Britain in 1900
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
- A documentary which displays and explores the lives and environment of our immediate ancestors a little over a hundred years ago. There is some excellent footage of the period, some perceptive comments from experts, and some charming recollections of people who were alive at the time. This is excellent for students of Britain at the turn of the twentieth century. Uploaded for educational purposes only.
Please visit our new site for the serious history enthusiast: www.historyroom.org We have recent history, old history, ancient history, debates, reviews, quizzes and much more. You might even consider contributing something of your own! See you there!
Thankyou x
I a hundred yrs. when confused People are attempting to piece together History ; These RUclips Comment Boxs' will be so contradictory to what is presented on the Monolith above , it's going to give them a migrane like i have from a similar dichotomy.
@@davidwaynechoate8059 Lol,wut?
What does it exist? To sell things? Sorry, but true.
if only we kept our self preservation instincts archive.org/details/youtube-Wk25AeFWMNs
Those people staring into the camera could never have predicted that I’d be laying down here on my bed over 100 years later and staring right back at them. It’s just wild.
They wouldn’t believe the garbage that has been allowed to replace British culture today.
Quasimodo predicted dis.
@@johnslatin4646 spot on. Absolutely abysmal what’s been allowed to fester within this old country over 70 preceding years
@@sirrom5155 sopranos lol
they wouldn't believe that five seconds after watching you would completely forget what you just watched and move onto something else
I absolutely love any street footage from the past. To me, the worst live street footage is about 1000 times more valuable than the best staged productions from that time. Seeing the kids playing in the street, the traffic, people simply going about their daily humdrum, it's fascinating to watch
Fantastic to read your remark. No bias or elitist ideals. A pity some people appear to harbour a different narrow.
I strongly agree! I love history!
@Sheila Mchgee Not sure what to do wid dat comment.
@Sheila Mchgee Is that your final response to someone who might just be interested in your angle of perception. I'm genuinely and naturally inquisitive.
@blah Newman Exactly!
Blows my mind that I’m watching all this in the palm of my hand.
I agree, Adrain. Imagine if we could tell them of the technology that would exist 100 years on from their present day. They'd look at us as if were crazy. Then again, imagine what will be normal 100 years from now...
They seemed to feel the same way about their technology, how it is portrayed in so many films. Especially trains, lol.
Exactly! I always say if we could tell the folks from 100 years ago, just what is normal for us now, they’d think we were all involved in serious witchcraft!
@@christineclancy5801 lol. Totally
Yep totally amazing
The kids running to keep ahead with the camera are adorable, it makes me sad to think the misery they would go through a few decades ahead...
I know they will have to face a blitz and two world wars.
@@emilymalden3310
That is nothing compared to what we face.
@@johnslatin4646 they had to face multiple waves of influenza, world war 1, the Great Depression, and world war 2 I’d say that’s living through a lot
If any became soldiers then they helped defeat the Nazis. If it hadn't of been for some of these the Nazis may have won,
Not even a few decades… a mere fourteen years! I always think of that too when l see such old footage. They had no idea what was coming down the track. Still, l also think the horror of WWl did lead to emancipation of women and eventually better lives for animals.
I would love to be one day in each era, to see and experience all in person.
Truth becomes you.
You and me both luv!
Good luck arranging that.
I too
@George Orwell video games and phones are the killer there.
Absolutely loved the elderly woman that was interviewed. Youth and enthusiasm for life was evident in her eyes, just lovely !
Tragic to think that many of those young boys cheerily running in front of the camera and having fun have no idea that they will meet a horrible end on the Western Front.
For context, 880,000 British forces died, 6% of the adult male population and 12.5% of those serving.
@@johnmiller6976so the overwhelming majority of them survived, right?
to set another perspective on the usual "omg, all those people in these old videos are dead, it's so sad" take.
also, you can't really cry about 880 000 people. because your extended family knew only few of those men. and you can't mourn your great-grandfather because you never knew him.
so, overall, to think "somebody is dead", is kinda moot.
yes they are, and relatively soon we'll be too.
so what?
@@ivok9846well that's depressing
@@becky2235 by the end maybe you'll change your mind. maybe you'll welcome it...
I grew up watching English movies ( I'm American) and I've always had a fascination with the Victorian period. I wouldn't have wanted to live then but the architecture of the time ...magnificent. I live in a very old house circa 1886 and it's considered Folk Victorian. Not as fancy as English Victorian homes but heavily influenced by the style.
My mother's house was built in 1830.
@@elizabethwoolnough4358 You win. lol May I ask if it was a city dwelling, small town or countryside? I'm from Pa. We have them in all three.
@@tonithenightowl1836 Read your first comment and wanted to say that in the '60s and '70s much of the Victorian housing was demolished to make way for cheaply built modern tower blocks and flats. They did have inside loos and bathrooms but nobody ever seemed that happy in them. Our whole street was moved en masse from our sunny, personable street to a miserable concrete block.
They became dilapidated very quickly (ref Ronan Point) and their maze-like construction developed into warrens of crime. Meanwhile, the architects who designed these human warehouses continued to reside in their nicely refurbished Victorian homes. If those demolished properties were around today they'd sell for a lot of money and be very desirable residences.
