Windsor Wednesday Classic – 187

This week we are heading back to the 1950s for a one off spanking from a stage play. In all other versions of the play we find no spanking, so this was probably written in just for this production. The play is called “Leave It To Grandma” and I will add this to my VARIOUS SCHOOL PLAYS album.

There are a number of plays where the spanker uses their left hand. You don’t suppose they wore their right hands out during rehearsals, do you? 😉

I wonder if anyone has genuinely been spanked by their Grandma?

4 thoughts on “Windsor Wednesday Classic – 187

  1. I have got to admit I really enjoy this one as the positioning is really great and the jeans do show the bottom really well.I always wonder what the spanking was for,but in this case I do not think it mattered as you said it must have been written in as it was not in the original play. I think the spankee is quite good as well. Thanks for sharing and have a great day.
    Jim

  2. That is a classic over the knee position wow. Bottom high up and arms holding onto Grandma’s legs. Classic
    Thanks
    Ron

  3. You question Richard asking if anyone was spanked by their Grandma prompt me to make the following ramble. One of my Grandmothers was born either just before or just after Queen Victoria’s death. For the first twenty years of my life she lived in the same house as I did. So my first point is just to ponder for a moment that here in 2020 the person writing this post has a direct overlap with someone who overlapped with Queen Victoria. Lost as we are in the present moment I find this quite a sanguine reflection.

    Now I can not say if she ever spanked anyone. I can say that she was quite preoccupied with spanking, often making mention of it. This was always in reference to some young woman who had crossed her in some way . So any shop assistance or Liberians judged to have been rude where later complained of with the admonition that they ‘should be spanked’.

    I can not now but wonder how this related to her own experiences as a ‘flapper’ in the twenties or indeed as a teenager before and during World War 1.

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