Jago -Yer’ done yerself proud. In the 1960s, my mania was to walk disused railways. About 1966, I went to the Isle of Dogs. What I saw was some rusty old track, run-down buildings and a sleepy guard dog (in the right location!) You mentioned the Ealing Studios film, “Passport to Pimlico.” This was filmed by Lionel Banes, who was a relation on my father’s side of the family. As a small boy in the late 1950s, I saw him a few times in East Finchley.
I was over in Chichester Way. Like you, long after the main event . . . Even in my day, the Pier Tavern changed dramatically, then disappeared, like the Cubitt Arms, and others . . .
An interesting tale ... just one correction. Council Tax was introduced in 1992 to replace the Community Charge aka Poll Tax, which was introduced in 1990 (1989 in Scotland). Prior to 1990 local taxation was the General Rates, which had been running since the Statute of Elizabeth in 1603 (originally as Poor Relief).
Fantastic! I had never heard of this before, and it's great that their efforts met with some success. Although it's likely Passport to Pimlico may have inspired them, it's a shame a film like that has already been made as the Secession of the Isle of Dogs would make for a good film (with comedy elements like the lack of a car to blow up).
My Dad used to live in Tooting in the 80s. He picked up a love of British-Caribbean music there and must be the only guy on his allotment banging along to Radio 1 Xtra ^^
Prior to the Docklands Development Corporation (LDDC) the GLC aspirations for the area was to fill in the docks and build industrial and storage units, Imagine the havoc on the then road system this would have created. Many locals were resistant to the LDDC plans and the spirit of Johns was evident when LDDC staff in a single storey glass walled building were treated to the vision of the building being surrounded by local males who then performed a mass urination, wether this was worse that the cattle truck pulling up and a herd of sheep driven into the building I don’t know. I do know that my own time in Docklands was one of the happiest and most interesting of my career and working with teams of ex lighter men was “enlightening”
@@EllieMaes-Grandad I know, I spent a lot of time and energy trying to get the trade onto barged, and had a sustainable business case to bring the paper rolls in by barge from the Medway and Chatham and the printing works manager was supportive. Sadly a major supplier scuppered it by moving their depot up the east coast. The then owners of the Docks (British Waterways) were prepared to consider the acquisition of the necessary vessels to make it work.
@@simonwinter8839 yes but rates were better and younger people should be aware of that instead of assuming that the current model has always been the way.
I just added similar before i read any comments. Interesting about making wrong associations in the minds of the young. i'd argue each and every one of us has a reality window of 1095 day's so the amount of miss information spewed in terms of the young during the past 40years and skewed facts is phenomenal !!! i recently spent a day with a younger talking class warfare the 'facts' she had about 'fcthatcharse' was mixed up and time events in some daft time line that never existed ???
Well, the Isle of Dogs might want to secede again, for totally different reasons - to keep Canary Wharf in the EU (but too late now). And we now know where Jago stands on Brexit - like the majority of Londoners, but not the rest of England - two very different worlds.
What possible reason could canary wharf have to stay in the EU? The finance industry has been *remarkably* unimpressed, globally, with the EU's behaviour last few years to the point the US fed is talking about economic sanctions.
Maybe not like the rest of England but very much like Scotland, which voted 62:38 remain with a remain majority in every one of the vote's 32 regions and is being dragged out of the EU against its will by a bunch of little Englanders.
@@Michael75579 Yes, London, Scotland and Northern Ireland voted differently to the majority of the UK. That's their view and that's democracy. I should perhaps have said "England and Wales" rather than just England.
@@katrinabryce but that's Euro risk not management of Euro accounts. It's still "there" just not there in the legal entities - the Fed in the US has repeatedly warned Europe if they mess with how this stuff operates they'll face economic sanctions, so it's all safe.
Interesting but also a cautionary tale of be careful what you wish for as only been to the area once and once again for a party at the furthest end on the river and as the great philosophy Lemmy might have said about the housing “goes up like prices at Christmas.” In the end the little man was priced out.