The initial intentions were good but they could have maintained the old houses instead of demolishing whole neighbourhoods. The 60s had a fetish for modernism but thank goodness they didn't manage to demolish St. Pancras after a campaign to preserve it; a fantastic Victoria Gothic building!
@@musicloverlondon6070 Oh I hear what you're saying and it's a damn shame but with public housing they can pretty much do what they want. We have very little public housing here in my one horse town. When the neighborhood public schools built in the late 1800's were no longer up to code, that's what was torn down and use to build public housing in the 70's. They still stand today so the construction was good but it was heartbreaking to see those beautiful buildings torn down. Some were privately bought and turned into apt buildings but most were demolished.
When I toured this house I fell in love with it despite all the work which needed to be done. We didn't restore ( too expensive) but we kept everything original which we could, remodeled and even added space where needed... like the kitchen. Nothing was done in this house for 116 yrs. until we bought it 20 yrs ago. The BONES were good so we took it on. It's not for the faint of heart, most would have torn it down and rebuilt something modern. I couldn't do that bc I watched too many damn British movies growing up. lol :o)
Set modern medicine back In this time and I'd ha e loved it
Then the wars and massive immigration.
'' We Are all ghosts...Just passing through. Only the buildings remain. And they too, along with along with all our schemes and dreams , will crumble into dust. Thus is the World in which we live in for a fleeting NOW '' !
Well said , greetings from Chile
"People who despise the past, tend also to despise the present."
DesolationAngel101 They look to a golden future that will never come.
That's a generalisation. The present has been fucked up by mass migration since the 1990's. The UK could have been very different, less crime, less crowded, less terrorist threats. This reality is least appreciated by the middle and upper classes.
And yet time stands still for no man. ..and for most of the time people waste it by despising it by design.
I preferred life 15 even 20 years ago because all these activist weirdos weren't around crying over nothing and making a fuss, none of them had a big enough mouthpiece to spout their stupid ideals into, many people including myself never knew they even existed which for me was great, ignorance is bliss as they say, take me back or do away with the lot of them
I despise a time I could not vote, being black. It’s a fun fantasy to imagine time travel if your white. I understand, it really would be cool.
My grandfather was born in 1900 and told me many stories when I was a child. I was too young to fully understand, but this goes some way to explaining the headlines of the time and what he may have been trying to explain to me. Thanks for posting.
Thanks, Paul.
What stories ?
where are all the homosexuals in the films?
emigrated to America to be with their fwends. . .
Everybody's dream. But yo can not be and have been at the same time !
This is what history should be about and not the rubbish that my children are being forced to study these days. They know nothing of the History of this country or even the rest of the world, this knowledge is being lost and it really annoys me.. This documentary and others like this should be shown in all schools. I thoroughly enjoyed this video.
+Karen Johansen ..work it out with your kids' teachers; I was able to. :-)
+Terry Licia I wish I had but they are all grown up now, my youngest is just finishing his final exams now. I showed him this video and he was amazed.
Karen Johansen Grandchildren are our saving grace, girl! I don't have any yet, but every mistake I made with my kids? I hope I one day get the chance for some do-overs! :-)
You are so right, something needs to be done so our Grandchildren don't suffer the same fate. Perhaps they could have a chance of a better education than our children did.
Why dont your children go and find out for themselves!
A document worth seeing. Contains interesting patches of film and photos as well. The mentality of that time seems to be more positive than today though poverty was a real problem compared to current times. My father was born in 1916 and died 2017. His early life was also very different. When he was young he was not given shoes to wear from May to October. Shoes were too expensive. He had to work since age of six. And mother never asked the 11 children what they wanted to eat. You ate what was available and did not complain.
At the 2011 census, London had a population of 8,173,941. Of this number
44.9% were White British. 37% of the population were born outside the
UK, including 24.5% born outside of Europe.
It’s much worse now.
@@johnslatin4646 yes they won't put the stats out
@@Sameoldfitup
The left has been dumbed down beyond the ability to debate most subjects. We need to take advantage of the fact that only we know what is actually going on.
@@johnslatin4646 i see it when i travel to our Towns up north, makes me angry and sad.
The old women in blue you can still see the young girl in her eyes when she recalls her childhood
YES!!! That is her secret to a long happy life!!!!
Well, that's the thing really. You never get older, you just grow more wrinkly.
James Quinn
Have you ever noticed when a girl digs you, they recall their childhood. It’s trippy
I can see that too
You mean Anne Coleman? She makes me smile seeing how happy she is as she recalls her childhood.
Those elderly woman looked healthy. This according to imdb was from 2000 so they would have been 110 and 100!
