When I was a kid a half century ago, America was home to a tremendous population of single fathers. They lived on television.
I'm reminded of that bygone era's singular fascination with fictional single dads by today's growing concerns about the swelling ranks and economic hardships of real-world single parents, among whom dads raising kids alone make up a fast-growing if still small part.
A front-page story in last Sunday's Star Tribune described how the Great Recession and its torpid aftermath has hit the incomes of single-parent families far harder than those of married-couple families. One-adult households no doubt have fewer ways to make up for a job loss or a wage cut.
The story noted that single dads are now raising some 2 million children across America — not quite 10 percent of all kids in single-parent households.
A Pew Research study last summer reported that one-third of all U.S. households with children were headed by single parents as of 2011, up from just 8 percent in 1960. Today, single-father homes alone account for 8 percent, Pew reported.
In 1960, the report said, that figure was just 1 percent.
This is what makes it odd, if you're old enough, to think back to yesteryear and the self-portrait America displayed in those days on television.
Sure, there were plenty of "Leave it to Beaver" two-parent fictional families. But one could have gotten the impression that single fatherhood was just about as common a family structure.