Astonishing Rural Ireland circa 1930 in Color Enhanced

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  • Опубликовано: 24 авг 2024
  • Rare in color footage of Rural Ireland in the 1930s with music. Film created with black and white footage that has been cut, colorized, reorganized and remastered for the viewers pleasure.
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Комментарии • 664

  • @piad2102
    @piad2102 Год назад +26

    And just Irish people . What a sight.

    • @cburg6383
      @cburg6383 Год назад +1

      If they don't get their immigration under control, idyllic scenes will probably disappear forever...

    • @mactirethesonoflir1536
      @mactirethesonoflir1536 Год назад +5

      How we have been betrayed.

    • @Zoe-dr5ps
      @Zoe-dr5ps 5 месяцев назад

      It would break your heart to look at it. Gone now forever 😢

    • @yorkshirelad3524
      @yorkshirelad3524 4 месяца назад

      No Ireland was built by black people

  • @nataliehorgan-young5896
    @nataliehorgan-young5896 Год назад +166

    I Love the way the video shows how people and animals lived so closely together.

    • @liammurphy2725
      @liammurphy2725 Год назад +11

      Only till we ate them.

    • @lorenzoblum868
      @lorenzoblum868 Год назад +7

      @@liammurphy2725 you want to eat a car?

    • @aethulwulfvonstopphen8013
      @aethulwulfvonstopphen8013 Год назад +10

      @@liammurphy2725 each animal only has one day of death. That same animal has hundreds, if not thousands of days of life among humans.

    • @nickyjohnstown7177
      @nickyjohnstown7177 Год назад

      O there still animals living amongst us only difference is that these animals steal from the elderly break into homes .

    • @kosmokritikos9299
      @kosmokritikos9299 Год назад +6

      At one time on Achill Island livestock was kept in the house on winter nights as there was no wood, coal or turf available for fires and the animals raised the indoor temperature.

  • @billmcgowan3930
    @billmcgowan3930 Год назад +263

    Please don’t confuse a hard working life with an unhappy life….I would trade about 60 percent of my modernity for this

    • @edsavage5526
      @edsavage5526 Год назад

      100%, men were real men and everyone knew what a woman is.

    • @gandolfthorstefn1780
      @gandolfthorstefn1780 Год назад +4

      👍☘️

    • @charlesrae3793
      @charlesrae3793 Год назад +26

      My dear, late mother, who came from rural Cavan, passed away in 2019, and nearly every day of her life she spoke about her childhood there. As a child I heard all about the day war was declared when she and her friends were up on the planting, about the animals she shared her life with, her bedridden aunt, her going to church on the pony and trap and so on and so forth. Altho' she left Ireland, Ireland never left her.

    • @stormsurge6765
      @stormsurge6765 Год назад +16

      Because it was a simpler life, it was less taxing mentally and certainly financially.

    • @stevencraig1871
      @stevencraig1871 Год назад +2

      Me too ☺

  • @sovaine
    @sovaine Год назад +13

    I remember going to my grandparents over in Ireland during the school 6 week holidays in late sixties (I'm now 62)...my dad was Irish and my mum English which was not good parentage to have at the time because of all the troubles in Belfast etc, but I can still remember those six weeks like it was yesterday....my grandparents lived out in the sticks, no running water, no flushing toilet, no telephone, no electricity....but it was beautiful to wake up to the hills of Donegal every morning almost magical and mystical.....you could see every star in the sky on a clear dark night and see the milky way....the morning mists where ghostly and surreal...those moments never fade....I have visited Ireland many times both in the south and the north and have found that as long as you don't talk politics or religion they accept you with open arms and are probably the most friendly and hospitable people that you could ever meet.

    • @sophiabreidfischer6242
      @sophiabreidfischer6242 9 месяцев назад +1

      The way you describe being out on the land is poetic, thanks for sharing your recollections

  • @anoshya
    @anoshya Год назад +78

    My wife said that even in the early 50s it was similar in Carlow planting with her grandfather in the fields..plenty of work for an 8 year old girl too..children walking miles to school in all weather..some boys would hop on the back of a donkey to get to school…very organic food as well before the dreaded pesticides came along

    • @pendlera2959
      @pendlera2959 Год назад +2

      They used lead arsenate as a pesticide back then, which caused lead and arsenic contamination of the soil that lasted for decades. Not to mention, even if their food was organic, they used a lot of toxins in other areas of their life that would have negated the benefits of pesticide/herbicide-free food.

