Pennsylvania Farmer Couple Looks Back From 1979
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- Опубликовано: 27 янв 2020
- I wish I had more of this. I wish I had been smart enough as a young filmmaker when I did this back in 1979 to realize the incredible history that they could have articulated about rural Pennsylvania, about farming life, about the coming of the 20th century, and so much more. The time before the telephone and the computer. Before the radio. Certainly before television. The time when she traveled by train and trolley and horse. The time when people essentially stayed in their own towns and didn't travel much. The time when the telephone was a device where everyone in town could hear everyone else speaking. I found this old 16mm workprint in my basement and digitized it not knowing it would be as wonderful as it is. I recorded this for a television special I was making in 1979 called “the information society.” You can see the entire 1 hour film on my RUclips channel by searching it although I did not use this clip in the film.
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Asked my dad what changed on the farm during the Great Depression. He said “Nothing.We were poor before it,during it and after it.”
"Let your soul catch up to your body every now and then." Brilliant!
Old guy just spoke to me...
Goes to show people haven’t changed much with regards to our need to destress; just the details surrounding the need have changed.
I feel this way when I fly overseas, and then back- that my soul needs to "catch up with" my body so that really speaks to me as well.
I loved that he said that too.
@@ThreePuttBogeys88 me too
I don’t think this old timer is negative. He’s a bit nostalgic for the old days as we tend to be in our old age. I’m middle aged but I sometimes find myself nostalgic for the things from my youth.
In fact he’s quite pragmatic at the end as he’s talking about farming technology and balancing against environmentalism and production needs for the population.
I am a middle aged man miss the pre internet smart phone age and pre I tunes age I remember watching film strips and listening to record albums as a kid if needed to send a message you wrote a letter or a note or called someone on the phone.
@Ancient Link It's very easy to hear the strong German influence in his speech. It's surprising, after so long.
I agree Bryan. He doesn't strike me as particularly negative at all. He acknowledges that you have to keep up with the current trends and information. He just sees that there was value also in the older ways and he has very understandable nostalgia for those older ways. I was expecting someone much crankier.
He acknowledged times were harder in his youth and they relished the challenge. This generation was 100 times tougher than any generation since. Certainly tougher than my generation.
@@YAMISOOLD2009 I agree that the filmmaker interpreted a negative aspect to the old man's perspective. I don't think the old man was cranky. He is sharing his view point. I think the filmmaker and old man have mostly different opinions and world view....
The gentleman being interviewed is NOT negative. We all heard him say that he has the best mother-in-law in the world. How could anyone be more positive?
😁
who said he was negative?
@@c_dubbzz6127 1:58 Mr. Hoffman did. I don't agree with Mr. Walt's viewpoint entirely but you can understand where he is coming from, we all long for the old days. My counter to Mr. Walt's "there's no challenge in today's America" is that we live longer (although not always healthier) lives in America compared to his days and days past.
:-D ❤️
My grandmother turns 102 this June. She’s starting to go downhill but has led a very healthy and great life. She still tells stories from the thirties right on up to today. She remembers the depression, the first Model T the family had, listening to the Grand Ole Opry on the radio and so much. In 1995, I took video of her and my grandfather for a solid two hours just telling stories. I am so glad I did that. Her generation is almost gone. That is sad but what we all face. Make each day what you can.
I loved talking about family history with my late gran I front of the coal fire, playing cards, loved those days, apparently the family back in the day transported tea from India to UK, a funny story of a big manor house, and one of our ancestors ran off with the stable boy, and we become disinherited, a class thing sadly, my gran used to laugh and say if didnt happen we wouldnt be here.
God Bless your grandma! My grandmother (the only grandparent I knew) was born on 1/1/1901. She passed a few months after her 105th birthday. She wrote her life story down, which is great. It's awesome that you videotaped your grandparents, and preserved some of their memories.
Cool to hear you actually took videos, which when you grandmother is gone will probably bring tears to your eyes when you watch them. I wish I would have videoed my grandparents before my grandmother passed away.
I'm encouraged by how people are living much longer on average I mean I remember not really long ago in years ago I mean people were just like up to about maybe 85 or 90 or something at best mostly it seemed
Long live your grandma :)
I love how the man let's his wife speak and finish talking, too! It shows great respect in their marriage, which wasn't always the case back then. Also, they sound like they would be amazing grandparents to have. Absolutely lovely couple.
