London on Film - The East End

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • Some sound may be removed due to copyright claims. I acknowledge that none of the content here is my own.

Комментарии • 919

  • @johnsalvidge4131
    @johnsalvidge4131 Год назад +4

    ANYONE REMEMBER THE LYCEUM IN THE STRAND?...THE BEST DISCO IN TOWN CIRCA 1970-1975?... MONDAYS AND SATURDAYS?...AH THOSE HAPPY DAYS!!

  • @davefish8107
    @davefish8107 Год назад +19

    Was born in East Ham in 1956 , then family moved to manor park , my first house was in barking in
    1978. I know everything changes but you could not pay me enough to live there now

  • @StevieOcean
    @StevieOcean 11 лет назад +193

    It Was A Wonderful.Suprise to See My Late Grandpa and Me Aged 10 !:)

    • @PeterShieldsukcatstripey
      @PeterShieldsukcatstripey 5 лет назад +4

      wonderful

    • @alanssnack1192
      @alanssnack1192 5 лет назад +1

      troll

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye 5 лет назад

      @@alanssnack1192 Sounds like it. 6 years later and still nothing :)

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye 5 лет назад

      @@alanssnack1192 Sounds like it. 6 years later and still nothing :)

    • @ginajones1003
      @ginajones1003 5 лет назад +4

      Isleofskye He might have just unsubscribed from RUclips because of trolls.

  • @warrentaylor6686
    @warrentaylor6686 8 месяцев назад +2

    I live in the east end to this day and I watch these videos and it really makes me feel sad that it’s almost completely gone

    • @ThePersian61
      @ThePersian61 3 месяца назад

      Me too Warren. Born in Bethnal Green 1961 and living there still. We were skint growing up as a lot of families were but as kids, we had a great time. As the gentleman in the film said, we were poor but didn't know we were poor because we were all in the same boat.

  • @pinkzweibel985
    @pinkzweibel985 5 лет назад +8

    One of the best documentarys ever !😍😍😍💋

  • @lindalunken194
    @lindalunken194 9 лет назад +51

    so proud to be a londoner

    • @pachma405
      @pachma405 7 лет назад +10

      Are you a modern Londoner? From pakistan?

    • @pommiebears
      @pommiebears 6 лет назад +10

      linda lunken yes....me too. But, it’s not our London anymore. It’s changed so much. I moved away years ago. But, you can take the girl out of London, you can’t take London out of the girl. I’m married to an Aussie, I live in Australia now......my cockney accent is still with me after 15 years lol!

    • @anncarolan4105
      @anncarolan4105 3 года назад +1

      yes from shorditch eastend Anna

  • @kenhooker4879
    @kenhooker4879 4 года назад +10

    Very interesting and entertaining. My grandmother's family were from north London, my grandfather's family from South Hackney, and my great-grandfather's from Whitechapel, just off Old Montague St. Great video, thank you!

  • @stewardbennett1335
    @stewardbennett1335 9 лет назад +11

    A very nice film. Enjoyed watching it. Thanks for posting it.

  • @diamond66ist
    @diamond66ist 3 года назад +5

    Childhood memories of Clubrow and petticoat lane with my old dad, he took me to see the old docks where he worked just before it all got knocked down or should i say knocked daaaarn !!!

  • @MediaDestroyer
    @MediaDestroyer 5 лет назад +18

    And just like that, it's all gone :'(

  • @lizzyloughton7501
    @lizzyloughton7501 2 года назад +3

    we lived through the hard times and the good times were good but short lived nobody on this earth can begin to bring back the good old days the end the cockney era

  • @iktomi5
    @iktomi5 4 года назад +6

    Once upon a time! Should be shown in classrooms across the nation! Social studies? Fantastic viewing 110%

  • @bonnieandclyde222
    @bonnieandclyde222 Год назад +2

    That's it , when he said we used to play in the streets,. I used to age 3 plus in the 60s on a terraced house street in Leicester. A massive downfall for Britain was when kids stopped playin the street as may now don't. It gave freedom and imagination which kids now have lost by using computers etc. This leading to terrible social isolation and many other problems.

  • @megataurus7779
    @megataurus7779 5 лет назад +5

    The photographer is very compassionate...seems a real good guy

  • @paulcoade
    @paulcoade 7 лет назад +5

    A blinding little vid of an ever evolving, top manor!

  • @lindalee5871
    @lindalee5871 5 лет назад +5

    happier then than now...despite progression....less interaction...more isolation...

  • @Kidraver555
    @Kidraver555 10 лет назад +12

    The photographer at 22.00 is Don Mcullin great war photographer and Humanist.

  • @pavementpounder7502
    @pavementpounder7502 5 лет назад +91

    Sadly it seems Cockneys are now rare on the ground in the East End.

    • @alanssnack1192
      @alanssnack1192 5 лет назад +8

      yes most of them sold their property and bought a mansion in the countryside

    • @silverbullet2008bb
      @silverbullet2008bb 5 лет назад +14

      It's called ethnic cleansing. The Han Chinese are doing it to the Tibetans right now and the media have no problem calling it that. The UN convention on the prevention and punishment of the crime of genocide, Article 2 (c) defines genocide as "Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part". According to Andrew Neather, a former adviser and speech writer to Tony Blair, Jack Straw and David Blunkett, they instituted a deliberate policy of mass third world immigration to "change the face of Britain" whilst lying to indigenous Brits that they were cutting immigration. They are guilty by the UN's own definition.

    • @truthbtoldwright6411
      @truthbtoldwright6411 5 лет назад +3

      @Nidgi London's nothing like America there's no segregated areas for blacks. The wealthy and the poor can live next to each other. The wealthy can live in a million-pound property and poor lives next door, social housing is the only affordable housing for the working poor now in London.

    • @ginajones1003
      @ginajones1003 5 лет назад +5

      Truthbtold Wright There is far too little social housing thanks to Maggie Thatcher:-(

    • @truthbtoldwright6411
      @truthbtoldwright6411 5 лет назад +5

      @@ginajones1003 My mother, single black woman with 5 children brought her home on the right to buy scheme in the mid 80s. She worked as a Booking Clerk on the railways. My mum believed that Thatcher was the only politician who really offered the working class a step up the ladder. Those were the good old days for some. Now the poor working class can't even afford to pay their rent without support from the the government.

