Barnsley 60's

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  • Опубликовано: 1 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 114

  • @barnabyhughes5643
    @barnabyhughes5643 Год назад +11

    A wonderful little insight into the shameful architectural vandalism that largely occurred in this country during the 1960's. Thank God they started to list buildings from the 1970's onwards otherwise we would all be living in a concrete dystopia that would resemble Romania at it's worst under Ceausescu!!!

  • @maggymay7827
    @maggymay7827 9 лет назад +24

    Margaret Thatcher did Barnsley in plus the rest of South Yorkshire .

  • @prettycastle1973
    @prettycastle1973 10 лет назад +32

    "I like Barnsley but, I wish it didn't look so much of a dump!" Sentiments I still share in 2014!

    • @falseteeth5621
      @falseteeth5621 9 лет назад +3

      It's no worse than any other industrial town and better than a lot.

    • @channelgettingdeletedon1ma390
      @channelgettingdeletedon1ma390 9 лет назад +1

      Agreed

    • @agirlwholikeskittys
      @agirlwholikeskittys 9 лет назад +1

      prettycastle1973 crap, its miles better than it used to be, looks pretty bad in the video and the narrator is very down on little old Barnsley. YOUUUUUUU REDSSSSSSSSS

    • @silversurfergamer
      @silversurfergamer 8 лет назад +2

      welcome to the north south divide of the Tory government..

    • @carole_Uk
      @carole_Uk 6 месяцев назад

      Barnsley is no longer a dump. The glassworks and town renovation beats any town around Yorkshire IMHO.

  • @mathewgreen4099
    @mathewgreen4099 8 лет назад +21

    Ian Nairn always seemed to get so emotional about the places & buildings that he presented. I can't help but like him.

    • @doktoruzo
      @doktoruzo 4 года назад +2

      Ian Nairn was a superb presenter. Sadly, drank himself to death aged 52 in 1983.

  • @damiangreen838
    @damiangreen838 10 лет назад +21

    That chap talks sense! YOu might call it depressing but hes spot on. Im not old enough to remember a lot in the town but from the pictures ive seen and from talking to parents etc.. the way they just knocked down our heritage and put up soulless concrete buildings was criminal. We'l never get that back. Its happening again now. Wish that guy had been brought in before they started pulling it all down - we might have some nice old buildings now like Chesterfield and Leeds etc..

    • @falseteeth5621
      @falseteeth5621 9 лет назад +2

      There are still old buildings in the town if you gake the time to look - especially look up. All of Huddersfield Road, the Civic Hall, Town Hall, Penny Bank Building, Ashley Jackson's etc.

  • @davidhunt1384
    @davidhunt1384 9 лет назад +28

    i love my hometown but i wish they had kept more of the old buildings. can just about remember the viaduct should definetely kept that, shame, the guy on film talks a lot of sense.

  • @glyndyer4052
    @glyndyer4052 8 лет назад +7

    I remember that market, the hustle and bustle, the stench of fish and pie and peas floating over. Aye it's good up North.....

  • @craigsweeting507
    @craigsweeting507 2 года назад +4

    The narrator is so true in what he says, I'm a Barnsley lad born an Bred and his prediction of market is spot on.

  • @procrastination_productions
    @procrastination_productions 2 месяца назад +1

    1:22 got it 100% right all the way back in ‘67 we still have this problem.

  • @MrVTEC555
    @MrVTEC555 7 лет назад +16

    Thatcher screwed this place real bad. The government really don't care about the north. I've lived in Barnsley for a while and I'm impressed with how much progress its made. They've knocked down a lot of the buildings, which they should've kept. I've never had issues with anyone in Barnsley and I don't mind the place. I've lived in Huddersfield and that's miles worse. It's a complete crap hole filled with 'wanna be' hard men. Barnsley is better than most industrial towns today.

  • @Joanna7428
    @Joanna7428 Год назад +2

    It's changed quite a lot since the 60s! Lovely to see old footage though.

  • @daystatesniper01
    @daystatesniper01 6 месяцев назад

    What a great video loved the old cars , and the disused railway viaduct , one of my uncles used to work at Barnsley Exchange station he would love to get hold of one of the old station signs from there

  • @barnsleymat
    @barnsleymat Год назад +3

    I'd love this Pillock to see it now. Proper town centre

  • @mickymack1230
    @mickymack1230 Год назад +1

    One of my "Reasons to be cheerful" Ian Nairn!

