New York / Manhattan 1965

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  • Опубликовано: 20 окт 2024

Комментарии • 793

  • @jimvinespresents...8463
    @jimvinespresents...8463 6 лет назад +140

    I was born in NYC in 1963...so I was there. It's wonderful seeing that town the way it was. Thank you for posting!

    • @saeedurrahman2056
      @saeedurrahman2056 4 года назад +6

      You are 56/57 years old now

    • @Papa-o33963
      @Papa-o33963 4 года назад +12

      I was born in 1963 NYC. I miss Mom n those years. Great times n experiences.

    • @jimvinespresents...8463
      @jimvinespresents...8463 4 года назад +5

      @@Papa-o33963 If you don't mind my asking: Where'd you live?

    • @alanmoon636
      @alanmoon636 4 года назад +7

      my dad born 1963 to😂 i am born 1998

    • @christinefleetwood6632
      @christinefleetwood6632 4 года назад +3

      I was born 71, but I remember what you all said when you were with us as kids, the stones and cher, its was really modern in 65.

  • @diannefaith7866
    @diannefaith7866 2 года назад +28

    I was born in 1959 in Manhattan NY… These streets and the way people dressed bring fond memories!,, My parents met in NYC… my dad was a singer…. He sang in Carnegie Hall !! So proud of him !,,, I was born from Puerto Rican Parent’s🇵🇷🇵🇷🇵🇷 I studied to be an Educator and a Librarian!! And a proud New Yorker!!

  • @bluesborn
    @bluesborn 10 лет назад +338

    I'm 55 and was 7 years old when this was filmed.It was so different back then it's hard to describe.No cell phones or computers,stereo equipment was primitive.I never even saw a color TV until about 1969 and the television we did have was comprised of about 3 or 4 good channels. CBS-ABC-NBC were about it with a few local shows and half the time the reception was awful! Still it was a wonderful exciting time to be alive.

    • @billanthony7896
      @billanthony7896 6 лет назад +6

      Come on, bluesborn. Half the excitement was waiting on the technology to catch up with consumer demand. Personally, I'm still hoping for those personal jet packs to get perfected and catch on!

    • @ralphsanchico2452
      @ralphsanchico2452 6 лет назад +35

      Im 60 and a native New Yorker from Brooklyn. I concur, and even the worst moments were good compared to today. My dad knew this city like the back of his hand and we ALL couldn't wait for those Sunday drives after church either to Coney island Sheepshead bay and parts of Queens and Long Island to visit some of their friends. Obviously Summer was the best time. We would go to the city (NYC) via the A train and walk for hours just to past the time. I sometimes have to stop watching because it really gets too nostalgic and I get a bit emotional inside remembering those days and the many people (who have past on) that we grew up with. But I'm so glad that these vids are posted. Oh! and don't forget those little transistor radios we used to carry around with us. The original Ipod! (lol)

    • @SNLGUY
      @SNLGUY 6 лет назад +9

      The radio was still somewhat popular and if you go back in time from 65 the radio was the only thing. You had radio programs like "The Shadow". Families gathered around the radio the way they do with television now. Although families do not gather as much as the old days.

    • @ZnenTitan
      @ZnenTitan 6 лет назад +4

      Ralph Sanchico I remember those days as well, but from Washington D.C. (my dad grew up in the Bronx and later Hempstead) and know the longing for a time when things seemed to just make more "sense" can be overwhelming. BTW, I remember when my sister got one of those "new" transistor radios, I think it was made by Zenith.

    • @ralphsanchico2452
      @ralphsanchico2452 6 лет назад +4

      Your'e absolutely correct. I think RCA might've had one as well. But if I'm not mistaken, didn't the Japanese have a strong market in those devices? Anyway, I remember walking past some of the shops and seeing them in the display windows. it was like electronic "Eye Candy"! (haha)

  • @tonyc7301
    @tonyc7301 4 года назад +46

    Most men wearing suits and women wearing dresses. You're lucky if a wedding looks that formal today.

    • @00wynters
      @00wynters 3 года назад

      I’ve never seen anyone wear anything other than suits or dresses to a wedding

    • @user-or6yn8pm3c
      @user-or6yn8pm3c Год назад +6

      Most people dress like hobos in NYC including the rich. People are heavily overweight or look sick these days and either physically or mentally or both.

    • @shaylawatson1244
      @shaylawatson1244 Год назад +2

      Yeah you right about that because this genration act like they ain't got no common sense 😂

    • @user-xg5kh9ci4f
      @user-xg5kh9ci4f 11 месяцев назад +1

      Today's generation is rude disrespectful with no common sense and simply put, just dumb

    • @kevinmadden1645
      @kevinmadden1645 4 месяца назад +4

      Th​@@shaylawatson1244They don"t know much about grammar either .

  • @lillydejesus9510
    @lillydejesus9510 3 года назад +13

    I was born in 1962 in Bellevue hospital after my father came from the Korean war he met my mom. My dad became a mailman and life was good. every summer my dad took us to Puerto Rico and we would spend two months out there and life was good I miss those early years of my life. I'm glad my parents stood married for almost 60 years my father passed away 7 months ago. And I miss him. He was born in 1930 and he's a purple heart recipient. Strong strong character funny and badass. But to be in New York you had to be like that.

  • @holysmokes4259
    @holysmokes4259 Год назад +5

    As a 23 year old my father landed in NYC from South America 3 months prior to this video being recorded. It's interesting to see what he was seeing in 1965, the clothing, womens hair styles, vehicles etc.. He lived in Manhattan and commuted to his job in Astoria Queens for 10 years. He told me the train fare was 15 cents and that you could buy a soda and a pizza for 25 cents. A few months later he experienced the blackout of 1965. He was coming home from work on the uptown 1 train and it came to a complete stop in the tunnel between 79 street and 86 street. The police came and everyone on the train was escorted out of the tunnel. Thanks for the video.