They look happier than most people today.
WTF
Yes, definitely: I smiled watching them :)
Cause they had more realistic ideals and expectations.
They lived in whiteopea
No blacks
My Senior Year of High School, my History Teacher was doing "Casual Fridays" back in '75 and would bring in elderly residents of the Retirement Home his Mom lived in (It actually was Her Idea) into his History Class to teach us Students what life was like back when they were our then age of 17-18 yr olds. We took notes, laughed, had a few tears, and even made them laugh too. Was such a cool way of learning about History AND from the Source that actually lived it! This video is such a learning tool for ALL AGES!! Cheers From Ohio Mr. Hoffman
This would be great for kids today however, there is little respect for the elderly today, especially among the young.
You had an excellent History teacher. What an excellent idea.
In my opinion, history is taught backwards in school. Instead of going back to antiquity and coming forward, start with now and go back. That way when somebody asks a question, "Why did this happen", the teacher can then say, "Well this is what happened before that caused that........"
@@itgetter9 My Teacher, Mr, Geyer told us it was in fact his Mom's idea. He asked the School Superintendent if it was possible and it was started on "A Trial Basis"...Turned out to be a Winner! Cheers
@@TheStuport That is amazing. I love it. (Moms often have the best ideas, too.) Cheers to you!
This man and his wife have more insight into the way life and how the world is than 89% of today's ppl.
Nonsense. You're suggesting that elderly people in 1979 have more insight than elderly people in 2020?
@@posysdogovych2065 Makes sense actually. The minds of today are distracted and manipulated all the time.
The couple had time to think and feel. The attention span of the internet generation is getting shorter and shorter.
@@MixolydianMode Of course, Professor. Because if I had to describe my 86 year old aunt, the "internet generation" is the first thing that would come to mind.
89%??? You sound ridiculous.
@@GplusGains He probably meant 88.43%, in which case it is now perfectly logical.
Greatest takeaway: “I don’t think you should know too much too fast. Keep your mind in the world.” I think that statement perfectly encapsulates why so many are overly stressed in this day and age
Gladaseeya hmm, that sounds like a climate change denier sentiment.
@@trishayamada807
I didn't read what Gladaseeya said as climate change denying. I think it is more about over-stimulation of the senses and a fast food/lack of patience society.
Rebecca Carlson I was implying this, people staring at phones and missing life around them
That's a great insight you shared. I like it
@@Gladaseeya
Now more than ever it feels. So many around me seem to have lost their plot obsessing over others.
I remember when old people used to look like this! Crazy how times change. Even the old people aren’t the same type of old.
He seemed pretty modern with the times to me. He even said he wouldn’t want to go back in time because it was too hard. That was a great couple. He praised his mother in law. I liked hearing that video
I like how you mention that because there are a lot of people in the comments using this to justify their own beliefs and pathological hatred for modernity.
Anything extreme, fanatical and uncompromising is pathological. People who root for modernity at the expense of all farmers are just as delusional as those who want everybody to go back 500 years. There are many pros and cons to both modern and traditional ways life living.
When I was a kid in the mid 70s our class went to a convalescent home to bring cookies and play music for the old folks. Many of them were over 80 years old but there were a couple who were over 100 and they still had their wits and memory. Listening to them talk about the 1880s like it was yesterday is quite amazing considering that I can still remember it today in 2020
There's something comforting about these people. Almost like it's going to be ok.
I feel the opposite. I really want to have a homestead but I am afraid they want us to live like we are in a Jim Jones commune with no independent thought. I fear the future and would do anything to go back in time
"Let your soul catch up with your body every now and then" wise words
The old dude doesn't seem bitter or grumpy to me. He's more of a "we'll see" about information society (as we alla should be IMHO - I'm 36 btw), he's very rational about technology I would say, seems like a wise, well-adjusted guy to me. Also totally right about tourism. And the line about office work... I wish I couldn't relate :(
"... Puts your mind in a whirl..." That's what the information era has brought us. A very nice couple who were raised in a more challenging time. A great video.
That part stuck with me too. It’s so true. I often feel like my mind is in a whirl due to the information overload.
More challenging in different ways...
@@LukenUSee Agreed! I don't think anyone's yet fully understood how psychologically damaging modern life has become. That usually takes half a century of hindsight and scientific research- by which time it's too late to fix.
