The Buildings of the Gore: Part One

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  • Опубликовано: 10 дек 2024

Комментарии • 53

  • @donniethomas7013
    @donniethomas7013 4 года назад +5

    The new Woolworth's was my first job 1976-1978. Nice to see it again!

  • @suzydolan6723
    @suzydolan6723 7 месяцев назад +2

    My sister Nicole worked at Robinson’s in the print shop where they made all the signs for the store .I still remembre going up to see her at work once. I was so impressed. She had to take blocks of letters and form word backwards so once printed they would be correct.

  • @vassa1972
    @vassa1972 3 года назад +2

    Never heard of Robertson store before but I did grow up in westdale in the mid 70's and remember coming downtown to a few stores along King with my mom and my grandmother and baby brother Chris

  • @maureendwyer1578
    @maureendwyer1578 3 года назад +3

    I believe the narrator is Margaret Houghton, who was head Archivist at the HPL, and published several books about Hamilton. She was a font of knowledge about this city, which is still an amazing place to live and work!

  • @qualityman1965
    @qualityman1965 3 года назад +5

    My wife's uncle worked at Robinson's. I remember going in there to see him way before his niece became my wife. Poor guy too old to remember now.
    Woolworth had a photo booth in the basement in the 1980s. It's where I got my first passport photos done. Wow. The memories, that's what lasts a life time

  • @harlow9175
    @harlow9175 10 лет назад +7

    Thanks to Local History and Archives, I always look forward to seeing these videos of my hometown...excellent work !

  • @lancelange9377
    @lancelange9377 3 года назад +3

    I'm glad we have videos like this to look at. It seems like there's been an obsession with destroying all unique history in Hamilton.

  • @guitarwiz2000
    @guitarwiz2000 10 лет назад +4

    I really enjoyed this journey into Hamilton's incredible past. Please continue producing these videos.

  • @starbright1256
    @starbright1256 3 года назад +4

    I would go back in time...in a heartbeat. Go Ole days. These days just depressing

  • @gammakrush905
    @gammakrush905 3 года назад +1

    Salute Urban Alley (2003-2017). And yesterday (July 24) was Ed Mirvish's birthday.

  • @vassa1972
    @vassa1972 3 года назад +1

    Very cool video I'm Peter from downtown Hamilton east end at 24 Tisdale street south and been told that there was a watermill where my appartment building stands now

  • @mgl8753
    @mgl8753 10 лет назад +10

    What a fantastic, and thoughtful video of Hamilton's booming past! I remember going to Woolworths when I was a kid too, and getting chocolates from one of those booths in the middle of the store. I also remember seeing Santa Claus at Robinsons, and having lunch at the lunch counter at Kresges. As nice as this video is, I noticed a theme: Hamilton started to lose its steam in the 80s. All the businesses that made the downtown core worth visiting, went belly up.
    I haven't lived in Hamilton for over 6 years now, but I have heard that it is slowly picking up momentum again, and businesses are interested in investing in Hamilton again. I can only hope that Hamilton will be like it was for us, for our children.

    • @Preppy-b2j
      @Preppy-b2j 2 года назад +1

      We still have Woolworth in Perth Australia

  • @Cromwell564
    @Cromwell564 9 лет назад +12

    I'm sure malls played a big roll in the decline of the core. People would rather walk from store to store indoors safe from the elements. I like how they made Jackson Square's roof. It's nice to cut across the top instead of going through the mall or around it. I just think the roof could be used for so much more. They should get rooftop events and vendors. The roof is an untapped resource for Jackson Square.

    • @nmac3718
      @nmac3718 7 лет назад +1

      Jim Gordon very very good point

  • @AfternoonsInStereo
    @AfternoonsInStereo 10 лет назад +5

    Far and away the best documentaries produced on Hamilton's glorious past. Many in the past have been informative but very cheaply done; it is nice to see the Library get it right, using every trick available to produce high-quality videos, I can't wait for the next one! I hope we might get to see glimpses of the downtown in the late 70's and early 80's, for those of us born in the latter half of the 20th century this is the way we remember it, at the tail end of it's former glory and the beginning of it's slow decline :( Would looooove also to see something about Hamilton Mountain one day too -- Concession St, Upper James, the expanding suburbs, the original Mountain Plaza (outdoors!), the original incarnation of Limeridge Mall, the building of the Linc ...

  • @AvgJoeCda
    @AvgJoeCda 4 года назад +1

    Love the details by the narrator.

  • @Gedvondur
    @Gedvondur 10 лет назад +4

    Wow! This is great stuff!

  • @northhankspin
    @northhankspin 9 лет назад +2

    This is great. thank you very much for posting this.

  • @rayn1ful
    @rayn1ful 2 года назад +1

    i like the old bank of hamilton building . it was too beautiful for them to demolish .

