1944 (September) - Le Mans - France (Remastered, Colorized)

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  • Опубликовано: 24 окт 2024

Комментарии • 912

  • @robdixson196
    @robdixson196 3 года назад +411

    Something about footage of day to day life in other eras always fascinates me.

    • @matthewmcalister2165
      @matthewmcalister2165 3 года назад +17

      Same. No idea why, but it also feel eerie to watch

    • @niclasjohansson5992
      @niclasjohansson5992 3 года назад +3

      It's stranger because France had just been liberated from Nazi Germany. If you look at American cities in the same time the lifestyle would seem more familiar

    • @robdixson196
      @robdixson196 3 года назад +1

      @@niclasjohansson5992 Yes footage from America in that time period looks very similar, In general i think the french are more mindful of their appearance and dress when they leave the house though

    • @RemedyUnderTheSun
      @RemedyUnderTheSun 3 года назад +4

      Aside from phones, they all seem to similar to us. Even though is was like eighty years ago, we see a resemblance of us in the smiles and looks. That's part of it for sure.

    • @kingultra6564
      @kingultra6564 3 года назад

      Oh shut up, you old relic

  • @elultimo102
    @elultimo102 3 года назад +253

    Funny how the color makes them look real, as opposed to artifacts of the past.

    • @barbarusbloodshed6347
      @barbarusbloodshed6347 3 года назад +29

      Yeah, suddenly that "break" in history is gone. Where everything black & white feels like "the time before" and everything in colour is the "a couple of decades ago"...
      It makes a huge difference and it makes the tragedy of WW2 so much more tangible...

    • @PaulMaranto
      @PaulMaranto 3 года назад +3

      I was thinking the same thing!

    • @MeiYingLim
      @MeiYingLim 3 года назад +6

      Because colour is a whole lot of information

    • @iliketowatchvideos47
      @iliketowatchvideos47 3 года назад

      Agree

    • @Happy_nessaa
      @Happy_nessaa 3 года назад +1

      @@MeiYingLim So true!

  • @azizbekov6009
    @azizbekov6009 3 года назад +179

    Le Mans was liberated by Patton's 3rd army on August 8. The Germans had retreated by then and the city was taken without much resistance. Le Mans mostly suffered heavy bombing of the train station area. Many people seen on this video were waiting for a son, a brother, a nephew, a husband.. still detained in Germany. Many would never come back..

  • @jonb351
    @jonb351 3 года назад +435

    I'm always amazed to see a world with NO PLASTIC. Things you bought were made to last, not be thrown away.

    • @maaxrenn
      @maaxrenn 3 года назад +9

      its just like that doesnt scale with the amount of people on earth consuming

    • @Itapirkanmaa2
      @Itapirkanmaa2 3 года назад +50

      There were a lot of plastic products, bakelite, nylon, celluloid, casein, shellac, polyethylene, neoprene, vinyl, teflon.

    • @guslakis
      @guslakis 3 года назад +30

      There were plastics, but little or no plastic bags, plastic cups, or plastic water bottles

    • @gordonayres2609
      @gordonayres2609 3 года назад +35

      @@shawnsteuer9951-I was a child in the 1950s and there was very little throwaway plastic in everyday shopping. Plastics seemed to exist here and there with some occasional objects such as cellophane which was used for expensive florist flowers... and other things ..but even my toys were largely made of metal and wood. And that was not wartime...when shortages made everything vital to be re-used.I understand your point about the prewar advance in that medium - Bakelite etc -but homes were not flooded with stuff like now.. especially throwaway plastic and takeaway. and all the packaging. My mother went to all the little shops like the butcher / baker / greengrocer / etc and it was all in paper bags etc which were reused.The supermarkets need to be burned down!

    • @389383
      @389383 3 года назад +9

      When the shopper put the bowl of whipped cream(?) in her bag without a cover I wondered where the wrap was for the top!

  • @SirThopas3
    @SirThopas3 3 года назад +111

    I love these because it gives me a sense of what people actually wore on the street as opposed to fashion plates or Hollywood films

    • @ibrahimmustafa2481
      @ibrahimmustafa2481 3 года назад +1

      As opposed to black and white films which look unrealistic for some odd reason!

    • @deweywatts8456
      @deweywatts8456 3 года назад +2

      Hollywood has always sold us what we wanted to see, not what is.

    • @clem_tangerine
      @clem_tangerine 3 года назад

      The place is still kinda like that as today, it's so cool to see it like that

    • @hiandbye2807
      @hiandbye2807 3 года назад +4

      Modern movies horribly portray the past. They're too stuck in negative stereotypes and cliches that stem from pop history.
      Genuine old movies in my opinion portray what I'm seeing here- happy individuals who put effort into their appearance and handle themselves decently.

  • @jeffdugger3276
    @jeffdugger3276 3 года назад +63

    Watching films like this make me wish my mom's dad were still alive. He served with General Patton's 244th Field Artillery, and I remember him sharing with me that Le Mans was one of many places his outfit saw during that ten months of combat.

    • @jean-marcknight8816
      @jean-marcknight8816 3 года назад +5

      I know your feelings. Thanks the internet because 20 years ago, it was still impossible to access such documents or the units archives.

  • @mickthealcoholicbear8311
    @mickthealcoholicbear8311 3 года назад +79

    it was written on the newspaper "les allemands résistent encore dans le sud du saillant de fier" translated "germans still resisting in the south of the saillant valley"

    • @benoitagnes9678
      @benoitagnes9678 3 года назад +8

      Perhaps a slight misreading : the title seems to be about Flers, a smaller town in the eastern part of Normandy, about 60 miles north-west from Le Mans (sorry for my bad English).

    • @jean-marcknight8816
      @jean-marcknight8816 3 года назад +5

      @@benoitagnes9678 I checked (my books, not google 😉).
      Following the Avranches breakthru on july 31st the Brits army corps 8th, 30th and 12th push toward Argentan from the north while the US 7th and 5th flank from west and south thus closing what is knowed as the Falaise pocket where many germans were trapped. Flers is about 100 miles south of le Mans and was on the Brits way.
      So yes the last fight in Falaise pocket did happen south of Flers but it was already liberated.
      Il est très bien ton anglais 😉

    • @BigPoppa-t3z
      @BigPoppa-t3z 3 года назад +3

      Germans were doomed !! Probably 5 of them didn’t know war was over.

