Southampton Cultural Services
Southampton Cultural Services
  • Видео 209
  • Просмотров 106 879
Southampton's D-Day Story
On 6th June 1944, about 156,000 British, American and Canadian soldiers landed on beaches in Normandy - this marked the largest military invasion in history and signalled the dawn of the end of the Second World War. It is now known as ‘D-Day’.
Around 55,000 of the soldiers for D-Day embarked from Southampton and its people were the unsung heroes behind the scenes, playing a pivotal role in the preparations and subsequent activities of D-Day. This included the diligent factory workers, shipyard craftsmen, and dock labourers who constructed landing crafts, manufactured munitions, and loaded the countless tons of supplies.
This short film introduces the role that Southampton played in this pi...
Просмотров: 826

Видео

Southampton Through Time
Просмотров 4884 месяца назад
Southampton’s history stretches back over 2,000 years. This introductory film provides the whole history of Southampton in under five minutes.
The Ghosts of Tudor House: Echoes of the Past
Просмотров 1684 месяца назад
Join historian and paranormal enthusiast Emily Pierce online to discuss research into the phenomena at Tudor House from the attic all the way down to the cellar.
The Story of Southampton's Medieval Water
Просмотров 1,5 тыс.Год назад
Southampton had one of England’s first medieval urban water systems and it lasted for over 500 years. The story begins in 1233 when a man called Walter le Fleming gifted the area north of where God’s House Tower is to a religious order called the Franciscans, who followed the teachings of St Francis of Assisi. These Franciscans built a friary here; by rights their accommodation should have been...
The Hoglands Park Air Raid
Просмотров 2 тыс.Год назад
On the edge of one of Southampton’s green spaces, Hoglands Park, is a small plaque recording an event that took place over 80 years ago. An air-raid shelter located in the park took a direct hit. Over the decades, this tale has become one of the most well-known in Southampton’s wartime story, but parts of the it are still shrouded in mystery. The bombing occurred on the night of Sunday 1st Dece...
Sea City Shorts - Titanic Grand Staircase
Просмотров 219Год назад
Join Learning Officer Andy as he explore Titanic's grand staircase.
SeaCity Shorts - Titanic Musicians
Просмотров 94Год назад
Andy explores the story of the musicians who played onboard the Titanic.
Medieval Buckle
Просмотров 44Год назад
Hooray, it's time for this week's Tudor House Short! Today Bea has been taking a look at a marvellous medieval artefact which provides a glimpse of fashion in the 1400s!
Money Chest
Просмотров 52Год назад
Today Andy has been taking a look at an amazing 16th century money chest which may have been given to the people of Southampton by a famous Spanish king!
Tudor House Short - Patch Box
Просмотров 28Год назад
What are your beauty secrets? In this week's Tudor House Short, Bea has been exploring a great artefact from Georgian times which was designed to house prized beauty products!
Tudor House Shorts: Tudor Fashion- Ruffs
Просмотров 33Год назад
Why did our Tudor forebears wear ruffs? In this instalment of Tudor House Shorts, Bea explores the fashion in a bit more detail.
Tudor House Shorts: Ship's Timbers?
Просмотров 48Год назад
Stories abound about buildings being constructed of old ships timbers. In today's Tudor House Short Andy looks at an interesting example from Tudor House and a Tudor owner of the house and his link to shipbuilding.
The Story of Anglo Saxon Southampton
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.Год назад
This short film introduces the incredible world of Anglo-Saxon Southampton, from the first people settling after the Romans left, to its zenith as a major trading port and the attacks of the Vikings.
A Short History of Tudor House
Просмотров 2,8 тыс.2 года назад
Tudor House & Garden in Southampton, is perhaps one of the city's most important historic buildings. Established about 800 years ago, it has been a constant present ever since, through times of prosperity, war and famine. This short film, presented by Tudor House's learning officer Andy Skinner, offers a short introduction to the history of the house.
Debunking The Titanic Switch Theory
Просмотров 15 тыс.2 года назад
Here at SeaCity Museum we hear many myths and conspiracy theories linked to the sinking of the RMS Titanic. We think that it is disrespectful to those whose lives were lost when false conspiracies are spread about the sinking. In this short video we’re going to look at just one theory and show why it is wrong: that the wreck at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean is not the Titanic, but her sister...
Richard Andrews
Просмотров 1032 года назад
Richard Andrews
SeaCity Shorts 20th Century Dredger
Просмотров 672 года назад
SeaCity Shorts 20th Century Dredger
SeaCity Shorts- Bargate Lions
Просмотров 832 года назад
SeaCity Shorts- Bargate Lions
SeaCity Shorts- Cannonball Concretion
Просмотров 2542 года назад
SeaCity Shorts- Cannonball Concretion
SeaCity Shorts- The Hero on the Hook
Просмотров 752 года назад
SeaCity Shorts- The Hero on the Hook
SeaCity Shorts- Laurentic Shell Casing
Просмотров 672 года назад
SeaCity Shorts- Laurentic Shell Casing
SeaCity Shorts- Quilters Vault Finds
Просмотров 672 года назад
SeaCity Shorts- Quilters Vault Finds
Southampton's Mysterious Wall
Просмотров 1 тыс.2 года назад
Southampton's Mysterious Wall
Southampton Civic Centre Clock Tower Bells- O God, Our Help in Ages Past
Просмотров 4,5 тыс.2 года назад
Southampton Civic Centre Clock Tower Bells- O God, Our Help in Ages Past
Titanic and Southampton
Просмотров 7482 года назад
Titanic and Southampton
Southampton Civic Centre Clock
Просмотров 8862 года назад
Southampton Civic Centre Clock
The Story of Roman Southampton
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.2 года назад
The Story of Roman Southampton
Titanic- The Basics
Просмотров 5702 года назад
Titanic- The Basics
The Mystery of the Civic Centre Sculptures
Просмотров 1622 года назад
The Mystery of the Civic Centre Sculptures
The Titanic Fire
Просмотров 16 тыс.2 года назад
The Titanic Fire