  • @2020-c1p
    @2020-c1p 3 года назад +1

    i remember staying at newinton lodge , home for the homeless , i was releived when it was demolished in 69 , iwas a kid then , i did not like being there and did not want to ever go back there

  • @mcdaniels6188
    @mcdaniels6188 7 лет назад +16

    the doodlebug huts, made primarily of wood and asbestos. Nice, how homely

  • @deniseg-hill1730
    @deniseg-hill1730 7 лет назад +4

    I knew Solly, used to go with my Team Leader to lunch with him at the Market Cafe (long gone now). I wonder if his fur place still exists. I used to work at the Boundary One Stop Shop in Calvert Avenue also long gone. Ah good memories

  • @Michelle-qd9gm
    @Michelle-qd9gm 5 лет назад +2

    No money but bloody happy

  • @PeterShieldsukcatstripey
    @PeterShieldsukcatstripey 5 лет назад +1

    so beautiful

  • @ivanahavitoff7308
    @ivanahavitoff7308 5 лет назад +5

    Thanks Guvnor. Right O Guvnor.

  • @elizabethmunson2129
    @elizabethmunson2129 5 лет назад +11

    That was when England was England

  • @selchap9187
    @selchap9187 4 года назад +2

    6:29 'Brrrrrt! When you're ready, quiet please, eyes on the bull, the first man's on the Mark !'.

    • @selchap9187
      @selchap9187 4 года назад

      9:51 'Why do the goals always get scored when Alfie's out of the running?' Go on all night couldn't you.

  • @ianthompson662
    @ianthompson662 2 года назад +3

    gone down hill now would not like to live there now

  • @taiterobinson793
    @taiterobinson793 5 лет назад +3

    I have alway been interested in London but live in Scotland

  • @mabellynch168
    @mabellynch168 9 лет назад +7

    oh wow this is good

  • @andrewgibbon-williams7974
    @andrewgibbon-williams7974 5 лет назад +1

    We, in our capital city, accept everybody. We are not narrow-minded or racist. Contrast this with Paris. It is this ethos which makes London a greater city than New York, Berlin, or Paris. London sets the exemplar. Which is why the rest of the world chooses to migrate there.

    • @gerrybrennan5715
      @gerrybrennan5715 5 лет назад

      London is a magnificent city but so too are NY and Paris and many others.The 2018 figures puts the EU population in London at just over 5% (450,000) and as the EU population(minus UK)is over 423 million and add in the other UK citizens(outside London)....56 million,it leaves 479 million people eligible to live in London and for whatever reasons, don't-so CLEARLY everybody doesn't wish to live in London.

    • @andrewgibbon-williams7974
      @andrewgibbon-williams7974 5 лет назад

      But no British city has ever been as segregated as Chicago.

    • @andrewgibbon-williams7974
      @andrewgibbon-williams7974 5 лет назад

      But not on the scale of US cities such as Chicago.

  • @wizkid01
    @wizkid01 2 года назад +1

    14:22 I don't think he likes the jellied eels! 😂

  • @j.a2101
    @j.a2101 4 года назад

    All who like this, go for we are the lambeth boys, a doc about lambeth in the late 50s, then a subsequent in the early 80s - see the difference!

  • @imictfh
    @imictfh 3 года назад +1

    Tony Camilleri sounds Maltese..... were there many Maltese in Hackney back then?

  • @machiavellian7490
    @machiavellian7490 2 года назад +1

    Forest Gate me was great we all knew each other

  • @timothybyrne5640
    @timothybyrne5640 6 лет назад +29

    This once great area has been hijacked by the rich.

    • @Grabfma040508
      @Grabfma040508 3 года назад +2

      What if it came out it was not Germans who bombed east end but English planned to Destroy it .

    • @zennow5073
      @zennow5073 3 года назад +1

      @@Grabfma040508 The marxist scottish run labour party under blair/brown done most damage while tories blew away billions of north sea oil.

    • @jackangus4530
      @jackangus4530 2 года назад

      @@Grabfma040508 100% 😕

  • @JanTheNan
    @JanTheNan 3 года назад +1

    Brick Lane, yard to where I grew up in Busby Street.

  • @1timhammer
    @1timhammer 11 лет назад +3

    brilliant

  • @BrassLock
    @BrassLock 7 лет назад +1

    I have found that with a good quality camera, it's possible to.take photos in the same general area that portray either ugliness or beauty, depending on your chosen viewpoint. The lens doesn't lie, but the photographer always has a bias.

  • @carolramsey6287
    @carolramsey6287 2 года назад +3

    Nothing of interest there now unless you want to make a documentary about Bangladesh and are on a low budget.

  • @marccarter1350
    @marccarter1350 4 года назад +1

    I am from this part of man name land, so it means I am like this, said every social conditioned human!

  • @RB747domme
    @RB747domme 3 года назад +1

    "wood and asbestos is the standard form"
    If they only knew.

  • @nigelsmith6077
    @nigelsmith6077 4 года назад +1

    Born Stepney Raised in Poplar ;-) early 60`s baby

    • @Laura55sere
      @Laura55sere 3 года назад

      60s teenager here, wonderful music, great atmosphere, fashion although we couldn’t afford much, firms ‘do’ every Christmas time, and a ‘beano ‘to Margate every year.

  • @Heinz57ish
    @Heinz57ish 4 года назад +1

    a very young John Lyall

  • @bissonboy7130
    @bissonboy7130 3 месяца назад

    That lady at 25-30 going to see where she used to live. Is she a well known singer ?.