Those days everyone new their neighbour .Lt was safer on the street and no fear of speeding vehicles
@@kateallsop6572 just the safe horse and buggies lol
@@kateallsop6572 yeah and most children died before their 5th birthday
@@kateallsop6572 Safer streets? Like where jack the ripper hunted? We've never been safe.
watching all of these old films makes me think that we got T shirts and Hoodies these days and it's looks convenient but i still love ppl wearing those suits and hats back then
Same.. I love past ❤️
kingofvintage 🤨
T shirts were invented in the 19th century
I’d imagine it was to keep warm since the world was colder back then. No efficient heating systems and it cost a fortune to pay for coal if you were lucky enough to have a steady job.
Alex Nick i just watched a video called “the construcion of chrysler building” and there were builders working 1000ft above the ground wearing suits and hats mad.
This is up there as one of the most fascinating glimpses into 1900s.
love stumbling on these rare gems!
We still had inkwells at school in the 40/50 in London and my Father who was born in1901 said there were lots of a Kids without Shoes in Winter in the Neighborhood, this was in Marylebone Lane near Wigmore Street with Harley Street just around the corner and the Work House just around the corner as well so Poverty just didn't disappear with " The New Age " in 1960 I worked in a Butcher Shop in Thayer Street when young and we would cook up Lamb Scraps to give Tramps something hot to eat in Winter . Yes, the new age alright, for some!
Did you have to dip the pen in inkwells after every few written words? Back in the late 1990s, in Romania, when I was at school, we still had inkwells, but the pens had reservoirs.
One of my friends struggles to afford food and still lives with his dad. His dad is a veteran of the troubles and the Falklands. He needs constant care and as such my friend looks after him. My friend has no time for a job nor any transport to get to one. Their benefits don't cover enough to pay for bills, rent, and food. He goes around with holes in his shoes that he's had for the past 10 years.
I used to live in social housing too. I've seen plenty of other people in similar situations. Poverty is still a big issue. It is a largely overlooked one these days even though it is starting to become a bigger issue again.
I'm sure the poor back at the turn of last century would love central heating, comfy beds, tellys and such... Yet there is still the issue of people being malnourished. Drugs really hasn't helped anything either
We still had inkwells when I was at primary school in Scotland in the 1960s.
Being naive was a big part of being that optimistic. When you are basically ignorant, you are happy, carefree about the future. No fear equals happiness. This is why children are so happy....they fear nothing. As we age, we start to fear almost everything; our health, money, relationships, dying, etc. Children do not have these fears.
I think thats a really simple, but accurate way to explain it. When I was very young my family were relatively quite poor, but so were everyone we knew, therefore it was the norm. Was I happy then? You bet I was.
Only when I got older did I realize that people had things that we couldn't afford....thats when the penny dropped and I noticed for the first time that we were poor. The two best bits of advice ever came from my grandfather (1898-1976) " Don't buy what you can't afford" & " If you want something, go out and work for it". The result is that I'm doing fairly o.k. and have never been in debt (except a mortgage).Simple really.
Yep - we adults have more invested in life and more to lose apart from loved ones dying or nursing sick aged parents and relatives, everyone dies but death was more common and in your face back then.
No antibiotics so a splinter could lead to your death, and they were always aware of that; pneumonia was a real risk, tuberculosis was very common and mainly incurable. Pain from arthritis, and hard damaging work loads, and general cold winter conditions. Pain was a constant, and anesthetics were only becoming less dangerous and reliable.
Many men died in industrial and farm accidents and women died in childbirth, no contraceptives! Many babies died. Often they re-married quickly because they both had children to care for and they supported one another and stuck together.
Back in the early 1900s a lot of people became very ill with conditions that we no longer have to fear, they were not naïve, they had very hard-working lives and religious beliefs were a comfort and joy to many. That is something people of today don't quite understand. They only think of religion as some sort of fairy tales but people actually read the Bible then and it is full of examples of life and it's difficulties and they had examples of how to cope with life's sadness - life is tough without something to sustain a positive outlook.
Children actually have lots of worries and fears too but very little real responsibility until they are taught about life to safeguard them. Forewarned is forearmed. I am grateful for what we have today but I don't think younger people understand what they hve compared to what used to be. I think everyone needs to learn more about their county's History, we knew a great deal about the world and geography as well, education was definitely better. That helps one have a more balanced and realistic perspective. JkK keep learning about History. Regards.
My mum also was born in England 1898 and died in America in 1972 because her doctor was out of town when I carried her to the hospital and they would not help her. So I carried her back to the car and into her little apartment. A few hours later she called me again saying that the pain was too great. So I drove over and carried her into my car and to the hospital. She died a few hours later of peritonitis which could have been prevented. St. Johns hospital, Santa Monica, hang your heads in shame.
Agree.
Fair point!! I miss not fearing anything!!
Oh look at the multicultural society!!!! Now people think Britain was always massively multicultural...
I am just waiting for my Amazon order to arrive. Then my time machine is complete. I hope the flux capacitor arrives undamaged.
loloy baloloy take me with you!
My grandmother was born in 1899, and I have many vivid memories and films of her. (She didn't die until I was 24.) So if you had a grandparent who was born around that time, and many people who are in their 50's or 60's did, it brings that time a little closer to home.
