Love watching these old films. I'm addicted to them. Very interesting Thank you for showing them.love watching the people.
@salamparadise91834 жыл бұрын
I wish I could go back in time. Life back then was so simple and unpretentious.
@RyanCarterVonArad4 жыл бұрын
Still, with all the disadvantages, I would gladly go back time as well.....
@cx59544 жыл бұрын
Ryan Carter von Arad what 60% chance of dying before you reach 30
@LG-ro5le3 жыл бұрын
I think Life still would of had its problems then. Much worse than now in some ways, but much better in other ways
@tschaytschay45553 жыл бұрын
Have you really watched documentaries about these times or just looked at nice pictures?
@anonimkaanonimka73523 жыл бұрын
@@cx5954 Provide the sources from where you got this data.
@derekharrison15823 жыл бұрын
Saw this footage when Dan Cruikshank’s show came out a few years back,and have it on dvd.The tram ride from Station Street,up Lister gate and into the Market Square is amazing.The buildings that have gone is truly staggering,to be replaced by dull,boring modernistic crap is heartbreaking.The building of Broad Marsh centre was a complete waste of money,and sealed Lister gate from the route to Arkwright Street,another iconic street that was full of old shops and was lost.So much history gone.The list of lost streets and buildings that have gone in Nottingham is endless.A lot of it that just didn’t need to go.Drury Hill for example.Nottingham City Council has a lot to answer for😡
@donb35574 жыл бұрын
I remember Griffin and Spalding and I'm not a hundred years old what a lovely reminder of our City's past, thank you for sharing this. Sad to imagine how many of those young men caught on film would meet their end in WWI a few years later.
@oxivele93742 жыл бұрын
@King Brilliant как жаль что феминистки не понимают что мужчины сражались за женщин,
@JPSLhench9 жыл бұрын
Now that's one top vid, and wow how things have changed!!
@bikbikkidbik28953 жыл бұрын
Thumbs down are obviously people who don’t live in Nottingham,
@cps27159 жыл бұрын
It looked more fun in the old video of horse and carts and open top trams. If I had the choice of going back then I think I would stay here in this time to avoid ww1. I worked in Nottingham at the Evening Post when I was 17 yrs old and loved it, I never knew it was built on caves until later I worked in the caves under Bridlesmiths Gate. It's a great city and always will be.
@simonwillis15294 жыл бұрын
Nottingham no matter where I end up in the world Nottingham is with me
@andyblackpool4 жыл бұрын
We left 20 years ago but when wego back visit family we still say to people up here that we're going home for a few days. Soon as I see the city on the horizon I feel I'm home too. Not sure however with its 'big city problems' I'd want to move back again though, which makes me feel very sad TBH.
@DavidLee-fe7yf3 жыл бұрын
sorry i have forgot his name but one of the best presenters on tv. love eveything he does.- so enthusiastic and and warm who appreciates everyone: great and small.
@bananabuttons66378 күн бұрын
Id like to go back to these time's.
@mikesheldon1957 Жыл бұрын
I was born and brought up in Long Eaton, can remember as a small child being taken into Nottingham city on a Bartons bus and when we were walking through the Old market Square seeing the Trolly Buses (think in my mind they were cream with a green roof) driving around, the tram rails were still down and they were using the tram electric lines all of which a few years later were dug up and the electric lines removed for petrol buses which was sad times to see them go. Funny how its now come full circle and they spent millions re-introducing them along the same routes they ran on before.
@erictowser84709 жыл бұрын
Yes it's criminal how many cities have been hideously developed and lost much of their charm. And when watching these precious old films you're reminded how far we've declined as a civilization for all of our modern technology. In the way people dress this is made particularly obvious with all the women wearing proper feminine clothing and not ugly jeans and trousers like todays mannish females, the men too are all smartly attired. These films just make you weep for everything that's been lost in our mad rush towards '' progress ''.
@neonskyline15 жыл бұрын
You should see where we live in Poland (Bydgoszcz), it's staggering, built by the Germans, bits have disappeared but still remains astounding, plus the Polish People in Poland havn't turned British, most look lovely when you see them out shopping etc and i've never seen so many beautiful Women in one place
@wasdalemanexploringoutdoor51373 жыл бұрын
At 216 you can see a post sticking up I believe it’s kings street junction of king street, there is a tunnel system below these streets and I am convinced that post has been cut off at ground level but is still in place below ground. I noticed it a few years ago and thought it was a bit out of place, but this would make sense.