  • @MrStax40
    @MrStax40 8 лет назад +129

    Delightful film, now alas a cockney graveyard

  • @themagicrat8803
    @themagicrat8803 5 лет назад +38

    David Attenborough has asked for Cockneys to be placed on the endangered species list

    • @kensyskye8965
      @kensyskye8965 4 года назад

      Jo Lisa Dukarić No that’s not what happened really is it? 😣

    • @kensyskye8965
      @kensyskye8965 4 года назад +2

      The magic rat I’m the only cockney left in my neck of the woods and I’m off soon....
      So sad that the world famous cockney of London will soon cease to be! 💔

    • @brokenbritain1930
      @brokenbritain1930 4 года назад +1

      Kensy Skye the new London is roadmen and chavs, wearing JD sports going round carying knifes, that’s the poor ppl of today no more cockney

    • @wendyburgess5805
      @wendyburgess5805 4 года назад

      You made me laugh; glad to read David Attenborough has a sense of humor, I need one too...

    • @yourtutor7098
      @yourtutor7098 4 года назад

      i think its too late, the are extinct nowdays

  • @robharding5345
    @robharding5345 4 года назад +119

    Sad to say, this old London life is no longer, It may be multicultural, diverse, But it certainly is no better.

    • @mjh5437
      @mjh5437 2 года назад

      Its not really "multicultural",there`s no whites there now.

    • @julianshepherd2038
      @julianshepherd2038 Год назад +3

      Back in those days you would have been complaining about eastern Europeans that moved into the east end.
      My granny was from Bow and hated the Belgians.
      Bow got Belgians fleeing ww1 and for reasons I never worked out, she didn't like them. Liked everyone but wouldn't even discuss Belgians.

    • @johncorrall1739
      @johncorrall1739 Год назад +2

      @@julianshepherd2038
      How many millions of Belgians were there?

    • @kod9400
      @kod9400 Год назад +2

      @@johncorrall1739 You’d think according to this guy as many as the millions of South Asians now replacing the native population.

    • @christinedennison7770
      @christinedennison7770 Год назад

      Mono culture in the end

  • @anncarolan4105
    @anncarolan4105 3 года назад +22

    I was born in the Eastend ( 29 Stonebridge House ) Shorditch London, and it was great, a couple of years ago i returned to see family and every thing i new was either gone or replaced with wine bars and cafes, we used to follow the old rag an bone man , play in streets till it was dark, also there was,nt one front door that was closed, but alas times have changed, locked doors, no playing in streets after dark sad so sad, but with this video i am able to go back in time to relive those wonderful days, and at 71yrs i need no more, thank you for this video you have made an old lady happy god bless you, Anna , Ireland

    • @MrMrliamo
      @MrMrliamo 5 месяцев назад

      Where in Ireland? I'm in Roscommon

  • @jackyoung3046
    @jackyoung3046 4 года назад +88

    This film really captures the spirit of the Cockneys very well. I am American and have always had a fascination with the East End of London. I read a lot about Jack the Ripper, the Krays, the devastation of the German bombs in World War 2 and how the spirit and sense of pride that the tough Cockneys had helped them endure. I always wanted to visit London. I had little interest in seeing the traditional London touristy things like Buckingham Palace or Westminster Abbey. I wanted to see areas like Whitechapel, Bethnal Green, Mile End etc. I was more interested in meeting East End people instead of seeing landmarks. Finally in 1986 I fulfilled my dream of visiting London. I've been told that it was around that time that the East Enders began moving out of their traditional neighborhoods. I feel a profound sadness watching this video knowing that the East End has changed forever. The white British people have been sold down the Thames by their traitorous government. They have been ethnically cleansed from the East End. Whether this statement is racist or Islamophobic I really do not care because it's the truth. To all you Cockneys that watched this video and grew up on the streets of East London and have fond memories of this place I feel for you. You may come back and cheer for your beloved West Ham but all you have is nostalgia.

    • @pinkyman5155
      @pinkyman5155 4 года назад +17

      jack young Sadly everything you have said is true Jack, sadly the people living in the East End have more money than we would have ever dreamt about years ago, But what we lacked as kids we gained as Cockney brothers and sisters with pride.

    • @Victoricat
      @Victoricat 3 года назад +5

      Maybe you have ancestry here...alot of the first people to go to america and later arrivals would have been from these area...or atleast visited... :)

    • @mjh5437
      @mjh5437 2 года назад

      East End was always a bit of a slum but at least it was an a recognisably English slum back then...its full of foreign trash now.

    • @bt4086
      @bt4086 2 года назад

      All the white people left of their own volition, you weirdo.

    • @chalkfarmcarsquadso1664
      @chalkfarmcarsquadso1664 Год назад +2

      God bless

  • @alisonnorcross951
    @alisonnorcross951 4 года назад +11

    We took the river trip with the school in 1965 up the Thames and at the time all the dock workers waved back at us. Gone now

  • @kensyskye8965
    @kensyskye8965 4 года назад +31

    The Eastend was absolutely wonderful! ❤️❤️❤️

  • @VintageMillyBooks
    @VintageMillyBooks 5 лет назад +36

    My Grandad was born in Hackney in 1923. He was a wonderful man.

  • @fitnessisgood4u
    @fitnessisgood4u 6 лет назад +18

    Have a walk down Whitechapel.....it's been totally trashed.

  • @juliakeats7242
    @juliakeats7242 3 года назад +11

    I was brought up in Garford House in Poplar right next to the docks we used to open our back windows and shout to each other happy New Year the noise was amazing everyone happy and cheering the boats would sound their horns the atmosphere was incredible then we would all rush to our Front doors and wish all the neighbours in the surrounding flats happy New Year at the tops of our voices they are lovely memories of growing up in the East End

  • @ukgoldenkiwi407
    @ukgoldenkiwi407 3 года назад +6

    was beautiful back then. brits as one. now its everyman for himself. i dont mind a bit of multi but we do need to limit it to protect the british values culture and lifestyle as it was. Every country around the world would surely want to protect their identity and britain is no different

  • @pinkyman5155
    @pinkyman5155 5 лет назад +96

    I was born in the East End, the ships would all sound their horns at Midnight on news Years Eve to welcome the new year.

    • @pinkyman5155
      @pinkyman5155 5 лет назад +4

      Martin Bootneck that’s right they did 🤪

    • @lesreed9269
      @lesreed9269 4 года назад +1

      Just so - the noise from The Royals would deafen us!