My own grandmother was born in 1899 too ;-)
and she died and was buried a week later on the day of my 22nd birthday - 1982 - no way would i have wanted to live back then - hard times
my great grandmother born about 1860 (grandma's husband side) married 3 times and was very business minded, but her 3 husbands were useless - bad choice in men unfortunately! - and in those days, women had very little chance especially from poor backgrounds on getting anywhere without the aid of a good man's name and help - although she did buy herself a lot of beautiful items for the house and one of her sons became mayor of a nearby town ;-) - her other sons were like her husbands - unfortunately that included my grandad LOL
My grandmother died in 1982 as well ! Times were indeed tough back then. Many diseases were much more dangerous and more children would die from them. Life was harder, but it was a simpler time.
RJ Walker My grandmother was born Sept. 14, 1898, died October 22, 2001. She lived her entire life in New York/Long Island. I’ve written down many of her stories and memories of life. On 9-11, she said, “I’ve through two world wars and the start of the third and final war, but I’ll not be here to see the outcome.”
My grandmother was born in 1894 and lived until 1986. She never talked much about her childhood or youth.
You should add when this documentary was filmed as well. Seems like the 90s which is also very vastly different from today!
yes. trying to look that up. wondering if it was 2000. there was a similar doc title from 2000 ive found on IMBD.
@@haroldofcardboard Yeah looked like the pre-digital age before the widescreen TVs.
Even Andrew Mar looked much younger in 1900
The Good Old Days .... Pretty bad at times no matter where you lived.. Thanks Dr Alan Brown, I put this down as one of the essential/videos that need to be seen. A professional Historian named Page Smith, People's History of the United States [8 v.] (McGraw-Hill, 1976-1987) .He is one of the best writers I have every read... He writes about New York City in 1870 where the death rate for newborn children at some "hospitals is over 80 %...There is a direct connection. What we don't know about history is often times more than we do, for most people.... My ex brother in Laws grandmother was called Nana... She was born about 1890.or 1895...I knew her in the early 1980 she had emigrated to the US, having been born in London, and ran a small tavern/Inn in Tokeland Washington.(it's still there) It was always amazing to hear her talk of England at the turn of the 19/20 century. A frail old woman with a clipped London accent. She was a good person and I warmly remember her. ..Once again... Great video... I'm getting older now and my Dad was born in 1907....and it always amazes me the common things that we don't know. Sometimes you had to be there. I graduated the University in History and while I never taught...My passion has never ended... Thanks again, we fight for the light of education and reason in a world that sometimes seems to grow darker as the forces of, for want of better words ignorance and intolerance seem to be resurgent
they did,nt know that they would be in youtube in 2017....
This period in time was fine for those educated or wealthy where as my father born in 1922 in poor area of Newcastle never even had shoes except in the winter when he was given a a pair of rope scandals donated by the Lord Mayor charity. Went to war at 16 like both of my Grandads before him. Became a prisoner of war when the Germans invaded Crete escaped POW camp twice and making it back to Blighty with help of the Crete resistance and heroes every one of them, got a medal then was sent to North Africa till the end of the war. Came home to a land fit for heroes ugh? back to square one still no nice house job education.....and people wonder there was revolutions throughout Europe at the time.
Absolutely agree with all you have written. Even today, a lot of our older men and women who served, live in poverty. Never mind, god save the queen😳
I like how Granny's teeth fell out around 6:55 and she had to close her mouth to set them right again.
Haha. Mrs Doubtfire! x
😂😂 I never noticed 😂😂
Aww she’s like a lil child 🥰
Rude of you to point that out.
I didn’t even notice hilarious 😂
I would love to go back and have a look for myself, it was the era of my Great Grandparents.
Your great documentary gives me an interesting insight into how my ancestors lived and what was going on in their times.
The days of real poverty for children, with scruffy, dirty clothes and shoes, with not much to eat or to look forward to.
Today children claim poverty because they don't have the latest iPhone, tablet, laptops, internet, Branded clothes and shoes, and stuff themselves wit burgers and pizzas......:)
This is a fascinating look at the past, and how people lived, and died, especially many children through diseases, malnutrition etc.
Plus Anne Coleman born 1890, is still very attractive too....:)
Yes now we are told about child poverty one day, obesity crisis the next. Poor Marcus Rashford doesn’t know whether to give free meals or take them away!
Gorgeous era and love the Edwardian fashions for both men and women. The beautiful actress Maud Adams is one of my all time favorites...thanks for sharing!
so--you see yourself as one of the uppercrust? good choice, 'cause most of the rest lived on a pound a week--for Everything.
The rich did dress elegant,the poor couldn’t even afford coats so wore blankets
If I would have been around then I would have been poor wearing blankets
More money than sense and ignorant
I am drawn to documentaries like this. I feel like I am an old soul eager to time travel. This is awesome!
Same I absolutely hate being alive in this time. I can’t wait till my life is over.
@@thepearlswirlyou can't talk to yourself like that. Stay positive.
I was homeless a few years ago with no car or family but it got better. Please stay strong
@@thepearlswirlYou are a real one Pearl. You'll get through it
Love how people keep looking at the Camera wondering what the person is doing.