@@jojoUK120 This stuff is fascinating to me. Great point
"Let your soul catch of with your body every now and then.
It's all down to your attitude.
It's not good to know too much too soon. The mind is in a whirlwind. Take it easy. Relax.
Keep the balance.
Study the cycles and find your own rhythm.
We are thankful and glad."
Total wisdom. We're lost today.
I love her drapes. I have the exact same thing on my windows that I made from gingham tablecloth. They make the house feel wholesome and warm. This could be my family. Them old-timers were tough and wise. Gentle and well-spoken thanks for posting
I loved her drapes too. I'm sure she sewed them herself. I've heard stories of sewing clothes from flour sacks for the children, as she mentioned. They did what they could do back then.
@@christinetarquin3773 Flour sacks were made out of fabric specifically designed to be repurposed into clothing. It was sort of a sales gimmick back then. A way to get you to buy their product.
I was 10. I miss the 70s. I wish things could have stayed that way for a looooong time. This was a treat. Thank you so much for sharing all that you do. They are treasures. All of them. I wish I had a cam coffee or smthg to record even the every day places I took for granted would always be there and didnt need to be even photographed. People were mostly good back then. God bless you for having the foresight and them sharing them. They are pearls, each of them.
Jo Mama, Hi I miss the 1970's too ! I was 14 years old in 1979. People were a bit friendlier back then. Of course no computers, Cell Phones or VCR but if you do not have it. You don't miss it ! I like these times but the 1970's was my favorite decade still. All the best.
What a precious couple. The women reminds me so much of my own grandmother who passed away. She lived and worked on a farm in Michigan with her husband - both of them came from the old Europe after the war. They had to grow their own food, cook on a wood fired stove and raised 13 children on that farm. I had my best times visiting the farm and spending time with my grandmother and all my aunts and uncles. This couple is so smart and sweet and I admire how the man cherishes the challenges of life. Most people now would not survive one week back then living like they did. Great outtake of a time that had sadly passed away.
David, your YT channel is a gem and I am so glad I found it (it just popped up in my feed one day). I think a lot people, young and older, enjoy seeing the kind of content you are producing for YT. Please don't stop! Thanks
I do agree with the gentleman too much puts your mind in a whirl. I think we are OVER stimulated today with all the visuals and audios and gadgets. And they are also correct about family farms dwindling and the cost goes up. When I was a kid many people had gardens in their back yard. That was common.
Completely agree. Our minds are in a whirl. This couple had clearly put a lot of thought into the implications of what might be headed our way, via technological changes.
Marlena D Yep. Get up so tight we couldn’t unwind.
One other thing not mentioned is all the adds polluting peoples' minds today. There were adds back then to be sure, on tv, billboards, in sports stadiums. Today it is much worse. We have all they had back then plus going online there are adds everywhere. And I do believe today that there is more bombardment in terms of add time per hour or some similar stat.
@@sdgakatbk So true
You're more than welcome to move to North Korea.
I'm melancholy thinking this lovely couple is no longer here.Just touching, looking at this vid, looking back in time to a period I was actually living in (I'm 52) and remembering life was so much MORE then. I hope the remainder of this couples lives were peaceful and happy. Any idea about the rest of their lives? Did they live 10 more years? 20 more years? Who died first and who had to remain alone? Well it was a sweet time capsule for sure, thanks for sharing your vids Mr. Hoffman.
I hear ya, brother. I'm 51 and have always loved talking to those in previous generations and hearing history firsthand. I also wonder about this couple and their family history, they are the real deal.
🐣🐓It makes me feel younger, and more mature at the same time - this video, - and I am 49, almost 50!
I don't even know their last name.
The couple in the video were my grandparents Walter and Jennie Himmelreich. Walter lived to be 87 and passed in 1993. Jennie lived to be 91 and passed a year later in 1994. The video really captured their personalities well. My grandmother was such a positive person and a joy to be around. My granddad shared much practical wisdom. Finding this video was such a pleasant surprise. It was like sitting down and talking with them all over again.
@@jimhimmelreich6329 thanks for the information!
That man is a visionair. The soul needs rest.
10:37 "Let your soul catch up with your body." Lots of great wisdom. If there was a film of the woman making her famous decorated cookies it would be pure gold on youtube.