  • @isabelleraby4779
    @isabelleraby4779 3 года назад +32

    My home town when my grandparents were in their early twenties... Thank you for sharing this!

  • @spybaz
    @spybaz 3 года назад +61

    Thank you for not putting any fake audio to this very cool footage

    • @waterfalls__
      @waterfalls__ 3 года назад +14

      I mean you could always just mute it.

    • @xav96
      @xav96 3 года назад +3

      @@waterfalls__ literally 💀

  • @mikeg2538
    @mikeg2538 3 года назад +115

    I remember the 40s like it was yesterday. I am not quite as in shape as then. I can run 10 miles but not as fast.

    • @YPO6
      @YPO6 3 года назад +1

      Thirty Years War in the 40's was really memorable.

    • @philgray1023
      @philgray1023 3 года назад +2

      Well you should check out Jim Dandy Mangrum. He could probably do 10 miles in a bus.

    • @mikeg2538
      @mikeg2538 3 года назад +1

      @@philgray1023 yes

    • @joshua6966
      @joshua6966 3 года назад +1

      Your a liar

    • @klaasj7808
      @klaasj7808 3 года назад

      sure

  • @rustopholis
    @rustopholis 3 года назад +5

    It saddens me in a beautiful way knowing they were in their prime as we are now, living for their time, as the future will look back at us.

  • @Plymouthmusicschool
    @Plymouthmusicschool 3 года назад +85

    That’s my grandfather’s generation. He fought in WWII and was one of the brave that stormed Normandy...makes me wish I could’ve known him

    • @marcozolo3536
      @marcozolo3536 3 года назад +11

      @Nobby Barnes actually he probably also voted for Biden despite being deceased. As a majority of swing votes can be thanked to the deceased and voter fabrication

    • @charmerci
      @charmerci 3 года назад +1

      My Dad was in France at the same time outside of Paris. Never talked about it. He was a good man but rarely said much about his experiences.

    • @carpii
      @carpii 3 года назад +2

      @@marcozolo3536 quit your bullshit dumbass

    • @praguhbis
      @praguhbis 3 года назад

      What is so great about storming Normandy? France was an Imperial power that subjugated millions in Africa, South America, and Indo-China and brutalized the local population in the same Nazis did. Do you know that French Colonial Govt. slaughtered 100000 Algerians after the 2nd WW. You should be ashamed of your grandfather

    • @marcozolo3536
      @marcozolo3536 3 года назад +2

      @@carpii there's irrefutable evidence asshole, that the supreme court refuses to even engage in. But don't worry, something is going to happen come January, over half the country is behind it. And no measure of youtube censorship will have any hope of stopping

  • @elier9885
    @elier9885 3 года назад +45

    I'm from Le Mans. I don't recognize this city. I'm sure that there ain't got any footage of the historic neighboorhood. I think most of the picture is from the downtown of Le Mans

    • @clem_tangerine
      @clem_tangerine 3 года назад +13

      On reconnaît pourtant bien la place de la République, et le Vieux Mans c'est le centre de la ville, la ou il y a le Palais de Justice donc c'est normal

    • @martinmontagne6933
      @martinmontagne6933 3 года назад +4

      La population a bien changé ca c'est clair

    • @Knwu-h4m
      @Knwu-h4m 3 года назад +2

      @@clem_tangerine il n'a pas compris que sous Jarry tout a été bétonné et la ville découpée au cordeau.
      On voit bien la place de la Sirène et la rue Gambetta...mais il a raison tout a été tourné dans le centre ville pas dans le centre historique.

    • @Knwu-h4m
      @Knwu-h4m 3 года назад +1

      @@christophan1 tout à fait, =gentrification

  • @johnathanryan2117
    @johnathanryan2117 3 года назад +20

    Le Mans twin town since 1974 is Bolton in Lancashire. Which is where im typing from now. Greetings!
    And to Paderborn in Germany too which has the same arrangement.

    • @clem_tangerine
      @clem_tangerine 3 года назад +1

      I knew for Paderborn but not for Bolton 😭 and I live there

    • @johnathanryan2117
      @johnathanryan2117 3 года назад +1

      @@clem_tangerine learn something every day !!

  • @tempemm
    @tempemm 3 года назад +6

    Everything was so classy and beautiful it’s really insane how charming everything was

    • @wezmarauder2754
      @wezmarauder2754 2 года назад +1

      Well, that's likely because they *filmed* the classy and beautiful parts. Do you think they were fair and filmed the bombed out parts and homeless people who had lost everything in the war??

    • @tempemm
      @tempemm 2 года назад +4

      @@wezmarauder2754 true point maybe it’s the same today if you filmed the rich beautiful homes and city centers 100 years from now they would think we lived in a modern utopia didn’t think of that

  • @homeontherange1284
    @homeontherange1284 3 года назад +19

    They all look so happy to be free again.

  • @pbasswil
    @pbasswil 3 года назад +6

    This is awesome! I could watch footage of regular folks from that era, for days! You're right there with them; I get a taste of what my old dad (borne 1914) experienced during the war.

  • @jadenlarson7127
    @jadenlarson7127 2 года назад +2

    Watching this gives me nostalgia from an experience I never had

  • @fonziebulldog5786
    @fonziebulldog5786 3 года назад +7

    Oh my ...those wonderful babes ♥️ ... gone today. 😢

  • @stoi5946
    @stoi5946 3 года назад +3

    Never wished so much for audio, incredible video.

  • @blurrypotato4573
    @blurrypotato4573 3 года назад +97

    Put a huge, uncovered bowl of mashed potatoes in your bag. Sounds reasonable.

    • @trainer1158
      @trainer1158 3 года назад +10

      I don't believe those are potatoes.

    • @Michael_______
      @Michael_______ 3 года назад

      @@trainer1158 what are they?