  • @capricorndragon6268
    @capricorndragon6268 Год назад +6

    The island of my birth has changed so much in the past 60+ years. I was raised far from the city and went back only 2 times after. Life moves on.

  • @kathryneconomou791
    @kathryneconomou791 3 года назад +11

    I was 13 in 1965 and remember visiting my nana who lived on the upper east side. We used to go to the automat. When I was younger, our school took us to the Central Park Zoo and my nana met us there and bought me a cupie doll on a pole and cotton candy. We also went to the Met to see the Mona Lisa. Wish we could go back... The best was the NY World's Fair '64/"65!

  • @Alex-fx5es
    @Alex-fx5es 9 лет назад +67

    I love watching old footage and trying to grasp how it was like to live back then, but I always struggle. I guess you truly had to live back then to fully grasp it.

    • @zinzanishful
      @zinzanishful 4 года назад

      me too

    • @christinefleetwood6632
      @christinefleetwood6632 4 года назад +5

      I was born 71, but I got taught a lot about the 60's when I was a kid, so it was sorta of still with us, and people were still playing all the songs and we were sorta trying to act the same. So, you CAN know what it was like, you just have to believe in yourself and keep in that time, by what music you play and things you watch. It was much better back then.

    • @novaonpluto
      @novaonpluto 4 года назад

      Me too, it's so fascinating.

    • @ramencurry6672
      @ramencurry6672 3 года назад +5

      Really not much different from today. Just a slower pace and people more social in public with no cell phones. One annoying thing though is without a GPS, much easier to get lost while driving especially in New Jersey and in the outer boroughs like Brooklyn.

    • @ramencurry6672
      @ramencurry6672 3 года назад +2

      Also when you turned on the TV you had very limited choices of only a few channels. Maybe around like 5 (more or less). And there was a good chance that your TV was black and white

  • @countalucard4226
    @countalucard4226 6 лет назад +58

    In 65 I was fourteen. Our parents had no fear letting us just kids going to Yankee Stadium ourselves, taking the bus then the subway. One thing I loved about going to the city was getting to read the New York Post.

    • @hewitc
      @hewitc 4 года назад +3

      Kids could do that today. It's not more dangerous, parents are overprotective now.

    • @jkryanspark
      @jkryanspark 4 года назад +4

      We took the 17A to Jamaica, the F Train to Manhattan, and the D Train to Yankee Stadium. Total cost of a Yankee game, hot dog and a soda, and travel: $5.

    • @countalucard4226
      @countalucard4226 4 года назад +2

      Jeff Karas if I remember the best seats “box seats” were $3.50. Of course the bleachers were $0.75 cents.

    • @jkryanspark
      @jkryanspark 4 года назад +2

      @@countalucard4226 We sat upstairs for $1.50.

    • @countalucard4226
      @countalucard4226 4 года назад

      Jeff Karas if you wanted ice cream you got the old Dixie Cup. Half vanilla half chocolate with a wooden spoon. Who knows what they sell today.

  • @jpolar394
    @jpolar394 6 лет назад +73

    Look at that, no walking cellphone zombies, just normal people. Amazing !

    • @Revolver1981
      @Revolver1981 4 года назад +10

      Why do fools always say something about there being nobody on cellphones on old videos? Just shut it lol.

    • @jpolar394
      @jpolar394 4 года назад +10

      @@Revolver1981 .......you would say the same thing if you hit with a car driven by someone talking on a cellphone and when you are walking in the sidewalk you are bumped into at least 2 times a day. And I'm not exaggerating either. Because it has happened to myself. I lawyered up and I made a nice bundle of cash.

    • @Revolver1981
      @Revolver1981 4 года назад +11

      @@jpolar394 If they had cellphones in those days they would be just as addicted to them as we are. It's the modern world now. Times change. Technology changes. They would've loved to have had Smartphones and Laptops back then.

    • @rovhalt6650
      @rovhalt6650 4 года назад +1

      @@Revolver1981 True. It makes it easier to spot the real humans though.

    • @hewitc
      @hewitc 4 года назад +7

      Teens walked around with transistor radios next to their ears sometimes.

  • @JeffFrmJoisey
    @JeffFrmJoisey 8 лет назад +89

    WOW! NYC the way I remember it as a kid. I was 8 / 9 years old when this was filmed, and remember Manhattan well. I used to there a lot when my Dad would bring me and my brother to work with him @ NYU, 51 W 4th St, on Saturday mornings from NJ. My parents put us in dress clothes whenever we went anywhere public. We got dressed up to ride the Staten Island Ferry, to see planes land at Newark Airport, the Circus, etc. That's the way it was around NYC in the mid 60s.
    A comment below asked how NYC changed so much by the 70s. It started in the 50s as people fled to the suburbs of NJ, Long Island, Upstate NY and Connecticut. Crime in the Boroughs was getting out of control. Landlords found it paid off to torch their buildings instead of making them habitable. It continued as budgets tightened and the City's finances worsened, finally crashing & burning in 1975, when the City was at the brink of bankruptcy.
    The gray, gritty, filthy, burned out vision of NYC you see in 1970s cop movies was not created in a studio, it was reality, it's what NYC really looked like.

    • @spreadthelove77
      @spreadthelove77 6 лет назад +5

      Love hearing this, Jeff. As for the other hating assholes, go hang yourselves

    • @zbdot73
      @zbdot73 6 лет назад +5

      theDracoIX - whats with the hate? The guy was just giving us a glimpse into the past, it's interesting. Why you get triggered brah?

    • @STKeTcH
      @STKeTcH 6 лет назад

      could you tell me which 1970s cop movies you are referring to?