Комментарии

  • @angieell2632
    @angieell2632 23 дня назад

    I live in Southampton, grew up in Eastleigh. An old lady I worked with as a teenager, who worked at pirellis during the war, told me that they had to dig a mass grave under The Common Park cos they didn't have time to dig separate ones. I dont know if they moved them all after the war ended or if its still there??

    • @shaneanderson7438
      @shaneanderson7438 16 дней назад

      Well i know in the grave yard in the common there are 100s of grave stones dating back 1912, then there's 100s in one section of army men from 1940

  • @CenturyHomeProject
    @CenturyHomeProject 24 дня назад

    I just purchased one of his maps at an auction online. It’s a 16th century map of England, Ireland, Scotland, and Wales. My husbands many time great grandfather was John Speed. I can’t wait for it to get here!

  • @southerneruk
    @southerneruk 27 дней назад

    According, relations, the pulled out a number of bodies, many were not complete, bits were missing, they did clear up what they could, but the fear was some will never be accounted for because the bodies disintegrated and there were bits of bodies that were buried in the shelter

  • @eric-wb7gj
    @eric-wb7gj Месяц назад

    With a direct hit like that, I'm not sure quite how they would tell who everyone in it was. Years ago I knew a man who was in the fire brigade in Southampton during the early part of the war. He mentioned this very incident, & said he got there soon after, & it was horrible. He didn't elaborate further. His recollection was that they quickly filled the trench in, with remains inside. He had relatives who worked on the railways, & one was an ARP Warden. He stated;- - Due to all the old medieval cellars, they had been knocked through, so the wardens didn't have to come up from below ground during air raids. - Locomotives sometimes fell into these old cellars around the city, where the railway line had been built over them. - Locomotives & teams were sent out to try & find bombs that had dropped near railways. His relative didn't like this as vibrations could set off bombs. - He was working in the fire brigade when the docks got hit hard. There was a large warehouse with rum which caught fire. Due to the fumes, the fire crews got drunk. Their commanding officer came down & was going to put them all up on disciplinary charges, until it was found out what happened. - He used to go up into the brick towers of the Royal South Hants Hospital, & report the angles of where he'd seen the bombs drop back to the command center. A friend of his in the fire brigade did the same watch on different times, but didn't like the RSH, as when he went there, bombs fell nearby.

  • @peterw4338
    @peterw4338 Месяц назад

    My mother went to the shelter with her newborn baby, the shelter was packed and she became claustrophobic and ran out to head to her mother’s home. Her living account was that the victims were buried in the shelter and left there.

  • @smmx65
    @smmx65 Месяц назад

    AND ITS STILL A S*** HOLE NOW

  • @jwmarshallsay
    @jwmarshallsay Месяц назад

    I am an expert on the Blitz of Portsmouth. I knew Southampton was badly hit, and this documentary really shows how severe it really was. My sincere sympathy to the families who suffered. God bless them all.

  • @peterw4338
    @peterw4338 Месяц назад

    Strange as Rotterdam was bombed even more yet is the most successful port in Europe.

  • @rollogillespie9169
    @rollogillespie9169 Месяц назад

    My Mother was born 1915 and from Shirley. She was cycling home during a raid and said "I should not have been outside but gone to a shelter." A bomb exploded across the road, and she had a fractured femur and huge scarring from the shrapnel.

  • @stevenbrindle1808
    @stevenbrindle1808 Месяц назад

    That was fantastic, Rebecca, thank you so much, I have loved these paintings for years, but you have taught me so much more about them

  • @Celticcross688
    @Celticcross688 Месяц назад

    My Grandmother was born 28 Lansdowne Hill 1883..

