Thursday, March 12, 2026

Can You Identify?

Earlier this week I learned about the term Generation Jones. According to Wikipedia:

"Generation Jones is the generation or social cohort sandwiched between the Baby Boomers and Generation X. The term was coined in 1999 by American cultural commentator Jonathan Pontell, who has argued that the term refers to a distinct generation born from 1954 to 1965."

I fall into the Generation Jones era, so I was very interested to find this great description of American generational differences on multiple internet and social media sites. However, there is never an author attribution. If you know where it came from please let me know and I will credit accordingly.

Formative Years and Identity

Older Boomers (’46–’54)

  • Grew up in post-WWII optimism, economic expansion, and the height of the American Dream.
  • Shaped by the civil rights movement, counterculture, Woodstock, and early Vietnam protests.
  • Felt they could “change the world.”

Gen Jones (’55–’64)

  • Came of age amid economic malaise of the 1970s (stagflation, oil crises).
  • Culturally overshadowed by older Boomers but too old to be true Gen X.
  • More pragmatic and skeptical — saw the ideals of the ’60s fade into disillusionment.

Politics

Older Boomers

  • More likely associated with the liberal wave of the ’60s/early ’70s (anti-war, civil rights, environmentalism).
  • They were old enough to vote in the first elections after the voting age dropped to 18 (1972).
  • Many shifted conservative with age, but their youth was strongly activist.

Gen Jones

  • First presidential election for the oldest of them was 1976 (Carter vs Ford).
  • Grew up in a politically cynical era: Watergate, Nixon resignation, Iran hostage crisis.
  • A major voting bloc in Reagan’s 1980 “Reagan Democrats” wave.

Military and Draft

Older Boomers

  • Directly impacted by the Vietnam draft; draft lottery began in 1969.
  • Many served or had peers drafted, and this loomed large over college and career choices.
Gen Jones
  • Mostly missed the draft - by the time they came of age, U.S. troops were leaving Vietnam (1973).
  • Never faced the same looming personal threat of conscription.

Economy and Jobs

Older Boomers

  • Entered the workforce in the 1960s–early 1970s, when jobs were plentiful and wages kept up with cost of living.
  • Benefited from the golden age of pensions, strong unions, affordable college.

Gen Jones

  • Entered the job market during high unemployment and stagflation (mid-to-late ’70s, early ’80s).
  • Fewer “good jobs” waiting; had to compete with a huge Boomer cohort ahead of them.
  • More debt-burdened due to rising college costs and higher interest rates.

Housing and Interest Rates

Older Boomers

  • Bought homes when housing was far cheaper relative to income.
  • Mortgage rates in the ’60s were often 4–6%.

Gen Jones

  • Tried to buy homes in the late ’70s/early ’80s during record-high interest rates (peaked near 18% in 1981).
  • Priced out of the same advantages older Boomers had.

Culture

Older Boomers

  • Beatles, Stones, Motown, Woodstock.
  • Defined by the Summer of Love, protests, “make love not war.”

Gen Jones

  • Springsteen, Fleetwood Mac, disco, punk, MTV.
  • Less about idealism, more about realism and personal survival.

Summary

Older Boomers

  • Idealistic, draft-affected, politically activist in youth, economic beneficiaries of postwar boom.

Gen Jones

  • Cynical/pragmatic, missed the draft, came of age in economic hardship, politically pivotal for Reagan-era conservatism, often felt “left behind” compared to older Boomers.

Five years ago: Love That Popcorn!

28 comments:

  1. I remember that 18% interest rate. Fortunately I worked for a bank and had a 3% mortgage employee benefit that I qualified for. -Christine cmlk79.blogspot.com

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  2. I fall into that contingent as well. Yes, it was tougher to get a job because the Older Boomers had already wedged their butts into most entry level jobs and were not going anywhere for a few decades. And those sky-high interest rates of the early 80s -- oh yes. That's when I had to start paying back my student loans at nearly 16% interest -- it was like financing my education on a credit card.

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    1. I remember filling out many, many applications for my first job out of college. Fortunately, I got a job that had student loan forgiveness.

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  3. I remember when there was no war for the first time in my life, '73. I thought the 18% mortgage was a really good deal, and was for time, '84, my Dad saying single digit interest would never happen again. It did. Wish Congress was a tough as the hippies back then.

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  4. Oh my, I'm a older boomer and it really describes it well. I voted just out of HS in 1972. I was enrolled in nursing school but was offered a good union job in San Francisco and decided that was best for me and moved out on my own at age 18. Those were some of the best times of my life but what it didn't mention was the sexual harassment on the job was terrible and absolutely nothing was done.

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    1. From anecdotal stories I have heard I think the sexual harassment didn't go away.

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  5. Interesting I was born in 1949 so doesn't apply to me haha

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    1. ooops I didn't see that first paragraph for my era

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  6. Never heard of gen jones before.

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  7. Interesting! I've never heard of Gen Jones, either, but then, I can't work out the different 'generations' anyway.

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    1. The way generations keep being sliced and diced I need a chart to explain the whole thing.

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  8. I'm an older boomer. I enjoyed the post and found it very interesting. Thanks

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  9. I'm both. 1956 was my year so that makes me a gen jones I suppose but I relate to the boomer's stuff too. I personally think that this is developed to make boomers feel better especially women. I had a woman say she did not wish to be referred to as a boomer even if she was. She wanted to be called something else so she didn't appear as old. Oh c'mon for heaven's sake we're old. It could be worse you could be a millennial or Gen Z. Heaven forbid! 😂

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    1. I spent my 30s and 40s being freaked out about the passage of time, but starting in my 50s I had come to terms with it.

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  10. I am a millennial so can't not relate.

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  11. Very interesting. I'm Gen X (and Canadian) but I can the influence of this in my older relatives.

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  12. I had never heard the 'Jones' designation while I was in advertising - it must have surfaced later or not here in Canada. I am a 'silent generation' by number, although those of us born during the war (note, for us WWII is 'the war') don't really qualify. We cheerfully refer to ourselves as 'war babies'. ... if you look that one up, the connotation is very different.

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    1. I think 'Jones' is a relatively new designation.

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  13. Every generation
    Blames the one before
    And all of their frustrations
    Come beating on your door

    God bless.

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  14. Very interesting.
    rsrue.blogspot.com

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  15. Interesting. Never heard of it. Neato. PS: Answering your comment about having fun setting up Batman ... Oh heck yeah. That was last year outside when I first got my off-camera flash. Had a blast and a half.

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  16. What a great way to introduce these unfamiliar term in detail dear Kathy
    You made me learn things I would have never otherwise
    Thanks 🙏♥️

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