    • @steviechampagne
      @steviechampagne 4 года назад

      As usual. The crime of our own beautiful cities, caused by nonwhites has forced us to flee further and further away

    • @STKeTcH
      @STKeTcH 4 года назад

      @Matt Beeman Thank you! I loved this movie..!!!! please share any more you know

  • @cllrbck
    @cllrbck 5 лет назад +26

    Oh man, what i would give to live in those times...

    • @ns7353
      @ns7353 3 года назад +7

      People weren't so divided and had still had unity in the church or in love for their country.

    • @themaestro3034
      @themaestro3034 2 года назад

      Nostalgia for the lead-laced constant smog, regular occurring race riots, and the bankruptcy that hit the city a few years later, huh? You remember how squalid times square was with the peep shows and hookers everywhere? What a strange sense of nostalgia you have.

  • @darkwoodmovies
    @darkwoodmovies 2 года назад +8

    So much is the same, so much has changed. But one thing will never change - the spirit and spark this city has. It will never die.

  • @BenRook
    @BenRook 6 месяцев назад +1

    Seeing this today ~60 years later...lots less traffic then, etc...wow. Thanks for the memories.

  • @benjaminbath8782
    @benjaminbath8782 3 года назад +18

    So, this is a coincidence almost beyond belief. Those shots were taken from an apartment that my grandmother lived in from the mid 70s until her death a few years ago and I grew up with those views.
    I’d love to know who took this home video and whether the family who lived there in 1965 knew our family.

  • @teletubetodd
    @teletubetodd 5 лет назад +7

    What beautiful footage of simpler times! This was the summer my family moved to Park Avenue, and I fondly remember those tailfins, small restaurants, green buses and well-dressed people. Today it's mostly luxury boutiques and chains, cellphone immersons, grungy attire, and real estate no one can afford. Thanks for bringing back this memory!

  • @erickonphoenix
    @erickonphoenix 9 лет назад +151

    Damn, I can't believe how uncrowded it is.

    • @j.a.bettig772
      @j.a.bettig772 6 лет назад +24

      NYC actually had around the same population back then that it does now. A ton of people left in the 70s/80s, and the numbers have only returned to their peak recently.

    • @hewitc
      @hewitc 4 года назад +2

      But look at the smoggy air. That's been cleaned up. No more coal furnaces and incinerators for one. Car exhausts were changed too.

    • @WitchKing-Of-Angmar
      @WitchKing-Of-Angmar 4 года назад +4

      @@hewitc unfortunately the cars changed as well...

    • @lordsod69
      @lordsod69 4 года назад

      And before Covid too; did they not have stuff like that back then?

    • @TRUCKOCD
      @TRUCKOCD 3 года назад

      @@hewitc Whete do you see “smog”

  • @likespurple2261
    @likespurple2261 4 года назад +6

    I was 4 years old in '65. I just barely remember the way the cars looked back then.But I remember that at 5, in the NE Bronx, I was allowed to walk two blocks to the library by myself for "Children's Hour", and at 6 or 7 years old, I was allowed to go to the grocery store 2 blocks the other way to pick up a few light groceries for my mother, and put them on the house account.

    • @freespirit21newyork
      @freespirit21newyork 4 года назад

      I was just born in June 1965 so I was 1 month old, but I too vaguely recall the old cars/taxis, I do recall feeling car sick in a taxi with my Mom back in the late 1960s🌞🌟☀️💚☀️💗

  • @FRANKIESIXTOES
    @FRANKIESIXTOES 7 лет назад +87

    I was eighteen in 1965 and had just started working in the Wall Street area. This film brings back good memories of a simpler more civilized time.

    • @douglapp5211
      @douglapp5211 6 лет назад +4

      Yes, so true. I graduated in 1965 and went into the Navy and did a year in Vietnam and was proud to have served. I was 17 when I graduated high school and think back to those times a lot now.

    • @neilwilson5785
      @neilwilson5785 5 лет назад +2

      I know, 'all lies and jests, but a man hears what he wants to hear and disregards the rest...'

    • @M-Is-For-Margaret
      @M-Is-For-Margaret 5 лет назад +5

      Hi FRANKIESIXTOES, Do you recall how much your first paycheck was? And how much you paid for rent? Were you renting or still living with your parents? Did you eat lunch around Wall Street? How much was lunch?

    • @jamesmack3314
      @jamesmack3314 5 лет назад +1

      Yes...more real,nicer people

    • @plank7316
      @plank7316 5 лет назад +10

      Oh yeah ofc... for a white man

  • @860anthony
    @860anthony 4 года назад +5

    I was 8 and living in the Bronx then. I love these trips in the time machine. Wish I could stay. Thanks for the post.

  • @TesticoloGonfioGaming
    @TesticoloGonfioGaming 3 года назад +6

    Im italian and this is beautifull to watch. I wish i could have visited NY during these times

  • @ScottCaldwell
    @ScottCaldwell 6 лет назад +28

    Love RUclips for footage like this.

  • @danwolven2321
    @danwolven2321 8 лет назад +18

    From one New Yorker To Another I Gotta Say This is Perfect!

  • @patriciaoreilly8907
    @patriciaoreilly8907 2 года назад +3

    Beautiful civilised city . Known & loved all over the World 🌎 what the he'll has happened a completely different world. Sad 😔

  • @alvojnikovic2171
    @alvojnikovic2171 7 лет назад +18

    I try to make the best out of my time and era here on earth but nothing compares to the 60's .. the cars, the woman, the music, and the politeness of people was top notch.

    • @j.a.bettig772
      @j.a.bettig772 6 лет назад

      yeah they were so polite when half the population were hippy bums and another quarter were rioting every day

    • @OneLoveRSR
      @OneLoveRSR 6 лет назад +2

      You have no clue about the 1960s if "the politeness of people was top notch" is your take away. Blacks were being beaten and hosed. Gays were being jailed and humiliated. An unpopular war raged on and was causing division across the nation. Political assassinations became a theme. Protests and riots were a trend. Watch this documentary: ruclips.net/video/mUc2eLe-ruI/видео.html

    • @JH-cy7rk
      @JH-cy7rk 6 лет назад

      allen vojnikovic Yeah. They were soooo polite to black people.