    • @laureteillier9368
      @laureteillier9368 3 года назад +34

      @@Michael_______ it's cream or cream cheese (fromage blanc)! very popular in France, even nowadays ;-)

    • @MrJm323
      @MrJm323 3 года назад +5

      To be fair, that's really more of a basket.
      ....But, wait for her shock when she gets home and discovers that her son-in-law of two years (who had a ravenous appetite for this stuff!) has suddenly left -- heading east apparently (fully dressed in his usual grey tunic and coalbucket helmet -- didn't her daughter say he in the fire service?!?), never to come back!!
      What a waste! ....Who the heck is going to eat all of this!
      And then the further perplexing news from her daughter that they've been scheduled to get new haircuts -- to be administered (ah, but this service will be for free!!) out in the open in the same town square!

    • @Tracymmo
      @Tracymmo 3 года назад +6

      @@laureteillier9368 crème fraîche

  • @profdant139
    @profdant139 3 года назад +1

    It looks like the items for sale at 3:30 are the Cross of Lorraine and a picture of DeGaulle. Thanks for posting this video!

  • @BVargas78
    @BVargas78 3 года назад +5

    People seem so much more relatable with the remaster effects. Awesome, really.

    • @wezmarauder2754
      @wezmarauder2754 2 года назад

      Only proves how shallow, ignorant and narrowminded people are. Did you ever wonder why British artists made it big in the USA but not German, French or Italian artists? Might have something to do with the language... Same thing. People in general can only relate to lyrics they can understand.

  • @blecksoff3898
    @blecksoff3898 3 года назад +19

    C'est incroyable :)
    Sa me fait bisard, de voir ma ville à cette époque.
    Je reconnais certains endroit, sa nous fait un bond dans le temp :)
    Merci pour cette vidéo :)

    • @mariebnrd5366
      @mariebnrd5366 3 года назад

      C'est sur voir notre ville comme cela fait tout drôle

    • @blecksoff3898
      @blecksoff3898 3 года назад

      @@mariebnrd5366 exactement

    • @blecksoff3898
      @blecksoff3898 3 года назад +4

      @@mariebnrd5366 mais bon... Mtn c plus des soldat qu'on voit passer, mais des bande, qui fout le dawa sur la place de la rep à 4h du mat x)

    • @harrycover9180
      @harrycover9180 3 года назад +3

      Bizarre....

    • @blecksoff3898
      @blecksoff3898 3 года назад

      @@harrycover9180 de ?

  • @ItsIdaho
    @ItsIdaho 3 года назад +47

    This is a small town in France. Pretty sure they never expected the war to end or have million people see this in color.

    • @mattgomes7762
      @mattgomes7762 3 года назад +31

      Petite petite .... pas tellement haha
      Une population d'environ 100 000 habitants vers 1944, en France, c'est une ville de taille moyenne, voir dense car aujourd'hui elle est de 150 000 environs haha

    • @joker_g7337
      @joker_g7337 3 года назад +7

      that's a city, a regional capital

    • @TonyVisconti
      @TonyVisconti 3 года назад

      A year earlier fascist Italy surrendered unconditionally, the struggle never ceased all those years.

    • @alexandre210613
      @alexandre210613 3 года назад +6

      @@mattgomes7762 Le Mans et ses rillettes, son circuit automobile, etc ...

    • @peteranderson037
      @peteranderson037 3 года назад +2

      The city's population gets much larger every year in June.

  • @sarlaccstapeworm990
    @sarlaccstapeworm990 2 года назад +1

    My mother was 7 months old in September of 44'... That's a trip!!👍

  • @sunshine-tq2bh
    @sunshine-tq2bh 3 года назад +38

    Ma petite ville comme c est beau on vois la place de la république pour les autres endroits un peu de mal a reconnaître....Les gents avais le sourire le pire était derrière eux.

    • @leaturk11
      @leaturk11 3 года назад +4

      Agréable de voir des visages souriants

    • @clem_tangerine
      @clem_tangerine 3 года назад +2

      Ouiiiiii je trouve ça troo drôle on reconnaît bien la place et tout et chuis pas sûre mais peut-être que les magasins du début c'est les Galeries Lafayette d'aujourd'hui ? En tout cas je trouve ça troo drôle 😂

    • @jacquesedu5401
      @jacquesedu5401 3 года назад +1

      Les Français ont rapidement retrouvé, et le moral, et le sens des affaires.

    • @cedericocosantorini8013
      @cedericocosantorini8013 3 года назад +1

      Nous vivons le pire de nos jours.

    • @VelvetFox
      @VelvetFox 3 года назад

      Faux. Le pire c’est aujourd’hui. Suffit de voir ce qui traîne dans le centre-ville ou en périphérie pour s’en convaincre. Mais les progressistes vous diront que vous êtes un facho si vous faites ce constat :)

  • @betweenthepoles
    @betweenthepoles 3 года назад +72

    Lots of pretty, stylish ladies, even with a war going on.

    • @ccrider3435
      @ccrider3435 3 года назад +10

      +1
      The camera operator had an eye for the dames!

    • @MrJm323
      @MrJm323 3 года назад +3

      Some of them were going to be receiving new haircuts in the coming days though. ....(The more stylish ones I suspect!)

    • @williamreymond2669
      @williamreymond2669 3 года назад +4

      If you don't understand the irony of the situation, vis a vis Europe 1944, you should check out Claude Chabrole's 1993 film, "l'Oeil d'Vichy" 'The Eye of Vichy' which recounts why France in particular was spared many [though not by far all] of the horrors of WWII. Collaboration. It's a trip. My own grandffather lived in France at the time: architect, air raid warden, and member of the Maqui, Chevalier de Légion d'Honneur', died in 1976, but there were likely more collaborators than members of 'La Résistance.' Something worth remembering when defeat looms and hope for the future seems unclear. People go along to get along.

    • @-NateTheGreat
      @-NateTheGreat 3 года назад +1

      @Sandra Braithwaite they died in the battlefields

    • @fergus247
      @fergus247 3 года назад

      Caus times were rough. Everyone upped their game

  • @opinionday0079
    @opinionday0079 3 года назад +14

    Fascinating Captain. I believe we have landed in the early 20th Century.