  • @Glynnermang
    @Glynnermang Год назад +74

    Simpler times. Imagine how close families were working , living, laughing and crying together ❤️

    • @Ghhyuttgg
      @Ghhyuttgg Год назад +11

      And dying of curable diseases in childhood because of ignorance, poverty and believe that the Lord would save them

    • @liammurphy2725
      @liammurphy2725 Год назад +4

      Mawkish sentimentality.

    • @paddypenman2682
      @paddypenman2682 Год назад +3

      @@Ghhyuttgg at least they got to have life compared to a lot of poor unfortunates today sacrificed at the altar of "choice"

    • @tommercury3349
      @tommercury3349 Год назад +1

      @@dezertfox3681 it's still possible in Ireland

    • @zerohours.
      @zerohours. Год назад

      World wars musta been fun

  • @fiachra4266
    @fiachra4266 Год назад +123

    My Dad grew up in this era. He loved it. If you look around, there is nothing like agricultural waste or rubbish in those days. Everything was clean and unpolluted. and used again.

    • @KingPhilipsRideshare
      @KingPhilipsRideshare Год назад +5

      The rivers had been highly highly polluted by the industrial shops popping up along the water ways since about 1780 sadly but otherwise I know what you mean

    • @UhtredOfBamburgh
      @UhtredOfBamburgh Год назад +3

      @@KingPhilipsRideshare yea but only in urban centres. countryside would have been much more pristine. Nowadays plastic garbage blows longs distances and chemicals seep through entire watersheds. Homeless people leave longterm piles of garbage bags deep in the woods

    • @spinny2010
      @spinny2010 Год назад +9

      @@UhtredOfBamburgh Picking on homeless people to illustrate the waste of modern society is misleading and shows your ignorance of the reality. Most plastic waste is created by home owning, tax payers. Much of this (recycled) waste ends up in shipping containers for poorer countries to deal with. Also. to your first point many rivers would have been somewhat polluted outside of urban areas due to the mining of metals like tin and lead. But yeah, things are much worse now.

    • @durtydubliner5758
      @durtydubliner5758 Год назад +5

      @@spinny2010 Most plastic waste is from the companies telling you its down to the individual to solve these issues while they contribute staggering amounts in comparison.

    • @spinny2010
      @spinny2010 Год назад +1

      @@durtydubliner5758 Well, yeah. The companies produce and we consume with little option of alternatives in many cases. We can reduce our consumption of single use plastics, but packaging companies need to be forced to change to more easily recycled and biodegradable products where possible. So I imagine we are in agreement.

  • @owengreene382
    @owengreene382 Год назад +86

    I lived in Galway in 1947,. But then my parents Anny and Joseph Brennan in 1961, moved to New York city. Doe I was a young boy,and a little wild at the time. I remember well those days as if it were yesterday. Ireland was and still is, is a beautiful place to live.

    • @andreasobuaculla9511
      @andreasobuaculla9511 Год назад +9

      i'm 67 and here for 40 years,must be somit in the water,?many people are surprised when is speak Irish to them few unfortunately dont understand

    • @owengreene382
      @owengreene382 Год назад +4

      @@andreasobuaculla9511 I didn't make comments of speaking Irish.

    • @owengreene382
      @owengreene382 Год назад

      @@andreasobuaculla9511 you obviously have some reading difficulties. I never mentioned anything about speaking Irish. Go back to sleep.

    • @lorenzoblum868
      @lorenzoblum868 Год назад +7

      Never visited Ireland, probably never will but I've heard so many nice things about it... And I love the music.

    • @dangermouse6687
      @dangermouse6687 Год назад +7

      @@owengreene382 did he say you did?? He was speaking about himself. Don't be so snappy.

  • @randycollins7910
    @randycollins7910 Год назад +111

    I visited Ireland eight years ago and I didn't feel like I was in a foreign land. My accent would have been similar to their own having grown up in Newfoundland and I felt right at home from the very start. Many Newfoundlanders of Irish ancestry would have come from Waterford and Wexford counties . Hope to get back again before I get too old to travel and have a walk down Talbot Street and drop into The Celt for a pint . Happy New Year to one and all. Erin Go Bragh !!!☘☘☘

    • @elflakeador09
      @elflakeador09 Год назад +6

      @Terminus Est yep, its falling apart at the seams

    • @robinboucherwonderfulflight
      @robinboucherwonderfulflight Год назад

      @Terminus Est Hi, Could you please say more about this? I really would appreciate it. Thank you

    • @rossmorebaz
      @rossmorebaz Год назад +10

      newfoundlanderrs are our cousins .. you guys are as irish as us !