    • @Maelli535
      @Maelli535 4 года назад +4

      Could hear it from my bedroom!

    • @Wanderingfren
      @Wanderingfren 4 года назад +3

      Wish I could of heard this

    • @pinkyman5155
      @pinkyman5155 4 года назад +4

      Trop To me as a kid it was amazing 😀

  • @RootlessNZ
    @RootlessNZ 3 года назад +35

    Great film that brought back a lot of memories, some good, some not so good. I grew up in poverty in Mile End in the 50s. I left when I was 18 to live in Islington but my parents lived in the East End all their lives . They eventually got rehoused in a GLC flat they liked when their slum dwelling was knocked down. I could never find decent housing in London and was appalled by what happened in Dockland. The rich just poured in to the housing developments in the old dock areas. The poor are powerless in the face of the onslaught by those who have money. I now live in New Zealand and miss the vibrancy of London, but I certainly don't miss living in a slum.

    • @thedigitalidiot
      @thedigitalidiot 2 года назад +9

      It's the same story in modern London. The once attainable housing in the outskirts of London are being gentrified by developments that disproportionately outstrip the affordability to the common Londoner. It's a sad state of affairs.

    • @kelvinb1350
      @kelvinb1350 Год назад +3

      I love the docklands, can't afford to live there but love it. My dad use to take us for walks there many years ago - no money for bus fare just good old legwork from Bromley by Bow and back - memories!

  • @duncanmacdonald4271
    @duncanmacdonald4271 5 лет назад +169

    The London I remember and knew so well. Now it has unfortunately vanished.

    • @spodge1233
      @spodge1233 5 лет назад +28

      But the film has people wandering around 50 years ago saying exactly the same thing. It's never been a place where things stayed the same. Nostalgia's a lovely human trait, but nostalgia ain't what it used to be :-)

    • @jimthompson939
      @jimthompson939 5 лет назад +3

      Nostalgia' is a strange thing

    • @leojames1443
      @leojames1443 5 лет назад +5

      I don't know about that. There's still plenty of poverty on Whitechapel Road.

    • @silverbullet2008bb
      @silverbullet2008bb 5 лет назад +24

      @King Brilliant They're diversity barriers mate, don't forget "Islam is peace" "diversity is our greatest strength" and "free speech is hate speech". Kinda reminds me of a novel I once read....

    • @Cheedillow
      @Cheedillow 5 лет назад +10

      @King Brilliant there was a literal war, people's houses getting bombed, half the city was piss poor. No crime!? London is one of the best cities in the world today. Stop trying to justify your thinly veiled racism

  • @markbishop1588
    @markbishop1588 3 года назад +7

    The main reason the docks closed was containerisation. No need for loads of men to unload a ship when all you need is one bloke in a crane.

    • @mauriceosullivan6832
      @mauriceosullivan6832 2 года назад

      Machines, have taken millions of jobs,, Machines will claim millions more.

  • @kevin39632
    @kevin39632 10 лет назад +71

    Thank you for posting this, although I was born in barking and never lived in the east end it still bought back a lot of memories some good some bad, just wondering what the hell happened to England? we was once the top ship builders, car makers etc etc, where the hell did it all go wrong?.

    • @americansarebeggersamerica6895
      @americansarebeggersamerica6895 9 лет назад +15

      sad to say, but maggie tatcher distroyed it by opening the doors to let in cheap labour in from u no where. the uk was so much an indipendant country/continent to anywhere elce in the world, and im an irish man saying this.

    • @COLEEN322
      @COLEEN322 9 лет назад +10

      ***** we try not to say that word here in the north east it's bad luck, she changed the character of our once proud town forever now like many others it's a fucking shell of it's former self and the FOOD PARCEL OUTLETS have increased 5 fold in 12 months with shoplifting up 4 fold in the same period, what does the government do? give billions to other nations some who even have nuclear programs while their own people have to fucking beg like bastard lepers!!!!

    • @americansarebeggersamerica6895
      @americansarebeggersamerica6895 9 лет назад +11

      yes, england was and is still such a beautiful country, i love looking at old videos of it, i not big into history, but, i am a mechanic and i soo soo love the genious engineering that england has done in the past and were so ahead of anyone else in the world, just superb, and the old old victorien buildings, oh my god, its so fantastic, the history is just astounding! but yet, the forign countries and population that came from these third world countries, well, the uk has seemed to forget the fanstatic history that it holds. im irish saying this, but then again, were neighbours and we are allout to communicate with each other as we have done for centuries!

    • @xiscozapatero1914
      @xiscozapatero1914 6 лет назад

      I take it schools didn't exist in Ireland when you were growing up ?

    • @08shunter
      @08shunter 5 лет назад +7

      The Do gooders ruined it.

  • @mylsey1511
    @mylsey1511 2 года назад +3

    Shame London identify is long gone from these days the country has been ruined the war generation would be horrified by what it is like and wonder all the sacrifice during the wars was all for

    • @jackangus4530
      @jackangus4530 2 года назад

      @Mylsey, events have taken a more drastic turn since most of those which fought are either too old or deceased. It's done by design and unfortunately the Western world still are unable to recognise that behind mainstream media , bankers & politics inc' weapon manufacturers and medicine we continue to see the same faces.
      WWW , We Were Warned

  • @andreamack7867
    @andreamack7867 2 года назад +18

    I was raised in Dagenham, born in ‘64. The streets were safer than they are today. We’d play outside while both our parents worked full time. We were safe, no worries about being snatched. I feel very sorry for my grandkids who will never know what we had. My own children had it good too but i cry for my grandchildren