  • @Celticcross688
    @Celticcross688 Месяц назад

    They are not forgotten ❤

  • @lawrieflowers8314
    @lawrieflowers8314 2 месяца назад

    Unfortunately, as in other towns and cities, Architects & Town Planners (who were supposed to be on our side) contributed greatly to the destruction and vandalism originally caused by the Luftwaffe, with results visible to this day…

    • @michaelfoy
      @michaelfoy 20 часов назад

      Agreed....I come from Portsmouth and grew up playing on bombsites in the late 50's....Now live in Exeter, which Hitler had bombed just to destroy what had been a Beautiful medieval city....The Re-builds unfortunately happened in grey concrete-time, ugly and out-of-place buildings.... after just a few years.....Southampton still had overgrown bombsites around the docks area in the 80's......

  • @RICHARDHAYSOM-us5tu
    @RICHARDHAYSOM-us5tu 3 месяца назад

    Thanks for good short film. Helped explain how things were in Southampton - This in The era of my grandchildren’s Great Grandparents’ life on the home front in wartime Soton

  • @terryblackman6217
    @terryblackman6217 3 месяца назад

    Many thanks. Very interesting.

  • @therespectedlex9794
    @therespectedlex9794 4 месяца назад

    I didn't know the civic centre was bombed.

  • @kenc4104
    @kenc4104 4 месяца назад

    As a child, Tudor House was one of the places to visit when we had nothing else to do! The ignorance of youth.

  • @marvinc9994
    @marvinc9994 5 месяцев назад

    Southampton - home of the Spifire and Benny Hill!

  • @hazharibo7439
    @hazharibo7439 7 месяцев назад

    I'm from near Coventry. We got flattened too

  • @richardspeed7135
    @richardspeed7135 8 месяцев назад

    Sad

  • @wannabesleuthinsomethin
    @wannabesleuthinsomethin 9 месяцев назад

    John Speed was my 11th great grandfather.

  • @davidfarmer2049
    @davidfarmer2049 10 месяцев назад

    Why cant we just listen to the account with out silly violins in back ground.

  • @rivco5008
    @rivco5008 11 месяцев назад

    My mom was 13 in 1940, living in a part of Southampton called Bitterne. The house she was born in is still there, I found it on Google Earth. On many levels she never got over what she went through in the fall and winter of 1940. She met my dad, a US Navy sailor from Los Angeles in 1944 when she was in the WAAF, and came to America in 1950. Landed in New York City, then the train all the way to California where she lived for the next 52 years. She died on 6 October 2002 & we all still miss her.

    • @marvinc9994
      @marvinc9994 5 месяцев назад

      "Bitterne" Where I was born! Mum told me about the various raids on that part of Southampton, and how she had to WALK every day into the town Centre - to Plummers, opposite Watts Park, where she worked as a hairdresser and beautician.She was eventually bombed out from there, and had to move north for work. One thing she remarked on was how BEAUTIFUL the High Street looked in those days (with trams going under the Bargate) - until it was virtually wiped out by the Luftwaffe. SO much was destroyed in that horrid war - all thanks to the evil ambitions of one man. I have HUGE respect for that generation - and feel sometimes that they were in many respects betrayed, somehow.

  • @nirvairsingh1678
    @nirvairsingh1678 Год назад

    Imy wish to see Southampton I am from panjab can you give me sponser

    • @cumception6999
      @cumception6999 11 месяцев назад

      Don’t know why you would want to see it. Not much here to see but if that’s what you want then go for it

    • @AlfFieldArt
      @AlfFieldArt 6 месяцев назад

      Southampton IS a great city. Since the war the city has been developed in-line with changing modern needs. Many of us think that process has somewhat reduced the aesthetic appeal of Southampton. But, it remains a unique and fascinating city with lots of things for visitors to see and do.

    • @therespectedlex9794
      @therespectedlex9794 4 месяца назад

      Get your cousin to give you the money. Or sponsor your family to go back to India.

  • @davideddy5877
    @davideddy5877 Год назад

    Just lovely

  • @chucks6781
    @chucks6781 Год назад

    I remember the yanks at this camp as they always handed out chewing gum to us kids playing cricket on the edge of the park & giving us a Christmas party with a small gift from Santa Claus

  • @kbraz1970
    @kbraz1970 Год назад

    I recently bought one from someone who had no idea what it was. Would have been nice in your video for you to show the skirt lifter in more detail, also given us the name of the maker etc.

  • @ashleymoye6829
    @ashleymoye6829 Год назад

    Do you have locations for some of these images? Can only figure out the High Street ones

  • @PJFreeman369
    @PJFreeman369 Год назад

    I spent many hours in cells back in 1996 and 1997.