  • @leesmith9821
    @leesmith9821 6 лет назад +4

    All those new building plans were built but are now being torn down to make way for new. Barnsley has been undergoing a massive makeover over the last few years and will be transformed into a fantastic place to live and work.

  • @jhjh321
    @jhjh321 5 лет назад +6

    The Belgians would put camels there.......by far the best thing I've ever heard

  • @fraserhardmetal7143
    @fraserhardmetal7143 6 лет назад +4

    It's from Nairn's Europe, screened on the 23rd July 1970.

  • @hatiice
    @hatiice 5 лет назад +1

    Miss Barnsley😔 need to visit again.

  • @davidstorton910
    @davidstorton910 9 лет назад +6

    I'm from Barnsley and worked on the market in the 60's and every day I thank God I don't live there anymore, they could have made such a lot out of it but did nothing but throw up concrete building totaly without soul or thought to people having to live there

    • @davidstorton910
      @davidstorton910 9 лет назад

      Weymouth, a lovely part of the world

    • @jimboBFC1
      @jimboBFC1 9 лет назад

      +Pube Well said Pube but David Storton has a point. I've grown up with those hideous concrete buildings and even as a kid I looked at them, I wondered, and I realize now that i hated them. I can't say that i'm fond of the new design either. It looks cheap and lacks character. Maybe it'll look better in the flesh but i'm not holding out too much hope. It'll probably be ridiculed and demolished in 40 years time. I like the new Bus station. It has imagination and character. it's just 1 or 2 buildings that are around it that make it look out of place. Hopefully when the soulless concrete shithole Market is finally demolished and the new market goes up we might see some symmetry and coordination. The town has some great Victorian buildings. Couple those up with some nice new architecture and you'll find they strangely go hand in hand. It's the monstrosities that went up in the 60's and 70's that make the town look bad. These type of poorly thought out buildings went up not just in Barnsley but in Sheffield too. The City centre of Sheff looks so much better now than it did 25 years ago. That's thanks to some major investment and architectural imagination. We could emulate them by investing properly in our town centre.Something else that would vastly improve the town is a Railway viaduct like the one that used to go to the Old Courthouse Station. What a travesty that this became unused and demolished in favour of our current set up. As usual the decision to choose the Sheffield Midland railway route was taken without enough thought. How many town centres have those stupid railway barriers continually disrupting the flow of people and traffic? I'm Barnsley born and bred, I live in the Oakwell area in a humble terrace but I refuse to hide behind sentimentality when it comes to our Tarn centre. Some awful decisions have been made over the years by the powers that be. I guess as the people of Barnsley we just learned to live with it but when some constructive criticism comes, you have got to take it in and look at it objectively.

    • @davidstorton910
      @davidstorton910 9 лет назад +1

      I would love Barnsley to have the character that it did in the 60s it was an old fashioned market town and I lived there and worked on the market, but sadly those days are gone and we are left with what the planners think we should be living in , it's really a shame they don't have to live in this shite themselves

    • @silversurfergamer
      @silversurfergamer 8 лет назад +3

      if those are the buildings i think you are talking about... they have just knocked a whole lot of them down if you are meaning near the bus station town center.. the most hideous things ever,, but thats the 70s for you.... The time of no style i call it..

    • @davidstorton910
      @davidstorton910 8 лет назад +1

      And I think you have the right of it

  • @johnboughen3064
    @johnboughen3064 3 года назад +2

    "there's going to be big changes in this marketplace soon", oh yes, nothing you could imagine, why would you, however you were warned.

  • @glenbetton3146
    @glenbetton3146 9 месяцев назад

    Interesting......most everything he said rang true and now some 50 years later, after decades of neglect and decay, many of those ideas have been put in place and the centre now looks surprisingly modern, clean, inviting and well developed, which for a post industrial town in the north is quite an achievement.

  • @pauloliver6813
    @pauloliver6813 10 лет назад +9

    Its actually 1975.
    Ian Nairn- one of the greatest champions of Architecture fit for purpose. A hero.

    • @grahamb7660
      @grahamb7660 10 лет назад +3

      Its 1967 actually ...........By 1975 the Market Complex was up. Court House Station was a car park.......and Eldon Street was a one way system

    • @pauloliver6813
      @pauloliver6813 10 лет назад

      Graham B You're right.

    • @oleggorky906
      @oleggorky906 9 лет назад

      Paul Oliver at the very least it's got to be before 1971. The prices on the stalls were marked up in imperial: 1s and 6p etc.