If only they knew one day they will be back to the future
I loe the way that grandma talks, she is so cute!
@Jusu Jaka stupid comment
Sounds like she likes shekels and subverting, hates foreskins and gas.
@@johnconner9485 East London accent.
Love
Bradford with no Pakistanis??? Amazing 👌
British people in 1900, looking like a harmonious society.
British people in 2020+ What does it mean to be British? And what is a woman?
The "Dog being kicked by a man" freaks me out.
snowflake.
@@Rickswars Stupid bastard.
Funny..we kill more tiny unborn human beings today than ever and in unspeakably cruel ways yet one is 'freaked out' with the sound of a dog being kicked. Modern snowflake society with its unhinged values..
I'd have bought the record for that track alone...
I'd like to visit that time just to see first hand how they lived and how the world was then
There are some great videos about that on youtube . A lady describing the food they cooked during the rationing and the depression. Google "cooking in England during the depression" or whatever. "Servants in England" - that should get something interesting.
There is a good series about what it was like to have a job in the large mansions of the day - very detailed.
Another one about country girls getting a job in a city home - House maids were country girls who wanted to get away from the farm labour and live in the city. Hard work.
My Grandad said that he had a boil on one bum cheek and the teacher told him to sit up straight at his desk. The teacher ended up smacking Grandad's desk with his leather at which point he sat up bolt upright and burst that boil, happy times.
Much the same and much different. At the end of the day, we appear to learn very little from our mistakes. We continue to choose the same kind of leaders and then wonder why episodes from our history keep repeating itself. Fascinating.
Are you black.
@@joesmoe8983 Black is an adjective, not a race of people or man. Why the question?
Dancing around the maypole in London today? Unlikely more like dancing toward the madrassa
They don’t dance towards madrasa unless it’s sufi
Progress? What a term of propaganda. Very few of the changes were really for the good. Here's what happened to the wonderful pedestrian communities of 1900:
The economy = the corporate global economy.
Industrialization = corporate usurpation of production and destruction of the independent craftsman.
Economic development = replacement of small businesses and self-sufficient local economies with the corporate global economy.
Job creation = 1. (Global South) sweatshops, plantations, child labor. 2. (Global North) paper-shufflers paid ten times the hourly rate of Global South workers who do the real, productive work.
Economic freedom = working for the corporations and buying from the corporations.
Economic growth = ever-increasing profits for white collar parasites (e.g., Wall Street manipulators and big corporate and banking executives).
Global labor competition = economic growth by giving your job to a sweatshop worker in another continent.
Global labor market = elimination of environmental, worker safety, minimum wage, benefits, & child labor laws.
Globalization = destruction of all cultures.
Mobility of capital and ideas = rootlessness, unaccountability.
Outplacement interview = You’re fired.
Competitive production costs = revocation of centuries-old protective tariffs (trade barriers), which enables production to be moved to off-shore sweatshops.
Free trade = massive oil-burning transportation system that centralizes economic power in the corporations.
Privatization = corporate appropriation of public lands and resources which creates favored monopolies.
The poor = people who live sustainably in true communities and diverse cultures, crafting their own homes, clothing, and utensils, and growing their own organic food. These millions are termed “poor” because industrial capitalism places no value on communities, culture, and the goods and services people provide for themselves.
Stabilization = subjugation, as in "The US military presence has stabilized the region."
Shift to export economy = corporate agribusiness theft of peasants' land creating massive mono-crop plantations and forced migration into big city slums and sweatshops.
Business-friendly environment = corporate puppet regime installed by U.S. military, CIA, Mossad, MI6, etc., and controlled by detailed and conditional World Bank loans.
European Union = elimination of democracy and borders and the homogenization of Europe's diverse cultures.
Costs outsourcing = subsidies, bailouts, and tax breaks given to corporations in exchange for campaign contributions and cash payments.
Media = propaganda machine owned by corporations and funded by corporate advertising.
Industry consultant = corporate lobbyist.
Market creation = advertising and selling increasingly complex, costly, and unnecessary consumer products.
Automobile = an expensive, dangerous, and environmentally destructive personal isolation chamber and unpaid part-time job, which disrupts, disperses, and destroys compact pedestrian communities.
Infrastructure = subsidized freeway sprawl forcing reliance on the automobile.
Television = an addictive corporate advertising and “news” propaganda device, which wastes time formerly used for family, friends, community, and reading.
Military-industrial complex = $Trillions in obscene profits for the financial elite, made from the mass murder of millions of non-elites.
Peace-keeping forces = occupying army.
Insurgent = local citizen resisting occupation.
Private security contractors = Mercenaries who replace soldiers in occupied countries, creating the image of US departure and local rule.
@James Hannum ..dark, very dark and mostly applies to the USA....I wanted to say....unfortunately, lots of what you mention has been (as per usual) trickling through into European nations. In Russia and China they sped things up by embracing totalitarian capitalism. Sad, really, because there are good developments as well. The negative trends you mention though, seem to prevail though. Capitalism isn't evil as such, übercapitalism is.... as are globalism, totalitarianism etc etc... So I sadly agree with most of what you write. Wait! I forgot: unbridled consumerism: look at the general populace: fat and ugly, overindulging in stuffing their faces and brains with polluting crap, false truths and misguiding trends..... I think deep down inside my view is just as dark as yours...