    • @hawnyfox3411
      @hawnyfox3411 Год назад +2

      @Andrea = What general part of Dagenham are you from ?
      Whilst I never lived there, my entire life revolved around it, "Merry Fiddlers"
      "Five Elms", "The Matapan" & even "The Civic Centre" & "Wood Lane" etc
      "Martins Corner", "Parsloes Park", "Green Lane" "Valence Ave" etc, etc
      Used to go every year to the "Dagenham Town Show" - used to be great
      Am told by my mate Steve (who still lives near the Civic), that it stopped, sadly
      Also am same age as you, so, I remember it like you did & local tales.
      My Nan was putting out her washing & one of Hitler's German Bombers flew SO LOW over the Dagenham roof-tops that my 39 y/o Nan 'wet herself' in fright
      ( She was laughing when she told me, but I was horrified !!)
      Both the Pilot & Front Gunner looked at her & she stared back at them both
      Then she saw the Black Crosses on the wings & swastika on it's tail !!!!
      So sad the way that Dagenham HAS "gone downhill"

    • @andreamack7867
      @andreamack7867 Год назад +2

      @@hawnyfox3411 that’s a great memory for you to know. I was brought up in Becontree Heath, i five minutes walk from our house in Albert Road. My brother who still lives there used to be a barman when it was owned by Alf and Sadie back in the early - mid 70’s. The Ship and Anchor was boarded up last time i was told. Merry Fiddlers pub is gone. I haven’t been up that way for quite a few years. I like to remember what it once was

    • @hawnyfox3411
      @hawnyfox3411 Год назад

      @@andreamack7867 = Many thanks for your swift reply Andrea
      I know Becontree Heath like the back of my hand (!), really do.
      Both sets of my G/Parents lived there - Grafton Road & Valence Ave
      That Heinkel.111 incident took place there & Bonham Rd nr Valence Park.
      I worked for R.M & the RM.8 & RM.9 postcodes were my delivery areas.
      My Wife went to Robert Clack school which is very close to you (were)
      I know Whalebone Lane like the back of my hand too, too many reasons !
      Selinas Lane was where I'd drive my Lorry (near you) to do collections.
      I remember the "Ship n' Anchor" Pub, there used to be a cinema nearby
      My Dad says he took me there to see "Tora, Tora, Tora" in the 1970's
      Just like the cinema in Green Lane, the one by the "Ship n Anchor" it shut
      Am told it was last used in 1970's, then it was bulldozed - sadly
      I'm from Chadwell Heath myself, but spent more time around Becontree during the 1960's,1970's,1980's & 1990's - Ending my association in 2004
      As a kid, I was always either on an 86, 193, 62 or 25 Bus, but mainly the 86
      I actually miss Becontree Heath the most from the 1960's, as, back then the houses were ALL owned by the G.L.C & were kept in smart order
      Each house had an immaculate lawn & well sorted roof-tiles.
      It all "went to $hit" in the 1990's once the "Right To Buy" kicked in
      Houses then were either run down, or, a bizarre mish-mash of colours
      Suddenly CARS replaced the lawns & yet more & more concrete !!!!!
      Is the Wood Lane Sport's centre still there, near you, opposite Central Pk ?
      I used to play "Five A Side" Football there, under floodlights !!
      It was near the Civic & basically next-door to Robert Clack school
      I swear to God, I really do pine after & miss the London I once knew
      It occupied the first 40+ years of my life, from Bow Bells Church & Cheapside & St.Paul's, via Stratford, Mile-End, Upton Park, Forest Gate
      I'd go back in a heartbeat & live thru it all again if I could

    • @londongirl1733
      @londongirl1733 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@hawnyfox3411 Great memories I remember it all. Mum and Dad had a shop Becontree Heath lol.

    • @hawnyfox3411
      @hawnyfox3411 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@londongirl1733 = Interesting to hear !!
      Was it in Green Lane by any chance ????

  • @TheMrgaztop
    @TheMrgaztop 11 лет назад +162

    I miss what London used to be. What a shame.

    • @womblowbobble1139
      @womblowbobble1139 5 лет назад +10

      TheMrgaztop the rich ppl stole it

    • @silverbullet2008bb
      @silverbullet2008bb 5 лет назад +10

      I take it you miss the capital city of the English people.

    • @SKY-jv9ue
      @SKY-jv9ue 5 лет назад

      WHY?

    • @edwardvickers5506
      @edwardvickers5506 4 года назад +1

      @Jo Lisa Dukarić no we don't miss being slaves of the Roman empire🤔

    • @philipmcdonagh1094
      @philipmcdonagh1094 4 года назад +10

      Same here in Dublin. So called modernization screwed it all up

  • @Isleofskye
    @Isleofskye 5 лет назад +5

    The Pub we had Xmas dinner in is now The Camberwell Islamic Centre. My Mums Bingo Hall is The Moon Mission. My Boys Club: "Clubland" where Michael Caine went b4 me is a Nigerian Church and until recently The Manor Place Baths which had a swimming pool.boxing/wrestling events/5 a side football and sports hall was a Buddhist Monastery...Progress innit !
    Innit ?

    • @johnsalvidge4131
      @johnsalvidge4131 Год назад

      I KNOW MANOR PLACE BATHS VERY WELL!...I USED TO BE IN AMATEUR BOXING BOUTS THERE BETWEEN 1968 to 1970 WHEN I WAS 12 TO 14 YEARS OLD AND I BELONGED TO THE LYNN BOXING CLUB JUST DOWN THE ROAD FROM THERE...ALSO USED TO SWIM IN THE BATHS AS WELL... HAPPY DAYS!...THE AREA HAS CHANGED BEYOND RECOGNITION NOW ...ANYONE REMEMBER THE LYNN BOXING CLUB THEN?...ALSO ANYONE REMEMBER THE LYCEUM IN THE STRAND?...THE BEST DISCO IN TOWN CIRCA 1970-1075?...AH Those HAPPY DAYS!

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye Год назад

      @@johnsalvidge4131 Hello mate. I remember Fitzroy Lodge and Lynn though not a Boxer, myself.
      Lyceum? EXACTLY what you said. I was 18 years old in 1972 and used to queue up in Winter in Summer clothes but you had to wear a tie. Some joker got sent home and came back wearing a Tie and Trousers😀
      My abiding memory was Billy Paul "Me and Mrs Jones". In 1983 I moved to this house 11 miles away in Bexley so where are you now,my friend,please?

