Carefree teens of the early 1940s sipped milkshakes, listened to records and went on their first dates - usually to the movies. These stunning images by photographer Nina Leen, captured daily life of the American teenager as the country emerged from the Great Depression and World War II was waged abroad.
The photos highlighted on LIFE.com center around the birth of the so-called 'teenage' generation, which was marked by its own fashion, music and shoulder-length hairstyle.
A little help: A gaggle of teens try to push their broken down model T down the street in this image featured in Life magazine in 1944
Flirting: A young women flirts while sipping a milkshake with teenage boys
Gathering: If alive today, the women featured in the photographs would be 83-85 years old
One image shows a group of teens pushing a Ford model T down the street. Another shows a group of girls huddled around a record player, likely listening to Bing Crosby, the top artist of 1944. An adolescent boy puts his arm around his date during a trip to the movies in one of Leen's photos, 1944 was a popular year for films. Casablanca won the best picture Oscar that year.
Young women of the day emerged as a distinctive generation between childhood and adulthood in post-Depression America. As the feature in Life magazine said: There is a time in the life of every American girl when the most important thing in the world is to be one of a crowd of other girls and to act and speak and dress exactly as they do. This is the teen age.
Dining out: A group of teens enjoy some fruit, cake and milk in one of Leen's images from 1944
Daily life: women listen to a record as two boys glance at a magazine, a young couple get romantic at the movies
Fashion firsts: The so-called 'teenage' generation, which was marked by its own style, music and shoulder-length hairstyle
'Some 6,000,000 U.S. teen-age girls live in a world all their own - a lovely, gay, enthusiastic, funny and blissful society almost untouched by the war. It is a world of sweaters and skirts and bobby sox and loafers, of hair worn long, of eye-glass rims painted red with nail polish, of high school boys [not] yet gone to war.'
For the story, Leen followed around a group of 12 teenage girls in Webster Groves, Missouri, snapping various pictures as they hung out together, dressed alike and met up with boys at local sweet shops and movie theaters.
Carefree: The women of 1940s America were carefree while World War II was waged overseas
Dawn of a new age: The young women of the day emerged as a distinctive generation between childhood and adulthood in post-Depression America
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