This is York

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  • Опубликовано: 7 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 117

  • @SloopyJohnG
    @SloopyJohnG 8 месяцев назад +15

    An excellent print, expertly digitised. Thank you for the care shown in bringing this to us.

  • @BillyKirbyUK
    @BillyKirbyUK 8 месяцев назад +22

    "Our transport job begins and ends by serving people". Oh yes - tell that to whoever is running the Department For Transport today!

    • @brianhepke7182
      @brianhepke7182 5 месяцев назад +2

      Exactly.. there was a sense of pride in the workplace back then... a vocation.
      Now it's "how much can I get out of it without giving too much of me".
      I love train travel, but the unsurity of it these days takes the fun out of it.

    • @myparceltape1169
      @myparceltape1169 4 месяца назад

      Politicians are not workers.

    • @marrs1013
      @marrs1013 4 месяца назад

      Who are the people who we are serving? Our friends, or the public?

  • @olikane530
    @olikane530 8 месяцев назад +6

    Superbly produced piece of nostalgia now gone along with expectations of a brave new world 😊

  • @dieseldavetrains8988
    @dieseldavetrains8988 Год назад +21

    An age of respect and dignity, a sense of purpose and everything had its place, just loved the video, my how the railways have changed since then...

    • @Niki-ln5be
      @Niki-ln5be Год назад +3

      Are you mad ?

    • @Mike8981
      @Mike8981 Месяц назад +1

      Yes, they are comfortable and clean now!

    • @Dusty42096
      @Dusty42096 28 дней назад

      @@Niki-ln5belol I was wondering the same 😊

  • @PorkChopJones
    @PorkChopJones 4 месяца назад +9

    Such an outstanding look into transportation management from years gone by. These people whose job it was to get us to work and back deserve our respect and gratitude. Fathers, mothers sisters and brothers, all with a sense of purpose of taking part in this great wheel called life. May God bless you.

  • @heartofoak45
    @heartofoak45 Год назад +8

    What an age. Why can't we have all the current technology but with the human touch. I know in so many ways matters are better today, but somehow there s something missing.

  • @grumpyoldman47
    @grumpyoldman47 3 года назад +11

    Life changes gradually, and it's only when you see a film a like this that you realise just how much it has changed during the present Queen's reign, even when you've lived all of the way through it.
    The station master arrives wearing a Bowler Hat, all of the double deck buses have open rear platforms, most women were wearing hats, telegrams, wheel-tappers, adding coaches to trains to match supply to demand, an open fire to heat the staff side of the booking office, a telephone exchange full of people and wires, and did you see the wheel chair they were pushing the woman round the station in? And was she wearing a fur coat?
    I think It's also the first time I've seen film of the old railway museum; as it was close to the south end of the station and not very large, I guess you would have had time for a quick look round as the London train had a 10 minute dwell time!
    A wonderful film; thanks very much for posting it.

  • @davidwolstenholme4676
    @davidwolstenholme4676 Месяц назад +1

    im 80 when i was younger i and others went around leeman road sheds trainspotting into the cabs of steam trains.

  • @philstraintravels9281
    @philstraintravels9281 2 года назад +3

    I always love watching this film and York in general, it has such a wonderful station and I always visit whenever possible.. and at times when its not possible.

  • @anamitradasgupta2608
    @anamitradasgupta2608 Год назад +8

    This is what the British established in my own land-the once Jewel of the Crown so many years ago. The railways now occupy the primary position of honour in India-the wheels of India turn because of its railways. We have retained nearly every law that concerns the running of our networks, preserved it all just as the British established them. Wherever I go, deep into my own land, and engage the station master of some little station so far away in the wilderness, the conversation always turns to the pioneering British, of whom so little remains except for poignant grave stones overgrown by grass and weed. Yet, these represent lives once lived in mute sacrifice and devotion to duty, so that a strange land may again live. Our thanks be unto the British. Much good was done. The ebb and flow of human recollections may fail; yet, in history both written and unwritten-in chronicles remembered or forgotten, Indians will always bow their heads in remembrance of all those nameless and now forgotten, who once lived, and toiled for a greater good.