    • @stephenduffy5406
      @stephenduffy5406 3 года назад

      Coffee shot from my nose, I laughed so hard, thank you very much!

    • @QUINT34577
      @QUINT34577 3 года назад

      @The Arrayz Indeed.

    • @56postoffice
      @56postoffice 3 года назад

      Needs more likes. That was very good.👍👍

  • @katchal2
    @katchal2 4 года назад +10

    Sublime travail merci !

  • @Dkenady353
    @Dkenady353 3 года назад +44

    The woman at 1:40 looks beautiful

  • @winkprince1875
    @winkprince1875 2 года назад +2

    These Frenchmen and women are soooo glad to be free of German occupation. Simple things such as food and clothing are available again, although still rationed.

  • @morningglory3323
    @morningglory3323 3 года назад +8

    So this is what it was like for my mother during the war thanks for the vid

  • @oceanegougeon3025
    @oceanegougeon3025 2 года назад +1

    I think the scene with "Automobile Club de l'Ouest" is shot on the Place de la République, with the post office on the left! (I live and was born in 1995 in Le Mans)

  • @tec0.comllc187
    @tec0.comllc187 3 года назад +3

    Quel temps pour vivre. C'est manifique!

  • @oh_its_alex_
    @oh_its_alex_ 3 года назад

    Thxs for this video, I’m from Le Mans, so I’m very grateful that RUclips has recommended me this video. Thank you

  • @charlesmagee1853
    @charlesmagee1853 3 года назад +21

    These dames had some gams.

  • @pogomole
    @pogomole 3 года назад +3

    The paper they are reading, "Le Maine Libre" (Free Le Maine) was only a month old in this footage...it was founded when that province was freed from German control by the Allies, and is still in business today...you can read it online.

  • @Rhehaxx
    @Rhehaxx 3 года назад +11

    Wouha c'est vraiment bizarre de voir ces images. Je reconnais certaines rue c'est dingue.

  • @musicsavage
    @musicsavage 3 года назад +18

    1944: c'est encore la guerre et pourtant les gens ont l'air heureux. Tout le contraire d'aujourd'hui.

    • @zoso73
      @zoso73 3 года назад +2

      D'accord.

    • @Tark75ifty
      @Tark75ifty 3 года назад +6

      musicsavage:
      ben...ils viennent d'être libérés, c'est normal.

    • @davidvincent380
      @davidvincent380 3 года назад +4

      Ce n'est plus la guerre pour eux, tu vois bien qu'il y a des Gi's parmi eux...

    •  3 года назад +2

      Parce qu'à ce moment, le vent avait tourné, ça ne semblait plus qu'une question de temps avant la défaite des Nazi !

    • @jean-marcknight8816
      @jean-marcknight8816 3 года назад +1

      @ A ce moment, 2 mois après le D-Day, le front Allemand est percé. Oui, pour ces gens la guerre est finie, on le sait maintenent, mais dans leur perspective de l'époque, ils ne peuvent en avoir la certitude.
      La percée a lieu le 31 juillet, la libération du mans le 8 août, le journal qu'on voit doit être vers le 12-15 août :)

  • @genez429
    @genez429 3 года назад +19

    The US liberated France during August of 1944. This was made in September 1944... Celebration and relief was to be found in the people.

    • @owainmeurig
      @owainmeurig 3 года назад +10

      The Allies liberated France.

    • @aquarius4953
      @aquarius4953 3 года назад +3

      Not only the US but also The UK, Canada, the French resistance, the French army Leclerc and De Lattre de Tassigny. Here in France we don't forget De Gaulle of course neither Churchill. By the way D DAY was on the 6th of June. Allies didn't wait till in August to liberate France. In September 1944 the front of the war was in Germany or at least very near. Le Man is far from Germany you know.

    • @davidviner4932
      @davidviner4932 3 года назад +3

      The US, British, Canadian and British Commonwealth soldiers liberated France, my great uncle, a British soldier died on the beaches of Normandy on D Day, his surname was Amos, my mother's maiden name

    • @genez429
      @genez429 3 года назад +1

      @@owainmeurig Sorry.... I saw the US Army emblems and did not give it a thought. True.. The Allies liberated France.

    • @jaredjlinden
      @jaredjlinden 3 года назад +4

      @@genez429 The Europeans are generally sensitive about the large role we played in WWII, because it doesn’t really align with how they like to look down on us. If it hadn’t been for the US, they’d all be speaking German right now.

  • @nicolasrobin-lenain133
    @nicolasrobin-lenain133 2 года назад +2

    2:54 "Automobile club de l'Ouest" c'est la "Place de la République", sur la gauche c'est la "rue Gambetta". Merci pour la reconstitution!

  • @damien2339
    @damien2339 3 года назад +12

    2:55 Place de la République avec en arrière-plan où se situait le siège de l'AOC à l'époque (Automobile Club de l'Ouest). Le bâtiment sur la gauche est resté tel quel, c'est une banque aujourd'hui.

    • @alexandre210613
      @alexandre210613 3 года назад

      Merci pour cette précision Damien !
      Salutations provençales d’un ex-dijonnais.

    • @thierryrebillard6432
      @thierryrebillard6432 3 года назад +1

      Le bâtiment sur la gauche de l'AOC était un cinéma au rdc un peu sur la droite c'était un pub je sais j'y ai travaillé en 1970/71 l'enseigne du pub était " le scaron"

    • @clem_tangerine
      @clem_tangerine 3 года назад

      Oui et ils sont juste devant le macdo d'aujourd'hui 👀

    • @cedericocosantorini8013
      @cedericocosantorini8013 3 года назад

      C'est plaisant Le Mans? Je pose la question par curiosité, n'y étant jamais allé.

  • @arnaudj.5314
    @arnaudj.5314 3 года назад +12

    *I wish I could spend just one day there, living in 1944 with those amazing people.*

    • @zoso73
      @zoso73 3 года назад +3

      Well, you wouldn't want to be in Le Mans before August 8, 1944. The Nazis were occupying Le Mans up until that date, when American forces liberated the city.

    •  3 года назад +6

      Life was still hard even after liberation.