These old bits of film are priceless. Windows into a world long gone. Thank you for capturing these moments and rescuing these clips and outtakes. Sometimes the outtakes tell us more than the feature. I can't get enough. Thanks again.
How cool, my Great Grandmother was still on a "party line" with several other people into the early 2000's. She spoke of it much like this lady did, she loved to hear the gossip of the neighborhood.
Lol so did my great aunt Ginnie
Absolutely refreshing! I can watch this forever! I love the old school attitude of doing. Not hand outs. He was so honorable and fought all new lol. Love it! But they adapted together and held strong together. People today do not know this strength.
Growing up in the early age of the Internet, I am really anticipating a future reality when people interview me about what it was like to be online in 1995 - 2005 before social media, youtube and smartphones. I am going to praise the hell out of the old days when the Internet was a wild west new frontier!
Same! Oh boy, those were the days.
Toarcade
"Back in my day, we had Napster to download music with. The time varied from 30 minutes to never!
Greatest days of my life. To hell with todays "advancements"!"
I remember the first time I surfed the internet...it was in the Spring of 95, a couple of months before my high school graduation. Our Social Studies teacher had us look up things with it in the computer lab. Mosaic and Netscape...in the lab, I think we used the Mosaic browser. She also had us play Sid Meier's "Civilization," on occasion. I miss the quiet and isolation of the pre-Internet days...it made you more creative and a better thinker. Now, like the old man in the video said, all the tech creates a whirlwind in your mind.
Surfing the Internet was amazing back then. Spending hours going from link to link to a totally new experience. Then coming across things like “Hamster Dance” and have your mind blown. So fun!
I remember the early online days in the 90’s and the sound of the dial up connection. I made my first online rental car reservation for a trip to Cancun, and it blew me away to show up in Mexico and have a car waiting for me in my name without ever having had to speak to someone. Amazing!
This couple is fantastic. Emotional intelligence in abundance. And you can physically see their love for each other, it’s amazing.
Absolutely brilliant! They're about the age I am now .. good grief .. how wonderful to see yourself from the future into the past. I didn't think he was negative at all. Just very practical. I love your old films David. Thanks. 💖
Just love his expression as she speaks of not WANTING to stay on the farm, milking cows.
"I don't think you should know too much too fast... Let your soul catch up with your body every now and then." Beautiful.
So cool, I bug my mom all the time to tell me how live was like when she was a kid in the 40's, and how her parents grew up in the early 1900's. She also talks about the massive change from her time and now. Older folks have so much knowledge to teach us.
My gosh so cute! I hope these people were well loved and missed when they passed on.
I like how he talks about life giving you challenges and how overcoming them gave you a sense of accomplishment. He is right.
I found them to be quite intelligent and they had a wise perspective of the past as well as the future.
Fascinating interview David. I didn’t find him negative at all, both of them just being honest, intelligent and articulate. I think there is some deep wisdom in his answers. A real gem of an interview David, thank you.
I particularly liked what he said about facing challenges ...so true, absolutely spot on in fact.
Struggle is good !!
I couldn’t imagine getting up at 2:00 am to harness the horses and wagon to travel 50 miles to town to get a years supply of groceries then head back home. Amazing life people had back in the day. Much respect.
He is so incredibly kind and respectful to his wife 😊 and very handsome too.
This is wonderful, David. Thank you.
Both sides of my maternal grandparents were Irish. Here in Nova Scotia, coal mining was a big employer. The different mining areas had baseball teams, and miners were moved from one area to another if they were on a ball team. They were both from Springhill, but were both born in Cape Breton because their fathers were playing ball here.
Grampy Jim’s family moved back to Springhill when he was a boy. His father, Pa Ryan, was a miner, a town drunk, and a ladies man. I remember my mother telling me he tipped his hat to every woman whom he met. He was also abusive. When Grampy Jim was 15, he had been learning to box. He pounded his father when he was abusing his wife, and was thrown out in bare feet. He went to work in a little grocery store, on the Main Street, and slept in the stable where the owners kept the delivery horses. Later in life he would own that store. I remember going to see him at the store.