  • @laurallama73
    @laurallama73 6 лет назад +17

    There’s no way I can bitch about my lot in life when I watch these historical docs. I’ve nothing but respect for those that survived the ravages of WWII-the city dwellers, as well as country folk. SO MANY had much more than their fair share of misery and trauma, .🇺🇸❤️🇬🇧

    • @wendyburgess5805
      @wendyburgess5805 4 года назад +4

      I so agree with this comment, thank you for posting it.

  • @FF-so3su
    @FF-so3su 4 года назад +17

    All England is doomed to go the way of London😢

    • @seansmith445
      @seansmith445 2 года назад +4

      You can see that the provincial cities going the same way as London now. All by design of course.

  • @gregglamb3105
    @gregglamb3105 4 года назад +20

    Made me cry watching this.
    Was born in Hackney, Amhurst Rd, my Nans always told me of what it used to be.
    Such a shame, it really is.

    • @Victoricat
      @Victoricat 3 года назад +2

      It's truly sad

    • @patsyhodge9071
      @patsyhodge9071 3 года назад +2

      I was in Amhurst Rd too, back in the late 70s and early eighties. I loved London then and I still do but I cant live there now. Im in New Zealand. I cry when I look at the east end and London now. It has fallen.

    • @sergioalmasy8722
      @sergioalmasy8722 6 месяцев назад

      No longer a sense of community now, and hasn't been for a few decades. Neighbours keep themselves to themselves. Oh, and there is a language barrier.

    • @ronniep9272
      @ronniep9272 2 месяца назад

      ​@@patsyhodge9071think about how the Maoris feel in New Zealand. You guys completely changed the demographics of North America, The Carribean and Australasia, there's hardly any natives left there now.

  • @davebanfield4440
    @davebanfield4440 2 года назад +6

    The East end as it was .you wouldn't recognise it today totally changed

  • @molossergirl2
    @molossergirl2 5 лет назад +19

    Ah, Petticoat Lane, Leather Lane, Mile End Road/Stepney market my old teenage haunts with long lost friends.

  • @howardbowen-RC-Pilot
    @howardbowen-RC-Pilot Год назад +7

    My childhood on film. All gone now.

  • @keenbaker-dias1137
    @keenbaker-dias1137 3 года назад +8

    I miss real Britain

  • @brainsmith3931
    @brainsmith3931 3 года назад +4

    The people can be racist about London but you will find that London is the only city in the UK that is very multicultural and is a integrated city and a city which embraces cultures and differences other UK cities and towns even today are very racist and segregated, without immigrants London would not be a amazing city many came from the Carribbean community and Asian and European community as well as the cockneys that integrated and worked together sadly doesn't exist anymore society is segregated and divided all over the UK .

  • @HoofinBob
    @HoofinBob 4 года назад +6

    bleedin hell memories galore there... 1980s after leaving the bootnecks my old man said bugger off were doomed lad... so Australia it was. Dad was right but I miss my east end.

  • @kellylevy8370
    @kellylevy8370 2 года назад +10

    I loved this. I actually show my grand dad ..selling a china dinner set and clapped his hands when it was sold...i have shown my boys there Great Grand Dad "Pip's" couldn't have done that if it wasn't for this documentary. .BIG THANK YOU to those that made this xxx

  • @Zlervo
    @Zlervo 6 лет назад +263

    I've lived in East London all my life. Sadly I don't feel at home here any more.

  • @pigsymagic4741
    @pigsymagic4741 5 лет назад +34

    I wonder what the world would be like today if everybody stayed in their own countries no wars no fighting nobody sticking their nose in anybody else's business

    • @TheFreshSpam
      @TheFreshSpam 5 лет назад +12

      Britian and London woukdnt exisit

    • @alecneate76
      @alecneate76 4 года назад +3

      Better, the world would be a much more diverse and exciting place too

    • @gavb9816
      @gavb9816 4 года назад +1

      @@TheFreshSpam can hoy explain why? do you think Englishman/Brits cannot work! the industrial revelation would suggest they can

    • @TheFreshSpam
      @TheFreshSpam 4 года назад +3

      @@gavb9816 Becuase if Britain didnt conquer half the world noone would know who we are. Its simple

    • @TheFreshSpam
      @TheFreshSpam 4 года назад

      @Genealogy Matters it's not. If we didnt go out in the world as a country we wouldn't be as known nor have our language used globally.

  • @user-cm8en8or1p
    @user-cm8en8or1p 5 лет назад +44

    It isn't English anymore.
    It's so, so sad. They never asked us, they just replaced us. Unforgivable.

    • @silverbullet2008bb
      @silverbullet2008bb 5 лет назад +7

      Now it's time for us to replace them, the politicians that is. Have a look at Patriotic Alternative's website.

    • @timothythomas7445
      @timothythomas7445 5 лет назад +1

      Go back 100 years and you'd find people saying the very same things. I know, for they are saying the very same in 2019.

    • @silverbullet2008bb
      @silverbullet2008bb 5 лет назад +5

      @@timothythomas7445 They may well have said that 100 years ago over a few Jewish families living in the East End of London. But the difference is that today we actually have a point when the 2011 census revealed English people to be a minority in their own capital city and that was 8 years ago, the situation now will be even less English people in London. Besides, maybe our forefathers anticipated the future of London if those immigrants kept coming and they were proven just as correct as Enoch Powell. In fact, Powell vastly understated the case. Today, 3.2 million people in London were born abroad and this does not account for their all the children born to them since they arrived. No wonder London is so expensive and there is a chronic housing shortage and NHS waiting times are astronomical. The third worlders in London all have ethnically homogenous homelands of their own, as is their right. The English deserve the same rights as every other ethnic group.

    • @ssss-df5qz
      @ssss-df5qz 5 лет назад +6

      The most given boy's name in the UK last year was Mohammed.

    • @jmnich6023
      @jmnich6023 5 лет назад +2

      Not gonna lie though, part of the reason is because everyone decided to move out of the east end and out to Essex. If nobody left there’s no one to replace.

  • @lesreed9269
    @lesreed9269 7 лет назад +133

    What was that bloody awful "rap" type crap, at the beginning?