    • @alexandre210613
      @alexandre210613 3 года назад

      @Tracchofyre 😂😂😂 il faut venir faire un tour.

    • @alexandre210613
      @alexandre210613 3 года назад

      @ tickets de rationnement jusqu’en 1948. Mes parents ont connu cette période.

  • @kamuelalee
    @kamuelalee 3 года назад +9

    My grandfather fought in the Pacific in WW2 and was on a military base in Hawaii, hit the same day as Pearl Harbor, 79 years ago.

    • @MariVictorius
      @MariVictorius 3 года назад +2

      Was he on Tarawa? My father was there. He passed away in 2010 at age 95.

    • @kamuelalee
      @kamuelalee 3 года назад +2

      @@MariVictorius No, I don't think so. After Pearl Harbor my grandfather was sent to New Caledonia and stayed in the South Pacific for 3 years. He was in the US Navy. My grandad died in 1988 at 79. I miss him very much...he was a cool guy.

  • @sarantospapadopoulos3173
    @sarantospapadopoulos3173 3 года назад +1

    They where all smiling,amazing,you dont see so many smile faces anymore

  • @chris-hu7tm
    @chris-hu7tm 3 года назад +3

    very cool to see so great footage from the year my great grandfather was born

  • @alexmajo2216
    @alexmajo2216 3 года назад +18

    3:07 "Le Maine libre" name of the province of Maine, of which Sarthe department was part

    • @popiadoudou
      @popiadoudou 3 года назад +6

      "Le Maine Libre" ,since 1944,is still existing. The north part of Sarthe was part of the Maine province,with the north part of Mayenne department.

  • @joeconrad3828
    @joeconrad3828 3 года назад +68

    I wonder if the “Bar Americain” was named “Bar Allemand” a few months earlier.

    • @thehoodie
      @thehoodie 3 года назад +5

      I don't speak French but sah Qu'elle plaisir

    • @Loutripe
      @Loutripe 3 года назад +7

      @@thehoodie j'ai explosé putin hahaha

    • @feraudyh
      @feraudyh 3 года назад +2

      No

    • @pollymuyt
      @pollymuyt 3 года назад +28

      I guess today is “Ahmed kebab” or something similar

    • @alexandre210613
      @alexandre210613 3 года назад +3

      @@pollymuyt you’re not totally wrong... 😆😆👋

  • @Happy_nessaa
    @Happy_nessaa 3 года назад +1

    In a lot of these older videos, I notice the people actually smile for the camera.

    • @swimlaps1
      @swimlaps1 2 года назад

      Yes, genuine smiles! No fakery like today.

  • @Bouh111
    @Bouh111 3 года назад +15

    1:30 omg she looks just like my grandma

    • @jeffdugger3276
      @jeffdugger3276 3 года назад +2

      Or perhaps you, in a past life? 🤔

    • @alexandre210613
      @alexandre210613 3 года назад

      Votre grand-mère a sûrement des origines françaises... 😉

    • @leaturk11
      @leaturk11 3 года назад +1

      Your grandad was a lucky man.

  • @DamnTastyVegan
    @DamnTastyVegan 3 года назад +3

    I've always wished I could float around in a little bubble, observing different time periods. THis channel is a lot like being able to do that

  • @Blimpie1000
    @Blimpie1000 3 года назад +10

    Very interesting as colorised. I once jokingly asked my father if he fought in WWII in black and white.

    • @allenschmitz9644
      @allenschmitz9644 3 года назад +4

      I think all us post war kids thought that.

    • @philgray1023
      @philgray1023 3 года назад

      We couldn't afford colour until about 1970.

  • @MuckoMan
    @MuckoMan 3 года назад +44

    If I were a US soldier at the time my kids would be speaking French.

    • @leaturk11
      @leaturk11 3 года назад +6

      I was thinking the same thing myself.

    • @philgray1023
      @philgray1023 3 года назад +1

      They could still learn

    • @nikolatovar9884
      @nikolatovar9884 3 года назад +1

      If you were a US soldier at the time, many of yours probably are.

    • @MrJm323
      @MrJm323 3 года назад

      ....and have half-sisters and half-brothers who were already speaking German!

    • @aquarius4953
      @aquarius4953 3 года назад

      US soldiers stayed in France from 1950 to 1967 when De Gaule asked them to go home. Who amount them were able to speak French or if you prefer wanted to learn French.

  • @doladolabilyo
    @doladolabilyo 3 года назад +20

    André, Le chausseur sachant chausser!

  • @justonemori
    @justonemori 2 года назад +1

    That Bar Americain looks like a fun joint.

  • @heyaprodz
    @heyaprodz 3 года назад +21

    on y voit la rue gambetta au debut et a la fin la place de la république, les commerces vus sont fermés mais les batiments existent toujours :)

    • @chrismopeds7267
      @chrismopeds7267 3 года назад +2

      Oui j'ai put identifié rue GAMBETTA PLACE DE LA REPUBLIQUE ET RUE DE BOLTON .

    • @gigiadam1777
      @gigiadam1777 3 года назад +1

      J’ai pu identifier la rep grâce à l’immense panneau de l’ACO. Pour le reste c’est difficile à identifier la prise de vue est trop serrée, aucun plan large.

    • @mattgomes7762
      @mattgomes7762 3 года назад +4

      J'habite pas la bas mais ça doit vous faire bizarre à vous les habitants du Mans haha

    • @TheTheolm
      @TheTheolm 3 года назад

      Le palais de justice de l'époque, je crois que c'est le batiment du crédit lyonnais place de la rép'.

  • @thomasandersonrittberg2903
    @thomasandersonrittberg2903 3 года назад +1

    Great Days of Freedom, Freedom Than Us today 2021 No have Anymore

  • @zyourzgrandzmaz
    @zyourzgrandzmaz 2 года назад

    it has hte same feeling as old home movies and it trips me out nothing has changed.

  • @aderfigueroa
    @aderfigueroa 3 года назад +10

    Those were the good old days before fast food 🍱 messed everything up ⬆️

    • @jean-lucpicard3012
      @jean-lucpicard3012 3 года назад +3

      Yes world war 2 was the good old days.... Right

    • @lohphat
      @lohphat 3 года назад +1

      Fast food isn’t the problem. Sugar is the problem.
      We’ve had fast food since the 50s but only when they swapped in sugars for fats in the mid 70s did things go horribly wrong.