My nanny Reilly’s family were in Cape Breton, mining. Her father was killed in the mine. There were no social safety nets then, and the mining companies owned their houses, so Nanny’s family (6) kids lost their father, their income, and their home all at once. Nanny’s mother married another miner, but he didn’t want her children. They were all put out of their home as teenagers. The boys rode the rails, and the only two I ever met were pretty rough. Nanny had been keeping house for a Jewish couple. She slept in a field the first night, and when she burst into tears at work the next day, Mrs. Cashen took her in to live with them. Nanny had to take her pay home to her mother every week. But Mrs. Cashen kept a little bit every week, and bought Nanny a new winter coat; the first new item of clothing she ever had.
Nanny went to Springhill when she was 17, and met and married Jim Ryan. They lived on the Main Street , close to the store. They had 6 kids. Once the kids had gone out on their own, Nanny Ryan wanted to move out to the country. Grampy laughed at that notion, but they did move outside of Springhill, on a big farm. They had cows, pigs, chickens and other birds, a collie I loved, and a garden. There was a brook meandering from a mountain, through part of the yard, under the milking room, then out under the outhouse. Nanny used to catch brook trout and fry them up. She loved them. The milk, chickens, and produce from the garden were sold in the store in town.
I used to love going there on weekends and summers. I still have a quilt Nanny made, 50 years ago. Grampy always wore a tam of Nova Scotia plaid, and a few times I got to go on the milk run with him. Going to Nanny’s house gave me some wonderful memories.
My Grandfather was born in 1882. He died in 1970, a year after he watched the Moon Landing with us with tears in his eyes. He told me the story, as a young man, when he first read about the Wright Brothers famous first flight, weeks after it occurred because news didn't travel fast then. He said it was all anyone talked about, and there were arguments whether it was real or not. Apparently, there have always been some who claim "fake news!"
Granddaddy was not among them, he loved technology, raised his son (my Dad) to love knowledge. Daddy became a top communications expert, an engineer at Collins Radio, and was on the team that designed and built the communication systems aboard the Apollo missions. That's what put that tear in Granddaddy's eye, the realization that those words, "One small step for man..." was heard around the world through equipment his son helped design. He was so proud of what his little farm boy accomplished.
One phrase Granddaddy often said, "They don't make 'em like they used to, and BOY! Am I GLAD!"
I'm the daughter of a pilot (I was taught to fly but unfortunately will never get to be pilot-in-command bc of my eyesight.) Reading your comment about your grandfather getting tears in his eyes at the moon landing made me tear up! He saw so much technology go from small steps to giant leaps.
What a great interview watching it makes me feel good as I grew up in the 70s and it was the best time for me with great memories. She reminds me of my grandma who lived in a small country town. I can identify with the gentleman because I've said some of the same stuff and I'm 54. Things were different in their time and they worked their tails off and appreciated what they had. It's not like that anymore and much of what he said applies greatly to today.
Oh my God it's like hearing my great grandparents again...
That old LC dialect...
Thank you for preserving it
Millennial here... love your channel! Your videos/channel really offer a special insight and perspective from the past. Please keep uploading! these outtakes are even good
That was brilliant. What an incredible outlook on the world. Open minded yet knows the value of things to them and expressed in such an authentic natural way. Ok as a Scotsman I absolutely loved their accents!
This is man is a great philosopher. This gentleman is very sharp. Thank you 🙏
He is well travelled too... how many people travelled to Israel and South America in those days.
It seems like it really gave him perspective!
I absolutely loved listening to this wise old couple! 🧨
Reminds me of my grandparents. The old generation didn't talk about complex things usually, because generally their lives were not complicated, though what they experienced could be intense, like the Dust Bowl. This sounds like the usual Sunday afternoon family chats I would often hear. I distinctly remember them talking about a tractor being, "A hundred bucks". I had no idea what that meant! The fascination with my uncle's new dovetailing router bit, and talking about steers, corn prices, and kids on the way.
“We looked back to what we thought were the good old days, but we wouldn’t want to go back to them.”
How true then and now!
It’s interesting how we see the value in capturing something only in hindsight. I try so hard to do it today...”Hold onto this...in 20 years, you’ll wish you kept this!” - But I think we are doomed to devalue the present for some reason. I would pay a year’s salary to get a video of me from 1979...just to see what kind of a kid I was...how I sounded...what I was like...would I have liked myself as a kid? Did I sound annoying? You at least had the wherewithal to capture some things on film...which now makes them national treasures. I remember visiting my great aunt and uncle probably in this exact year or maybe the next. Not realizing I was talking to people who lived in the 1800s. I should’ve asked so many things...but you just don’t think of it at the time. Love your videos, David. 👍🏼
The respect this couple has for each other is amazing. What a stunning perspective, they are true American farmers, reminds me of that one painting!