@danharrison79935 жыл бұрын
Look At That Is Hard Rock Cafe King And Queen Street In Nottingham
@theauthority15986 жыл бұрын
Pinders for gloves...wow
@ichabodon7 жыл бұрын
A bit late Eric Towser for my comments but how right you are.
@robtyman42813 жыл бұрын
Funny to think that back then the Great Central Railway had only opened a few years before, and Victoria station was still pretty 'new'. Sad that it lasted barely 70 years. The GCR was the last major rail line from London to be built, and to open.........and the ONLY one to be got rid of.
@syounas46774 жыл бұрын
Very nice video
@angelaberni88733 жыл бұрын
Pity all that class has been replaced by so much Rif raf !! Even the poor looked better than what you see today.
@romystumpy1197 Жыл бұрын
People had respect and just got on with their lives no matter what was thrown at them ,they were stronger mentally and physically
@HXLproductions4 жыл бұрын
Essentially much nicer 😂
@johnmurray84284 жыл бұрын
How many of those young boys running across the tram line survived the Somme!
@davidbrown83035 жыл бұрын
They wondered up and down the street the British where more social and less stuck up and reserved then. what happened.? Time changed them and not for the better.
@Dstew57A5 жыл бұрын
It seems like life was much more peaceful back then.
@Alex-ni2ir4 жыл бұрын
That's false.
@ben49504 жыл бұрын
That's false.
@scottpeacock54924 жыл бұрын
D Stew, Except for the two world wars, I don't think life was that peaceful with all the bombing.
@thehoneyeffect4 жыл бұрын
it was just a little bit sexist and racist back then... still is now but not as extreme
@cx59544 жыл бұрын
D Stew it really wasn’t peaceful
@YoloMenace0014 жыл бұрын
2:16 this was filmed ages before this video here on youtube was originally filmed due to this road here not existing and is just a massive pavement
@kubhlaikhan2015 Жыл бұрын
Speaking as a man in a hat with a moustache and a long skirt, I can't really see what has changed.
@supersmasher36194 жыл бұрын
I live there
@clarkkent45954 жыл бұрын
Nottingham
@jameshotham954 жыл бұрын
Can you explain your strange comments?
@clarkkent45954 жыл бұрын
@@jameshotham95 Comments by topic
@jameshotham954 жыл бұрын
@@clarkkent4595 What does that mean? You just go around commenting single word topics of videos? Why?
@clarkkent45954 жыл бұрын
@@jameshotham95 Comment only
@jameshotham954 жыл бұрын
@@clarkkent4595 Thank you that's cleared everything right up
@Embracing014 жыл бұрын
Today places like this have a very dystopian vibe about them, not helped by the soulless buildings and public transport which looks like they came straight out of a futuristic totalitarian film set in the year 2080. The insane amount of surveillance cameras everywhere spying on you adds to that vibe, and we're supposed to believe they are there to stop "terrorism"?, yet there's never any video evidence of these supposed attacks as they never release any footage showing the terrorist in the act of his destruction, all we get is blurry, grainy footage with timestamps missing which couldve been taken at any time and could be anyone. Kids at school have zero privacy because there's cameras watching them. To think we fought two world wars for all this privacy erosion and our freedoms being taken away.
@johnsmith-bx4rn4 жыл бұрын
have you been reading george's book
@minatormyth8 жыл бұрын
still usong trams 100 yeats later, how far we have come. last week i saw a few trams drinimg about....followed by a bus, go figure.
@pinky-ud1rt3 жыл бұрын
Wow
@mayamfeizi1612 жыл бұрын
سلام عالی برنامت دمت گرم
@F4Insight-uq6nt Жыл бұрын
Proof we live in a Cycle if you ever needed it.
@ZalthorAndNoggin5 жыл бұрын
Shame it was so short!! I lived there for many years and loved every moment. Pity about the awful narrator too but great to see old Nottingham.
@danielmfraser4 жыл бұрын
look how they massacred my boy
@stinkerboo50282 жыл бұрын
😊
@williampercival76624 жыл бұрын
My dad, William Harold Percival was born there in 1919 after world war 2 he ended up in the Cook Islands, settled in Rarotonga and past away on July 5th 1978 aged 59 years old. William Harold Percival ( son ) Kathleen ( daughter) John ( son ) June ( daughter) Rosemary ( daughter) Now living in New Zealand and Perth Australia. William Percival New Zealand Kia Orana.