  • @rodneycooperLMSCoach
    @rodneycooperLMSCoach 5 лет назад +47

    The 1950's. The closest Britain came to being civilised. Of course times were hard but most were honest and were proud of their work.

    • @Isochest
      @Isochest 4 года назад +1

      @MusicalElitist1 People understood technology then. The modern age puts blind faith in Allah! Good Luck!!

    • @simonf8902
      @simonf8902 8 месяцев назад +5

      And look at poor Britain now. No pride. No manners. No style. No good.

    • @marrs1013
      @marrs1013 4 месяца назад +1

      Stay delusional! You didn't live in the era, so you don't feel the urge for progress. Those who lived, were keen on progressing. Never stop wondering: Why...?

    • @rodneycooperLMSCoach
      @rodneycooperLMSCoach 4 месяца назад

      @@marrs1013 What a load of junk. You haven't a clue what you are talking about. You're the one that's delusional ....gaslighter.

  • @calebmumby5803
    @calebmumby5803 4 года назад +6

    just amazing how much York has changed in the last 60 odd years incredible love York

    • @learnerm3120
      @learnerm3120 3 года назад

      Does that make it the New York now, seeing that it has changed so much?

  • @jeremypreece870
    @jeremypreece870 4 года назад +7

    People have commented that this film was made in 1953. It is interesting to see that country stations were already being closed and branch lines lifted ten years or so before Dr Beeching and the butchering of the rail system.

    • @grumpyoldman47
      @grumpyoldman47 3 года назад +4

      Many miles were closed to passenger traffic in the 1930s as well

  • @inveteratecrusader4882
    @inveteratecrusader4882 4 месяца назад +1

    Sending individual rabbits by mail to win prizes is absolutely wild. I realize that wasn't the main point of the video, but it just jumped out and caught me, and I fixated on it.

  • @tourcox
    @tourcox 4 месяца назад +1

    Amazing insight into a way of life long long gone .

  • @boyfromblackstuff7859
    @boyfromblackstuff7859 8 месяцев назад +2

    Very interesting, thanks for posting.

  • @johnward374
    @johnward374 7 дней назад

    York Market Weighton to Hull line. One of Dr Beeching's demolishing jobs. He wanted to close the Leeds to Ilkley line, but it was saved. Now it's all electrified and trains every 30 mins. Always packed peak times and well supported other times.

  • @jeremypreece870
    @jeremypreece870 4 года назад +5

    Very interesting film. How vast the station complex and the lines fanning out from York compared with nowadays where the two central lines have been removed and there is a large strip of gravel in the middle! I wonder how many people were employed in York station then and now.

  • @jonfletcher147
    @jonfletcher147 11 лет назад +10

    Beautiful film....I still have it on VHS! :)

  • @martm216
    @martm216 5 лет назад +5

    What a delightful old film.

  • @hardakml
    @hardakml 7 лет назад +24

    Watching this, it's hard to imagine how we used to live. So simple and yet so complicated. Everyone had a job and seemed proud of whatever it was s/he did, whether trimming lamps or announcing the trains. I imagine this film is about as old as me, filmed in 1958 or so? Perhaps a year or so later? Does anyone know for sure?

    • @neilsaunders9309
      @neilsaunders9309 5 лет назад +6

      It was a full-employment society. Then Thatcher and Neoliberalism came along, with open borders and an imported labour surplus to drive down wages.

    • @martm216
      @martm216 5 лет назад +2

      @@MrHeliums thanks for that - I was wondering what year myself, and when the other person guessed 1958, I thought no, it's a touch older than that. And 1953 is the year in which I was born! What a lovely old film, and how contented everyone seemed.

    • @neiloflongbeck5705
      @neiloflongbeck5705 4 года назад +3

      @@neilsaunders9309 this era was not as good as you think. Piss-poor management of the economy by the Tories between 1951 and 1964 destroyed the economy from 1964 onwards including the 1967 devaluation. Whilst it is true we had full employment, but that was due to employment being at levels the economy could not support.