Wow this is fabulous! So glad you saved these outtakes
This guy you are interviewing looks like a hard worker.
Back when men were men and women were glad they were.
Interesting to see the difference in their feelings about the past. The wife was happy the old days were over, but the husband is waxing nostalgic about them.
@@the_gilded_age_phoenix8717 you are absolutely right.
I'm glad my husband was one of them. A real man. That's what we need now, real men. But now they call it "toxic masculinity". That is just crap.
@@mariabecker521 couldn't agree more.
@@mariabecker521 I'm going to disagree with you slightly. As I understand it, "toxic masculinity" only refers to certain traits that hurt men as well as women, and those are: a) limiting boys to only certain emotions, and berating them if they cry or express sadness or gentleness; and b) a masculinity that seeks to dominate, rather than to protect. I think most people who use the phrase "toxic masculinity" use it to distinguish from healthy masculinity, which is what I hear you supporting, and I support too. This guy in this video seemed to have the kind of masculinity we all appreciate (he was a hard worker and also thoughtful, expressive, etc.). Hope that makes sense. I wish you well!
This is really wonderful. Some bits are so well spoken. As always, thank you David for sharing a unique perspective for the times. There's no channels that hit this sweet spot like you do. Cheers.
Your channel is a rare treasure, such wisdom in both of their words. Thanks for posting this!
A nice couple who have moved well with the times. The bowl of flowers said it all, a care for their surroundings & home. They had a kind view of the rest of the world.
Fascinating Couple ...
I guarantee you that my aunt know the children of this couple. And her parents knew this couple.
She was a Mennonite that grew up on a farm in Lancaster. Glad you’re in a happier place Aunt Marian and Uncle Henry. They lived a simple, but wonderful life. They left behind a large, and prosperous family filled with blessings. I’ll always remember their sweet corn dish.
Thank you David once again for sharing this with us.
Fascinating. They were just so full of experience that we cannot even begin to imagine today, and so capable of communicating. And, yes, I wish your youthful nature at that time would have allowed for more patience. You had really good questions. But I'm grateful for what you did capture and retain. Thank you!
Wow, in 1979 I was 18yrs old, lol. I was born in 1961, Wow again, lol. I know I'm always nostalgic for the days back when I was a kid. Best times to have grown up for kids is 50s, 60s and 70s.
The way her dad shopped sounds like my husband going to Costco! 😂
Texas 1 haha what a fantastic comment. Made me chuckle 😂
Alex D 😘
"Let your soul catch up with your body every now and then" I love that, thank you for sharing x
Beautiful couple and so true in what they were saying. It brings to my mind how exactly difficult we can make life for ourselves!! What a blessing it is to have a simple life with challenges that made you strong yet gave you accomplishment in enjoying life.
What a lovely couple. They both seem like such kind, wholesome, and even-keeled people.
Their accents are very interesting to listen to. I live in Philadelphia, Lancaster is about 2 hours away. It's a slightly different dialect there today, but these people were there likely in the late 1800s, which is really cool to hear how they talk
I think radio and tv have made American English more uniform than it was in the past. Everyone grows up hearing the same professional tv accents (the kind they teach New York broadcasters to have)...and so everyone's English is beginning to sound similar. The language variations are become much less pronounced, I think.
The_Gilded_Age_Phoenix exactly. I think that fact that people and families tend to move around more now plays a role as well. Regional accents really are becoming a thing of the past.
The man in particular has a strong PA Dutch accent.
@@awholtzapple87 Ya, du bischt recht. Seller kall iss gewiss en Deitscher. (Yes, you're right. That guy is definitely a Dutchman.)
My parents grew up in the depression, WWII, and they seemed amazed at the changes. (I cannot imagine what they'd think now!) They always told me how easy it was for me. And about bread lines and operators handling phone calls. I'm sure your parents told you about these things.
I was 18 in 1979, my relatives weren't all that different from these folks.