  • @kingkong81icloud
    @kingkong81icloud 21 день назад

    Amazing to see them plan that market and multi story car park an now it’s all been knocked down and it’s all brand new again

  • @apodis4900
    @apodis4900 6 лет назад +4

    He was on the money for sure. They ripped the guts out of Barnsley. Look at Pontefract, it's what Barnsley could have been like. Full of original old buildings with a bit of new sympathetically added. They may do a good job of the new town center, but it will still remain without soul because the history has gone. Still, it will always be home to me, and a lot of the surrounding villages still retain their charm and character(s).

  • @peterrobinson2485
    @peterrobinson2485 2 года назад +2

    the redevelopment of the market, which i think was opened by the Queen in 1977, lasted until recently and the next iteration has recently been unveiled.
    i've not seen the Glass Works up close yet, but it has to be much better than the previous concrete monstrosity.

  • @MrVerge
    @MrVerge 4 года назад +3

    I'm guessing everyone here are in Barnsley and thought it would be cool to look it up

    • @Rosso1990
      @Rosso1990 4 года назад

      Yep pretty much haha

    • @ChrisRamsbottom
      @ChrisRamsbottom Год назад

      no but I used to live there, left 25 years ago and was amazed to see how things were before I got there 10 years earlier

  • @stuartallen6066
    @stuartallen6066 10 лет назад +5

    My home town

  • @joepowell57uk
    @joepowell57uk 11 лет назад +3

    Fantastic, just what most people in Barnsley were thinking. What were the council thinking, that could open a can of worms. What happened to all the exhibits in the civic hall museum are they all accounted for?

    • @kevingreen20
      @kevingreen20 4 года назад +4

      I'm a Barnsley lad, and was already a working man when this film was made. The guy is bang on in his comments. I wonder what he would have made of the present redevelopment. I know what I think of it - give an architect a pencil, a set square and a straightedge, then take away his imagination, and the new centre is what you end up with. The new library looks like a stack of shipping containers, with the rest of the development shaping up the same way. No character at all, soulless and bland.

  • @vincerobinson6144
    @vincerobinson6144 Год назад

    Good to see Poulsons Architects mentioned in relation to YMCA building. My dad worked for them as a QS.

  • @MattBlackUK
    @MattBlackUK 4 года назад +1

    Amazing to see what my home town was like before I was born 😊

  • @peterdyson9590
    @peterdyson9590 9 месяцев назад

    My Father was Born in Barnsley and the
    people there are very good easy to talk to
    i like to see the tykes win its alright
    Ian saying we should redevelope a place
    like Barnsley wheres the money coming
    from?myself i live in Bridlington i just
    like it by the sea.
    ❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @SCHRUBBE1966
    @SCHRUBBE1966 Год назад

    going to move there .. just seems like awesome

  • @nialloneill5097
    @nialloneill5097 2 года назад +2

    He sounds as depressed as I have always been, when visiting Barnsley town centre, even our local town in Wombwell was better than this. That's gone under as well now due to lack of jobs and money and community. There was real character and personality there in the 60's and 70's, especially around the markets, but it all began to die after the strike, with demotion of pubs to piles of rubble. This is integarl to death of these communities, as these drinking houses and pits were community hubs, but never replaced. In Wombwell there were two good markets too, although Barnsley was the biggest. I recall being dragged down there when about 5 or 6 (1963 ish) in the pouring rain, just like in the video, amongst many old uns who scurried around looking for a bargain, and whose ears were highly receptive to the cries of the market stallers who proclaimed great bargains... not one, not two, and not three, but five for a quid, but get it now, as it's a once in a lifetime buy. And they did, trampling over anything that barred their way to their bargain. The side of Barnsley up Huddersfield Rd from the Town Hall he highlighted had a nice feel to it, but it was the money side, whereas going the other way up the River Dearne Valley, and towards the Don Valley, was really, really rough in parts. This was the biggest and busiest industrial site in Europe, maybe the world, full of beer-swilling and hard-working men, who worked and played hard, oft in extremely dangerous and low-paid jobs. They had little time for genuine beauty, but plenty of time for beer and bargains, and so the town centre reflected this philosophy, where money tended to be spent on the very basics of life, along with pleasures, usually the pub, footie, or fishing. Back in those days, I don't remember seeing men around, as they were at work, apart from really old retirees, but it was nearly all older women with their headscarves over their heads, and thick, long coats drooping to the floor, as it was cold back then, real cold There are a few localised sites near Wentworth, and towards Huddersfield that have a distinct beauty, some elegance, that reflect wealth and thoughtfulness in their architecture, but those in the mining villages didn't seem to care, and neither did the Council. I therefore agree with other commentators here who suggest it was s h_t hole before these developments, and an even bigger one after, and now with abated breath we await the next development, and my preliminary view is that it's more of the same...a heartless, soulless mess, although the bus arrangements were improved, but then they couldn't get worse. Perhaps, this is the point though, these people's soul was in their communities, and the heart of these were the pits and the pubs, along with the canals and reservoirs where they fished, so shopping was a necessity to be done as cheaply as possible, and with as many bargains. Hence why the markets and £ shops and Wilkos thrived here, well before these emigrated into southern towns, during the general and more recent demise of the British retail town centres. And so as with life in general, you get what you wished for, and since hardly anybody gave a damn, you get a sh_t ole!!! I would be intrigued to see the localities before the 1900's though in a stand-alone scene, as there's plenty of nice stone houses around from those days, and we had all the canals back then, with lock houses, theatres and such, suggesting it was quite a cultured place, but for whom I wonder, for did the miners from those back-to-back red brick housing rows sat next to their collieries attend such places??? And did they give a damn?