Yikes, that footage was taken on a grim day!!! My wife used to live in that area in the 70's and remembers nothing of this and her dad was a docker too!!!!
This was a funny story, yes. If you want to see a tragic story about a tiny republic, see the video of the Uzice Republic. ruclips.net/video/l4y0HdOtGkA/видео.html The Uzice Republic enraged Hitler...that never ends well.
Thanks for the video. I do remember this event but as it has been some time I had forgotten the details. So thanks for that. You have to wonder what would have happened but for those 'secret plans.' And do you think the anonymous bomber was going to buy Ted Johns a car then bow it up.
Why don't you review the old film " Passport to Pimlico", which was filmed in North Lambeth. You can see the old railway arches in the background of the film, where they found the get away van from the Great Train Robbers. Behind those railway arches is Archbishops Park and the Marine Institute, which would make an interesting video.
It would be nice if communities in trouble today could get away with gently absurdist stunts. I fear that if one was attempted, numerous individuals on both sides would take it far too seriously. I regret to say I would have some difficulty restraining myself; it's just so easy to get worked up these days.
Another fabulous insight, time moves on but the gentrification of another area shows again disrespect for another area of London that always had and still has true Londoners at its heart who in reality give so much to Londons heritage. Thanks again.
This reminds me rather of the Conch Republic, a similar attempt by the Florida Keys to secede in response to the US setting up a border checkpoint on their only bridge to the mainland, thus cutting them off from the rest of the United States.
Brexit is the best thing we ever did :) proved by the events of the past few days. As an ex islander (10 years), this video brings back all the memories of pushing my 2 babies around here and in Greenwich. That foot tunnel is might useful if not mighty dank! Thanks for the trip :)
The 'Isle of Dogs' is NOT an Island. As stated in other comments, there was no council tax in 1970 only rates which were paid by homeowners/landlords not tenants so I doubt if the residents of these council blocks were concerned with rates unless they were fortunate enough to own their home which most were not.
@@jpaulc441 True. London has a temperate oceanic climate. No great temperate extremes, and no great rain totals, but it's very often overcast, cool and damp. NYC is situated in a transitional zone between humid continental climate and humid tropical climate. That means NYC experiences weather extremes. Summers can be very hot and humid, with thunder storms and the occasional hurricane in late summer. Winters can be very cold with temps often dropping below zero C with occasional blizzards.
It is my understanding that when King Henry VIII lived in Greenwich Palace on the other side of the river directly opposite the Isle of Dogs, he was constantly disturbed by the barking of his hunting dogs and had them moved across the river so he would not be disturbed by the noise, the place to which the dogs were sent becoming known as the Isle of Dogs.
Rates were the thing back then, not to be confused with the 'bleep bleep' chai-all of fckthatch'ass poll tax, circa mid 1980's to 1990 just a solidarity thought, have you done any video's in regard to 'FareFight' and 'it's' 1st spawned; Can't Pay, Won't Pay (early 80's) following the 'lairds decision cheap fares were illegal ?
3:28 Most people on this street have fairly normal cars parked outside their houses... except the ones that for some reason own a Nissan Figaro and an X Type
Not all of it. They left some of us behind on the South side of the Island, so we get to constantly fear the day the encroaching skyscrapers finally reach our homes and the council forces us to relocate despite us not having the money to do so. I love the convenience of Canary Wharf, but I hate its constant expansion with a passion. The fact that the surrounding area has been totally neglected in favour of the shiny glass buildings doesn't help either.
The World needs more 'Johns' and less 'Johnsons'.......just shows 'People Power' starts getting things done. Then Govts mess it up with Capitalism....but there's always hope. Nice video as ever
Very interesting as usual, may thanks! 👍🏼 Just one point the council tax arrived after the hated Poll Tax in the 1990's, before then property owners paid rates, which went to the local councils, but many people didn't pay rates, so it needed reform, well Thatcher thought so anyway?
