I walk along that road every home game of Bradford City to visit Valley Parade. Amazing how the route is still pretty much the same with a lot of the buildings in the video still there, the train station, manor row buildings, the entrance to Lister Park. Completely agree with you that the area itself is not the same, once a very affluent area with huge stone town houses, now a decrepit dumping ground.
Wonderful! Such excitement at the beginning to be involved in the filming. These Mitchell and Kenyon films are such a treasure trove of the Edwardian era.
Goodness, a corner of England 120 years ago…the subjective camera,always on the move gives the images a dreamlike,surreal quality as if we are revisiting this epoch. Thanks a million for this
Cool. Starts Lower Kirkgate, turns right onto Cheapside, Manor Road, Manningham Lane, past Broad Street, Stone Street, along Manor Row, past Thorncliffe Road? Clifton Street, across Queens Road and ending at Lister Park entrance.
Видно, как дети сремятся попасть в историю, бегая перед объективом камеры! Все они живые, веселые, ловкие остались такими навсегда, тем самым радуя нас, живущих в другое время и в другом мире!! Браво!! Незабываемые и очень интересные кадры! 😊😊
Спасибо. Представьте себе также, что все они родились в 19 веке, 2 века назад! Это действительно другой мир. Думаю, камеры тогда были новинкой, и для развлечений больше было нечего делать, отсюда и такое увлечение. :)
I used to live on Wood View. So many memories growing up there in the 80’s, going to Frizinghall first & middle school through the woods and playing football on the Bradford grammar pitch. Good times.
@@martinh9099 Most old photos and footage you see of Bradford back then shows people dressed that way, it was the most prosperous city in Britain per capita in those days.
Look at how well dressed so many people were shows how Bradford was such a wealthy city back then and in fact was until the early 60's then the decline started. I think Im right in saying that in 1947 there were more owners of Rolls Royce cars in both Bradford and Huddersfield than in the whole of London.
One of the many excellent films produced by Mitchell & Kenyon to show at local halls to townsfolk that evening or the next day, after a quick film processing later in the day. Note at 4min 30sec, either Mr Mitchell or Mr Kenyon speaking to the girls to ask them to "parade" in front of the camera as the tram passes soon after. They used to create "scenes" along the route to enhance the viewing experience and sell more tickets. Note also, at 7min 25 sec the tram extension being laid from Lister Park Gates to Heaton which opened for service in May 1902.
Lived in Bradford most of my life and always resented how everyone says it was a shithole, but looking how it used to be ...it IS a shithole now. Very obviously an important place then.
Somewhere there is my Great Grandfather and Gramd mother. He was an architect and had a hand in designing City Hall. They had a big house out at Eccleshill with servants. I’ve heard tales of my great grandmother and her ladies maid. The family still had the house until the late 1950’s but had to sell it. Death duties were vicious back then.
Manningham was where all the German Jewish textile export house owners lived, a very affluent area as was Heaton where I'm surmising this tram was heading. Most of the city was poor working class with low life expectancy although the success of the wool textile industry saw things quickly improve for most workers over the next decade.
I so enjoyed watching this. I can recognise all the old buildings. Seemed strange seeing the park with a high wall. The Spotted House. I used to go to there in the seventies. Those people waving, all long gone now. A window into the past. Wonderful thank you.
Great to hear you enjoyed it. That's why I work on these films. :) Maybe you can resolve or likely expand on a mystery? "The Spotted House" looks to be half buried. even to the point of one window, bottom left, being partly covered. Look at the sill, almost none of it is exposed. Even a corner of the window is covered. It's highly unlikely a building would be constructed in to the small hillside in this fashion. There's a strange chimney/funnel like object on the lower floor between the 2 windows, was that still there in your day? The entrance on the street looks like an adaption, providing access to what was previously the first floor. I see the 2 windows there are bricked up, which is odd for a pub. Was there evidence inside of an adjustment to the structure? Maybe there were 2 bars on separate floors. A stairs of a different design. Odd arrangement to rooms etc. It's stranger still when you consider the graveyard next door is on the same level as the first floor of this building. I guess an adaption in a graveyard is easier.
@@livinghistoryaienhanced. Yes I see what you mean about the bricked up windows. I’m sorry I can’t remember much about the building. I was too busy having fun at the jazz nights.
@@livinghistoryaienhanced The bricked-up windows were due to the window tax. The more you had, the more tax you paid. The act was abolished in 1851, so presumably that building was built in the early 1800s, even earlier.
@@WillScarlet1991 Ah, OK. I forgot about the window tax. Even so, why the main windows and door which would have encouraged passing trade? Perhaps changes to the interior dictated the change.
Amazing love too see these old films l have lived in Lincolnshire all my life and have seen some films but lots of pictures it’s even better when they are colour 😊
I love these. Almost everybody is wearing a hat! I feel a strange sort of affinity with these people for some reason. Perhaps it's because every single one of them is long gone.
This is incredible the original is so grainy, this just brings it to life so much more! Some of the AI faces in the distance are a little bit creepy, but still so amazing!