    • @aaronturner4597
      @aaronturner4597 5 лет назад +45

      Les Reed
      The nu-London cuz
      Where you get acid attacked from a moped fam
      Dis postcode better than yours blad
      Pop dat ting, sell dat ting.
      This is London now, Delboy and Rodney have been replaced with Leroy and Rashid. Third worlders creating the third world.
      Breaks my heart to see cockneys being replaced with such people.

    • @clapalot
      @clapalot 5 лет назад +8

      Why are you guys angry that the third world are doing your jobs better than you

    • @bens1972
      @bens1972 5 лет назад +5

      Clapped Speed well said

    • @tomtaylor7339
      @tomtaylor7339 5 лет назад +13

      that awful rap type crap you call it,was music called Grime,which was invented in East London in the early 2000s.

    • @HarrySmith-hr2iv
      @HarrySmith-hr2iv 5 лет назад +11

      rap music=sh!t music.

  • @Kentavious444
    @Kentavious444 4 года назад +15

    I was in London around this time. I think it was one of the best eras for London! Fun and exciting times.

  • @darrylkennedy2236
    @darrylkennedy2236 8 лет назад +81

    when I got to London in the 1970's the east end was very different to today.All the docks were still working albeit slowly. I remember when they started to fill in the Rotherhithe docks and large areas were still bare land after being bombed especially along the Newham Way.Corrugated iron fences even across roads were common. I met an old lady who lived in Savile Road at Silver town.Her street backed on to the docks and she had lived here all her life. Although the THAMES was less than 100yds away she said she'd never been to the other side as everything was just down the road.What a lovely person. We had some great conversations.The east end then was certainly rough in places but it had a soul and a never say die attitude that definitely stuck with me.Though I lived in SW16 I drove trucks and spent a lot of time there. The old commercial road and the surrounding streets were alive then and I loved every minute.

    • @irispluck5536
      @irispluck5536 6 лет назад

      Darryl Kenned

    • @joywaller3045
      @joywaller3045 6 лет назад

      Darryl Kenne

    • @land7776
      @land7776 5 лет назад +1

      Darryl Kenn

    • @direktorpresident
      @direktorpresident 4 года назад +6

      I remember George's Cafe, just like going in to someone's front room! Later his son moved the Cafe over to Graving Dock area, but I see that too is now derelict.

    • @petergrahamwilson210
      @petergrahamwilson210 4 года назад +4

      At those docks I joined Shaw Saville Line in 1956 as a junior engineer and departed in 1970 from the same docks on a one-way trip to Sydney, I'm still here, seeing a still (24.46) of the Dominion Monarch on her berth brings back so many memories, one I'd like to replicate with pleasure would be downing a pint of Red Barrel at the Round House Pub just down the road abit!!! Happy Days them

  • @jmnich6023
    @jmnich6023 5 лет назад +26

    I’ve lived in Newham all of my life, born in 1990. I wish there was still even an ounce of our culture left in the east end. Growing up in the 90’s was the best time of my life.

    • @theblindfoldep
      @theblindfoldep 4 года назад +5

      It's in Barking, Havering, Essex and Kent now or perhaps you're not looking hard enough. Culture is a fluid thing and changes constantly. Always has, always will. The Londoners of 1890 were very likely to bemoaning their "loss of culture" too.

    • @mjh5437
      @mjh5437 2 года назад

      @@theblindfoldep No,they weren`t,the amount of foreign invasion over the last 30 years is incomparable to anything ever before.

    • @Hn-gz5iw
      @Hn-gz5iw 2 года назад

      @@theblindfoldep Never in Londons history before have it become a white minority city as it is now, so what your saying is only a half truth.

    • @everythingflows3639
      @everythingflows3639 Год назад +1

      ​@@theblindfoldepVery few places and times have seen as much change as the east end in the past half century. An old lady born and raised there in eg. the 1930s/40s and still living there today will likely feel extremely culturally and socially isolated. Why are you keen to downplay that? Why must change - in any form and to any degree - be seen as an unmixed blessing?

    • @londongirl1733
      @londongirl1733 11 месяцев назад

      @@everythingflows3639 FACT

  • @jeffrawe6486
    @jeffrawe6486 5 лет назад +41

    To quote John Cleese........”London isn’t English anymore”. How true that is.

    • @tdonovan4735
      @tdonovan4735 5 лет назад +7

      And that was said by Cleese - an English man living in the Caribbean. A man still thinking that his white provided allows him to be living like he's in a British colony that's still in the Empire. Oh the irony of an ignorant Brit living abroad - talking about immigrants in Britain! Dumb ignorant, blinkered pratt

    • @elpistolero9394
      @elpistolero9394 5 лет назад +16

      T Donovan
      Oh bore off with that white privileged claptrap. Insufferable imbecile

    • @freebornjohn6876
      @freebornjohn6876 4 года назад +2

      Was London ever purely English? If you look at its history you'll see it was always where immigrants have lived. My family has lived in the East End since around 1820. Hugenots, Jews from Eastern Europe, Irish, Chinese, Bangladeshis. The migrants who arrive change the complexion of the place, but that makes the East End what it is, and it always will .

    • @giuseppenero110
      @giuseppenero110 4 года назад

      The results of colonization and declaring 3rd world countries part of the Commonwealth

  • @PhilUKNet
    @PhilUKNet Год назад +4

    "Wood and asbestos are the main ingredients used." When I used to walk from home to school in East Ham in the mid 60's there were still a few of these pre-fabs being lived in. There were also bomb shelters in the school playground. Those were the days.

  • @stevegreen443
    @stevegreen443 3 года назад +7

    I'm from North Wales so have no associations with The East End , but , it's the kind of place I'd of felt very much at home at (in those days) . Real people .