  • @RichardDarn1
    @RichardDarn1 8 лет назад +4

    Remember this programme at the time - perhaps a bit selective but on the whole on the money.

  • @muir8009
    @muir8009 Год назад

    This is fascinating. The guys a legend. I have absolutely no idea why RUclips had this queued for me but maybe it knows what I want to watch than I do.
    Tbh being a kiwi its hard to relate to the urban decay as here. Theres a similar period Stockton and Darlington railway documentary with artist David Sheppard and he's just as disparaging regarding the then state of urban decay as Ian Nairn.
    Britain almost seemed to hit some trough of cultural collapse in the seventies. Just thinking of the morbese car industry and its self destruction. The stark reality of any form of civic or urban development or beautification plans. The essential collapse of the northern industrial heart (cars, manufacturing, mining that kind of thing).
    Even the apocalyptic vision as presented in Qatermass or Clockwork Orange: no nuclear wasteland, no robots or AI takes over the world; just the societal collapse, moral bankruptcy where the "weather" reports just predict counties' blackouts.
    Almost like Britain was just pushing time for a new awakening. Fascinating period.
    P.S why is Barnsley singled out? Is it some cultural capital of the North?

  • @leigh7507
    @leigh7507 10 месяцев назад

    Love the grim depression of it all. Love northern misery

  • @renegade-master29
    @renegade-master29 2 года назад

    Love Barnsley it's like a mini Glasgow or Belfast lol

    • @renegade-master29
      @renegade-master29 Год назад

      @monkeyspanner1186 I totally agree but for what it's truly worth it's owned by the banking mafia of Israel and we did people don't get a say

  • @abmcelln
    @abmcelln 10 лет назад +2

    What a depressing chap, he'd throw himself under a bus if he seen it today. Great video though, really good watch.

    • @Michaelbrown1995
      @Michaelbrown1995 10 лет назад +8

      That's Ian Nairn. He traveled Britain and expressed his opinions on architecture and practicality of buildings and town planning around England and Scotland in several brilliant and controversial television series. Sure - a lot of the time he sounds rather depressing in what he says... but most of it is the truth.
      He really is quite a great presenter and has a unique way with words.

    • @abmcelln
      @abmcelln 10 лет назад +4

      Michaelbrown1995 I agree, he does undoubtedly know his stuff and saying that I'd much rather have him presenting a program like this than those we have on tv today that look and sound good but haven't a clue on what they are talking about.
      I'm surprised by the quality of the footage and audio for that time. Whoever has preserved it has done an excellent job.

  • @AmyWinehouse4Life-Blake
    @AmyWinehouse4Life-Blake 3 года назад +2

    I luv tarn!

  • @HeyGamer69
    @HeyGamer69 6 лет назад

    So different from when I was living there

  • @paulbaumer8210
    @paulbaumer8210 4 года назад +3

    "This can't be coincidence."
    It's not. It's the British class system: keeping the peasants down.

  • @Walkwithpaul1
    @Walkwithpaul1 4 года назад

    Will look better now once all the works has been completed with glass works etc

  • @ConspiracyLoon
    @ConspiracyLoon 25 дней назад

    When did the gradiented tax system start??