One problem with including a wee bit of politics in the video: you end up with a comments section full of ill-informed gibberish, as people use your channel to air their simplistic, media-hyped views on subjects they know hee-haw about. Oddly enough, I watched another of your videos a few minutes ago and the comments section was interesting, full of helpful, relevant conversation. It's your channel to do with exactly as you wish bnut, if I may make a suggestion: leave the politics out of the Tales from the Tube. Unfortunately, the railways are a political football themselves and the Underground is certainly no exception. It's hard to keep politics out of a railway channel, especially one with it's roots deeply embedded in the capital city, but from what I see on various YT channels, anything political just brings out the muppetry. Shame about the comments section, cos this was another interesting little gem, on a subject I know very little about.👌👍😁
@@jasonuk8333 The truth is in the eye of the beholder. My point was, are they necessaary. Does Jago want to risk offending people for a cheap political shot. Its his channel of course. Say what he wants. I was merely offering a thought. Fortunately Corbyn was defeated so we arent in a communist state and can therefore offer our thoughts on peoples youtube channels.
"There will be no downside to Brexit, only a considerable upside." _David Davis_ “The free trade agreement we will have to do should be one of the easiest in human history.” _Liam Fox_ “The day after we vote to leave, we hold all the cards and we can choose the path we want.” _Michael Gove_ “There will continue to be free trade and access to the single market” "I'm in favour of the single market. I want us to be able to trade freely with our European friends and partners." "We would be inside the single market council, and able to shape legislation" _Boris Johnson_ “Absolutely nobody is talking about threatening our place in the single market.” _Daniel Hannan_ "Only a madman would actually leave the single market." _Owen Patterson_ “Not a single job would be lost because of Brexit.” _Lord Digby Jones_ "Getting out of the EU can be quick and easy - the UK holds most of the cards" _John Redwood_ ”We will maintain a free flowing border at Dover. We will not impose checks in the port. The only reason we would have queues at the border is if we put in place restrictions that created those queues. We are not going to do that.” _Chris Grayling_ “Britain will have access to the single market after we vote Leave.” “The idea that our trade will suffer... is silly.” "Farmers will be better off if we vote to leave the EU." “Let’s give our NHS the £350m the EU takes every week.” “we would immediately be able to start negotiating new trade deals with emerging economies and the world’s biggest economies which could enter into force immediately after the UK leaves the EU.” _Vote Leave_ "there will be broad sunlit uplands" _Jacob Rees-Mogg_ "We have a great new deal that is ready to go... we can get that deal through a new Parliament in days. It is oven ready. Let’s get Brexit done, and take this country forward." _Boris Johnson_ “If Brexit is a disaster, I will go and live abroad. I'll go and live somewhere else.” _Nigel Farage_
phmc123 lots of opinions but don’t dare to show name as picture. That’s a sure sign of a right winger and often racist and Brexiters. Always pussies and what do I find further down in the comments, a true facist comment. If you are way out on the right side everything is communism, for some even The Tory party is. You grandparents fought what you embrace, you should be ashamed of yourselves.
0:28 ‘the one he deliberately stoked...’ nothing like introducing tendency early - you have lost my interest already - that sense that this misjudgement in a small matter will necessarily condition your view in any matter. Here’s to a compact Britain making her individual way around the world again in mutually beneficial trades and adding to those - political alliances and cultural ties as well as conversing with old friends. So good not to have to see everything France and Germany’s way and suffer their perpetual derogade while they run our country down both verbally and physically. Good luck Europe - better luck Britain. You were pushed into this ill-suited fellowship by US policy requirements 50 years ago when you were still staggering from losses incurred in a recent almighty conflict - time now to move out up and onward and let the ‘wrong side of history’ take these bleating troglodytes into the dark backward and abysm of time. Better still I hope they develop a healthy and positive imagination outside a state of servitude.
@@JagoHazzard yeah, long comment for someone who voted to gut our nation, I wonder if he thinks Boris and his disaster capitalists are going to save the nation...
