Quote:
Originally Posted by commonsense
As a child in the 50's my sister and I both had bangs (and my father did the trimming).
My mother went to a beauty school for a trim and color rinse when she was first getting grey hair. ( 1959 or so)
From what I recall at camps.....hair was long enough for pony tails or updo's but not always uncut.
Hair was worn down more often in the 50's and 60's. Perhaps the beehive of the 60's caused the directive.
I have umpteen photos that show shoulder length at church functions.
And a huge collection of ABI yearbooks from 50's & 60's.
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I was not brought up in a Pentecostal church.
I got saved in 1955 and joined a Baptist Church.
I was later baptized in the name of Jesus Christ, joined a UPC church in Racine, Wisconsin and then later was baptized in the Spirit.
The girls and women in the UPC church in Racine wore their hair in various ways. The older ones wore it in buns or wrapped around something (don't remember the name) close to their head. The younger ones wore it down and curled. It seemed about shoulder length.
I spent one year at ABI (1956/1957) and the girls there wore their hair rolled or curled and usually about shoulder length.
I came to Ohio and attended a UPC church from 1957 to 1963 or 1964. Older women usually wore their hair in buns or a French twist. Younger women and teenagers usually wore theirs down in a page boy or curled and it was around shoulder length. They later adopted the oatmeal box also. Little girls who were not teenagers had quite short hair.
I attended an ALJC church from 1963/1964 until 1978 (or maybe 1979). The women there had a variety of hair styles, mostly quite short and dyed.
During the sixties and seventies some ladies (and some teen age girls) began to use hair pieces to add height to their hair. Some used rolls of toilet paper or oatmeal boxes to make their hair taller.
At various times in the 60's and 70's I visited African American Churches (PAW, PCAF, etc) and the women wore their hair quite short.
What limited fellowship I have with UPC folks now it seems the women keep their hair short enough to manage but long enough to fix into a "Pentecostal do." Some pin on hair pieces to go to church.