  • @Michelle-qd9gm
    @Michelle-qd9gm 5 лет назад +9

    East end everyone new each other neighbours said hello they looked out for each other people their tough as old boots didn’t take any crap of anyone good on them men were men in them days

  • @jerrykitich3318
    @jerrykitich3318 5 лет назад +27

    Very young Chas and Dave at 5:56

  • @dennispatten5669
    @dennispatten5669 2 года назад +4

    I am from Bethnal Green which along with Stepney and Poplar IS THE EAST END. West Ham's original stadium in Upton Park (EAST HAM) is in East London NOT THE EAST END.. During the 1950's and 60's, I NEVER met one person in the East End that was a West Ham supporter. In my Manor it was 50-50% Tottenham or Arsenal with a soft spot for Leyton Orient.

    • @DuxBrit-66
      @DuxBrit-66 Год назад

      Me too. I am one of those Spurs supporters from the ‘60s with Orient vs Mansfield being the first football game I ever attended!

  • @robg71
    @robg71 5 лет назад +17

    This should be shown in Schools. Real people.

    • @robg71
      @robg71 4 года назад

      @StealthyMonk My Gramars Dead, you sick twat!

  • @danabrahams7892
    @danabrahams7892 5 лет назад +8

    I went with my dad 10 years back now to our family's old homes and life in the East End, it was all gone really - couldn't even find a proper begel (egg wash) - all the pubs were gone his school in Old Street gone - was very sad, and was the last time he walked around there dying a few years after...

    • @Isleofskye
      @Isleofskye 5 лет назад +3

      Sorry to hear that Dan but he lived in a great time there,my friend. Same in South East London. The Pub we had Xmas dinner in is now The Camberwell Islamic Centre. My Mums Bingo Hall is The Moon Mission. My Boys Club: "Clubland" where Michael Caine went b4 me is a Nigerian Church and until recently THe Manor Place Baths which had a swimming pool.boxing/wrestling events/5 a side football and sports hall was a Buddhist Monastery...Progress innit ! Innit ?

    • @danabrahams7892
      @danabrahams7892 5 лет назад

      @@Isleofskye Yes he did fella, and your mum and family by the sounds - progress they say - not sure that's the way to go - all that history and community gone - least we have the memories eh

  • @jonboy9912
    @jonboy9912 4 года назад +16

    So pleased I can remember it all and shamed at what it has become!

    • @davidnewman9244
      @davidnewman9244 2 года назад

      im a country boy from the south. are there any parts of the east end you recommend to visit now.

    • @jonboy9912
      @jonboy9912 2 года назад

      @@davidnewman9244 We all moved out to Essex and watched our parents who were trapped there put up and shut up for years under successive governments that didn't give a damn and now the filth has it to themselves - pubs all shut and churches in disrepair - some dripping wet Liberals still think its cool, but it is a social tragedy people lost their histories and traditions forever!

    • @davidnewman9244
      @davidnewman9244 2 года назад

      @@jonboy9912 thanks for the replie. im sad to hear that.

  • @Putlinka68
    @Putlinka68 11 лет назад +23

    What a great piece of film. Great to see all the old characters of the east end gone by,

  • @mariastevens1774
    @mariastevens1774 2 года назад +4

    I lived on Newell Street Limehouse in the 1950s. There is no way that I would live in the East End now..

    • @uk-martin4905
      @uk-martin4905 10 месяцев назад

      My late stepfather owned and rented out a house in Newell Street in the late 50s /60s. No. 14 I think it was.

  • @leemorgan8478
    @leemorgan8478 10 лет назад +54

    The old east end gone now but the gap between rich and poor is widening .

    • @bangladasilondonbloger5580
      @bangladasilondonbloger5580 5 лет назад

      Lee Morgan

    • @CaptCondor
      @CaptCondor 5 лет назад +2

      @Charles Martel neither does your comment

    • @CaptCondor
      @CaptCondor 5 лет назад +1

      @Nidgi I would need to check, because I don't have the necessary facts available in my head. But otherwise, please indulge me.

    • @ramsey633
      @ramsey633 4 года назад

      the poor being immigrants who live on benefits and never pay tax

  • @brianjoyce9907
    @brianjoyce9907 3 года назад +2

    We was poor but we didn't know it. That was my house too when I was a kid. It's all we knew. White privilege my arse.

  • @paulgrinsill7785
    @paulgrinsill7785 5 лет назад +6

    The East End is now called Islamabad junior by the locals

    • @topbanana4013
      @topbanana4013 5 лет назад

      @General Guile it always was thats what makes no sense.

    • @gerrybrennan5715
      @gerrybrennan5715 5 лет назад +1

      The Eastenders never were too hot at geography or racial profiling.

    • @marianmorley
      @marianmorley Месяц назад

      No it's not called that by the locals. That's rubbish.

  • @dirkbogarde44
    @dirkbogarde44 6 лет назад +41

    God bless you Chas for keeping the East End alive. RIP brother.

  • @nodramaplease6663
    @nodramaplease6663 3 года назад +3

    We lost this country when we won ww2 👎🏼

  • @oldbloke5277
    @oldbloke5277 6 лет назад +16

    I learnt me way round the east end in me dad's lorry. One of the firms he worked for was Davis Bro's Haulage,
    better known as yiddle Davis. Five Jewish brothers owned it and could never be described as honest,
    upstanding citizens :-) Their yard was in Solebay Street at Mile End. Good education for when I was old enough to drive lorries. I'd learnt how to drive when I could see over the wheel, learnt me way around the docks and the
    rest of the country and most important, I'd learnt most of the fiddles. Like a lot of people have said, it's not the same place now. The Jews were harmless enough, but the rest of 'em, well....

    • @pip110.5
      @pip110.5 5 лет назад +1

      Old Bloke I remember Yiddle ,I'll say no more.😂

  • @tokyohands
    @tokyohands 3 года назад +5

    Let’s be honest, it was an absolute dump. My late grandad grew up in Deptford and he didn’t sugar coat it, he said it was hard and it was a dump that people would’ve left if they’d had the means.

  • @songsmith31a
    @songsmith31a Год назад +4

    So many memories. I served as a young PC in docklands during the 1960s...patrolling
    :the streets of Limehouse, the Isle of Dogs and Poplar before the place changed to
    become a business and high cost residential area. By then I had been transferred
    on promotion to the West End - talk about chalk and cheese!!