That is mind blowing!. Some things never change!.
ATTENTION DOPEY LIBERALS: Your denunciation of all of modernity is hysterically wrong on every conceivable level - especially when you conveniently use your smart phone, the complete manifestation of all things new that you hate!
Yes I say let’s hit the fields and sing along in perfect harmony! Screw the conveniences of modern technologies!
James Hannum 10/10 A+
What are all those white people doing there?
I see Andrew Marr is pedalling his dogma.
Very interesting I would take issue with the school leaving age being 14-it is rather misleading as many children were "half timers" meaning that they spent the mornings at school and the afternoons in the mill (at least in Lancashire)
David Worsley I know, David. My mother was one of them!
Poor chaps didn't know two wars and a Great Depression were just around the corner.
How old is this documentary?
How many of those joyous kids died horribly in the trenches 16 years on? Britain was at the height of Empire prosperity. So much was lost in the war that followed... and then even more after WW2.
Thank you for posting this, Dr Brown. What an amazing time that must have been! So many of the things we now take for granted had not yet been thought of, and yet, this era was on the cusp of so many incredible things.
Just HAD to ruin the video by putting a leftist political commentator on it didn't you 😒
That's all it took to ruin it for you? Thin skinned snatch! You're pathetic.
Starkey is certainly pretty right-wing.
the opening scene in Bradford..wow..look at all of those indigenous peoples...thankfully we've become more enriched and now most of yorkshire is a caliphate.
simon lloyd Yes - England is less British every year Just a fact
Anne Coleman, born 1890, has to be 109 in this docu, but that seems impossible. I'm wondering if her interview was filmed at her 100th birthday and then included here? If not, she's the brightest, most spry, most delightful 109 I've ever seen.
even in them days they sent money over seas to help, the hungry or sick, while kids on British street go unnoticed, Well that hasn,t changed,
everytime i think of an event in the past my mind initially starts picturing everything in black and white
People of the future don’t want to work for anything they all feel entitled to a million dollars 10 acres and a mansion with a fancy car🤦🏾♂️
those kids running at the beggining... they all went to war later and probably died
macc305 Actually the majority of British soldiers who served in the 1st World war survived.
David Worsley well, they still probably died eventualy
macc305 You got me!-
macc305 Yeah in WW2... LOL
+macc305 LOL!
We had inkpots and those dip pens with replaceable nibs at school in England in the 1950s and 60s too. First you learnt to write with pencils, then you learnt to use dip pens, then later, I can't remember when exactly, we were allowed to use fountain pens.
So much can happen in just one year, and to think how at the beginning of that year, everyone is so happy, and then unhappy at the end of it. Plus, devastation at the beginning of the following year. It's like in the times of now where you may start off to a good year, or you begin with a bad year. I can feel that we are living in the end times, because there have been a numerous amount of signs to prove so. God knows what's gonna happen by 2020, or 2040. People a 100 years from now are gonna be reading us in their history books. The way we were living, what we did, what we wore. They're gonna be talking about ISIS and whatever else has been going on. It's scary when you come to think of it. Even though we consider 2015 our present time, we're actually living in the olden days to the new generations.
+Bexy Evans The World does End; over and over. Every Generation swears that it can't get any worse-that the World is ending. Devils had danced all through History.
I think there is only so far we can progress. If i think of my Nan and Grandad both born 10 years after this film and what early life was like for them. My Grandad in WW2, My Nan back at home, not knowing if we would ever win., making do with 3 kids on rations.Things like telephones,electricity,indoor toilets, loads of cars.My Nan lived to see home computer games consoles,the first mobile phones. so much in her 82 years.Ive seen much in my 54. But how far can those kids being born now progress in 80 years What will the world be like??
The brits are fascinating! " The intelligent aristocratic minority was doubting their right to rule, only in moral grounds" When has it ever been in history of people, a nation, a class, a clan or whatever to start renouncing their opportunity to rule, their power, based only on their own morality , shame or conscience?! Only brits or british influenced nations like america. Americans or fractions of americans fought against slavery or propagated anti-slavery ideas without themselves being slaves or affected by slavery but only based on moral grounds of what is right and wrong. The Magna Carta, a work of aristocracy initially, itself changed the rule of the old world with the divine right of kings, into the new world with the rights and the freedoms of the individual. It is in the core of american institution itself, a document that has ensured the strength of this great nation of ours more than military brute force has done! Brits are , for good or for bad ,a world-changing force. Sometimes they have screwed up, especially when they renounced their colonies, and other peoples of the world are still paying for brit's mistakes. Nevertheless, the brits are fascinating!
It's a quality that ought to be admired that is a direct result of our Judeo-Christian heritage
@@garethifan1034 No it has nothing to do with judaism at all
If they only knew that they being watched from people in 2020
At the beginning she mentions inkwells and pens with nibs - I used these at school before ballpoint pens came in. They were awful - the ink got all over the hands and the cuffs and there were big splotches on the page.