I am one of those that would love to see London complete the the Brexit bollocks to its conclusion as it voted overwhelmingly to remain in the EU, it is frequented by visiting EU persons and has a service industry maintained largely by EU members; lest we forget, we can get a tube (well a super tube if you will) from London to Paris and despite being on the front lines, as it were, we all celebrate the EU membership now and for always! REJOIN THE BLOC!!!!
@@EllieMaes-Grandad I can get a direct train from down the road to Paris, although I have neither gone or declined to visit, but I did previously appreciate how easy access to mainland Europe was before the decision to make it hard to access the UK's biggest market was dealt an even more paperwork that it hasn't been this difficult to trade with them since the 1920s... have a slow clap of congratulations to all those people who contributed to it.
@@dambrooks7578 You were trading with European partners in the 1920s? . . . . as if! Quit the b/s - support your country (if UK is your country). If it isn't, just go away . . .
“... as he didn’t own a car” - brilliant!
Well of the end result was to leave him without a car, who is the real winner?
There used to be a sign there that read "Welcome to the Isle of Dogs" and someone added some graffiti that said you're welcome to it !!
Jago -Yer’ done yerself proud. In the 1960s, my mania was to walk disused railways. About 1966, I went to the Isle of Dogs. What I saw was some rusty old track, run-down buildings and a sleepy guard dog (in the right location!) You mentioned the Ealing Studios film, “Passport to Pimlico.” This was filmed by Lionel Banes, who was a relation on my father’s side of the family. As a small boy in the late 1950s, I saw him a few times in East Finchley.
Finchley l visited my cousin there when l was 7 good memories
25 years I lived there (Just Off Manchester Road, opposite The Pier Tavern.) and I never knew any of this. Cheers ;-)
I was over in Chichester Way. Like you, long after the main event . . . Even in my day, the Pier Tavern changed dramatically, then disappeared, like the Cubitt Arms, and others . . .
It was funny as kids
Big fan of the area. The London docklands museum is well worth a visit
It's a great museum 😊
An interesting tale ... just one correction. Council Tax was introduced in 1992 to replace the Community Charge aka Poll Tax, which was introduced in 1990 (1989 in Scotland).
Prior to 1990 local taxation was the General Rates, which had been running since the Statute of Elizabeth in 1603 (originally as Poor Relief).
Fantastic! I had never heard of this before, and it's great that their efforts met with some success.
Although it's likely Passport to Pimlico may have inspired them, it's a shame a film like that has already been made as the Secession of the Isle of Dogs would make for a good film (with comedy elements like the lack of a car to blow up).
I wonder if he was the inspiration for Citizen Smith? As a kid from Tooting, I never saw that show as a parody. Wolfie was a working class hero.
Ah, I see I’ve found a fellow Tooting citizen! Are you Bec or Broadway?
I’m from tooting to now live in central Queensland
@@rogerlabbett9584 long way from tooting that
My Dad used to live in Tooting in the 80s. He picked up a love of British-Caribbean music there and must be the only guy on his allotment banging along to Radio 1 Xtra ^^
Prior to the Docklands Development Corporation (LDDC) the GLC aspirations for the area was to fill in the docks and build industrial and storage units, Imagine the havoc on the then road system this would have created. Many locals were resistant to the LDDC plans and the spirit of Johns was evident when LDDC staff in a single storey glass walled building were treated to the vision of the building being surrounded by local males who then performed a mass urination, wether this was worse that the cattle truck pulling up and a herd of sheep driven into the building I don’t know. I do know that my own time in Docklands was one of the happiest and most interesting of my career and working with teams of ex lighter men was “enlightening”
However, a huge printing works was built on Westferry Road, bringing in a huge volume of road transport vehicles. No longer there . . .
@@EllieMaes-Grandad I know, I spent a lot of time and energy trying to get the trade onto barged, and had a sustainable business case to bring the paper rolls in by barge from the Medway and Chatham and the printing works manager was supportive. Sadly a major supplier scuppered it by moving their depot up the east coast. The then owners of the Docks (British Waterways) were prepared to consider the acquisition of the necessary vessels to make it work.