    • @neilsaunders9309
      @neilsaunders9309 4 года назад +4

      @@neiloflongbeck5705 I'd need to know what you think constitutes good management of the economy, and, indeed, what a good economy actually is.
      I've read Robin Ramsay on the postwar economic situation www.lobster-magazine.co.uk/free/lobster60/lob60-062.pdf, so I've no illusions that it was any kind of earthly paradise; I simply note that it was vastly better than what replaced it.

    • @neilsaunders9309
      @neilsaunders9309 4 года назад

      @MusicalElitist1 Thank you for that thoughtful and independent-minded comment.

  • @bruceanderton1518
    @bruceanderton1518 2 года назад +9

    A tremendous film, which I viewed just after returning from a visit to the present day equivalent, which is not quite as impressive-and sad to say the station master's office is now a shop! I also have this film in both Super-8 and 16mm film versions.

    • @yorksteam
      @yorksteam  2 года назад +1

      Yes it’s the Whilstlestop, the rear set of windows towards the outside were the ladies toilets

  • @darrenmillett8875
    @darrenmillett8875 5 лет назад +4

    Excellent film and great nostalgia.

  • @drcurv
    @drcurv 8 лет назад +9

    Wonderful! Thank you so much for uploading this gem, yorksteam.

    • @michaelporter2574
      @michaelporter2574 2 года назад +1

      A wonderful film indeed - much work has been put into this and it shows. Light has been used as art where it can, different camera angles add interest, and the narration is spot on. Sadly, almost everyone except, possibly the small boys trainspotting must have gone by now....

  • @jonny7dreamin
    @jonny7dreamin 4 года назад +2

    Some of these little devils might work for the railway some day....How true that opening phrase was..

  • @Nigelpreece
    @Nigelpreece 4 года назад +11

    A different way of life, a time when we did things properly.

    • @Satters
      @Satters 4 года назад +5

      yes indeed, everyone smartly dressed too, unlike the chavs and foreigners of today, England is not what is was when I was a boy sadly

  • @simonf8902
    @simonf8902 2 года назад +4

    Absolute best of BTF

  • @chriswaring5565
    @chriswaring5565 Год назад

    GREAT PLACE TO VISIT YORK NOT JUST THE STATION BUT THE RAILWAY AND OTHER MUSEUM'S AND THE CITY ITS SEN AND PLEANTY OF PUBS LIKE THE KINGS ARMS THAT GETS FLOODED WHEN THERES A HEAVY DOWN POUR OR RAIN

  • @xr6lad
    @xr6lad 4 года назад +7

    Can’t help but think that God the railway companies were cheap skates even back then, charging a ‘platform fee’ to kids wanting to train spot. It’s not as if the cost of the platform ticket was going to exactly make the difference between keeping them solvent.

    • @gillchatfield3231
      @gillchatfield3231 4 года назад

      Platform tickets even if you were just seeing someone off on the train!

    • @grotekleum
      @grotekleum 4 года назад +5

      @@gillchatfield3231 It was only a penny. The reason is that you had to have a ticket to be on the platform. If you presented at the barrier on the way out without a ticket, how would the ticket inspector know you weren't a fare dodger, especially if they changed shift - the new inspector wouldn't know you just saw of old Auntie Jane.

    • @OrbioneKenobie
      @OrbioneKenobie 3 года назад +1

      I remember using 3x 2p pieces for my platty pass,those ticket booths and machines were still there in the mid 70s

    • @stephenrice4554
      @stephenrice4554 Месяц назад

      I think it was a contract , you gave them a few coppers and you could run all over railway property , it's not public land , all railway land is just that , you're paying to visit , that's why they have their own police , mail service , telephone system drainage , etc .

    • @stephenrice4554
      @stephenrice4554 Месяц назад

      J​@@grotekleum , that would still be a good idea .

  • @EuroScot2023
    @EuroScot2023 7 месяцев назад

    Does anyone know who was the Stationmaster in 1953 at York? My father was Stationmaster at Alyth Junction at this time - where I was born. We then moved to Armadale (West Lothian), Bridgeton Central (Glasgow) and finally Motherwell. Dad was then Area Manager based at Carstairs.