    • @davidmccann9811
      @davidmccann9811 Год назад +8

      I've heard the Newfoundland accent, it is very Irish sounding.

    • @soldier2297
      @soldier2297 Год назад +4

      I am an west Irish man who lives in London. Done a job for a guy from newfoundland. Could not believe the accent. He had never stepped foot in Ireland.

  • @nicktozie6685
    @nicktozie6685 Год назад +11

    I truly wish it was still like this

  • @edwardbisono6714
    @edwardbisono6714 7 месяцев назад +2

    Beautiful...the little girl playing with a goat is my hero...thanks for posting...great job!!!!

  • @ashemgold
    @ashemgold Год назад +12

    I remember these days. My mother was born on the west coast of Ireland, west of Clifden, in the 30s. Her home was on a peninsula with water on three sides that we still visit to this day. They didn't get electricity till the late 50s. I can still remember my grandmother sitting outside my uncle's thatched cottage churning butter.

    • @tommercury3349
      @tommercury3349 Год назад +1

      The late fifties was still much sooner than most of the world,

    • @ashemgold
      @ashemgold Год назад

      We're visiting there today actually. Slan'.

  • @benhur1959
    @benhur1959 Год назад +8

    I am 65, and have to categorically say spending my summer holidays on my grand parents farm in the 1960,s were fabulous times as a young child. Learned life skills very early..

  • @grlfcgombeenhunter2897
    @grlfcgombeenhunter2897 Год назад +9

    Ohh Ireland 🇮🇪 what have we become so sad 😭

  • @mcddetectrespect.7467
    @mcddetectrespect.7467 Год назад +9

    Thank you for posting this video it brought tears to my eyes as I thought back to the 50ths and 60ths when as children we spent time on our family farm during our summer holidays, making haystacks and my memories of making ropes from hay with my grandfather to trow over the haystacks. A time of my life that was so precious to us all, sadly most of my family are gone now but I forever have those memories. Enjoy life when you can.

  • @chrismullan7191
    @chrismullan7191 Год назад +64

    my god 90 years ago, wonderful to watch, little did these people know one day people would watch this in a changed world that no matter what can never live those days again, i know it was not easy at that time, but part of me thinks i bet people where happy with there lot, and life was simple and every one did there bit.

    • @ggmm6182
      @ggmm6182 Год назад +4

      People will say the same thing about this generation in 90 years time that's the way of the world to look back with nostalgia,
      I'm not sure they were happy with there lot in the 1930s I think they didn't know any better so they were used to it and having very little

    • @dangermouse6687
      @dangermouse6687 Год назад +3

      @@ggmm6182 is anyone happy with their lot now either? Constantly struggling, looking for the basic thing we're all entitled to, a roof over our heads. Some people working day and night with no hope of getting one, others doing nothing and getting everything for nothing.

    • @julianskinner3697
      @julianskinner3697 Год назад +1

      Well as soon as they had a choice they voted with their feet.

    • @MariaHelena-pb1rt
      @MariaHelena-pb1rt Год назад

      Verdade... simplicidade 🙌💖🇧🇷

    • @eclecticx
      @eclecticx Год назад

      @@ggmm6182 There will be no one around to say that if humanity continues on its current trajectory. It also doesn't take much foresight to see how poorly future generations will view what's happened since the 1970s. In that span, we've continually harmed and polluted the earth, quite unlike what you see here.

  • @JohnDavies-cn3ro
    @JohnDavies-cn3ro Год назад +7

    Fascinating. As a model maker interested in horse drawn vehicles, I notice that the donkey carts differ in construction details from the similar, but slightly larger English ones. Thanks for these pictures. A delight.

  • @daveclemmer4536
    @daveclemmer4536 Год назад +4

    I love the intro to this video so much, the happy girl pulling the donkey cart with hard wind a blowing, legs kicking, and a smile on her face.

  • @laetitialogan2017
    @laetitialogan2017 Год назад +23

    Thank you for uploading..my grandparents lived in this era in Ireland..great people..

    • @tommercury3349
      @tommercury3349 Год назад +1

      Good to hear you getting positive about our past

  • @72mossy
    @72mossy Год назад +10

    I can remember pony and trap on the road in the 70s as a kid and trams of hay. My grandad has a small farm outside Templemore, he never drove, travelled into town on pony and trap, milk churns on the trap to the creamery and Billy cans. I used to help him bring in trams on the trap. Found memories of my two hardworking grandparents God rest them all. My other grandfather was born in Templemore in 1895, he was a Carter in the town, and a ploughman for a shilling a day.