    • @onenikkione
      @onenikkione 4 года назад

      you meant the 50's (and early 60's) after that it all went down hill

  • @tonycollazorappo
    @tonycollazorappo 2 года назад +4

    I remember a lot about NY in the 60s, I was born in 1961 in Brooklyn. Those were the days, playing the streets, so carefree at the time.

  • @Leatricaw
    @Leatricaw 8 лет назад +13

    I was born July 1965. Nice to see this, thanks so much.

  • @bonnieandclyde222
    @bonnieandclyde222 6 лет назад +8

    So clean, beautiful. I was 6 then , in England though. It was like a fairytale compared to now

  • @annaagolli4140
    @annaagolli4140 Год назад +1

    We came to NYC in 1956, this is the NYC I grew up in. 1965 was the year my parents and sister became USA citizens.

  • @TheSpogNYC
    @TheSpogNYC 8 лет назад +18

    Thank you so much for sharing this video, I found it fascinating. I'm a New Yorker, but I was born in 1981, so I didn't get to experience the 60's and 70's here, but it's always been interesting to me to see my city in a different era. New York in 1965 seems more simple and wholesome, but it wasn't without it's problems (one of which, homelessness, which is visible in the footage, the person sleeping in the doorway). That feeling of a more calm, more safe, more simple time kind of radiates from this footage, after all, this was before all the technology that exploded from that time to the present (one of which I'm using to make this comment, the internet, and others, cellphones, computers, etc.). I love old footage of my city, and, once again, I thank you for posting it.

    • @sixsixxsixxxx
      @sixsixxsixxxx 8 лет назад +1

      hahahaha! NY in the 60's and 70's was a sewer of drugs pimps gangs...go check the number of rapes and murders they dwarf today's numbers...graffitti and slums too...wholesome! holy shit u oldsters are so full of shit

    • @GenK1991
      @GenK1991 8 лет назад +4

      +Robert Bermudez woah, way to take it from 0 to 100. Thanks for the statistics but calm the fuck down bitch.

    • @blazerman61
      @blazerman61 8 лет назад +1

      +Robert Bermudez ..70s into 80s maybe..60s were relatively calm...

    • @bluegillphil1427
      @bluegillphil1427 7 лет назад +6

      I grew up in Jamaica Queens 1950s & 60s. It was a different world, a different time, a different age. I feel as if Im a time traveler. Indian head pennies & real silver dollars were still in circulation, subway ride was 10 cents, slice of pizza & coke 25 cents ,etc etc,

    • @luislaplume8261
      @luislaplume8261 Год назад

      It was exactly like that except for the Prohibition era and the Great Depression of 1929 til 1941.

  • @リサイクリング
    @リサイクリング 8 лет назад +29

    51 years later, I was there.

  • @freespirit21newyork
    @freespirit21newyork 4 года назад +2

    Wow I was just 1 month old baby girl then, I love this video!! What a great time to be born & alive. I vaguely recall in the late 60s those well made cars that were very heavy & dense so happy I was born in that year June 1965 🌞☀️💚☀️💗☀️🌞

  • @oliverv291
    @oliverv291 4 года назад +6

    I was born in 1965... moved to. New York City in 1987... then left in 1993 to go back to the suburbs

    • @Sky-y5i1b
      @Sky-y5i1b 4 месяца назад +1

      Smart move.

  • @dorojessy6932
    @dorojessy6932 Год назад +1

    Incredible footage! Thanks to the tourist who filmed this stay. It's so valuable and interesting to watch this from a person who wasn't around in 1965. It looks much more civilized than these days.

  • @MarkinDC
    @MarkinDC 9 лет назад +6

    WOW - great time capsule of 1960's Manhattan, probably in Kodachrome, as the colors are so vivid. THANKS for sharing this.

  • @allanotropy
    @allanotropy 10 лет назад +10

    You started out somewhere over West End Avenue or Broadway, with a view of the Master Apartments in the upper left corner of the frame, where I moved into 28 years later. I also recognize the Upper West Side and Chinatown of my childhood; I lived just north of Chinatown in Little Italy in 1965. That was also the summer my family went often to the World's Fair. And Fifth Avenue was still a two-way street; it would become one-way southbound in January 1966, just after the transit strike.

  • @tomsisson660
    @tomsisson660 2 года назад +3

    No internet, no laptops, no desktop computers, no cell phones, and no cell phone networks; just by looking at the video and comparing it to our world you can see the difference.
    Tom Sisson

  • @OliwiaLi.
    @OliwiaLi. 4 года назад +2

    I didn't expect time travel today. I am captivated. Thank You.

  • @Bates1960
    @Bates1960 5 лет назад +1

    I like it when people walk normal and not looking at their phones and admiring the world around them and just being themselves everyday better times. Look around not a single phone in hand. No annoying devices, no smart phones, no distractions.

  • @justicewillprevail1106
    @justicewillprevail1106 3 года назад +1

    I was born 10 years after this time. It’s amazing to see the world change so vastly yet the same.

  • @warmonger2998
    @warmonger2998 7 лет назад +151

    Wow. All the women wearing dresses.

    • @marcelodaneriperez6128
      @marcelodaneriperez6128 6 лет назад +1

      War Monger In 1966 or 1967 she's become to used short-skirt and pants i think.

    • @nuckymancini7013
      @nuckymancini7013 6 лет назад +39

      Today they think theyre men (covered in tattoos)

    • @tommytruth7595
      @tommytruth7595 6 лет назад +23

      They way it should be, War Monger. Today they look like a bunch of tattooed and pierced, crackhead, homeless slobs

    • @tommytruth7595
      @tommytruth7595 6 лет назад +18

      Nucky, back in that day the only ladies with tattoos were in a carnival freak show. And that is where they still belong.