  • @spottydog4477
    @spottydog4477 13 лет назад +7

    I just luv the accent on the female station announcer...''heva so frightfully propa".....

    • @Robert_Manners
      @Robert_Manners 4 года назад +1

      I believe you had to be during this time or you would never of be able to get such a job/role/position in society. The class system was very strong still in the 1950's as it wasn't until the 1960`s that things became a bit more relaxed as generations adjusted attitudes.

    • @tomkent4656
      @tomkent4656 4 года назад +6

      At least you can understand what she's saying!

    • @あいはら恆秋
      @あいはら恆秋 Месяц назад

      @@Robert_Manners Class system? No. The accent the announcer uses was cultivated, learnt. Upper class ladies were not serving as station announcers. The point is, announcers were expected to speak in a clear, beautiful sounding accent, befitting their role as the most outward facing representative of the railway. Through training and effort, this was developed. Now, no one cares.

  • @1973ts
    @1973ts 12 лет назад +3

    Wonderful, thank you for sharing.

  • @bertspeggly4428
    @bertspeggly4428 8 месяцев назад +1

    14:49 Love the wheelchair - an armchair on wheels!

  • @JJONNYREPP
    @JJONNYREPP Месяц назад

    This is York 1005am 3.10.24 let's hope york is more friendlier...

  • @naguerea
    @naguerea 8 лет назад +4

    Dear Old York.City of my birth, I was there when the bombs came , a voice a I lay in my bed "where s his mum? another voce 'Down the pub., I ws picked up and take to a dark room.

  • @POON3345
    @POON3345 Месяц назад

    Nice film. This got be around 1940s early 1950s.

  • @michaelcolllett9082
    @michaelcolllett9082 4 месяца назад

    Enjoyed how we has nation got job done ,another history lesson as I like past more present,, as born in 1958, collect vintage music and films despite world wars ,we still world ,how things get job start to finish, which show in film

  • @roykemp4941
    @roykemp4941 6 лет назад +1

    Thanks for uploading.

  • @AnthonyHandcock
    @AnthonyHandcock 5 лет назад +7

    I'm not prone to nostalgia but can we please have back announcements that aren't "MMMMM MMMM MM MM MMM MMMM MM MMM MMM MMMM MMM".

  • @markhodgson2348
    @markhodgson2348 Месяц назад

    The wrong way ,the right way and there's the railway way

  • @lindsaypeterholden2701
    @lindsaypeterholden2701 7 лет назад +10

    Oh Look,Smart,Polite People.York Station's structure is little changed and is a very interesting place.However,beware of drunken parties.You can't move for Brown Beards,Tatoos and Tatty Chavs.It used be be Vikings and Roundheads that were the invaders.Bring back the A4 and the Deltic.Brilliant Film,anyone know where I can buy a Time Machine.

    • @Isochest
      @Isochest 4 года назад +1

      @MusicalElitist1 Better encountering Vikings than Islamic Gangsters!!

    • @Isochest
      @Isochest 4 года назад

      @MusicalElitist1 I smell Troll Shit! Passed gas when you did wudu? Or was it Doo Doo!

    • @andyrbush
      @andyrbush 4 года назад +1

      @MusicalElitist1 Why are yo being so nasty, are you one of the type he describes?

  • @joshslater2426
    @joshslater2426 4 месяца назад

    York was once the railway capital of the north, which I guess it still is, but it’s not quite as grand. The National Railway Museum peaked in the 90s and 2000s, and has rapidly declined in the past five years.

  • @BoneyMsue
    @BoneyMsue 12 лет назад +2

    Wonderful!

  • @johnward374
    @johnward374 8 дней назад

    York is jammed with people in the summer. You can hardly move through the narrow streets. The xmas market is rammed full. Pick pockets everywhere. Also full of Chinese taking photos on Lendal Bridge, you can't get by them.

  • @FinnMikazuki3
    @FinnMikazuki3 5 месяцев назад +1

    hello I like York railway station now in 2024

  • @Isochest
    @Isochest 4 года назад

    Quite a daunting job for the General Manager!