  • @ivobiancucci4528
    @ivobiancucci4528 6 лет назад +4

    Didn't see anyone with a sign asking for change

  • @LanceLange
    @LanceLange 9 лет назад +3

    Great video. Makes me sad that they tore down Robinsons for a parking lot.

  • @heidiheidi4662
    @heidiheidi4662 3 года назад +2

    Why don't we have more photos of all of these colossal masterpieces buildings being BUILT?

    • @Hamilton-Public-Library
      @Hamilton-Public-Library  3 года назад

      Hi Heidi, HPL's Local History & Archives collections are acquired through donations. We would love to have more photos and videos of historic Hamilton buildings and architecture. Anyone wishing to donate can email us at AskHPL@hpl.ca
      Thank you. - Team HPL

  • @CityGirlCountry
    @CityGirlCountry 9 лет назад +5

    I briefly lived in Hamilton to attend college in the late 1980s, but I have a strange fondness for Steeltown. It's gritty, but has tremendous spunk and potential. No wonder why it has also been nicknamed the Ambitious City.

    • @ComedySceenwriter
      @ComedySceenwriter 5 лет назад +1

      It would be more flattering if you didn't call it a "strange" fondness.

    • @0xsergy
      @0xsergy 2 года назад +2

      @@ComedySceenwriter it is strange to have a fondness for a post boom steel town, lol. and i speak as one who is fond of hamilton :P

  • @starbright1256
    @starbright1256 3 года назад +2

    So many fires.. wow

  • @arthurdewith7608
    @arthurdewith7608 4 года назад +2

    Downtown Hamilton has become a drive thru

  • @larryclement1917
    @larryclement1917 3 года назад +4

    It's a wonderful video, which would be so much better without the piano music interfering with the spoken description.

  • @KarenNewtonCanada
    @KarenNewtonCanada 8 лет назад +1

    That was excellent.

  • @rbesfe
    @rbesfe 9 месяцев назад +1

    Hamilton has nice building or buildings -> torn down for "urban renewal" -> failing mall or parking lot built in its place
    This city deserves the problems it has now. Bad leadership and shortsighted decisions are a Hamilton specialty.

  • @doughale3024
    @doughale3024 Год назад +1

    In reply to Mg. Businesses aren't interested in investing in Hamilton. The days of well paying jobs like American Can, Westinghouse, Proctor & Gamble, Stelco (it's just surviving in Hamilton) Harvester, are gone. Blue collar city it isn't. Stay in school, if you can, & become a professional or tradesman. Something with a good guaranteed income. You can't buy a house working at landscaping. The businesses in downtown went belly up was because of Jackson Square. The only ones investing are condo people.

  • @oldsteamguy
    @oldsteamguy 9 лет назад +3

    If this is the 4th episode and it is called "part one" where does the series begin?

  • @davidwan2488
    @davidwan2488 3 года назад +1

    every cities fall represent its development doesn't fit the modern requirements. and once its inline with the world's trend again it rise

  • @firefightergoggie
    @firefightergoggie 8 лет назад +5

    I moved away from Hamilton 17 years ago and never looked back. It's a decaying city. Makes me sad to think of what it once was and what it could have been. Wish I could get my family out of there.

    • @345Taco
      @345Taco 8 лет назад +6

      That seems a tad melodramatic. It's not Compton and there's plenty of nice areas.

    • @tommysoprano1441
      @tommysoprano1441 8 лет назад +3

      I guess you do not visit your family eh ?? Shows what a jerk you are.. Hamilton is not East Berlin. Shows you have not been here in a while. Its fast growing vibrant city with huge investments coming out way..... was just named the number 1 city in Canada for Real Estate. When you leave the shit hole city you now call home..... come and visit your family and take a drive around Hamilton. You might want to move back. But maybe Hamilton does not want you back. " I wish I could get my family out of there" LOL they probably tell you they hate becasue they dont want you to come back.

    • @ComedySceenwriter
      @ComedySceenwriter 5 лет назад +1

      Ummm try looking up the average salary in Hamilton... It's not Buffalo.

    • @arthurdewith7608
      @arthurdewith7608 4 года назад +1

      @@tommysoprano1441 all new hamilton development is condos this market is flat now and overpriced time for tlme new ideas

    • @tommysoprano1441
      @tommysoprano1441 4 года назад +1

      @@arthurdewith7608 I live in the Hammer and I would agree you on that. It is over priced , my son just bought a brand new town house on the west mountain. It cost him 500,000 That's a lot of mortgage for a young couple to handle.

  • @charltonbolden9356
    @charltonbolden9356 5 лет назад +1

    I want to visit the store Ligett Rexall Drugs in Dania Beach, FFL.!

  • @Kitzkrieg
    @Kitzkrieg 2 года назад +2

    Please edit without the music in the background... its too loud and distracting... can barely understand the narration

  • @msdee7444
    @msdee7444 3 года назад +1

    Fred Eisenburger is the worst Mayor ever. What has he done? Now there is talk about closing the Downtown Farmers Market which is a great legacy of Hamilton.