    • @lucase9698
      @lucase9698 5 лет назад +5

      Dresses are nice but more uncomfortable than pants, its most comfortable for women now to wear mostly pants, skirts or shorts and in special occasions wear pretty dresses.

  • @oneafter9095
    @oneafter9095 3 года назад +1

    Awesome...when I saw that freighter sailing in the Narrows I thought of my father who was an AB seaman for S.I.U. at that time and thinking he could have been on that ship...we lived in Brooklyn...and I was only 4 years old in ‘65

  • @moritzschafer3930
    @moritzschafer3930 4 года назад +6

    I always wonder how it felt like living there back then.Even though I wasn't even alive in those days I'm still getting these vibes like I just wanna jump into the screen to be there and experience it in reality, it just seems much more convenient and homely back then.

    • @freespirit21newyork
      @freespirit21newyork 4 года назад +3

      Sweet thanks for sharing that, I was just born in June 1965 just a 1 month old baby girl, my spirit belongs to the 1960s & 70s🌞☀️💚☀️🌞☀️💗☀️🌞

  • @jkryanspark
    @jkryanspark 4 года назад +1

    The wonderful quietude and aquamarines of 8mm/Super 8 film. It enhances the feeling of nostalgia to know this is somebody's home movies.

  • @GabiN64
    @GabiN64 2 года назад +2

    1960s NYC is very interesting. This is before the decline in the 70s but there was still enough video camera technology around to capture what it was like.

  • @adamredfield
    @adamredfield 7 лет назад +9

    I am almost certain the image at 20 seconds is taken from the Paris Apartments, which back then was called the Hotel Paris, on 97th st. and West End Ave. If I'm right, the building across the street is the one in which I grew up. I lived there from 1963-1983.

  • @MrEnoBeano
    @MrEnoBeano 2 года назад +1

    I went to high school on 54th street from 66 to 69. Midtown was my hangout with my school friends. Especially central park.

  • @AnnabelleJARankin
    @AnnabelleJARankin 6 лет назад +5

    So much more elegant than today. And Central Park looked like woodland!
    I was 11 and in the UK in 1965, and did not go to the US until I was in my twenties -
    lived in New York in 1982-3.

  • @holymolystudios8467
    @holymolystudios8467 9 лет назад +15

    Great film, i use to live in the area in the opening scenes. It seems to me that it was shot from the old Hotel Paris on 96 st and 97th street and west end ave. You can see footage where PS 75 there and also on the side street on 97th you can see the old fire escape for the old movie theater the Riverside and Riviera. I use to walk those streets everyday. Brings back great memories from a time of the early sixties. Thank you.

    • @NickAndTommyFight
      @NickAndTommyFight 8 лет назад

      How old are you?

    • @Tflexxx02
      @Tflexxx02 8 лет назад +1

      I live in the area now. To a great extent, the area hasn't changed that much in 50 years. Parts of West End Avenue/Riverside Drive north of this point were recently designated a Landmark Preservation Area by the NYC Landmarks Commission...buildings can't be torn down or greatly altered. So, in another 100 years, its should look pretty much the same, still.

    • @vjoaquin
      @vjoaquin 7 лет назад

      Awesome, I noticed the same thing, I am 56yrs old and went to P.S 75 : )

  • @alcamerc9970
    @alcamerc9970 4 года назад +6

    I miss those times. I know there was dirt all over, the subways were grimy, there was garbage on the street for weeks, but they were our times. Life was easy then and we knew how to live it, we knew who we were and where we belonged. I’ll probably get a lot of flak, but that’s ok. That life was a challenge, a dare of nature, a kick in the ass to get you going, but they were good times. Life is difficult now, and for those of us with a few years under our belt, too darn confusing.

    • @AbidingDude420
      @AbidingDude420 4 года назад

      I wish I could go back in time to this era. I wasn't alive then. I bet things were simpler.

  • @cac7549
    @cac7549 9 лет назад +14

    beautiful videos. These videos prove in a way that we can time travel. Awesome !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @TheSpogNYC
      @TheSpogNYC 8 лет назад +1

      +Carlos Elias I totally agree with you, I wish I could just experience my city in that time period, but watching videos of old footage is the closest I can get, until we get that "Back To The Future" movie's time travel, haha!

    • @cac7549
      @cac7549 8 лет назад +1

      Yeap, and the older we get the more we will want to know about our past and about our people.

    • @cac7549
      @cac7549 8 лет назад

      I love every single second of these old films brother. I am trying to get them on DVD so I can play them somehow on my television. They are super !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @Themanwhocameback2
    @Themanwhocameback2 6 лет назад +8

    I see "The Subject Was Roses" on Broadway. It was made into a movie in 1968 - Martin Sheen's first film. And he and Jack Albertson starred in the play.

    • @christorpher84
      @christorpher84 5 лет назад +1

      Themanwhocameback2 And filmed in the Bronx on Andrews ave and University ave at 174 st

  • @Hamerguy68
    @Hamerguy68 2 года назад +1

    While I am in Germany and born a few years after this was filmed, I just love this, as this scenery is the one that was in many movies and comic books (I grew up with the early Marvel Comics of the 60's in the 70's).

  • @luislaplume8261
    @luislaplume8261 3 года назад +2

    Iwas at the World's Fair that year we took some photos in color which even then was not even then commonplace.
    We went ther the previous year. 1965 was a booming economy and there were many Mom and Pop stores,and work in NYC. I am a New Yorker. Am now retired and believe me the best years were 1964, 1965 1969 in NYC Igrew up in the borough of Queens.Old NYC, OLD AMERICA.

