This is the first time that I truly saw the value of home movies. How incredibly similar, yet so different the town looks. Seeing my old house on North Green as it was way back when, was very cool indeed. Thank you.
Thank you so much for this. I really enjoyed seeing it way back "In the day". Wish there were more clam diggers footage, but seeing downtown in all its glory made my heart sing
We at Tuckerton Historical Society have a 30 minute copy of this, with more Memorial Day and Baby Parade and less in places. The movie was made by Sylvester Loux, owner in 1939 of the Community Theater. Who else would have had a hand held video camera! Lincoln Mott partnered with Stockton audio visual (I believe) to make a voice over version pointing out many people by name and some description, and adding old time music tracks. We call it "Tuckerton Remembered" and sell it (DVD) for $15 (I think). We showed it one evening a few years ago to a nice crowd. I do believe this is a higher resolution copy. A few months ago a relative of Sylvester Loux came in to THS and we talked about the movies. There were more, but they were apparently lost.
The lady dancing holding up her right hand 11:42 Stella Rider Parsons. The man working at the pole "PopPop" William McDevitt 8:24 Ed and Virginia McDevitt Mathis 4:38 Roxie Pauline, sect'y for Herman Gerber, lawyer for 27 years 11:32 and 7:52
this is awesome; the 10 year olds would be 90 yrs old today; my mother would have been one of the 17 year olds, but we had no connection to Tuckerton until 22 years later, in 1960
Does anyone remember my father in the 1960 clam digging days they named him goldy he was from new York he clam dig with sick calaleer his name was Edward goldsmith.
This is the first time that I truly saw the value of home movies. How incredibly similar, yet so different the town looks. Seeing my old house on North Green as it was way back when, was very cool indeed. Thank you.
Thank you so much for this. I really enjoyed seeing it way back "In the day". Wish there were more clam diggers footage, but seeing downtown in all its glory made my heart sing
We at Tuckerton Historical Society have a 30 minute copy of this, with more Memorial Day and Baby Parade and less in places. The movie was made by Sylvester Loux, owner in 1939 of the Community Theater. Who else would have had a hand held video camera! Lincoln Mott partnered with Stockton audio visual (I believe) to make a voice over version pointing out many people by name and some description, and adding old time music tracks. We call it "Tuckerton Remembered" and sell it (DVD) for $15 (I think). We showed it one evening a few years ago to a nice crowd. I do believe this is a higher resolution copy. A few months ago a relative of Sylvester Loux came in to THS and we talked about the movies. There were more, but they were apparently lost.
I would like to buy a copy, please let me know how to proceed
Do you have any video footage of the railroad?
@@daveydoodle86 We don't have any at this time. Should it be we get some, we will post it right away!
I love seeing the history of our great town😊
Very special, so much value to movies taken back then!
This is amazing.
My Grammy is in it twice :)
This is truly priceless
An amazing find. Great to see footage of Tuckerton as it was.
Thank you so much for sharing this, I wish there was more video in existence from all of southern ocean county
Thank you for sharing!
The lady dancing holding up her right hand 11:42 Stella Rider Parsons.
The man working at the pole "PopPop" William McDevitt 8:24
Ed and Virginia McDevitt Mathis 4:38
Roxie Pauline, sect'y for Herman Gerber, lawyer for 27 years 11:32 and 7:52
Man in 15:09 Louis Resh. He was a very talented artist and a good Christian man.
this is awesome; the 10 year olds would be 90 yrs old today; my mother would have been one of the 17 year olds, but we had no connection to Tuckerton until 22 years later, in 1960
At 3:09 is my grandfather Robert Crean Jr.
At 10:34 the young lady looking out the window really looks like my mother, Dot Smythe (Hall). She would have been in 9th grade ?
How different society was then . So so so much better. Look how clean everything was
Who's the drunk guy crossing Rt.4 (9 now) @ 11:53 ?
Wow how on earth were you still able to read that film?!
Does anyone remember my father in the 1960 clam digging days they named him goldy he was from new York he clam dig with sick calaleer his name was Edward goldsmith.
2:49 stupidity was alive well back then too.
Kid at 9:15 invented the moonwalk
I remember that A&P real well.