Anstria Greenwood she loved them it’s kinda cute they way she talked about them
And worse if you were left handed. My primary in the 70's insisted on ink cartridge pens.
At least I wasn't punished for writing with my left, but cartridge ink dries too slow for lefthanders who have to move their hand over the fresh written text not preceed it like righthanders.
I remember those inkwell s and lovely pink blotting paper. I'm sure I still have a piece somewhere...
Fountain pens and then cartridge pens. Elementary school.
We still had inkwells in the desks when I was at school in the 70’s & 80’s.
Children appeared much more well behaved back then
Whenever i see street footage of young kids in the early 20 century , i always wonder how many of them were killed in the first world war.
All theses people are dead it's mad to think
Time devours everything.
Some of the babies from that year are alive still.
Alex the Muffin from 1900 that would make them 117 if not more you got proof??
c s f b.c.f.c Research oldest person alive and you will see.
Alex the Muffin no arguing just saying your saying research oldest person alive how do you know it's one of these baby's in the film?
Where’s the diversity?
A fascinating documentary
This old footage is really marvelous
You can see how the car and the road system totally changed the landscape of our towns and cities forever, so many buildings were bulldozed to make room for the road system
Difference between people then and now is people were brave not afraid of change. There was a collective sense of progress where we must cater to everyone. I long for the time we can be happy for the new decade 2020 and be happy for change no fear of political correctness. Great video!
Not entirely true. Even motorised vehicles met with a lot of resistance. Gas was thought dangerous.
Well Jay, 5 years on, I can tell you 2020 sucked in so many ways, it was incredible. And we've all fallen downhill since then.
all of these people are dead, Its so scary to think that someday, all of us are dead aswell
Taxes and death. 2 sure bets.
we already are...we just dont know it yet!
Good point.
+SHWN 12
We will all taste death.
And the first night in the grave will be your worst nightmare, when you see yourself being buried, you see the people around you.
Then you realize that there is 3½ tonnes of soil on top of you.
You hear the foot-steps of the people walking walking away after they said their last goodbye -- You scream and no one hears you.
Your soul realizes that your body cannot any longer move --- You are trapped and all alone. Soon you are forgotten, no one comes to visit your grave, and you now wait for Resurrection to face judgment by the Creator.
( álloh - áramaic ) ( állah - árabic ) ( éllah - hebrew )
Death is not so scary -- Judgment day will be scary.
Allah prepares you for death and shows you what it is like -- This happens every time you go into deep sleep.
The outside world does not matter and is irrelevant -- Only by the mercy and will of Allah he keeps your heart beating and your lungs breathing.
HE allows you to wake in the morning
When HE decides not to continue with you you remain asleep, your heart is switched off and everything remains the same as the time you fell asleep.
Your problems of the world are over --
As you entered this world not knowing what was here after you were evicted from your mothers womb, you entered the second life that you knew nothing about and did not believe even existed.
And during your life in the Dunya you were told by many that there is another life beyond this -- And you still do not believe, no more than you believed of an earthly life when you were in comfort in your mothers womb.
I could tell you more, and this is enough for you ...
Do not fear death, it is no worse than going to sleep at night.
The only difference is that you don't wake up from it.
Andrew_koala thats the scary part, not waking up from it, I dont care about anything, I just want to always be awake after going into deep sleep
I very much appreciate such informative documentaries. I only wish one could be made for each year.
Oh Annie, Annie, Annie. This lady is just so adorable - ah I just want to give her a squidgy cuddle. We all need an Anne Coleman in our life. Wonderful documentary - thank you so much for the upload.
And still mischievous... Loved her to bits ❤️
The size of the stone buildings is remarkable. How did they move these giant objects that they built with. Mind boggling.
I really love old documentaries. It's 2018 and we get to see footage of people from the 1900]s. The footage is incredible. They did't have iPhones or hand held video equipment.back then. Well done.
I was born in the 70s and so much has changed in couldn't imagine the change these people saw must have been amazing and terrifying at the same time
Hello, how are you doing over there.
This is great! I truly enjoy these rare peeks into our past. Styles, fashions trends, cultures, and the world around us change., but mankind remains the same.
I would love to visit UK at that time. It looks much more British than what i see when I visit London now.
Josef Duben trur
true
London has always been like it is now. It's the world's city.
yes but what josef means by British is white, but that definition no longer applies. Does it matter? Not much if you think that there is only one race and it's called human.
Ashley Caldwell , Don't talk daft, there's always been immigrants there but nothing like today!!
From ruling 1/5 of the worlds population to being an insignificant little nation in less than 100 years
A new age of absolute psychological dominance!
And not a foreigner in sight. Happy days.
I was 8 years old at my first boarding school in 1967, I hated it, the cane was the usual punishment you got for misbehaving, not as extreme as the lady talks about with her spelling mistakes at the 6.58 point but for talking after the lights were out in the dormitories, then you would get 6 lashes on the arse. Two of the teachers had fought in the great war of 1914 to 1918 and at one school when the battery powered calculator became commercially available we still we not allowed to have them in the exams, I got myself a slide rule but had no idea how to use it.