  • @kerrysupporter
    @kerrysupporter Год назад +2

    No one walking around with plastic coffee cups

    • @LANCSKID
      @LANCSKID Месяц назад

      Or mobile phones!

  • @Robert_Manners
    @Robert_Manners 4 года назад

    The platform numbers seem to be very different from today, in my lifetime (Born in 1974) they have been the same.

  • @Niki-ln5be
    @Niki-ln5be Год назад

    You can see how efficient the Germans shipped all those poor souls

  • @samtrak1204
    @samtrak1204 2 года назад

    Were train stations like York engulfed in smoke and diesel fumes before electrification?

    • @EuroScot2023
      @EuroScot2023 7 месяцев назад +1

      It wasn't just the stations. It was everywhere in every town and city was dusty and grimy with the smoke and soot from millions of coal fires. Just watch for the views over York and compare them with the visibility these days. There may be many faults with today's Britain but I do not miss the constant smoky air.

    • @samtrak1204
      @samtrak1204 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@EuroScot2023 Thanks for sharing😃✌️

    • @robertplace6131
      @robertplace6131 4 месяца назад +1

      @@EuroScot2023 , Its interesting to recall, that the Smog was ever present in the 50s , even far out into the country, down-wind of the towns . The Clean air act has improved life in this country for the better, not just for the health of people, for buildings & wild-life too, the word Acid-rain hadn't been invented ! Quite how train drivers could see the signals , lit by the feeble light of those oil lamps, is remarkable , especially considering the dangers of not seeing !

  • @train4905
    @train4905 Год назад

    Awsome

  • @888ssss
    @888ssss Год назад

    clearly this is around late 1960

    • @JC-gm3zs
      @JC-gm3zs 8 месяцев назад +2

      Clearly? You need to get your eyes tested.

    • @EuroScot2023
      @EuroScot2023 7 месяцев назад

      Try 1953 - I was 2 years old.

  • @JessyP-u6q
    @JessyP-u6q 4 месяца назад

    There were no issues regarding maps for the last several decades .......
    Suddenly maps are .............complaining ?

  • @iainclark5964
    @iainclark5964 Год назад

    Another BTF classic!

  • @lindsaypeterholden2701
    @lindsaypeterholden2701 6 лет назад +2

    I hope the 9.25 from Newcastle is not full of HenParties!!!

  • @MrsBobby-gy5of
    @MrsBobby-gy5of 6 лет назад +1

    Wow a clean New England loco.

    • @neiloflongbeck5705
      @neiloflongbeck5705 4 года назад +1

      @MusicalElitist1 New England depot, Peterborough. You......

  • @england4214
    @england4214 12 лет назад

    cool change

  • @tonyboloni64
    @tonyboloni64 4 года назад +1

    Look. Adults using bicycles for transport. No wonder that people were fitter.

  • @finnsempire5671
    @finnsempire5671 4 года назад +2

    I’m a time traveler please hire me to be a signalman. Please pretty please! I’m the doctor and the signalman is my undercover name. Mr. Finn Flattely after my great grandfather. I will be an train driver if one of lads is ill.

  • @deancwhmackinnon6547
    @deancwhmackinnon6547 2 года назад

    The old controller in his very silly top hat

  • @user-gp5ot2xb7t
    @user-gp5ot2xb7t 3 года назад

    1953

  • @samtrak1204
    @samtrak1204 2 года назад +6

    I see no black workers or passengers whereas today UK rail is multi-cultural. Thanks God some things have changed for the better.

    • @coloradostrong
      @coloradostrong 2 года назад +12

      Not all change is good. "Multi-culture" dilutes true culture.

    • @Robhalifax
      @Robhalifax Год назад +8

      Can you explain why it is better rather than just different?

    • @misterwhipple2870
      @misterwhipple2870 Год назад +7

      You call that better?

    • @Niki-ln5be
      @Niki-ln5be Год назад

      Are you backward ?

    • @simonf8902
      @simonf8902 8 месяцев назад +3

      Yes. Do explain what exactly you mean by better ?

  • @DadRail
    @DadRail 6 лет назад

    Brilliant!