@@marklloyd3536 Pity you failed - but the output would still have had to go out by road, even though mainly in quiet hours . . .
There wasn't Council tax in 1970. It only came along in the 1990s.
You probably should have said lower rates.
Michael Leiper.
I'm sure Jago was aware of this but he was making it more easy for a younger audience to understand.
@@simonwinter8839 yes but rates were better and younger people should be aware of that instead of assuming that the current model has always been the way.
@@giansideros Okay, point taken.
@Alan Bane bet your kids love having a deadbeat dad who hasn't contributed one penny to their upbringing never mind actually being there for them
I just added similar before i read any comments. Interesting about making wrong associations in the minds of the young.
i'd argue each and every one of us has a reality window of 1095 day's so the amount of miss information spewed in terms of the young during the past 40years and skewed facts is phenomenal !!!
i recently spent a day with a younger talking class warfare the 'facts' she had about 'fcthatcharse' was mixed up and time events in some daft time line that never existed ???
Council tax? Not back then, it was the Rates.
Same thing, different name...
@@mats7492 Sort of, but the 'poll tax' came in between . . .
Thanks, that’s the first time I’ve heard that story. I’m from the other side of the river Lea but regularly used to fish on the docks in the area 👍🏻
That "up the river" addition to the sold sign was a brilliant move lol
Isn't the term actually 'down the river'?
Well, the Isle of Dogs might want to secede again, for totally different reasons - to keep Canary Wharf in the EU (but too late now). And we now know where Jago stands on Brexit - like the majority of Londoners, but not the rest of England - two very different worlds.
What possible reason could canary wharf have to stay in the EU? The finance industry has been *remarkably* unimpressed, globally, with the EU's behaviour last few years to the point the US fed is talking about economic sanctions.
Maybe not like the rest of England but very much like Scotland, which voted 62:38 remain with a remain majority in every one of the vote's 32 regions and is being dragged out of the EU against its will by a bunch of little Englanders.
@@Michael75579 Yes, London, Scotland and Northern Ireland voted differently to the majority of the UK. That's their view and that's democracy. I should perhaps have said "England and Wales" rather than just England.
@@streaky81 Because, before Brexit, more than half of all Euros were in British banks.
@@katrinabryce but that's Euro risk not management of Euro accounts. It's still "there" just not there in the legal entities - the Fed in the US has repeatedly warned Europe if they mess with how this stuff operates they'll face economic sanctions, so it's all safe.
I live not to far from the Ise of Dogs and this was a surprise to me thanks Jago
I'm proud to have Ted's last name as my own. What an absolute mad lad.
We need activism like that goddamn
Rather enjoying these little history lessons. Keep em coming!
this needs to be a film
A small point but Council Tax didn't come about until the late 80s, so it would have been the rates.
Interesting but also a cautionary tale of be careful what you wish for as only been to the area once and once again for a party at the furthest end on the river and as the great philosophy Lemmy might have said about the housing “goes up like prices at Christmas.” In the end the little man was priced out.
Yikes, that footage was taken on a grim day!!! My wife used to live in that area in the 70's and remembers nothing of this and her dad was a docker too!!!!
Came here after watching your latest video on the unbuilt international termini!
That is the funniest story I've heard all day. 'Republic of the Isle of Dogs' now that's a mouthful
This was a funny story, yes. If you want to see a tragic story about a tiny republic, see the video of the Uzice Republic. ruclips.net/video/l4y0HdOtGkA/видео.html The Uzice Republic enraged Hitler...that never ends well.
Love your stories. Great work !
I'm the same year Prince Leonard formed the Hunt River Provence as a protest to government taxation. Seems like it was the trendy thing to do in 1970
Yet another top drawer video!!!
That is most kind of you!
Seems the Isle Of Dogs Republic was just a "arf"-hearted effort! LOL
That's a Dad Joke and a "arf"
@@bryansmith1920 ....But I'm not taking it "bark"! LOL
Reminds me of that film, Passport to Pimlico.😂
Thanks for the video. I do remember this event but as it has been some time I had forgotten the details. So thanks for that.