Out of all the old films I've previously worked on this one keeps popping back in my head to colourise and improve. However, it is one of the longest of the old films at around 9 minutes. We'll see. :)
There's something strange when the tram comes into view 3:23 The tram is stationary although it appears to be moving, and the driver looks like a dummy. There's a man with a similar hat stood just to the left and in front of the vehicle who looks like he could be the real driver... weird.
The tram is at a tram stop, and that is an inspector standing alongside. No doubt they both wanted to be on the film, so "posed" until the camera had passed.
6:42, Nothing like the taxi drivers you have of today in Bradford, or anywhere else for that matter. Bradford has been so culturally enriched that it’s unrecognisable compared to this video. Unfortunately it’s just like many other places in England, so very sad to see how things were then and how they are now. Cultural enrichment has well and truly overtaken.
It's absolutely brilliant.
The gates at Lister Park give me the chills. Live near them. Thanks
Thank you 😁
As a Bradfordian i loved that! - how smart people were back in't day!! - Manningham certainly does not look like that now!
I walk along that road every home game of Bradford City to visit Valley Parade. Amazing how the route is still pretty much the same with a lot of the buildings in the video still there, the train station, manor row buildings, the entrance to Lister Park. Completely agree with you that the area itself is not the same, once a very affluent area with huge stone town houses, now a decrepit dumping ground.
@@looneytune6955sad to see it like this now a days, just full with takeouts. Guess that’s the way life goes. 😢
A once beautiful city. How times change
Still have horse's and carts going about Bradford.
Wonderful! Such excitement at the beginning to be involved in the filming. These Mitchell and Kenyon films are such a treasure trove of the Edwardian era.
Goodness, a corner of England 120 years ago…the subjective camera,always on the move gives the images a dreamlike,surreal quality as if we are revisiting this epoch. Thanks a million for this
Glad you enjoyed it :)
Cool. Starts Lower Kirkgate, turns right onto Cheapside, Manor Road, Manningham Lane, past Broad Street, Stone Street, along Manor Row, past Thorncliffe Road? Clifton Street, across Queens Road and ending at Lister Park entrance.
Видно, как дети сремятся попасть в историю, бегая перед объективом камеры! Все они живые, веселые, ловкие остались такими навсегда, тем самым радуя нас, живущих в другое время и в другом мире!! Браво!! Незабываемые и очень интересные кадры! 😊😊
Спасибо. Представьте себе также, что все они родились в 19 веке, 2 века назад! Это действительно другой мир. Думаю, камеры тогда были новинкой, и для развлечений больше было нечего делать, отсюда и такое увлечение. :)
They had a working tram system and everyone was well dressed. Look how far we've devolved since then.
I agree, heartbreaking.
Yeah, but back then the common flu could be a death sentence, so there's that.
@@therabidscorpion It can now can’t it?
I used to live on Wood View. So many memories growing up there in the 80’s, going to Frizinghall first & middle school through the woods and playing football on the Bradford grammar pitch. Good times.
how smart everyone is dressed, Bradford was wealthy back then... unlike now !
Peaple are so well dressed and smart
Probably because they knew they were gonna be on camera!
@@martinh9099 Most old photos and footage you see of Bradford back then shows people dressed that way, it was the most prosperous city in Britain per capita in those days.
A time of modesty
Look at how well dressed so many people were shows how Bradford was such a wealthy city back then and in fact was until the early 60's then the decline started. I think Im right in saying that in 1947 there were more owners of Rolls Royce cars in both Bradford and Huddersfield than in the whole of London.
Their fascination with the camera and today everyone has a film making device in their pockets. I love that era.
One of the many excellent films produced by Mitchell & Kenyon to show at local halls to townsfolk that evening or the next day, after a quick film processing later in the day. Note at 4min 30sec, either Mr Mitchell or Mr Kenyon speaking to the girls to ask them to "parade" in front of the camera as the tram passes soon after. They used to create "scenes" along the route to enhance the viewing experience and sell more tickets. Note also, at 7min 25 sec the tram extension being laid from Lister Park Gates to Heaton which opened for service in May 1902.
Yes I thought that’s what he was doing. Did you see how thin that waist was as well.
Beautiful history
My grandfather could have been one of those kids larking on Manningham lane, he would have been about 7 years old then. He was born there.
Lived in Bradford most of my life and always resented how everyone says it was a shithole, but looking how it used to be ...it IS a shithole now. Very obviously an important place then.
Somewhere there is my Great Grandfather and Gramd mother. He was an architect and had a hand in designing City Hall. They had a big house out at Eccleshill with servants. I’ve heard tales of my great grandmother and her ladies maid. The family still had the house until the late 1950’s but had to sell it. Death duties were vicious back then.
Wish the clock went back than now
Brilliant film. Thanks for sharing.
Glad you enjoyed it
I take it Bradford was really affluent in that time? They all look so well dressed and the streets are so clean....
The rich were mill owners and other businesses in the city. The rest were very poor, ill, and died much early ☹️
One of the richest areas of the country outside London. But only for a few select folk. Had the lowest life expectancy of adults in the country.
