
Program Extra: Growing Up on the Rock
Clip: Special | 3m 36sVideo has Closed Captions
Ron and Gary Delaney fondly remember growing up on the Rock River.
Ron and Gary Delaney share stories of their family’s ice skating shows on the Beloit Lagoon, water skiing on the Rock River, and indulging in fresh Korn Kurls.
Wisconsin Hometown Stories is a local public television program presented by PBS Wisconsin

Program Extra: Growing Up on the Rock
Clip: Special | 3m 36sVideo has Closed Captions
Ron and Gary Delaney share stories of their family’s ice skating shows on the Beloit Lagoon, water skiing on the Rock River, and indulging in fresh Korn Kurls.
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- Gary Delaney: Ronnie, he was born in 1942, and I was born in 1944.
We both grew up in Beloit.
♪ ♪ - Ron Delaney: It was good times when we were starting to grow up.
That's basically when we started getting into skating.
I was two years old.
My dad took a pair of my regular shoes, and he made my first pair of skates.
Mom and Dad put on quite a few shows, and they put them on at the lagoon.
- Gary: My dad made Mr. and Mrs. Snowman.
He took chicken wire and made snowmen out of it.
- Ron: Oh, yeah.
- Gary: And my mom and dad actually waltzed together!
- Ron: My mom would take a bunch of young gals and build up a ballet.
And then, we had some dads and daughters skating together.
One of our friends built up a stilt skates.
- Gary: Then, he would do all different other type of figures that figure skates would normally do.
And these skates were 18 inches high.
[laughs] - Ron: Yeah, you're a ways up in the air.
You can definitely... in the air quite a ways.
Dad, he was the clown of the circus, and he would take a wooden table, and take two wooden chairs out there, and also have four Coke bottles, and take the first wooden chair and stand it on the four Coke bottles.
And then, he'd do a complete handstand on top of that.
It was just for entertainment.
It was all free.
♪ ♪ - Gary: There would be at least 1,000-plus people because they would be all around the rink, and they'd probably be five, six deep.
And, of course, the parents are proud to see their kids when everybody's watching, you know.
[surfing music] - Ron: Living in Beloit, at that time, it was a good, safe place to live.
Just being on the river and everything else, it was just a good time.
We swam in the river a lot.
We both learned how to water ski.
- Gary: There was a Korn Kurl factory just a couple of blocks away from us.
And there was a kind of like a little driveway there.
And we'd walk down that, and we'd get free Korn Kurls 'cuz they'd have a batch going.
They were nice and warm, too.
[laughs] - Ron: But the thing we used to do is we used to take our white T-shirts and hold them out, and that's where they put 'em.
[Gary cracking up] Mom wasn't very happy about that.
- Gary: Yeah... - Ron: It was just a good place to grow up, and we just enjoyed the heck out of it.
- Gary: You just don't forget that kind of stuff.
♪ ♪
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Across decades, Beloit’s newcomers find opportunity and community through education. (7m 7s)
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Beloit’s residents revitalize their city and return to the confluence where it all began. (10m 39s)
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The confluence of two waterways drew the Ho-Chunk Nation and settlers to the Beloit area. (7m 26s)
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Early residents built up their city through Beloit College and industrial innovation. (9m 47s)
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Southern Black families moved to Beloit to escape injustice and seek job opportunities. (9m 27s)
Preview - Wisconsin Hometown Stories: Beloit
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Beloit’s industry, college and community each contributed to World War II victory. (8m 31s)
Youth Media Extra: Deportation
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Students examine the history of deportation in the United States. (5m 48s)
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Students examine the history of Latino-owned businesses in Beloit and nationally. (4m 22s)
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Students examine the history of accommodations for Latino students in schools. (5m 52s)
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Students examine the history of discrimination against Latinos in the workplace. (5m 30s)
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