  • @Devo491
    @Devo491 Год назад +8

    Great content! The skill of the weavers is impressive, and how fit those field-workers harvesting grain were.

  • @JamesKing-sb4tq
    @JamesKing-sb4tq Год назад +11

    My mother was born on a farm in the middle of rural Ireland in 1918. 2nd oldest in a vary large family, in summer went to school bare footed, went to work at 10 as the family desperately needed the money, lived in a tiny house with no running water, most of her generation left Ireland or went into religion, the siblings who left never went back except for visits, the poverty drove them all away. I'm not saying they were unhappy, but they all had a better life elsewhere, very sad really.

    • @movinon1242
      @movinon1242 Год назад +1

      1918 the Irish, certainly the landless tenant farming Irish, were still enslaved by the British. They were still living the same way as they had been at the time of The Great Hunger of the 1840s (albeit with a few legal fictions passed to make the servitude seem voluntary).

  • @royksk
    @royksk Год назад +10

    A great video with some lovely scenes. I particularly like the expressions on the man tasting his poteen.

    • @Slithey7433
      @Slithey7433 Год назад +4

      Yes, I liked how he gave a little shudder after each sip! 😊

  • @TheStargoose
    @TheStargoose Год назад +9

    Happy memories of hitching around Ireland. One of the friendliest and most welcoming places in the world in my experience. 🇮🇪🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 Pob lwc i blwyddyn newydd dda i bawb!

    • @DChristina
      @DChristina Год назад +1

      Happy New Year to you too! 🎉💕

  • @geraldbyrne465
    @geraldbyrne465 Год назад +12

    I picked potatoes, cut the bindertwine on the threshing( we called it 'thrashing') machine, stood on wynds of Hay and helped make them, drew them home with my father in the Hay car, picked Hay into the shed, or made reeks of Hay and covered them outside, drew home turf and went to the creamery with an ass and car, cut turf with the sleamhain, and footed and stooked it, went barefoot to school, and skated on the ice in the pond in Shanahan's field across from Kilflynn National School. I also broke the ice, fell into the pond and was suitably compensated for my efforts, at home and educationally.
    Gerald J

  • @zeetty
    @zeetty Год назад +7

    I am not Irish. My grandfathers, both paternal and maternal, immigrated to America in the early 20th century. But there is a connection, be it of heart or ancient blood I feel inside, that draws me dear

  • @freespiritnufc5661
    @freespiritnufc5661 Год назад +7

    Wow just simply Wonderful and the guy at the end,that was moonshine for sure, thanks for sharing brilliant ⛄🎄🎄⛄👌

  • @dalemartin7183
    @dalemartin7183 Год назад +3

    This is the era my parental grandparents were a young married couple in , raising their seven children in rural Monaghan. Out of their seven children five emigrated, my father being one of them.
    His oldest brother did return from Birmingham when he inherited the farm in the 1960s .
    I really must get over to Ireland this year. Love that country and its people

  • @busybee3458
    @busybee3458 Год назад +10

    Lovely, nostalgic video. Thank you for your work.

  • @vladtepesjunior
    @vladtepesjunior Год назад +4

    Cheers from Brazil. Beautiful images in this video. I've just subscribed to the page.

  • @Dustinjlarson
    @Dustinjlarson Год назад +27

    As a Minnesotan, I can say that it terrifies me to visit Ireland. I know I would never come back. What a great video!

    • @alfredroyal3473
      @alfredroyal3473 Год назад

      It’s not like that now, it’s full of so called refugees milking the system. Ireland is finished as is the U.K.

    • @nainoswad2725
      @nainoswad2725 Год назад

      Not now Dustin, it's a shithole !

    • @musashidanmcgrath
      @musashidanmcgrath Год назад +14

      Sadly, Ireland and its unique culture has been destroyed in the last 20 years. Globalisation and its mass illegal migration agenda has irreversibly damaged every city, town, and village.

    • @thedabbinunicorn5432
      @thedabbinunicorn5432 Год назад +1

      It's all changed so much know but still so beautiful here

    • @thomasm5714
      @thomasm5714 Год назад +7

      Sadly you have reason to be terrified. All changed, changed utterly: but what has been born is not a terrible beauty, but ruin, and loss of our national identity.

  • @dt1351
    @dt1351 Год назад +39

    You choose great backing tracks for your clips, way different and much superior to the usual schmalsh most people posting similar clips select! Great!