    • @death2pc
      @death2pc 3 года назад

      Ever been to France, idiot................?

    • @MrJm323
      @MrJm323 3 года назад

      Yes, I crave mashed potatoes dished up into a bowl and placed in a straw basket! ...The old food-to-go!

    • @Tracymmo
      @Tracymmo 3 года назад

      France still has some of the best food in the world. They have some fast food, but they don't eat there often and still prefer quality over quantity.

  • @ErikBongers
    @ErikBongers 3 года назад +6

    The last fragments are what we would now call "The Internet".

  • @Tom-kc9hg
    @Tom-kc9hg 3 года назад +17

    Something has really changed about the population ... can't put my finger on it.

    • @cameriqueTV
      @cameriqueTV 3 года назад +3

      I think it's called "happiness".

    • @Tom-kc9hg
      @Tom-kc9hg 3 года назад +2

      @@cameriqueTV Which comes from being white.

    • @PresidentGas1
      @PresidentGas1 3 года назад +6

      Too many non whites these days.

    • @Tracymmo
      @Tracymmo 3 года назад +8

      @@Tom-kc9hg You don't sound happy. If being white is all it takes to be happy, then it shouldn't matter what anyone else is. I'm glad France is no longer so white. C'est vachement mieux.

    • @iansiebert
      @iansiebert 3 года назад

      They were leaner.

  • @patrickvibien2204
    @patrickvibien2204 3 года назад +18

    I believe that is my great grandfather store that he managed at the beginning of the segment, Les Nouvelles Galeries

    • @FD-E-St-Fire
      @FD-E-St-Fire 3 года назад +1

      Patrick Vibien
      Another ww2 video I saw showed a segment someone commented that the soldier in the video WAS there grandfather. He went on saying of all his grandfather did during the war... what a find on RUclips

    • @leaturk11
      @leaturk11 3 года назад

      Wow that's amazing, he had a nice store, do you know who the lovely girl behind the counter is?

    • @NudePostingConspiracyTheories
      @NudePostingConspiracyTheories 3 года назад

      Patrick Vibien WOW. How good is that!?

    • @patrickvibien2204
      @patrickvibien2204 3 года назад +1

      @@glenn9683 Hello Glen, I wasn't suggesting it was owned by him but managed by him. Per my understanding, Jules and Lucien Peltier were directors. Please explain your relationship: I am interested

    • @patrickvibien2204
      @patrickvibien2204 3 года назад

      @@glenn9683 Hi Glenn, Jules Peltier is my great grandfather so we are both right! Can you give me some of the lineage for your and Les Galleries. I have nothing for that branch of the family.

  • @popiadoudou
    @popiadoudou 3 года назад +11

    Le magasin du début me fait penser aux Galeries, rue des Minimes, au vu de la place et des moulures.

  • @1Life2Little
    @1Life2Little 3 года назад +2

    A few weeks before the Americans came that bar would have been named Le bar allemand

  • @TheonlyLarsNelson
    @TheonlyLarsNelson 3 года назад +7

    Il y avait déjà des chaussures André en 1944, un Félix Potin.. incroyable.

    • @alexandre210613
      @alexandre210613 3 года назад +1

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/F%C3%A9lix_Potin

    • @alexandre210613
      @alexandre210613 3 года назад +1

      fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andr%C3%A9_(chaussure)

    • @TheTheolm
      @TheTheolm 3 года назад

      Il y avait même les Nouvelles Galeries.

  • @wildboy700
    @wildboy700 3 года назад +2

    I love seeing these images in color because it stops people from saying oh, it was nearly a hundred years ago or it was a long, long, long time ago, can't people just move on? No, to see the French hold images of Hitler in color makes me feel like I'm there with the people and we share this universal feeling of unity and wanting to defeat the Nazi's and take down Hitler once and for all.

  • @jakeorama
    @jakeorama 3 года назад +8

    Looks like Le Mans got outta occupation and the war pretty unscathed. Amazing.

    • @AndreaElizabeth100
      @AndreaElizabeth100 3 года назад

      Do you know why there are American soldiers there? Are there also British soldiers there?

    • @BandiGetOffTheRoof
      @BandiGetOffTheRoof 3 года назад +1

      I was thinking the same thing...considering 1944, the stores look well stocked.

    • @k.v.7681
      @k.v.7681 3 года назад +7

      Le Mans was a key city for supply chains, being midway on the main road from the major port cities of the Atlantic and the capital (Paris) so as soon as it was liberated, goods started flooding in (hence the stocked shelves. Also to consider: these weren't exactly all "store articles". As indicated by the sign above, it's rationed produce. There are only a couple of ration depots around the city, with a very large stock to supply the entire population. It may seem a lot, but in the end it isn't). The train tracks and main stations around the city's periphery (including residential areas used by car-factory workers from Renault for instance) were bombed before D-Day because, well, roads work both ways, so it was key to stopping reinforcements getting to the coast as well as any potential assets that could be used by germans. 31 dead and 45 wounded, all civilians. But otherwise, they wanted to avoid bombing it to oblivion because they would need it in turn, and because bombing some "factory bums" is one thing, bombing a historical city center with no real strategic value and a serious risk to have a more well-off population turn against you, notably in the domain of public opinion, is another.

    • @zoso73
      @zoso73 3 года назад +1

      @@AndreaElizabeth100 Two American infantry divisions liberated the city in early August 1944. The British were not responsible for cleaning up Jerry from that sector of France -- the British were further north and encountering stiffer resistance as the approached Belgium and Holland in August and September.

    • @zoso73
      @zoso73 3 года назад

      Le Mans is south of Normandy so it avoided the carnage.

  • @savanaviolenta
    @savanaviolenta 3 года назад

    That's so amazing to watch. I'm going on a vintage roller coster trip.

  • @boleskineblackline4951
    @boleskineblackline4951 3 года назад +8

    Qu'elle était belle et fière cette France !