Manningham was where all the German Jewish textile export house owners lived, a very affluent area as was Heaton where I'm surmising this tram was heading. Most of the city was poor working class with low life expectancy although the success of the wool textile industry saw things quickly improve for most workers over the next decade.
Nice beautiful old video
I so enjoyed watching this. I can recognise all the old buildings. Seemed strange seeing the park with a high wall. The Spotted House. I used to go to there in the seventies. Those people waving, all long gone now. A window into the past. Wonderful thank you.
Great to hear you enjoyed it. That's why I work on these films. :) Maybe you can resolve or likely expand on a mystery?
"The Spotted House" looks to be half buried. even to the point of one window, bottom left, being partly covered. Look at the sill, almost none of it is exposed. Even a corner of the window is covered. It's highly unlikely a building would be constructed in to the small hillside in this fashion. There's a strange chimney/funnel like object on the lower floor between the 2 windows, was that still there in your day?
The entrance on the street looks like an adaption, providing access to what was previously the first floor. I see the 2 windows there are bricked up, which is odd for a pub.
Was there evidence inside of an adjustment to the structure?
Maybe there were 2 bars on separate floors. A stairs of a different design. Odd arrangement to rooms etc.
It's stranger still when you consider the graveyard next door is on the same level as the first floor of this building. I guess an adaption in a graveyard is easier.
@@livinghistoryaienhanced. Yes I see what you mean about the bricked up windows. I’m sorry I can’t remember much about the building. I was too busy having fun at the jazz nights.
@@janmargaret7972 Ha Ha fair enough :D
@@livinghistoryaienhanced The bricked-up windows were due to the window tax. The more you had, the more tax you paid. The act was abolished in 1851, so presumably that building was built in the early 1800s, even earlier.
@@WillScarlet1991 Ah, OK. I forgot about the window tax. Even so, why the main windows and door which would have encouraged passing trade? Perhaps changes to the interior dictated the change.
Amazing love too see these old films l have lived in Lincolnshire all my life and have seen some films but lots of pictures it’s even better when they are colour 😊
What I think is sad in some of these is that those little children would be at the
Right age to fight 12 years later in WW1. How many didn’t make it.
The old boy at 5:45 looks about 70 years old meaning he might have been born around 1830 😮
This blows my mind.
All those kids.
12 years later...........
A free trip to France!
@@livinghistoryaienhanced Possibly a one-way trip for many.
Amazing!
I love these.
Almost everybody is wearing a hat!
I feel a strange sort of affinity with these people for some reason. Perhaps it's because every single one of them is long gone.
This is incredible the original is so grainy, this just brings it to life so much more! Some of the AI faces in the distance are a little bit creepy, but still so amazing!
Thank you. The tech has moved on quiet a bit since I worked on this. Face enhancement is now available. :)
Thank you
4:06 the film jumps. They were approaching Belle Vue pub and barracks.
This is fantastic 😊
Most of them young lads would have ended up on the somme
Will you ever be able to colour this. It ia fantastic to see
Out of all the old films I've previously worked on this one keeps popping back in my head to colourise and improve. However, it is one of the longest of the old films at around 9 minutes. We'll see. :)
@livinghistoryaienhanced I often wonder what it would if been like back then. These videos give a little insight. They are great.
Aww..
BRADFORD 😢
It hasn't taken long to go from a smart, wealthy town to an absolute shitehole.
Blame those running the city since the 60s.
Couldn't help but notice how slender some of the girls waists were!
A lot of women did wear uncomfortable lace up girdles back then so it can be a little bit decieving.
Where are all the takeaways and Turkish barbers?
Other side of the area.
If they could see it now they’d marvel about the lack of horse shit in the street,.
hasn't changed
There's something strange when the tram comes into view 3:23 The tram is stationary although it appears to be moving, and the driver looks like a dummy. There's a man with a similar hat stood just to the left and in front of the vehicle who looks like he could be the real driver... weird.
The tram is at a tram stop, and that is an inspector standing alongside. No doubt they both wanted to be on the film, so "posed" until the camera had passed.
it was illegal to be fat , also illegal not to wear a hat.🥴🥴
😁
Do you have any idea where the park entrance at 7:26 is ?
That Lister Park entrance is on the corner of Oak Lane going onto Keighley Road.
Is this footage real, it says AI enhanced. Can you post the original footage unedited so the viewers can compare?
AI is not currently advanced enough to fake things at this level.That is natural movement, natural camera movement, fully coherent scenes etc. :D
6:42, Nothing like the taxi drivers you have of today in Bradford, or anywhere else for that matter.
Bradford has been so culturally enriched that it’s unrecognisable compared to this video.
Unfortunately it’s just like many other places in England, so very sad to see how things were then and how they are now.
Cultural enrichment has well and truly overtaken.
There's still 350,000 British whites living in Bradford. Unlike other cities and towns in the UK they haven't abandoned the city.
thanks for uploading this, i know the route well, but look at the shithole now, some things change for the better, but bradistan aint one of them
Bore off r@cist t_urd.
casi no se ven mujeres
Real British beutifull to see now its like a international airport
Great video! Entirely wrong music!