Bullying was common place and the food was aweful, lumpy porriage for breakfast, butter beans and beef/pork sausages was the worst food that we got some days and we had no vegetarians if I remember rightly, but at this school I first heard heavy metal music, it was 'Paranoid' by Black Sabbath and it was my favourite sound.
I was 8 at my boarding school in 1984...hated it, still have some emotional baggage of anxiety surrounding that period of my life. We had he cane and latterly the slipper. The emotionally sterile environment coupled with intollerance for children and no 1st names used left us all with no doubt we werent cared abt...
These places were rife with sexual abuse. See ruclips.net/video/uhWOM3iqF7c/видео.html
What a great age to be alive. Coca cola still contained cocaine and laudanum was available over the counter. Oh to go back in time.
mike evans junkie
Mike I agree- drugs are not the problem brother, legislation is
That's what you long for?
I wish it was possible to go back in time, but not because of cocaine in coke.
@@alvexok5523 like the idea of polio and no antibiotics?
Some things never change we seem to be going backwards today. Poverty and slums appearing once again.
these films always ignore that over 92% of Men were fighting to get the vote too, until 1918 only rich property owning Men were eligible to vote
Actually between 1885 and 1918, about 60% of men had the vote.
That's a lie it's not Bradford. They are all white in that video 😂
Not a curry in sight!
so where did it all go wrong??
The poor little buggers didn't know what was coming!
Dr. Brown thanks for your vid. Would you mind performing an editorial favor for those of us who like history while somehow still despising racism and removing the blatantly racist posts from your comments section? Or perhaps close comments for this (and similar vids)? Much thanks.
Thanks AB for taking the time to publish these historic recordings. If we fail to learn from the past, we will repeat it again!
Very true words, Andrew. Thanks. Regards - Alan.
27:47 Did I hear ... a fart? lol
Fantastic documentary. Liked it very much, thank you! :)
OwnedByAGrey Do you know, I think you might just be right about that! It's faint but audible. Shocking! Thanks for watching, and I'm really pleased you enjoyed the film. Regards - Alan.
OwnedByAGrey It's a creaking in her voice due to the state of her voicebox, you hear it again over the next few seconds when she breathes in during pauses.
Ah! Thank you very much, Matthew :)
Dr Alan Brown OwnedByAGrey HAH! You ARE positively correct! From what my diagnosis reveals, anyhow.
If you watch closely... you can tell, from like her facial information that contreys a sense of embarrassment & also the whole situation-throws off her thoughts..creating alot noise in her head as she's thinking about all the variables(did he hear me? !Oh dear, should i run off to the Lavatory etc) and thus enters the meta-cognition... Where you start thinking about what your thinking WHILE your trying to think about what ur talking about! God, we've ALL been there! :D
AH but after a short stumble she plows through it like a champ ! kudos :D
OwnedByAGrey Oh yeah! She ripped one. Hahaha! Good ear old chap.
I am always amazed that the Richest Country at the time Great Britain could have so much poverty amongst its own citizens. Socialism doesn't work but so much more could have been done.
Look at how much poverty America has within its own borders today and yet it provides billions in donations to other countries
@@lavish_1717 ,i
True
Yes, people optimistically looked into the future in 1900. But keep in mind that many of the young boys you can see in the film would be senselessly massacred in the machine gun fire and the artillery shells of World War One just 14 years later. The first half of the 20th century actually happened to be a catastrophe.
20 seconds in, Andrew Marr talks about 'progressive' in flattering terms. You couldn't invent a story about the ignorance of academia today.
Agree. Innate.
Indeed.
Thank you for this documentary, this is my favorite time period. I would have loved to live at that period or at least been able to visit it with a time machine or something. It was far from perfect but it's good enough for me. I've subscribed to your channel so that I can check your other documentaries. Once again, thanks.
+Héctor Cavalcanti Saavedra You're welcome, Hector, thank you very much. Regards - Alan.
@Jusu Jaka The majority of black Africa is worse off now than they were when they got their independence. Ghana and Gabon are probably better off. Even Nigeria with all its oil wealth is pretty much a violent basket case.Kenya was way better off under the empire.Asia and Latin America certainly have their problems but Africa never seems to progress.
VERY GOOD info here ...and well worth the watch .
Once again Alan.....you have shared a very lovely part of history with us all ...and let me send u a smile :)))))))))))))
Dankje ...x.
I aim to give satisfaction! I will have another good 'veterans' film available after Easter (once I've processed it) so please stay tuned. Good to hear from you again. Regards - Alan
and the uk is as proud of class is as it ever was. some things just dont change.
Wow. All the 7-10 year old boys who would later be sent "over the top" and mowed down like grass during WWI in this video.
Someone please donate a tube of denture adhesive to that poor old lady. Whoever let her be filmed in such a state should be ashamed. Why would you do something so cruel?!
thought the same but how do you ask a lady of her years HEY would you like some Fixodent as your Teath are in and out lol but yeah felt for her.