    • @bobduvar
      @bobduvar 3 года назад

      Oh mon Dieu que oui !!! Des temps difficiles mais Ô combien chaleureux et bienveillants entre la population !

    • @Tacotac64
      @Tacotac64 3 года назад +5

      bobduvar Vous plaisantez tous les deux j’imagine ? À moins que vous ayez fait une overdose de nostalgie ! En 44, à part la joie évidente de la Libération en cours, c’est plutôt une atmosphère délétère, entre collabos en pleine débandade, milice enragée, délations en tout genre, femmes tondues en place publique par des « résistants » de la dernière heure... bref, sans vouloir noircir le tableau, pas très glorieux tout ça, et pas vraiment chaleureux... Demain : interro de rattrapage pour vous deux, sujet : La France de 40 à 44 !

    • @keithharvey7478
      @keithharvey7478 3 года назад +1

      Tant de courage dans cette population!

    • @gaelbl
      @gaelbl 3 года назад +1

      @@Tacotac64 Oui il faut arrêter de fantasmer cette France du passé.

    •  3 года назад

      Belle, peut-être, fière, pas si sur. Cachés dans cette foule, il y a parmi eux des gens qui il y a à peine quelques semaines collaboraient avec les Nazi et qui essaient de faire profil bas...

  • @nordiskkatt
    @nordiskkatt 3 года назад +6

    Really very interesting, thank you so much! And thank you for NOT adding sound - I find the fake stock sounds that some remastered videos contain incredibly distracting and annoying - much nicer to see the authentic images without added sound.

    • @allenschmitz9644
      @allenschmitz9644 3 года назад

      It was shot on 16 mm...no sound.

    • @blop1343
      @blop1343 3 года назад +1

      You know there is a mute function, and it needs one click to activate it?

  • @terrywbreedlove
    @terrywbreedlove 3 года назад +4

    1944 wow WW2 didn’t end until 1945. This is such a cool look at that time.

  • @fergus247
    @fergus247 3 года назад +2

    What a great feeling they had? Knowing that the war is over but it wasnt really over yet but they knew it was almost over

  • @RuleofFive
    @RuleofFive 3 года назад +10

    Wow for 3 months after D-Day that city looked well! Its amazing how well dressed people were in that period. Now its sweatpants.....

    • @RuleofFive
      @RuleofFive 3 года назад +2

      @Alfonso Fedele Thank you. I dIdn’t know that.

    • @alexandre210613
      @alexandre210613 3 года назад +2

      @@RuleofFive Dijon where I was born and Aix-en-Provence where I live we’re not bombed too.

    • @RuleofFive
      @RuleofFive 3 года назад

      @@alexandre210613 I don’t know why but I thought that after the landing there was a path of complete destruction between Normandy and Paris. I’m glad your city was spared! Apparently there were several places that were left unscathed!

    • @Tracymmo
      @Tracymmo 3 года назад

      @@RuleofFive Dijon and Aix are south, but I think in this case, Le Mans is south of that Normandy beaches to Paris line.

    • @RuleofFive
      @RuleofFive 3 года назад

      @@Tracymmo I see. I’m glad as it looks like a beautiful place. When I see the destruction of some towns and cities during the world I guess I have generalized it to mean most places endured severe damage.

  • @PaulMaranto
    @PaulMaranto 3 года назад

    These are the most fascinating videos on RUclips! 👍😎

  • @rosscampbell1173
    @rosscampbell1173 3 года назад +2

    It’s nice we still have their gratitude and respect 76 years later🙄

    • @uncletony6210
      @uncletony6210 3 года назад +1

      huh? They hate us...except for our blues singers...and Jerry Lewis. Don't forget Jerry Lewis.

    • @Stug9680
      @Stug9680 3 года назад +2

      @@uncletony6210 Thanks Lafayette and Rochambeau isn't it ?
      Ho, and for the Statue of Liberty too...

    • @alexandre210613
      @alexandre210613 3 года назад

      You’re still very welcome in France 🇫🇷

    • @Tracymmo
      @Tracymmo 3 года назад +1

      @@uncletony6210 Wow, you seem to be connecting to the internet from 1965.

    • @Tracymmo
      @Tracymmo 3 года назад

      Without France we would still be British.

  • @cyranodebergerac1080
    @cyranodebergerac1080 3 года назад +2

    Une mine d'informations. C'est presque la France de mon enfance puisque je suis né en 1962. J'y retrouve tout même des impressions qui me sont chères.

    • @bluebalade
      @bluebalade 3 года назад

      Cyrano de Bergerac L’enfance des années 40 et celle des années 60 n’est pas du tout identique!Le style vestimentaire n’est pas le même,il n’y avait pas de rationnement,la guerre mondiale était finie...

    • @cyranodebergerac1080
      @cyranodebergerac1080 3 года назад

      @@bluebalade Bien sûr, mais c'est je parle plutôt du côté suranné des choses. Avez-vous vous les commerçants laver à grande eau le sol de leur magasin de nos jours? Où avez-vous joué aux billes jusqu'à vous en écorcher les genoux dans la cour de votre école ?

    • @bluebalade
      @bluebalade 3 года назад

      @@cyranodebergerac1080 Non bien sûr c'est plutot rare de laver à grande eau le sol de nos jour mais je peux voir encore aujourd'hui les 7-10 ans (garçons et filles) s'amuser comme d'antan aux billes dans la cour des écoles et à la limite j'ai envie de jouer avec eux (je suis de 69) ;-)

    • @laug8902
      @laug8902 3 года назад

      née au Mans ,1964

    • @Tark75ifty
      @Tark75ifty 3 года назад

      Cyrano de Bergerac:
      Moi je sui né en 63 et effectivement, la France s'est vraiment modernisé sous Giscard dans les 70's.

  • @TheDkeeler
    @TheDkeeler 3 года назад +4

    Consider Paris was only liberated about a couple weeks prior to this filming. Paris was liberated by American troops between Aug. 19th and Aug. 25th 1944.

    • @TheDkeeler
      @TheDkeeler 3 года назад

      @Alfonso Fedele That's right . The Americans could of but it was far better politically for the French to enter first I recall now. Thanks.