  • @Jonathanbroder
    @Jonathanbroder 6 лет назад +16

    An awful lot less traffic (both people and cars) in midtown than there is now. I've lived in Manhattan for 30 years and I've decided it's gotten too uncivilized for me. NY looks like it may have had a little charm back then. Now, it's every man for himself.

  • @ernestkovach3305
    @ernestkovach3305 6 лет назад +89

    Notice how the vast majority of people back then were fit looking and far thinner and in far better shape than Americans are today!

    • @DannyEastVillage
      @DannyEastVillage 6 лет назад +8

      it's still like that in New York: the people here are much more fit than people in the burbs, the Midwest, the South--just about anywhere you can name. New Yorkers eat smarter, still walk a lot, and many, many of us belong to gyms and play sports. Obesity just isn't a thing in Manhattan.

    • @ernestkovach3305
      @ernestkovach3305 6 лет назад +5

      False! You are delusional. Indeed, I have rarely seen any city with more grotesquely obese people OF ALL AGES than NYC. Least fat: Hard working Midwesterners. Still, compared to way back then Americans generally are far more apt to be overweight than Americans from the 1940s, 50s, and early 60s. CASE CLOSED!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @iramos2488
      @iramos2488 6 лет назад +15

      high fructose corn syrup

    • @ernestkovach3305
      @ernestkovach3305 6 лет назад +2

      Tim Tripas yup.

    • @citizen1163
      @citizen1163 6 лет назад +5

      Danny Berry Do they still dress well? Here in London & I live 2 miles from St Paul's Cathedral, many look as if they're dressed for the beach. I'm no fan of the workout clothes & trainers with everything look either. Maybe ppl dress down bc of the scruffy, dirty appearance of our iconic sites such as Oxford St, Piccadilly Circus & Shaftesbury Avenue..theatre land! If I were a tourist I'd be disappointed. Chelsea is a different story & the Govt even bother to put a couple of policemen on the street nr Kensington palace sometimes, with carbines! London has changed so much from even 20yrs ago let alone 50! Sad.

  • @johnstutzman5520
    @johnstutzman5520 4 года назад +1

    I remember visiting the World’s Fair in Queens, N.Y., July, ‘65, I had just finished my three year hitch in the Army and was on my way to my family’s home in Pennsylvania from the Army discharge center in Oakland, Ca.

  • @johnd.1849
    @johnd.1849 6 лет назад +8

    No social event in Manhattan was complete without an appearance from the lovely Edie Sedgwick. Those were indeed the days...

  • @johnaddeo2251
    @johnaddeo2251 6 лет назад +25

    "Everything looked so nice", "people were not fat", "everyone dressed so well", in '65 this city was only a few short years from becoming a cesspool. It was the complacency of the "establishment" and the clash of the counterculture of the later '60s that drove this place into an almost unrecognizable sea of filth, peep shows and crime. You are looking at the calm before the storm here. Sad.

    • @StevenLAkins
      @StevenLAkins 4 года назад +9

      New York City became a sleazy, crime-ridden cesspool in just a few short years after the passage of the 1965 Hart-Celler Immigration Reform Act that turned NYC into a 77% minority third-world dystopia.

  • @rrider3946
    @rrider3946 6 лет назад +5

    It reminds me of the opening scene to the television show the Odd Couple.

  • @christofour217
    @christofour217 5 лет назад

    In 1965 i was 4 and i could have been on that ferry this day the film was taken. I have pictures of me and my brother at the Statue in 1965. Thanks for the video.

  • @HonestJunkie
    @HonestJunkie 5 лет назад +1

    I love that this little gem isn't accompanied by some cheesy music .... Thank YOU!!

  • @johnray3705
    @johnray3705 6 лет назад +1

    Great stuff! I was born in July 1965 in NYC. This was the world my parents lived in.......and I did too......sort of.
    Great video thanks. :)

  • @neronevetti4540
    @neronevetti4540 2 года назад +1

    Born March 1 1962 south Bronx left to Miami in late 1971 with the grandparents and siblings.

  • @stephenspinelli4265
    @stephenspinelli4265 4 года назад +1

    I was born in July 1965!!!! This is awesome 😁

    • @1986SSMONTECARLO
      @1986SSMONTECARLO 4 года назад

      I hatched in August of '65
      Roosevelt Hospital NYC

    • @freespirit21newyork
      @freespirit21newyork 4 года назад

      I was born in June 1965 a 1 month baby girl 🌞☀️💚☀️💗

  • @frog5104
    @frog5104 4 года назад +1

    Thanks for sharing this video with us.

  • @briankeller788
    @briankeller788 3 года назад +1

    Was waiting for the "Naked City" title to zoom up towards me. That was my first glimpse of NYC.

  • @vstu7643
    @vstu7643 2 года назад +2

    I was 12 and 3 significant family events that year. Notice how people dressed. Slack suits for women came into vogue around 1970 and men wore dress shirts or suits and ties walking around Manhattan.

  • @michaelbeza7469
    @michaelbeza7469 5 лет назад +4

    I was about 7 at the time New York was wonderful then.. simple time..yea they had problems but not like nowadays..the vibe was different..people enjoyed each other's company people interacted a lot more. And their was more respect for one another back then..you could be content just sitting outside your house..their was no internet..no cable..no cell phones..just a regular phone in your house. Great music was made back then...tv shows were great too...

  • @thomasn3882
    @thomasn3882 2 года назад +1

    Sad. Makes me long for a time that I never experienced.

  • @spider82666
    @spider82666 4 года назад +3

    How refreshing : ) Back when native New Yorkers could afford to live, work and raise a family in New York. Thank you Mayor Bloomberg : (

  • @RandyTheWildHorse
    @RandyTheWildHorse 3 года назад

    This video is so visible and alive! No corny music to make me either mute of shut the video off! Perfection personified!

  • @pacorodriguez1394
    @pacorodriguez1394 4 года назад +1

    Its hard to describe how much life was different.