    • @liammurphy2725
      @liammurphy2725 Год назад

      Great to be an expert on other channels crap.

    • @dt1351
      @dt1351 Год назад +1

      @@liammurphy2725 not claiming any such. Simply an observation. Failte Ireland have the same problem - usually a slow smarmy Dublin South/Wicklow type accent promoting tourism all over Ireland! It turns me off. Maybe you're from Wicklow? 🤣

    • @InOffTheRed
      @InOffTheRed Год назад

      @D T, I've only heard schmalsh once before from the song 'Do the Strand' by Roxy Music. 'weary of the waltz and mash potato schmalsh' 🙂

    • @dt1351
      @dt1351 Год назад

      @@InOffTheRed oh well, I know what I mean! 😅

    • @InOffTheRed
      @InOffTheRed Год назад +1

      @@dt1351 it's a catchy tune, great video too here on RUclips if you have a chance. Best Wishes 🙂

  • @adribroekhuizen8775
    @adribroekhuizen8775 Год назад +3

    Beautifully done,, such hard but simple times ❤️

  • @likklej8
    @likklej8 Год назад +3

    Ive seen Trotting Carts while hitchhiking in Ireland in the 90s and that crazy back lanes bowling game. great film a culture that’s never died Erinn go Bracht

  • @carolinecoffey5404
    @carolinecoffey5404 Год назад +4

    Absolutely loved this thanks so
    Much for sharing

  • @jquill6
    @jquill6 Год назад +4

    Don’t let the rose tinted video fool you , ireland was a very tough country to live in those days. A lot of economic hardship and lingering bitterness from the civil war.

    • @deanpd3402
      @deanpd3402 Год назад

      "It's okay to struggle. That's how you get stronger."

    • @frankharrison5247
      @frankharrison5247 Год назад

      @@deanpd3402 not if you die during the process.....

  • @the-nomad
    @the-nomad Год назад +3

    Watching this, it looks so like the Latvian countryside and way of life that I have been experiencing the last sixteen years.

  • @paulpayton8238
    @paulpayton8238 Год назад +7

    I miss Ireland and the craic and the people my great grandparents are from co wexford and I lived in Ireland for 10 years until 8 years ago now back in Birmingham

  • @chloeew4627
    @chloeew4627 Год назад +4

    Thankyou , just so easy on the eyes 😊

  • @margaretohara7250
    @margaretohara7250 Год назад +3

    Absolutely beautiful videos. God love the Irish people - worked so hard but always a smile. They were happy and in touch with nature. Yes, historically, they suffered but moved on with life and always had welcome for visitors. Blessings.

  • @grabman1927
    @grabman1927 Год назад +4

    Just got back from a 10-day walkabout in Killarney National Park and the Iveragh Peninsula. Beautiful.

    • @dylan3657
      @dylan3657 Год назад

      did you try a pint of stout

    • @grabman1927
      @grabman1927 Год назад

      @@dylan3657 Beamish is my personal preference.

  • @timothykozlowski2945
    @timothykozlowski2945 Год назад +8

    It's always nice to see how the world was before WWII.

    • @jquill6
      @jquill6 Год назад +2

      Things weren’t much different after ww2 in ireland. Not until the 1960s did we begin to industrialise and catch up.

  • @davidmccann9811
    @davidmccann9811 Год назад +2

    It's always great to see such footage. Thanks for posting.👍

  • @Eagle-nq2mv
    @Eagle-nq2mv Год назад +6

    Wonderful life , simple, peaceful, yes hard work too but really satisfying.

  • @seanohare5488
    @seanohare5488 2 месяца назад +1

    Beautiful Ireland and its splendid people

  • @homewithemma42
    @homewithemma42 Год назад +6

    I am lucky to be surrounded by this kind of life still. Some things have changed to be more comfortable. ⚘

  • @curtiseagleeyemullin
    @curtiseagleeyemullin Год назад +1

    Beautiful! @erinofold We were so much more connected to Earth back then. Let’s do it again! Why not? 🌱

  • @you-know-who9023
    @you-know-who9023 Год назад +11

    Wow great video . Hard to believe we alll know people who were born in that decade.
    Because the world outside Ireland went to war a few years later the 1940s probably looked pretty similar.🙂👍

  • @nonameblues
    @nonameblues Год назад +6

    Talk to any american and they believe this is what it's actually like, and expect Maureen O'Hara to come round the corner with John Wayne.