  • @GreyWingUK
    @GreyWingUK 2 года назад +1

    He wanted to put medium/high rise flats in Monk Bretton? No thanks

  • @kristijanajuhas3285
    @kristijanajuhas3285 5 лет назад +2

    BARNSLEY 2019 LOL

  • @thezebrafromheaven7568
    @thezebrafromheaven7568 2 года назад

    There might be camels up there, Ian.

  • @TheSecondof5
    @TheSecondof5 2 года назад

    The Luftwaffe couldn't have done a worse job on Barnsley and they are still making a pigs ear of it.

  • @susandroger8248
    @susandroger8248 3 года назад +3

    Didnt they make a balls up.A bluming disgrace

  • @GreyWingUK
    @GreyWingUK Год назад

    That's a guy must have an affiliate scheme with the Samaritans.

  • @Bloxdio_God
    @Bloxdio_God 5 лет назад +14

    Immigration has destroyed Barnsley. Powell was so right. Why didn't anyone listen to him.

    • @Bloxdio_God
      @Bloxdio_God 3 года назад +2

      @John Cliff he is so right and yet the media will not have any mention of it.

    • @karenwright4587
      @karenwright4587 3 года назад

      Too right my friend

    • @nialloneill5097
      @nialloneill5097 2 года назад +2

      Many mill tarns changed int 50's and 60's, but coz Barnsley was a mining tarn, they dint come thear, not till pits had cluosed.

    • @fishermansid8861
      @fishermansid8861 2 года назад

      But the clown 🤡 Powell brought the immigrants in to work in the NHS , how contradictory is that .

    • @jamessmith84240
      @jamessmith84240 Год назад +1

      @@nialloneill5097 Very amusing XD

  • @Roscoe.P.Coldchain
    @Roscoe.P.Coldchain 2 года назад

    Az Tha gor any chicken tikka fort bird..? 😂

    • @Joanna7428
      @Joanna7428 Год назад

      Would expect nothing more from a Leeds fan! We've expanded from chicken tikka now in Barnsley - we have chips with it now 😁

  • @oguzri4487
    @oguzri4487 2 года назад

    Ağdam uşaglarına aqromnu salamlar 02 02 2022 2 fevral 2022

  • @888ssss
    @888ssss 2 года назад

    He turned out to be wildly wrong.

  • @denisekinderman894
    @denisekinderman894 8 лет назад +1

    Makes such a statement. Sad.

    • @denisekinderman894
      @denisekinderman894 8 лет назад

      Reminds me of the Dickens novels.

    • @stevebardsley6830
      @stevebardsley6830 5 лет назад +1

      Barnsley market waste of time flaten barnsley put houses there waste of money council not worth a toss

  • @kingkong81icloud
    @kingkong81icloud 21 день назад

    I know why the hedonism nightclub got burnt down in a arson attack, a tit for tat argument about who was setting up running it an some kids burned it down for someone I know, bit bad that am glad I was nothing to do with it , they was an old burial site underneath it

  • @bretwalda8543
    @bretwalda8543 5 лет назад +10

    Full of foreigners now

    • @doktoruzo
      @doktoruzo 4 года назад +3

      yes, unfortunately. Like most of Europe. And still they come...with the likes of Merkel inviting over 1 million Muslims to Germany. Ha, you couldn't make it up.

    • @nialloneill5097
      @nialloneill5097 2 года назад +1

      Not when I woz a young 'un

  • @chriswaring5565
    @chriswaring5565 6 месяцев назад

    NOT TOO KEEN OF NEW BARNSLEY MARKET ME SEN NOT LIKE THE ONE IN 70S WHEN ME & MY SISTER ALISON WENT WITH OUR GRANDMA, WARING AND GRANDMA RAWSON 5:42 THAT WAS THE COURTHOUSE RAILWAY STATION THATS NOW COUTHOUSE PUB

  • @andykerfoot6624
    @andykerfoot6624 7 лет назад

    Sadly it isn't any better today. . . . . . .

    • @justaiden1268
      @justaiden1268 7 лет назад +1

      Andy Kerfoot are you even from Barnsely

    • @justaiden1268
      @justaiden1268 7 лет назад +1

      Andy Kerfoot no that's the tarn reyt not the entire town

  • @celestialteapot309
    @celestialteapot309 4 года назад +1

    not a man t listen to if you feel depressed

  • @MAGA-Morons
    @MAGA-Morons Месяц назад

    Don't look like it now