  • @rightweaponry908
    @rightweaponry908 2 года назад +3

    This is beautiful but makes me soo sad, New York has slowly been turned into a suburban chain store transplant yuppie hipster haven full of frivolous novelty. I look around Manhattan and it could be anywhere, the character and the uniqueness, the feeling that anyone and everyone is welcome and can find a little corner for themselves is gone. Hope you like 7-11's and organic coconut yogurt shops.

  • @edski8536
    @edski8536 4 года назад +1

    I was 5 yrs. old....born on LI...raised in. Bklyn/Qns....I remember those big steel cars....those bubble cabs......people hitching rides on the backs of NYC buses......🗽

  • @valvlog4665
    @valvlog4665 4 года назад +8

    7:05 Coffee Shop B4 Starbucks. So cool to see.

  • @themachine798
    @themachine798 3 года назад +1

    What a wonderful city New York WAS! And then the you know what happened. How sad.

  • @darkefoxx
    @darkefoxx 8 лет назад +351

    Oh look, people surviving without cellphones attached to their heads.

    • @bklynslipnjimmy
      @bklynslipnjimmy 8 лет назад +29

      That's right, there was life before the stupid phones. People spoke to each other.

    • @rockolutheran
      @rockolutheran 8 лет назад +29

      yeah back in the days where you had no form of communicating with someone else in a different place so you had to painstakingly find the nearest payphone or landline. Yeah those were the days man

    • @opencurtin
      @opencurtin 8 лет назад +13

      Did you ever see the rush to pay phones in old movies in places like train stations the stress having to Q the rush to get to them the anxiety that it caused I agree that mobiles have created many zombie like people walking around the place but they also make life easier from a communications point of view, not all things are perfect but mobiles do make things better.

    • @MySugarWallz
      @MySugarWallz 7 лет назад +16

      +1 You'd better not have typed that from a cell phone, though.

    • @darkefoxx
      @darkefoxx 7 лет назад +14

      ***** The only cellphone I ever own is in the shape of a brick. It can only text and make calls. I never grew into the whole smartphone thing and social networking crowd, and I'm in my thirties. :)

  • @mattwilliam4803
    @mattwilliam4803 3 года назад

    -I was born in this year - 1965 - wow, everything so clean !!! It's truly amazing, just how far down, the U.S.A. has fallen, during my lifetime.

  • @frankdiaz9783
    @frankdiaz9783 6 лет назад +1

    NYC. Always beautiful, God bless!

  • @salvatoredestefano439
    @salvatoredestefano439 6 лет назад

    Great little video. A gem. Thank you for sharing this.

  • @norakat
    @norakat 6 лет назад +18

    City looks much cleaner than in the 70s

    • @jpwjr1199
      @jpwjr1199 6 лет назад +3

      That's true. The overt descent of the city's appearance that followed in the early 70's was striking.

    • @tommytruth7595
      @tommytruth7595 6 лет назад +1

      It was.

    • @MrCarguy2
      @MrCarguy2 6 лет назад +5

      That's what drug use and rioting do to a city, it quickly reflected upon their homicide rate

    • @merccadoosis8847
      @merccadoosis8847 5 лет назад +2

      Not really - do a Google search for urban smog in the 1960s. It was actually FAR worse than in subsequent decades when we had environmental reforms.

    • @hewitc
      @hewitc 4 года назад

      Look at the Empire State views. Smog everywhere. This was before pollution controls on auto emissions. Many buildings still used coal furnaces and incinerators. Much much cleaner air today. NYC used to dump raw sewage into the rivers. A "Hudson River Whitefish" was a used condom floating down the river. There were lots of them.

  • @michaelworse6034
    @michaelworse6034 4 года назад +6

    The year ' We can work it out ' from the Beatles came out

    • @davehall44
      @davehall44 3 года назад +1

      The Stones released I can't get no satisfaction in the same year. It was flogged to death on the radio, still ringing in my ears :o

    • @45vinyljunkie
      @45vinyljunkie 3 месяца назад +1

      @@davehall44 "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" was No. 1 for the whole month of July, which is when this was filmed.

  • @luislaplume8261
    @luislaplume8261 3 года назад +2

    In 1961, NYC had these channels 2,4,5,7,9,11,13, 21,25. It was the TV Network Capitol of America!

  • @Gustave67
    @Gustave67 7 месяцев назад +1

    Wow what a different time...

  • @59jmartin
    @59jmartin 10 лет назад +43

    Being a kid then,...it was a gentler time. Crime rates have skyrocketed since then. Pornography then was what you see on cable TV today. People dressed up everyday and treated each other with respect. New York City was more enjoyable since tourism was scant compared to today. The World's Fair was happening at this time and I went with my dad many times. Good videos of that on RUclips also....Thanks for posting this!

    • @skylark9770
      @skylark9770 7 лет назад

      What would being Jewish have to do with possessing porn? And unheard of among normal people? How many men bought Playboy?

    • @alexricketts273
      @alexricketts273 6 лет назад +8

      And back in 1965 black people were still not equal

    • @PR4470
      @PR4470 6 лет назад

      ACMilan2016: ruclips.net/video/Uus_rs_KJWI/видео.html

    • @spencerpetunia8268
      @spencerpetunia8268 6 лет назад +9

      Eh, you were a kid then. Rose-colored glasses. The funny thing about NYC is that though its crime skyrocketed over the course of the 60s, starting in the mid-90s it plunged and today in 2018 it's actually about as safe as it was in the mid-1950s!

    • @modernist2628
      @modernist2628 6 лет назад +8

      As they say (they were saying it then too), 'nostalgia's not what it used to be'. In fact the homicide rate in New York is lower than it's been since 1951.