  • @MariaMartinez-kg6ns
    @MariaMartinez-kg6ns 11 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you alot beautiful video ❤❤❤

  • @michael42158
    @michael42158 Год назад +2

    Love this. I have been going back there since I was a kid in the 60s.

  • @homeagain9692
    @homeagain9692 Год назад +2

    My mom would have been around 10 years old at this time in the hills near Wicklow. She talked a little about growing up back then but after migrating to Canada after the war and me being the 9th of 10 those memories were long past and faded. I wish I had asked more questions as a kid.

  • @BANKO007
    @BANKO007 Год назад +8

    Actually, it looks like a beautiful life.

    • @danwebb4418
      @danwebb4418 Год назад +1

      This is just a romantic view..It was a struggle for the less well off..

    • @deanpd3402
      @deanpd3402 Год назад

      @@danwebb4418 ...and struggle is what made it a beautiful life.

  • @elenafoleyfoley168
    @elenafoleyfoley168 Год назад +1

    Lovely video of times gone past 🇮🇪😥💔

  • @annemurphy9339
    @annemurphy9339 Год назад +3

    When Ireland hadn’t been invaded and was still the home of the Irish.

  • @Seansaighdeoir
    @Seansaighdeoir Год назад +15

    Fascinating insight. Looked at the start as if that was from around Killarney. My mother and grand-parents would have been living in Killarney at this time so wonderful to imagine the times they lived in.

    • @mossyslopes
      @mossyslopes Год назад +3

      @seansaighdeoir -I'm from county Kerry & I would have to agree with you that some of that early footage indeed looks like Killarney. Bucolic life at its most appealing 😃

    • @omstygomsty
      @omstygomsty Год назад

      I'm from Killarney and you are correct. The first scene from Killarney is with the girl going through the gates on the horse and cart at 00.48 seconds. Tomies mountain is featured in the far distance in the background. Queens cottage in Derrycunnihy is featured at 00.58 seconds. Just inside the original driveway entrance to Muckross House beyond the gate lodge is featured at 1.28 mins. Torc mountain is on the left.

    • @Seansaighdeoir
      @Seansaighdeoir Год назад

      @@omstygomsty thanks for that. I used to know Killarney well so thought that might be the drive down to Muckross. Was either that or around the domain. Many Jaunting cars down there in the summer. I missed Torc waterfall / mountain so will watch again. Its a few years since I've been up there but always remember what a beautiful spot it is. We used to visit often by now most of the folk there are no longer around so we have lost touch with the place sadly. All the best, thanks for your comments.

  • @maryodea9818
    @maryodea9818 Год назад +3

    Lovely to watch this video they were so happy those days are gone now what a pity

  • @wd1534
    @wd1534 Год назад +2

    So much grass, trees and nature all around in this video...
    so much grey, concrete everywhere now... I can't breathe, air stinks. Let's plant trees

  • @graemebdh2172
    @graemebdh2172 Год назад +12

    Only the decade before I was born : just incredible how much the world has changed since.

  • @deusdat
    @deusdat Год назад +3

    Long live the Republic!

  • @lesliepieterse1072
    @lesliepieterse1072 Год назад +4

    I love how people just get on with their own business and the simplicity. I would give what I have for that.

  • @Falconlibrary
    @Falconlibrary Год назад +1

    "Did I ever tell you about the old country, Jim? Ah, the old country! The songs! They'd melt your face!"

  • @Rinty145
    @Rinty145 Год назад +8

    And not a car in sight.

    • @patkelly9907
      @patkelly9907 Год назад

      You won't have long to wait no cars on the road and no cows in the fields no turf in the shed No pubs for a drink God bless Ireland we are all going backwards

  • @shaunmckenna1923
    @shaunmckenna1923 Год назад +1

    Wonderful thanks for sharing .

  • @frozenwarning
    @frozenwarning 11 месяцев назад

    I love the way the man opened the gate for the lovely woman riding on the wagon and even took off his hat to her.

  • @Humble_Electronic_Musician
    @Humble_Electronic_Musician Год назад +2

    Beautiful!

  • @johnedwards4394
    @johnedwards4394 Год назад +2

    What a way to grow up. Perfect.

  • @GreatGama777
    @GreatGama777 Год назад +1

    Wow ,, happy and peaceful

  • @jimclarke1108
    @jimclarke1108 Год назад +7

    Back when fuel was an honest price

    • @treecutter
      @treecutter Год назад +2

      Back when everything was a reasonable price

  • @loosestroodle
    @loosestroodle Год назад +3

    Netflix movie with all black cast

  • @Endtimescounterchurch
    @Endtimescounterchurch Год назад +6

    I would love to live like that.