    • @allenschmitz9644
      @allenschmitz9644 3 года назад

      @Alfonso Fedele The french hated DeGaulle as much as Churchill did.

    • @leneanderthalien
      @leneanderthalien 3 года назад

      @@allenschmitz9644 nope, only the fanatics from Pétain did hate de Gaulle...

    • @leneanderthalien
      @leneanderthalien 3 года назад

      @Alfonso Fedele yes de Gaulle was a very honest man, with a high level of honour and love for France, but it had a very high regard for he's sacred mission to restaure France in he's honour and magnitude, and this did deep anger Churchill...but Roosevelt did never understand de Gaulle and see it only as a future dictator...

  • @vincentlussier8264
    @vincentlussier8264 3 года назад +2

    The footage is so amazing you want to jump right in and join them!

  • @alexandre210613
    @alexandre210613 3 года назад +5

    3:30 affichettes (posters) du Général De Gaulle et croix de Lorraine.

  • @hardmaxer
    @hardmaxer 3 года назад +1

    Loved the smile on the barista.

  • @inesubr
    @inesubr 3 года назад +10

    C'est ma ville !

    • @zoso73
      @zoso73 3 года назад +3

      Do you recognize any of the buildings? Est-ce que vous conaissez les batiments? (Pardonez mon francais.)

    • @bourdais6
      @bourdais6 3 года назад +1

      @@zoso73 The city is still exactly the same today, except Palais de Justice which has been moved to a new building, and modified to become a shopping area

    •  3 года назад

      Et une ville souvent oubliée quand on parle de la Seconde Guerre Mondiale en France !

    • @zoso73
      @zoso73 3 года назад

      @@bourdais6 Merci.

    • @inesubr
      @inesubr 3 года назад

      @@zoso73 je ne rejoins pas vraiment l'idée de elegy je trouve que Le Mans a beaucoup changé , certaines parties de la ville on des airs d'avant oui, mais il y a eu beaucoup de changement

  • @rgbchromium
    @rgbchromium 3 года назад +1

    Imagine a few years later from now, technology will found that old recordings, despite the lack of sound, still retain a small trace of sound and recreate the sound just like how we remaster and colorized black/white film nowadays. What a great age we live in..

    • @Xero_Wolf
      @Xero_Wolf 2 года назад

      I've actually seen videos of experiments like this already. ruclips.net/video/FKXOucXB4a8/видео.html
      ruclips.net/video/eUzB0L0mSCI/видео.html

  • @pr03va42
    @pr03va42 3 года назад +7

    ça fait trop bizarre de voir ma ville comme

  • @tootsie5052
    @tootsie5052 3 года назад +2

    This just beautiful!!!

  • @mickanvonfootscraymarket5520
    @mickanvonfootscraymarket5520 3 года назад +7

    Where's Matt Damon

  • @steves7896
    @steves7896 3 года назад +2

    Neat!
    I love the smiles.

  • @TotoFrancey
    @TotoFrancey 3 года назад +8

    I am surprised how good every thing looks and how well stocked the store shelves are after just getting out from the tyranny of Nazi occupation. If the date of this video is correct, then there is only a one month difference from when liberation of Le Mans, France, which occurred on August 8 (9), 1944, to September 1944 when this video was shot.

  • @semkateryna3161
    @semkateryna3161 3 года назад

    Hello from Le Mans ! Funny to see some building that didn't change from that period ! And sad that ANDRE closed its shop after lockdown this summer (2020) was my favorite shoes shop.

  • @annetoronto5474
    @annetoronto5474 3 года назад +10

    They had to bring their own containers for shopping!

    • @josephturner4047
      @josephturner4047 3 года назад +5

      We still do. Save the planet.

    • @emilienmare1508
      @emilienmare1508 3 года назад +2

      We can see how we got smarter, we now have plastic that we throw once we arrive home!

    • @allenschmitz9644
      @allenschmitz9644 3 года назад

      @@emilienmare1508 They saved on costly packaging to 'pass on the savings to le coustomer.

    • @emilienmare1508
      @emilienmare1508 3 года назад +1

      @@allenschmitz9644 Do you mean we're paying the packaging for them? Or that we can purchase for cheaper?

    • @allenschmitz9644
      @allenschmitz9644 3 года назад

      @@emilienmare1508 yes, every one was 'cheap' back then, so it was both.

  • @FubarSir
    @FubarSir 3 года назад +1

    Priceless images, tres bien!

  • @stevefaure415
    @stevefaure415 3 года назад +3

    All the smiles--

  • @sawcenmaamri1889
    @sawcenmaamri1889 3 года назад +2

    "André, le chausseur sachant chausser" I like the slogan

  • @ozzie-sk9dh
    @ozzie-sk9dh 3 года назад +5

    Women kept the lights on in France during the war. After she was heavily defeated the Germans rounded up able bodied men and send them to work in Germany for the war effort.

    • @FoB39
      @FoB39 3 года назад

      and the men did all the fighting, dying and suffering. Always got to make it about women pathetic.

  • @toddtrojek6521
    @toddtrojek6521 3 года назад +2

    Lady serving brew, “We can hear you chomping that gum really well!”

  • @billg7205
    @billg7205 3 года назад +3

    Thumbnail at first glance looked like Alice from the Brady Bunch.

  • @mariadabrowska2321
    @mariadabrowska2321 2 года назад +1

    Wspaniałe obrazy Tak toczyło się życie 😚🌷🌼

  • @johnfellows2867
    @johnfellows2867 3 года назад +8

    Beautiful girls, no fat, no ink, no body piercings !

  • @niivmah106
    @niivmah106 2 года назад

    Imagine hearing the audio…
    It would be so great

  • @aimon1er
    @aimon1er 3 года назад +5

    La mini-jupe ne date pas des années 60 ;)

    • @Bella_Mar
      @Bella_Mar 3 года назад +6

      Ce sont des shorts, pas des mini-jupes

    • @alexandre210613
      @alexandre210613 3 года назад

      Moi, j’adore les jupes-culottes; quand elles sont bien portées cela va de soit ! 😉🥂