You have to wonder what would have happened but for those 'secret plans.' And do you think the anonymous bomber was going to buy Ted Johns a car then bow it up.
One year later and the mentioning of it still hurts.
Superb and beautifully narrated - much love 🌞
Reminded me of Chesterton's The Napoleon of Notting Hill which is supposed to have inspired Michael Collins.
Why don't you review the old film " Passport to Pimlico", which was filmed in North Lambeth. You can see the old railway arches in the background of the film, where they found the get away van from the Great Train Robbers.
Behind those railway arches is Archbishops Park and the Marine Institute, which would make an interesting video.
1:14 Ooh I can see my old house!
Thanks for making this. I lived on the Island for a year.
I lived there for twenty - a great place!
bro I LIVE THEIR about 10-30 seconds away from island gardens station
Another great short vid!
...looking forward to the Kloop
These madlads followed in the footsteps Ian Douglas Smith
“Freedom For Tooting!” 👊
(© Tooting Popular Front)
.... Looking through the satellite now.. I had no idea there were locks in London
Direct action and great video.
You have to do one now about the 1977 Republic of Frestonia in Notting Hill.
I did, but it was a long time ago. Time for a remake perhaps?
@@JagoHazzard ah ha, I missed that. Will look it up now. I grew up in Notting Hill.
wasn't council tax in them days it was the rates.
Proper fellas.
It would be nice if communities in trouble today could get away with gently absurdist stunts. I fear that if one was attempted, numerous individuals on both sides would take it far too seriously. I regret to say I would have some difficulty restraining myself; it's just so easy to get worked up these days.
I feel like these days, politics has become something that people take too seriously, but in all the wrong ways.
Hello from Ottawa. yes, thextrucking capital of North America for a few wretched weeks this past winter
Seems like someone has been trolling my page?
Nice job!
Sorry, I wrote the above before you mentioned the film.😂
Another fabulous insight, time moves on but the gentrification of another area shows again disrespect for another area of London that always had and still has true Londoners at its heart who in reality give so much to Londons heritage. Thanks again.
Council tax back then? I don’t think so, you meant ‘Rates’!!!
This reminds me rather of the Conch Republic, a similar attempt by the Florida Keys to secede in response to the US setting up a border checkpoint on their only bridge to the mainland, thus cutting them off from the rest of the United States.
Yet again brilliant Jago.
Thanks!
Brexit is the best thing we ever did :) proved by the events of the past few days. As an ex islander (10 years), this video brings back all the memories of pushing my 2 babies around here and in Greenwich. That foot tunnel is might useful if not mighty dank! Thanks for the trip :)
The most postmodern protest ever?
Every single one of us has the same stupid problem. None of us care about the other guy.
Great love these Videos.
The 'Isle of Dogs' is NOT an Island. As stated in other comments, there was no council tax in 1970 only rates which were paid by homeowners/landlords not tenants so I doubt if the residents of these council blocks were concerned with rates unless they were fortunate enough to own their home which most were not.
Is it always raining and cloudy there? I don't think I've ever seen it sunny in a video there
Yes it's cloudy and miserable frequently here. For rain though, cities like New York get more rainfall in terms of volume than London.
@@jpaulc441 True. London has a temperate oceanic climate. No great temperate extremes, and no great rain totals, but it's very often overcast, cool and damp. NYC is situated in a transitional zone between humid continental climate and humid tropical climate. That means NYC experiences weather extremes. Summers can be very hot and humid, with thunder storms and the occasional hurricane in late summer. Winters can be very cold with temps often dropping below zero C with occasional blizzards.
Johns and Westfallen met with Harold Wilson? You sure about that?
Harold met anybody and everybody, for beer and sarnies at #10 Clowning Street.