  • @PsychicIsaacs
    @PsychicIsaacs Год назад +3

    My husband holidayed in Co.Monaghan during the 1950s, with friends. He said the farmers were still using teams of horses to plough their fields, although motorcars were fairly common. Meanwhile, the British Army would land helicopters on country laneways to trap vehicles they wanted to search, in the South, there was definitely trouble brewing and a lot of discontent below the surface veneer of rural idyll…

    • @johnkirke8356
      @johnkirke8356 Год назад +1

      No helicopters in N. ireland in the 50s…

  • @mht525
    @mht525 Год назад +2

    For a decendant from Ireland (Kelly of Cork) and Australian. Thank you 🇮🇪 🇦🇺

  • @garychynne1377
    @garychynne1377 Год назад +1

    i was born on newfoundland. very similar lifestyle. my granmother had a loom.

  • @JHatLpool
    @JHatLpool Год назад +1

    Superb. Really nice.

  • @danclabby3441
    @danclabby3441 Год назад +3

    Working WITH nature. 3:07 see the guy scything the barley, wind seems to be blowing right to left holding up the stalks. Otherwise you'd need another person ahead with a long stick to hold up the cropface to be cut.

  • @willtwain1383
    @willtwain1383 Год назад +4

    What have we done to living a good life?

  • @_sneer_
    @_sneer_ Год назад +1

    The only day of summer in Ireland ever. Circa 1930.

  • @Tjalve70
    @Tjalve70 Год назад +2

    At first I couldn't understand why there were so many trees.
    And then I saw that it said Ireland, and not Iceland.

  • @JUST-ME2468
    @JUST-ME2468 Год назад +1

    0:38 That fearless young girl wrestling with the billy goat sums it all up for me.

    • @drdecco1
      @drdecco1 Год назад

      My God, those were the days & that was good 'old-fashioned' farming when the animals were truly "domesticated" and often had personal names. Modern farming is industrialised by comparison and no goat would let you away with that now.

  • @kev897
    @kev897 Год назад +7

    It was an hard life an unnecessarily hard life if you ask me. Without getting into any sort of politics I believe the catholic church had its jackboot at the throats of the Good Irish people for way too long. And I am a Dub

  • @chrismccartney8668
    @chrismccartney8668 Год назад +5

    I saw the gate keeper difficult his hat, and here is East London even in the 50s my grandfather would doff his hat to a lady passing, the view of Old Eire if show to the older people of Eire having to dodge the foreign drug and knife gangs that have been imported by their own government! would be in tears at what has been lost recently, the Government should ashamed of what it has imposed on its own people..

    • @yosemite735
      @yosemite735 Год назад

      They say its a three-letter word that is behind the destruction of the White countries.

  • @gerry5134
    @gerry5134 Год назад +2

    These are clips taken from all over Ireland. Mayo Connemara, Wicklow, Antrim are some places I recognize. Imagine is you could send yourself there . A slower more peaceful way of life

  • @Mercmad
    @Mercmad Год назад +6

    95 years earlier one of my GGG grandfathers would have lived a similar life before being transported for the term of his natural life ,because he uttered an unlawful oath .He was 12.

    • @duckduckgoismuchbetter
      @duckduckgoismuchbetter Год назад

      Jeez, what on earth kind of an oath would that have been?

    • @Dreyno
      @Dreyno Год назад +2

      @@duckduckgoismuchbetter He said Lyon’s tea was better than Barry’s. Wasn’t half enough for him.

    • @duckduckgoismuchbetter
      @duckduckgoismuchbetter Год назад

      @@Dreyno Are you joking? I'm American and unfortunately don't get any of the references.

    • @Dreyno
      @Dreyno Год назад

      @@duckduckgoismuchbetter In Ireland there’s a divide between Lyon’s tea drinkers and Barry’s tea drinkers more serious than any political or religious one.
      Barry’s tea drinkers think Lyon’s tea drinkers are subhuman scum. And Lyon’s tea drinkers insist they’re not subhuman scum but they actually are subhuman scum. It seems harsh looking in from the outside but I assure you it’s for the best. A society which tolerates the drinking of Lyon’s tea in spite of the widespread availability of Barry’s tea is doomed.

    • @duckduckgoismuchbetter
      @duckduckgoismuchbetter Год назад

      @@Dreyno That's hilarious. But are you sure that's Irish? No offense meant, but that's about the most English thing I've ever heard. (running away very fast now!) 🤣

  • @boris8787
    @boris8787 Год назад +1

    Great video - reminds me of Chillingbourne.

