1960s Teeside | Pollution | River Pollution | Living with Pollution | River Tees | This Week | 1969

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • Teeside - Where nearly half a million people live in the shadow of one of Europe’s Largest industrial complexes. Pollution has become an excepted fact of life in the area, but how is it affecting the environment and people’s lives?
    Peter Williams investigates.
    First shown: 27/11/1969
    To license a clip please e mail:
    archive@fremantle.com
    Quote: VT101027

Комментарии • 24

  • @rayjones5771
    @rayjones5771 10 месяцев назад +4

    My grandfather fell in the river tees in 1942 and died a short time later He was working on a ship being built. He's widow given 100 pound The ship builder denied liability but gave 100 as a good will gesture.

  • @steelhelmetstan7305
    @steelhelmetstan7305 2 года назад +12

    Growing up in the 1970s I remember the state and smell of the rivet well....its clean now , full of fish etc, industry has cleaned up its act as well as sewage treatment improving.....but one factor has to be taken into account that the industry today in 2022 is a shadow of its former self when this film was made , 1968?. Where did the industry go ?....overseas?, where there is probably zero pollution control. You have to get the balance between jobs , industry etc and pollution.

  • @regplasma7906
    @regplasma7906 2 года назад +10

    0.22 'When was the last time you saw a salmon this far up the Tees ?' '1921 0r 1922".To prove it ,those 2 salmon fishermen in the background have been there for 47 years and only caught a rubber tyre full of shite.

  • @andrewharding7459
    @andrewharding7459 2 года назад +4

    I remember falling into the river when I was a nipper living in doggy and 50 years later I'm still a steady 6 inches on the slack.

  • @deanstanley5799
    @deanstanley5799 2 года назад +12

    Those woman we’re only in there 30s !

  • @derekgraham5443
    @derekgraham5443 2 года назад +3

    The joke used to be that if you fell into the River Tees the toss up was whether you died of poisoning before you drowned.

  • @DeannaAllison
    @DeannaAllison 2 года назад +1

    I remember crossing the river as a young child in the late 60s or early 70s, on the Tees Transporter Bridge which is visible in the background during part of this report. And I remember looking down at the river's surface and wondering why it looked like pea soup ... it is still a really vivid memory for me because it looked so odd: bright green stuff was floating, covering the surface of the river. Only years later did I learn about algal blooms caused by pollution.

  • @gehanoates294
    @gehanoates294 2 года назад +6

    As long as they make money they don't care.

  • @dreadfulspiller8766
    @dreadfulspiller8766 2 года назад +4

    I thought where I grew up in the states in the 70s was grim but it's the garden of eden next to this place.

    • @scrog77
      @scrog77 Год назад +1

      Used to be, its completely changed for the better now but understand what you mean.

  • @steven-vn9ui
    @steven-vn9ui 2 года назад +1

    When will those with power stop the greed and just look after OUR planet. Saddens me so much.

  • @BruceIredale
    @BruceIredale 2 года назад +1

    I lived on Teesside for 20 years and although I'm back in South Yorkshire now it still wound me up that some idiot from inside the M25 can't be bothered to spell Teesside right even before I'd watched the video. Like the good Doctor was saying, it just shows how much care those in the south really had for the North East. Can't even be bothered to spell it right let alone anything more important

    • @cthonorsoma5702
      @cthonorsoma5702 2 года назад

      Teescide

    • @this_is_a_tiny_town
      @this_is_a_tiny_town 2 года назад

      Jesus, man you need to learn to relax if that's what winds you up. I'm from nowhere near the M25 and I also didn't know there was a double 's' in the spelling. Furthermore if I asked you to spell some place names local to my part of the UK I guarantee you would struggle and to be honest, it wouldn't be a big deal!

  • @tomfenn7149
    @tomfenn7149 2 года назад +1

    Ah. This must be back in the days when British river pollution just wasn't as bad as it is today?

  • @original.dwornboy
    @original.dwornboy 2 года назад +10

    Meanwhile in 2022 there's seals well up river from the sea with plenty of fish for them to eat. The good old days, eh?

    • @warriorboy1976
      @warriorboy1976 2 года назад +1

      In some ways, yes.

    • @sm1thers
      @sm1thers 2 года назад +2

      Things have improved, still a way to go. Sewage is treated normally, but in heavy rain it still overflows at many points along the Tees and coast.
      Last years deeper dredging was followed by deaths of thousands and thousands of lobster and crab deaths which were found to have high levels of toxins. A lot more deeper dredging is due to take place.

  • @trueblue726
    @trueblue726 4 месяца назад +1

    Teesside two double s

  • @spider_hoss
    @spider_hoss 2 года назад +1

    Desecrate the land for the almighty dollar (or pound).

  • @natureisallpowerful
    @natureisallpowerful Год назад

    The tees was dead