Seniors
Related: About this forumDo you still have your first Social Security card and the brochure that came with it?
I got my card almost immediately after my 14th birthday during the Eisenhower era.
With it came a small information brochure. It told me how to make sure that my employer paid into Social Security and gave me lots of other information.
Here is some key language.
"YOUR CARD shows you have an insurance account with the U.S. Government, under the old-age and survivors insurance system provided for in the Social Security Act.
YOUR ACCOUNT is a record of the pay you receive which counts toward old-age and survivors insurance benefits. The size of benefits will depend upon the amount of wages credited to your account.
MONTHLY BENEFITS may be paid to men and women at retirement age (65 for men, and 62 for women). In addition, disabled workers may qualify for benefits at 50.
Benefits may be paid to the wife or to the dependent husband of a retired worker if that person has also reached retirement age. Benefits are also payable to a retired worker's children under 18, to his disabled children, regardless of their age, and to the wife (any age) caring for such children."
IF THE WORKER DIES benefits may be paid to the widow or to the dependent widower at retirement age. Benefits are also payable to disabled children and to children under 18, and to their mother, regardless of her age. Benefits may be paid to the dependent parent of a worker if the parent has reached retirement age.
In addition, when an insured worker dies a lump-sum payment may be made to the widow (or widower) or, if there is no widow or widower, to the person who paid the funeral expenses."
The language is quaint. The sexism is a little offensive by our standards. And referring to seniors as "old-aged" is pretty dated. But I consider this card to state an express or implied contractual agreement between me and the government.
There is a promise -- that the government will provide benefits if I qualify and I provided consideration by paying the government a part of my earnings over the years.
I don't think I looked at the brochure since I first got it, and I had no idea I still had it until the other day when I was going through an old box of items -- books from my childhood and things like that to show my children when they come for Christmas.
Does anyone else have the original brochure that came with their original Social Security card?
I wonder whether people still receive a brochure when they sign up for Social Security. I don't think my children did. They were much younger than 14 when they were given cards.
Graybeard
(6,996 posts)The card attached to the brochure were in my strongbox along with passport, birth certificate, etc. It has six pages of information illustrated with cartoons of a John Q. Public type going through all of the steps to assure proper coverage.
On the last page, in little print on the bottom it says:
U.S. Printing Office 1954
JDPriestly
(57,936 posts)Peregrine Took
(7,502 posts)I'm terrible about losing things and, accidentally, throwing things out.
bemildred
(90,061 posts)I like to keep records.
Scottybeamer70
(873 posts)it's getting a little on the "used" look though. I don't remember the brochure that came with it.
Zoigal
(1,488 posts)Have had to get a new one to show a change of name (marriage)
so have no idea what happened to the old one. But kudos to those of you
who have hung on to the originals...easier for you guys (unless you have an alias).
.....z
JDPriestly
(57,936 posts)of my childhood. I just happened across it when I was looking for something to show a grandchild.
Bob Wallace
(549 posts)1958, when I was 14 and started making more than "a dollar a week" working in the family hardware.
I had been working Saturdays and school holidays since I was 7 but the little bit I got paid was just wrapped into my father's taxes. At 14 I started working afternoons as well and started earning about a dollar an hour.
That was massive money in those days for someone my age. All of my friends worked on their family farms but didn't get a wage, just money from selling calves they raised, whatever.
I carried the card daily until a year or so ago. The brochure, well, I'm not one for reading user manuals....
JDPriestly
(57,936 posts)Gingrich waxes nostalgic about all the child labor of earlier eras. Fact is, the workplace has changed a lot since that time. I would not want a kid to work in today's workplace at the age that I started. We worked in family businesses or for friends. It was a great place to gain confidence and learn to finish the job and get there on time. Ah, being young, what more could we have wanted than just to be young?
Back then, we trusted the promise behind Social Security the same way as we trusted our family doctor or pharmacist or our dad's friends how paid us to babysit their kids or mow their lawns. And now, today? Big business treats Social Security like a joke and not the solemn promise that it was made to kids not out of high school.
housewolf
(7,252 posts)Created on a typewriter, with my last name spelled incorrectly! LOL!
It must be from the early 1960's. I have a brother 10 years younger than I, and my mom went and got SS cards for all of us at the same time - so I always know their SS numbers because they were all sequential.
I don't know how it is that I still have the card, one of the advantages of never throwing anything away, I guess!
LOL!