mobile phone (not that anybody had one) because littered all around were pay telephones — in airports, shopping malls, pharmacies, restaurants and other public buildings, outside grocery stores or in corner phone booths. There used to even be a drive-up pay phone on Elm Street between Fourth and Fifth streets.

Drop in a dime and you could call anyone in town.

That was America in 1976. And we thought it would be that way forever. Of course, we also thought there would always be Sears, Roebuck. Or Kmart. Or Pan Am. We thought there would always be drive-in movie theaters. And drug store soda fountains.

And entities such as RCA and Magnavox and Zenith that had TVs and other products in nearly every American living room and were real pioneering technology companies, not just warmed-over trademarks.

And Saturday morning cartoons on TV for kids. (To be fair, today you can watch Woody Woodpecker and Bugs Bunny cartoons for a couple of hours on Saturday mornings on an over-the-air TV channel called MeTV, which features programming from the 1960s and ’70s supported mostly by commercials for Medicare Advantage plans.)

Later, we thought there would always be videocassette or DVD rental shops (think: Blockbuster).

And a long time ago, seemingly in a galaxy far, far away, we thought there would always be newspapers.

Those were conveyances of all sorts of information that were printed and sold at newsstands and on corners by newsboys, or tossed onto subscribers’ front porches by kids on bicycles. Once, newspapers were so cool that Superman’s Clark Kent cover was being a newspaper reporter, which kept him plugged into the events of mythical Metropolis. That was back when a million conversations began, “Didja see in the paper that …”

And then, newspapers—local newspapers, especially, like the once-proud Gleaner — shrank and shrank until they more or less vanished.

Then a couple of years ago, the Hendersonian appeared. It was the vision of one guy, Vince Tweddell, who had worked at newspapers at the tail end of their glory years … understood what they meant to a place like his hometown … and launched a new old-fashioned newspaper, available in print, via email subscription and online, with real Henderson news.

In 2026, that seems worth celebrating, too.

Previous Post

Work together to ensure a happy honeymoon

Next Post

Kentucky moves toward ban on cell phone use while driving

Chuck Stinnett

Chuck Stinnett

Next Post
Kentucky community colleges working to meet students’ ‘severe’ need for mental health support

Kentucky moves toward ban on cell phone use while driving

  • Sign Up
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Corrections
  • Account
  • Donors
  • Hendersonian people
  • Log In

© 2026 The Hendersonian • Henderson, KY 42420

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Tech
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Public Notices
  • Sign Up
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Login

© 2026 The Hendersonian • Henderson, KY 42420