  • @johncroghan6943
    @johncroghan6943 3 года назад +1

    Amazing how clean thing's were,see how new Yorkers from back then dressed and carried themselves.I was a year old growing up in Washington heights nyc and it will always be called the Heights,the original's were Irish,Jewish,Greek,Puerto Rican and Black.Guess what we all got along and shared the neighborhood.

  • @carlos.a.vcarvajal6119
    @carlos.a.vcarvajal6119 3 года назад +1

    Just....Amazing..... Amazing.....

  • @sihrirnoonim7583
    @sihrirnoonim7583 5 лет назад +1

    Wow it's very interesting to see that virtual museum..

  • @themuffinman775
    @themuffinman775 3 года назад +1

    crazy how those cars were driven everyday and now they are collectors items. some of them from this video probably don’t even exist anymore

  • @unitor699industries
    @unitor699industries 6 лет назад +18

    wow the streets are so clean people had manners and respect back then what happened to us?

    • @azul8811
      @azul8811 6 лет назад

      @RPQ
      How do you think John Lindsay impacted the city? When first elected, he was a Republican WASP, correct?

    • @mrdiplomat9018
      @mrdiplomat9018 6 лет назад +1

      RPQ - What kind of sick logic is that you’re using? Anti Semitic thoughts and actions only bring down those individuals and countries that allow its demonic influences to fester and grow. Conduct a cursory examination of history, and you may have your eyes opened.

    • @jamesmack3314
      @jamesmack3314 5 лет назад

      Well for one rap and hip hop...crap

    • @jamesmack3314
      @jamesmack3314 5 лет назад

      So overrated

    • @413smr
      @413smr 3 года назад

      Where do you get the "manners and respect" from watching people walking around?

  • @mrsandmom5947
    @mrsandmom5947 3 года назад +1

    Oh the humanity of clean civil people

  • @nativetexanful
    @nativetexanful 4 года назад +1

    I sure wish I could have seen New York in those days.

  • @ralphiew98
    @ralphiew98 4 года назад +3

    World fair in queens, the best time ever,waffles with whip cream 1965s

  • @antonalex007
    @antonalex007 2 года назад +1

    Pretty cool video nice footage.

  • @richardr655
    @richardr655 9 лет назад +3

    My last year in NYC. I left never to return again. I miss it and wish that I had stayed. Great film of great times. Many thanks.

    • @PR4470
      @PR4470 6 лет назад +4

      Why did you leave? Where do you live now? Just curious.

    • @christorpher84
      @christorpher84 5 лет назад +1

      Richard R your not missing anything it’s shithole

  • @James7796ify
    @James7796ify 10 лет назад +12

    its hard to imagine that was the most advanced life up until that poi nt. only 20 years later was completely different

  • @juliet3827
    @juliet3827 8 лет назад +38

    Can someone explain to me what happened to NYC between the 1960s and the 1970s? Because the city looked so nice and orderly and safe and (relatively) clean throughout the 1960s. And then something happened. In the videos I've seen of the 1970s, and in many books and articles I have read, the city turned into a cesspit all throughout the '70s with fires raging everywhere, drugs, riots, muggings, etc.

    • @TheSpogNYC
      @TheSpogNYC 8 лет назад +46

      In the 1970s our city started to drown in fiscal problems, money was mismanaged, funding for basic services (school, police, subways, fire department, sanitation etc.) were simply not there as it was in the 1960s. Financial problems, coupled with the fact that the 1970s was the start of, unfortunately, the companies/corporations of the United States outsourcing production to other countries where manufacturing, and employee wages, were cheaper than in the U.S., which started a trend of the decrease in manufacturing (which was always strong in NYC and other cities, those of which are now known as Rust Belt; cities, examples include Detroit, MI, Toledo, OH, Buffalo, NY, amongst many others today, unfortunately). This saw an increase in unemployment among people who worked in manufacturing, shipping, etc. (notice how in present time, you can hardly find an active shipping dock, as they all moved out to Newark, NJ, and manufacturing factories are few and far between nowadays in New York.
      With the city nearing bankruptcy, the police were grossly understaffed, a lot of cops working were apathetic and ill-equipped to contend with the rising crime. The rising crime can be attributed to rising poverty rates, increase in drug-use, and other social problems that grew in the early 1970s. Sectors of the city were striking, including the Sanitation Department strike (1975), and things got bad. Arson for profit was also a big issue, most famously known in The Bronx, but occurring all over the city (Bushwick, Brooklyn to mention another area). In my opinion, the blackout of 1977 was the start of what would become a bad era in the history of New York. From 1977 to 1995, New York City was a dangerous, dirty place, crime culminating in 1990, when we had 2,262 murders. All of what Ive said is a combination of my opinion and what I know, as a New Yorker (although I was born in 1981), and what I have learned through research and schooling (I attend John Jay College of Criminal Justice here in the city). I hope this gives you a little insight into the history of New York City, but I have just given a small amount of information, theres much more to the story of our troubled past.

    • @logic7374
      @logic7374 8 лет назад +16

      +TheSpogNYC If you want the truth, fiscal conservative Republicans were dying off or retiring and democrats took over. TRUTH! Not biased. Just the truth.

    • @TheSpogNYC
      @TheSpogNYC 8 лет назад +4

      O It was a bi-partisan effort.

    • @oochiewally2783
      @oochiewally2783 8 лет назад +19

      why it was so quiet was in the 60's was my DAD and many many teens were drafted or joined in the vietnam war under president Johnson (democrat) which made many areas of NYC so quiet weird how no one here says anything..but the filth that remained were liberals democrats antiwar drugheads who ruined the city pretty much the same liberal morons that are doing it 50 years later

    • @opencurtin
      @opencurtin 8 лет назад +31

      The sexual revolution happened where all morals were lost and the gates of hell opened up ..

  • @neeleseidel677
    @neeleseidel677 7 лет назад +2

    listening to miles davis while watching this video/perfect vibe,