Watching this Sep 9th 2020 in Brisbane, Queensland:0730 on a 32 degree forecast day . . . . . . .so . . . .still raining in London then? 😁😁😁
Now I need to know why it was called the Isle of Dogs. Seems insulting to the residents. But I’m sure it was named that before the housing was built.
royal kennels for hunting dogs was there in the middle ages hence it became the island of the dogs
It is my understanding that when King Henry VIII lived in Greenwich Palace on the other side of the river directly opposite the Isle of Dogs, he was constantly disturbed by the barking of his hunting dogs and had them moved across the river so he would not be disturbed by the noise, the place to which the dogs were sent becoming known as the Isle of Dogs.
@@Ben-xe8ps I came here to say exactly this
how do you find all this stuff out?
@MusicalElitist1 woah now, easy there. Some books are not on the internet and some people are not able to reach those books especially now.
MusicalElitist1 ok hun?
Rates were the thing back then, not to be confused with the 'bleep bleep' chai-all of fckthatch'ass poll tax, circa mid 1980's to 1990
just a solidarity thought, have you done any video's in regard to 'FareFight' and 'it's' 1st spawned; Can't Pay, Won't Pay (early 80's) following the 'lairds decision cheap fares were illegal ?
Isle Of Dogs seceding? They did come "bark" to the fold!..... Sorry, that joke was a bit "ruff"! LOL
I think that joke deserves a round of a"paw"lse!
@@scythal I thought it was purrrrrrrfect!
Didn't know this, i have subscribed.
Yep London separate from the rest of the UK .
3:28 Most people on this street have fairly normal cars parked outside their houses... except the ones that for some reason own a Nissan Figaro and an X Type
so instead they knocked it all down and turned it into Canary Wharf
Not all of it. They left some of us behind on the South side of the Island, so we get to constantly fear the day the encroaching skyscrapers finally reach our homes and the council forces us to relocate despite us not having the money to do so.
I love the convenience of Canary Wharf, but I hate its constant expansion with a passion. The fact that the surrounding area has been totally neglected in favour of the shiny glass buildings doesn't help either.
@@gaildahlas Thanks for the info
Thanks great post, keep safe , 👍
The World needs more 'Johns' and less 'Johnsons'.......just shows 'People Power' starts getting things done. Then Govts mess it up with Capitalism....but there's always hope.
Nice video as ever
Very interesting as usual, may thanks! 👍🏼 Just one point the council tax arrived after the hated Poll Tax in the 1990's, before then property owners paid rates, which went to the local councils, but many people didn't pay rates, so it needed reform, well Thatcher thought so anyway?
Great video
One problem with including a wee bit of politics in the video: you end up with a comments section full of ill-informed gibberish, as people use your channel to air their simplistic, media-hyped views on subjects they know hee-haw about.
Oddly enough, I watched another of your videos a few minutes ago and the comments section was interesting, full of helpful, relevant conversation. It's your channel to do with exactly as you wish bnut, if I may make a suggestion: leave the politics out of the Tales from the Tube.
Unfortunately, the railways are a political football themselves and the Underground is certainly no exception. It's hard to keep politics out of a railway channel, especially one with it's roots deeply embedded in the capital city, but from what I see on various YT channels, anything political just brings out the muppetry.
Shame about the comments section, cos this was another interesting little gem, on a subject I know very little about.👌👍😁
Brilliant
Lol
Please refrain from the political cheap shots. They arent neceesary and lessen your otherwise wonderful videos.
Sometimes the truth hurts.
@@jasonuk8333 The truth is in the eye of the beholder. My point was, are they necessaary. Does Jago want to risk offending people for a cheap political shot. Its his channel of course. Say what he wants. I was merely offering a thought. Fortunately Corbyn was defeated so we arent in a communist state and can therefore offer our thoughts on peoples youtube channels.
@@phmc123 Your assertion that Corbyn is a communist only shows your utter ignorance. No huge fan of his, but communist? Pathetic.
"There will be no downside to Brexit, only a considerable upside."
_David Davis_
“The free trade agreement we will have to do should be one of the easiest in human history.”
_Liam Fox_
“The day after we vote to leave, we hold all the cards and we can choose the path we want.”