  • @rossmorebaz
    @rossmorebaz Год назад +2

    some of this was filmed in and around Killarney county kerry .. you can see the lakes and mountains there in the background

    • @omstygomsty
      @omstygomsty Год назад

      The first scene from Killarney is with the girl going through the gates on the horse and cart at 00.48 seconds. Tomies mountain is featured in the far distance in the background. Queens cottage in Derrycunnihy is featured at 00.58 seconds. The original driveway entrance to Muckross House just beyond the gate lodge is featured at 1.28 mins. Torc mountain is on the left.

  • @createa.googleaccount713
    @createa.googleaccount713 Год назад +1

    Thank you 💖 🙏

  • @paddypenman2682
    @paddypenman2682 Год назад +1

    A luminous visualisation of an Ireland so viscerally described in verse by Patrick Kavanagh

  • @redtobertshateshandles
    @redtobertshateshandles Год назад +24

    Mums uncle Con was a horse and mule expert. He was in the British Army and loved by the regiments Colonel for his knowledge. This explains why.

    • @briankean7153
      @briankean7153 Год назад +1

      Boooooooo

    • @choncord
      @choncord Год назад

      A great man.

    • @markoplo2008
      @markoplo2008 Год назад

      @@briankean7153 🤣😂🤣👍

    • @theeaskey
      @theeaskey Год назад

      I would not mention this in Irish company,, you might find out where the door is very fast. The tans are a bad Irish memory.

    • @sl_721
      @sl_721 Год назад

      Maybe don’t mention the British army part

  • @joshuamurr9760
    @joshuamurr9760 Год назад +1

    Love it!! 💚❤

  • @johnnyperez1969
    @johnnyperez1969 Год назад +2

    Long gone days! People worked hard but happy!

  • @everlastinglife5978
    @everlastinglife5978 Год назад +1

    Everyone looks so happy even though they had so little. Just enjoying being alive. What happened to us that so many people hate life now?

  • @stevendoylan6633
    @stevendoylan6633 Год назад +5

    Very nostalgic scenes indeed from a bygone era....where there was no TV licence fees, no junkies & probably the legal system was optimal.

    • @thekingofelfland3294
      @thekingofelfland3294 Год назад +1

      There was no legal system. No health system and no social welfare. They died younger and most emigrated.

    • @nebularain3338
      @nebularain3338 Год назад +1

      There were junkies. The world wide opium trade has been around for thousands of years. Just remember that these folk had very little food, heat, and were always under the threat of extreme hunger. You can call it "nostalgic" all you want, but it was a hard life, and we're far better off today.

    • @owenrua6192
      @owenrua6192 Год назад

      @@nebularain3338 you are wrong

  • @rose-ey6ct
    @rose-ey6ct Год назад +6

    Making Poitin. Second wash.

    • @Mercmad
      @Mercmad Год назад +1

      He probably had distant cousins in Appalachia using the same recipe in the 1930's.

  • @Vesnicie
    @Vesnicie Год назад +3

    Gaggingly gorgeous.

  • @harrier5154
    @harrier5154 Год назад +2

    It must have been a tough existence but it looks beautiful.

    • @deanpd3402
      @deanpd3402 Год назад

      I couldn't help thinking how much more satisfying it would have been to be actively producing things. Much better than sitting around watching TV.

  • @ryanbamfordslife9650
    @ryanbamfordslife9650 Год назад +1

    A horse and cart is used to get to the shop by my neighbour. Other than the hairstyles and clothes not a lot has changed. ☘️❤☘️

  • @thomas35835
    @thomas35835 8 месяцев назад

    Real people living real lives instead of being glued to phone screen and scrolling the timeline of social media. And they look happy.

  • @deejaykay1975
    @deejaykay1975 Год назад +2

    We all need more simplicity in our lives. Owning stuff does not bring happiness, it just clogs up our lives. I know they were harder times, but I bet people had more happiness and contentment in those days. I know my own parents did...

    • @margaretohara7250
      @margaretohara7250 Год назад

      So true. They had time for each other and welcomed everyone. They know what is important in life - stuff does not make people happy. There is beautiful channel on RUclips called the Bealtaine Cottage. The lady is a writer and it is unbelievable what she did with an old rundown cottage. Slainte.
      USA

  • @tomryan4501
    @tomryan4501 Год назад +1

    Lovely old film!