Luana B. Same here, only my parents used the ole “we had to walk to school every day,uphill,both ways “
@@rpool5874
*In the snow, with only grease sandwiches for lunch(because they couldn't afford the meat), while in the orphanage...
Then they got sent to Omaha Beach to fight the Nazis.*
Yes, I actually heard this.
Luana B. My moms greatest line was “ if you don’t straighten your ass up, I’m sending you to the children’s home “ it never worked though.
stickinit totheman My mom would get on the phone and trick us that she was talking to the funny farm until we cried and begged no mom no.
Walt is SMART. He recognizes the impact of stress on mental health when no one else did.
Thanks! As a 43 year old today, I enjoy seeing what 70 yr olds thought in 1979.
Oh I so love these old films. I could watch them all day. Thank you David
A wonderful insight by this great couple, and at almost 68 years old, I can agree wholeheartedly with the gentleman's view on tourism...I live in coastal Alabama and in my teens, the pristine beach had one small motel and one snack stand...now it's all condos and hotels and upscale attractions and tourist crowds and traffic...good for business, for sure, but I'm thankful for having had blissful, introspective walks on an quiet, solitary beach before it changed!
I just love these two. I could listen to them for hours.
I love learning new things from your vintage footage.
Thank You David! ♡
Wow these people were wise beyond their years, literally. This is a gem
Thank you for sharing this video, Mr. Hoffman...I graduated from high school in 1978, and so much has changed since then. I grew up in California and there was alot of agriculture there. There was no silicon valley, just 3 channels on TV, slot of people would go to the city to see a movie or a play or a concert. I enjoyed listening to this couple, since I had no grandparents, they had passed away before I was born. So any ways, I like hearing stories that the older people would tell, very interesting. I always liked working on the farm my aunt and uncle had.Milked the goats, collected the eggs, fed the rabbits,and helped my aunt collect the vegetables from the garden, etc. In my younger years I worked on horse ranches, which I loved because it got me out of the city, L.A. for a while. Well, enough about me, but thanks again for sharing the videos, please keep them coming!♥️
I grew up in Lancaster county. In many ways this county is still very old times. Especially the little town called Quarryville if anyone here knows of it. I love it there. Unfortunately I am homeless and live in my car and work abut and hour away now. But I miss living there. I miss being a kid and having my mom and living in quarryville. I loved Lancaster county
Just brilliant. Wonderful, elegant couple.
Frequently being in the Lancaster/reading area it’s cool seeing some interviews like this from years back. Still a traditional life in certain parts with the Amish
dcbee z how
dcbee z abhorrent?
@@dcbeez5956 Not all.
Not all of any religion or group is abhorrent because some are. That kind of thinking and blame gets billions of people killed.
An Amish co. put a great roof on my house and not 1 of them or their families run a puppy mill.
@@dcbeez5956 you really don't know much about the Amish if you think that. Puppy Mills are run by bad eggs. Not necessarily the Amish.
I cannot imagine what you were thinking; Walt was charming, pleasant, and he didn't criticize anything, but that he gave the opposite point of view in the next breath, allowing a good reason for whatever both sides of the argument were. He saw the good in many things that were being spoken of. Wish I could meet these folks! They must have seen some changes 🕰️
Thank you for sharing this one 💛
Great video David. Two more of the greatest generation.
David, why would you say the husband is negative? I found him to be honest, contemplative, insightful and willing to share his perspective with you.
Both of them were delightful...I enjoyed them very much.
“Let your soul catch up with your body” how fitting on how today, we are pounded with news, bad and good. There is so much that people do not have time to process it all, and jump to conclusions , feed on emotion and not facts.. I forgot my cell phone a few weeks ago, it felt nice after the panic wore off..
This was fantastic - Thank you for posting, Mr. Hoffman.
What a beautiful couple! I don't blame them it's like they say
It's got it's good and bad. They wouldn't trade it for the today's world! They had hard jobs they worked in gardens picking potatoes sewing for their children cooking in an stove bringing wood to stay warm.
When you have the courage to be yourself you'll feel a freedom like no other. The right people will love the real beautiful and creative soul that you are quirks and all
Take a stand for authenticity and openness Believe in yourself to be yourself is to be Free!
Thanks for sharing!
Another great excellent story!
I was born in 1979 and this was absolutely awesome.
I'm just two years older than you and I remember people like this couple, too. I miss their generation so much.