_Michael Gove_
“There will continue to be free trade and access to the single market”
"I'm in favour of the single market. I want us to be able to trade freely with our European friends and partners."
"We would be inside the single market council, and able to shape legislation"
_Boris Johnson_
“Absolutely nobody is talking about threatening our place in the single market.”
_Daniel Hannan_
"Only a madman would actually leave the single market."
_Owen Patterson_
“Not a single job would be lost because of Brexit.”
_Lord Digby Jones_
"Getting out of the EU can be quick and easy - the UK holds most of the cards"
_John Redwood_
”We will maintain a free flowing border at Dover. We will not impose checks in the port. The only reason we would have queues at the border is if we put in place restrictions that
created those queues. We are not going to do that.”
_Chris Grayling_
“Britain will have access to the single market after we vote Leave.”
“The idea that our trade will suffer... is silly.”
"Farmers will be better off if we vote to leave the EU."
“Let’s give our NHS the £350m the EU takes every week.”
“we would immediately be able to start negotiating new trade deals with emerging economies and the world’s biggest economies which could enter into force immediately after the
UK leaves the EU.”
_Vote Leave_
"there will be broad sunlit uplands"
_Jacob Rees-Mogg_
"We have a great new deal that is ready to go... we can get that deal through a new Parliament in days. It is oven ready. Let’s get Brexit done, and take this country forward."
_Boris Johnson_
“If Brexit is a disaster, I will go and live abroad. I'll go and live somewhere else.”
_Nigel Farage_
phmc123 lots of opinions but don’t dare to show name as picture. That’s a sure sign of a right winger and often racist and Brexiters. Always pussies and what do I find further down in the comments, a true facist comment. If you are way out on the right side everything is communism, for some even The Tory party is. You grandparents fought what you embrace, you should be ashamed of yourselves.
0:28
‘the one he deliberately stoked...’
nothing like introducing tendency early - you have lost my interest already - that sense that this misjudgement in a small matter will necessarily condition your view in any matter.
Here’s to a compact Britain making her individual way around the world again in mutually beneficial trades and adding to those - political alliances and cultural ties as well as conversing with old friends.
So good not to have to see everything France and Germany’s way and suffer their perpetual derogade while they run our country down both verbally and physically.
Good luck Europe - better luck Britain.
You were pushed into this ill-suited fellowship by US policy requirements 50 years ago when you were still staggering from losses incurred in a recent almighty conflict - time now to move out up and onward and let the ‘wrong side of history’ take these bleating troglodytes into the dark backward and abysm of time.
Better still I hope they develop a healthy and positive imagination outside a state of servitude.
That’s a long comment for someone whose interest was lost.
@@JagoHazzard yeah, long comment for someone who voted to gut our nation, I wonder if he thinks Boris and his disaster capitalists are going to save the nation...
@@JagoHazzard a long comment with valid points which remain unrefuted.
@@ichibanmanekineko Looking at the state of the country right now, I'd have to say that Jago was spot on.
@@ichibanmanekinekoCan't refute reality, however much the moaners try . . .
I am one of those that would love to see London complete the the Brexit bollocks to its conclusion as it voted overwhelmingly to remain in the EU, it is frequented by visiting EU persons and has a service industry maintained largely by EU members; lest we forget, we can get a tube (well a super tube if you will) from London to Paris and despite being on the front lines, as it were, we all celebrate the EU membership now and for always! REJOIN THE BLOC!!!!
Paris beckons . . . ?
@@EllieMaes-Grandad I can get a direct train from down the road to Paris, although I have neither gone or declined to visit, but I did previously appreciate how easy access to mainland Europe was before the decision to make it hard to access the UK's biggest market was dealt an even more paperwork that it hasn't been this difficult to trade with them since the 1920s... have a slow clap of congratulations to all those people who contributed to it.
@@dambrooks7578 You were trading with European partners in the 1920s? . . . . as if! Quit the b/s - support your country (if UK is your country). If it isn't, just go away . . .