@mayamfeizi1612 жыл бұрын
🙂🙂🙂😘
@maxmullen63374 жыл бұрын
The people haven’t changed, he said. So no immigrants then? No Hindus, no Muslims? I must visit the place. It must be the only place in England that hasn’t become unrecognisable to anyone over 50.
@thehoneyeffect4 жыл бұрын
Black and Asian people were there then Plus they helped fight in WW1 and WW2...sorry to interrupt your racist fantasy you ungrateful nobhead
@maxmullen63374 жыл бұрын
thehoneyeffect. Take a look at the link. That’s my country. But it’s gone now, taken over by some of the most primitive cultures in the world. A country where incestuous marriages are normal, producing huge numbers of children with severe birth defects yet continue because it’s their culture. A country where immigrants don’t integrate or assimilate or identify with this country or the people who created it. Instead they keep up a constant barrage of complaints yet few go back to where they or their parents/grandparents came from. Britain used to be a country where I felt at home. Now I go into the next street and I’m in a foreign land of people who hate the British and never stop complaining about it. And very, very few join Britain’s armed forces even though the lying scum at the BBC doctor film to make it seem like they do. As for fighting in the war. They were mercenaries. They fought on our side because they were paid. A bit like the German Hessians who fought for the British in the American War of Independence. They weren’t much good either. And who in their right minds would want to hand their country over to aliens? No one. kzfaq.info/get/bejne/a-CbY8iqsODUYZc.html Meanwhile, mass immigration has turned this once nice country into the overcrowded stink-hole dump it has become. The current lockdown makes me very sad. The roads are like I remember them.
@mrfarkyhars91924 жыл бұрын
thehoneyeffect Think you need to turn off your TV - your brain is shackled.
@maxmullen63374 жыл бұрын
Mr Farky Hars. What’s TV got to do with anything? Except of course the broadcast media is totally dominated by lying scum with a death wish.
@neonskyline14 жыл бұрын
Yeh that's it, that's why a lot of Britain is so boring, the soul has gone out of these streets, making towns with old buildings look depressing now
@kateallsop65725 жыл бұрын
It certainly was safer there was no fear of speeding cyclists .more police on the beat and no parking in pedestrian zones.
@cx59544 жыл бұрын
Lol! I live in the city center and I went out for a walk a few months ago. And I got caught in a stampede of feminist protesters and I got badly injured.
@andyblackpool4 жыл бұрын
Half of them'd be blokes anyway these days
@cx59544 жыл бұрын
andy thompson yes but feminists are scarier 😂😂
@clarkkent45954 жыл бұрын
Student
@patrickdoyle9369 Жыл бұрын
The street furniture you talk about, such as the street lamps, were all taken out / down by the local council, in their infinite wisdom, because they know best.... ERRRR NOT
@michaeldemarco47975 жыл бұрын
Not a Muslim in site
@lastemperor47164 жыл бұрын
Not a Muslim in site but women dressed like Muslim women back then covered from head to toe respectable outfits not like the slags of today wth big fat asses and tits hanging out
@thehoneyeffect4 жыл бұрын
Just racists
@gillianlawlor8683 жыл бұрын
Sight? possibly
@anthonydblackmore71524 жыл бұрын
Nottingham is horrible now
@thehoneyeffect4 жыл бұрын
yeah Market Square is often littered with racist misogynistic nobheads
@hayleyquinnx942 жыл бұрын
people love to romanticise the past, some of the things looked nice, sure, but the entire city air would have been worse than it is now with the amount of gas and coal powered items, its nice that there's more room to walk around back then, but only the very centre looks this nice, huge sections of nottighams were essentially completely crammed slums with little to no amenities, as he said in the video, people walked round on the streets because the buildings were so cramped. There's nice things about the past but I think if someone from the current time had to live there suddenly they'd realise how much they'd romanticised it.
@volvos60bloke4 жыл бұрын
LLooked more of a dump then than now
@cocoanimates98764 жыл бұрын
We don’t have fucking long moustaches anymore and we don’t all wear hats and finally we don’t wear long skirts