Thanks for preserving history. More people should do it.
Oh, Mr. Hoffman, I love this one. And 1979 was SUCH a watershed moment in U.S. history! I'm so grateful you got this footage. p.s. These two folks remind me a bit of my own grandparents.
I stayed 2 weeks with my great grandmother when i was 12...1981. She was 81. Yep...born 1900. I still treasure every moment. I picked veggies from the garden everyday. Shelled peas, her greanbeans were a meal by itself imo. I had to bath in a round washtub outside under the clothesline with drying sheets shielding me. She had a big tv but not one channel came in...so it just sat there unused. Id sit in front of it reading Readers Digest or playing solitaire. She knelt beside her bed every night and talked to God like he was her best friend. I dont think she knew I could hear her. She passed away in 84. Priceless footage here.
So fun to watch as a 55 year old. Reminded me of my great uncle Lawrence. Thanks again David Hoffman
My wife and I are the 2022 version of this couple. After dairy farming for the last 42 years, the changes we see in both agriculture and society in general are both as irreversible and dramatic now for us, as they were for the folks in the video. People need to become aware that agriculture, and food processing all the way through to retail is falling into the hands of very few individuals.
Did he say she was 98? She looks way too healthy and young for 98! Wow time has changed.
These two know what the value of living really means.
Thanks, David, for the perspective.
In our push button, automatic, instant world today I can't help but wonder what they would have to say now. I just love to hear from people like these. Thank you!
I am from the area and a large part of my family were farmers. I really enjoyed this interview, thank you!
Do you know what part of Lancaster County this was in?
I do not remember. Sorry.
David Hoffman - filmmaker
@@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker Would be interesting to know their ages, but I guess those are also lost to time. I'm guessing between 75 and 83.
Jimmy Carter was still President & John Lennon was still alive. There was a pop band in the 80's named " The Information Society " who had a few hits.
David Ellis thank you for this! I’m going to find their music now
They’re still around and just released a new song a few weeks ago
The Information Society came after Carter and after Lennon's death. Their hits were more late 80's.
When I watch these I can almost smell the coffee and Danish like when I was a kid around the same aged folks. I sure do miss hearing my grandparents voices.
Beautiful couple. Still as sharp as a tack remembering the times of their youth.Like the man said he misses when you worked HARD for something. You do appreciate things more if you work hard for it. I was 14 years old in 1979. There was no Computer, Cell phones or VCR back then. But if you do not have it. You do not miss it. I was outside playing baseball and football back then. Kids are inside more these days and not as much social interaction I think, which is sad. I love these times but I do miss the 1970's of my childhood. Thanks for the upload.
Thank you Sonny for your comment. If your resources allow, I would sure appreciate your using the THANKS button under any of my videos including the one you have commented on. It is something new that RUclips is beta testing and would mean a great deal for my continuing efforts.
David Hoffman filmmaker
@@DavidHoffmanFilmmaker Will do ! Keep up the great work.
The man didnt seem pessimistic to me, it seemed like he had a pretty educated outlook on the past and why things need to progress
And he knows how to pronounce “Lankister...”. My heart. I miss home. 😉
They said both city right Lancaster' and Reading Pennsylvania. Of course I grew up at the Berks County Pennsylvania.
York County Dutchman here. Judging from their accents, I guarantee these two old folks were fluent Pennsylvania Dutch speakers.
@@martinmummert5614 yep, I’d know that accent anywhere, spoke just like my mom and dad. I grew up right outside of reading and went to school in Morgantown.
@@DebraGill Ya. Mir Pennsilfaanisch Deitsche leit misse zamme schtecke. (Yes. We Pennsylvania Dutch folks have to stick together.) By the way, I recognize your name. Long ago, you used to comment on Bryan Denlinger's videos 😊. I love how he exposes Catholicism, and particularly the devilish Jesuit Order.
@@martinmummert5614 my mom spoke Pa Dutch fluently, me not so much. 😂
I can pick out a word or so. Funny thing was when my aunts, uncles and grandparents got together I could always tell when they were talking about me. 😂 That was a long time ago that I followed Bryan. He has changed.
What the gentleman said at 5:06 about having things too easy and being soft applies to the U.S. Today in 2020 same as it did in 1979! Great Interview!
Good point!
Another one that I love!!!!! Love the past !!