  • @montbrehain
    @montbrehain Год назад

    An excellent telling of a little known and sad part of our local history. I have walked by the plaque often and always spare a thought and pay my respects. A few years ago a mate and I went on a "Southampton Blitz" guided tour which took us to many unknown and often overlooked and forgotten shelters. There are many tales like this that deserved to be told and remembered. Thanks for this one...

  • @davidknowles3459
    @davidknowles3459 Год назад

    Also in that shelter were some Edwin Jones staff,who couldn't get into the Edwin Jones Shelter.Anold man told me that a jacket had been blown up into a tree.It had been left there,but after a few weeks it was taken down as the arms of the jacket were flapping in the wind,and scaring some people

  • @jimbyrne1844
    @jimbyrne1844 Год назад

    Excellent work here!

  • @comeonengland5312
    @comeonengland5312 Год назад

    Had a few kips in there back in the old days

  • @Devinaydinsagun
    @Devinaydinsagun Год назад

    Do a video about debunking the titanic federal reserve theory

  • @KnowledgeAddicted
    @KnowledgeAddicted Год назад

    It got poop emoji pattern. I like it.

  • @hilliardbynd8412
    @hilliardbynd8412 Год назад

    🤦 P𝐫O𝕞O𝓢m

  • @gingerhebblethwaite
    @gingerhebblethwaite Год назад

    We found one of these (though rather less fancy) in my grandmother's house and was curious to learn more. It was with some trepidation that I typed the search term into RUclips! Thank you for the video.

    • @southamptonculturalservices
      @southamptonculturalservices Год назад

      I'm glad your RUclips search found us! The next step is to try your grandmother's skirt lifter out in real life- you just need to get hold of a crinoline!

  • @AussieSaintJohn
    @AussieSaintJohn 2 года назад

    Good to learn some history of my hometown, even though I'm now an Australian for 3 decades...

  • @Seelieness
    @Seelieness 2 года назад

    My Great Great Grandparents lived in this house. I am yet to travel to the UK to see it, but someday soon I hope. Thank you for the glimpse inside.

    • @lenzohh
      @lenzohh Год назад

      i have been there, in 2019 was amazing!

    • @lenzohh
      @lenzohh Год назад

      2018^

  • @johnsanders2220
    @johnsanders2220 2 года назад

    Well done Andy et al

  • @Haihiru
    @Haihiru 2 года назад

    Haha, you can see the shape of the light tubes as they reflect in the lens 0:26

  • @adrienneberger3642
    @adrienneberger3642 2 года назад

    My wonderful 1923 Tudor Revival house has a secret room!

  • @garryferrington811
    @garryferrington811 2 года назад

    So much of the history of slavery has been glossed over. One thing to Britain's credit (amongst it's frightful imperialist record) is that it did not take a civil war to abolish slavery.

  • @carlholloway2594
    @carlholloway2594 2 года назад

    ░p░r░o░m░o░s░m░ 💔

  • @hpro9579
    @hpro9579 2 года назад

    Very interesting!

  • @samanthadearman62
    @samanthadearman62 2 года назад

    It obviously has had to have a lot of repairs and restoration done over the years but has outlasted many of later buildings and no doubt will continue to do so.

  • @nicolacarter6939
    @nicolacarter6939 2 года назад

    How interesting. I have lived in southampton for about 2/3rds of my life and never done a walk of the walls or vaults. One day I will have time to do it.

    • @marvinc9994
      @marvinc9994 5 месяцев назад

      "never done a walk of the walls" WHAT? You'll be saying next that you've never been to the Tudor House Museum, or visited St Michael's Church (which the Normans started building only four years after the Battle of Hastings). When you DO get to do that wall-tour, don't forget to stop under the West Gate - a stone's-throw from the _Duke of Wellington_ , and reflect on the tens of thousands of soldiers who've marched through that arch, from Henry V's men on their way to Agincourt, all the way through to those heading for the New World on the _Mayflower_ and the _Speedwell_ , and later on to the GIs embarking for D-Day. Tut-tut, Sir! 😉😉😉 My Mum, a Lancashire lass, always remarked how ignorant most Sotonians were of their town's history - the sort of thing our American cousins would LOVE to be able to call their own. Frankly, I wish we'd had some Americans sitting on our (typically, rather unimaginative) Town Council in 1945; they often have a greater respect for _our_ history than the natives (who take it all for granted). Enjoy your tour, anyway!

  • @davidjuson5608
    @davidjuson5608 2 года назад

    An interesting presentation. I think it probable that there is more to be said about the slave issue in Southampton, but to my knowledge there has been no in depth study of the subject to date.

  • @BroccoliHead-qh4cv
    @BroccoliHead-qh4cv 2 года назад

    Thank you for this video!