A housewife’s old diary from 1957 was dredged up at a thrift store in west Tennessee, and the contents are a goldmine of vintage nostalgia and delight.
A local woman named Kaitlyn Sawyer discovered the diary, and decided to share excerpts from it on TikTok. Within weeks, her videos were going viral.
Her followers simply couldn’t get enough of the curious entries from the diary’s owner—a stay-at-home mom in the late 1950s, named Nellie.
Archiving everything from boredom eating to breaking dates, Nellie had her readers captivated in no time.
“We are not the same, but no different,” Sawyer told The Epoch Times cryptically.
All too relatably, Nellie simply wrote: “Didn’t do any thing but eat all day.”
Sawyer noted in the video caption that Nellie “filled it out for the whole year. And tbh, she seems like a mood.”
A week later, she mentions Winnie again, noting, “Called Winnie told her I couldn’t go to Okla T.G.”
Sawyer deduced that Nellie was referring to TG&Y department store, “a store like Walmart” headquartered in Oklahoma City.
Nellie didn’t always cancel plans, though.
Nellie “scared Vicki nearly half to death,” the older woman wrote. “She was poking in a fox hole and I barked like a fox. Boy did she jump.”
Upon investigating the enigmatic diary-keeper’s past, Sawyer learned that Nellie was born in France and emigrated to Kansas with her family at the age of 7. She married a man named Samuel and went on to have six children.
Sam was struck by an oncoming train in 1918 while inside his car, suffering irreversible brain damage. Nellie was left to take care of their family alone. She successfully sued the train company for a small recompense.
Sam passed away in 1920.
Intriguingly, industrious Nellie and her family made and sold alcoholic beverages during the prohibition era to get by, resulting in years of discord with the law.
Viewers begged for context, but Nellie’s brief logs left the day’s events to the imagination.
Thanks to the magic of social media, Sawyer found out she wasn’t the only one privy to Nellie’s enigmatic logs.
She was contacted by TikTok user @claireclaireh, who produced two more extraordinary volumes: two more of Nellie’s diaries, one dated 1934, the other 1935.