The music reflects a sadness for a world long gone, never to return. Order, consideration for others, trust and hope. It also tells us that we too shall pass and that our lives are inconsequential to the passage of time. What is present shall soon be the past but the world goes on.
Přeloženo CZ- Hudba odráží smutek nad světem, který je dávno pryč, který se nikdy nevrátí. Pořádek, ohleduplnost k druhým, důvěra a naděje. Také nám říká, že i my projdeme a že naše životy jsou bezvýznamné pro plynutí času. To, co je přítomné, bude brzy minulostí, ale svět jde dál.
Yes- People who grew up in that world told me they would readily return to that time if they could. They didn't have the conveniences of today, but there were so many fine, intelligent, reliable folks.
Absolutely wonderful photos!! Would love to also see captions on the photos where available. Also a bit longer time per slide. 7 seconds is recommended when there are no captions, and 10 secords with captions. Thanks!!
So much lost in this world, you can see the difference during those times and now, modernization has only separated us and continues as time goes on. God bless the souls throughout these pictures gifted the gift of life and all the memories they created with each other.
This captures America that use to be , all the hard work and hardships of the times, when America took pride in what they produced and made. Sad to see how things have changed over the last decades. So many of these businesses are long forgotten as well as the people. Advertising on the buildings was so cool. Sad the best times are behind us .
It’s an entire world, culture, people, way of life that was always there, but you never noticed it. The enormity of meaning in these photos can’t be understated. We are truly standing on the shoulders of giants.
Wonderful collection! Best I've seen. Such a variety of images, don't want this to end. Detail and clarity of the images are most admirable. Thank you for taking the time to post this, I will return to this time and again, just can't get enough.
Really interesting photos. If I were to make any suggestions they would be 1. Show the individual photos longer and 2) add some information ad to when and where they were taken.
Saludos and fine work! Simply put, "true excellence".... and most comprehensive to boot. This is my new favourite, if not one of the best photograph collections I have seen! Thank you, cheers and blessings!
This is one of the best videos that I have seen in a long time! I want to thank you for presenting it. I love history and "old" pictures, so this was a real treat!
On my computer, pressing the k key runs/stops this as a slideshow; the l key advances to the next photo and the j key goes back one photo. I prefer to mute the sound and advance manually by pressing l instead of running the slideshow so I have enough time to examine the details (including with a magnifying glass). These photos have led to me wallowing in nostalgia, for a time before I was born, but was experienced by my grandmother (born 1873, died 1955), and much of it by my mother (born 1906, died 2001). Having spent so much time with these photos, some of them repeatedly, I've gotten to the point where I _almost_ feel as if I had been there, much as I would feel in recalling what I'd seen after having visited some tourist destination. If you decide to browse the photos in the video: many were taken to showcase a new building, but I've found that the people and traffic are more interesting. Many from the entire date range show streetcars and steam locomotives, but look for changes from horse-drawn carriages and carts alone in the early years, to cars and trucks and no horses just a couple of decades later. Some photos I'm pretty sure were of people proudly showing off their first car or truck. Note a rise in women's hemlines. Except at the beach, _no adult_ went without some sort of hat, and most men are seen wearing a suit and tie. I've read that 1920 is the year that the number of people living in cities first exceeded the number living on farms.
I have to stop and read the signs. I look for faces in the windows. At 10:47 is a museum, and there is one right outside too. I wonder what is inside. It seems I can almost put myself there, they're taking a photograph! Most all long gone, the faces and the places... I love the sign for "The Tickler" at 22:12: "Re-modeled not as rough as last season"! I also love the transitional ones: Horses and cars, square cars and rounded ones, etc. At 1:40:40 that could be my wife's dad and his little brother. There is a photo (A rare thing!) of them in front of a truck a bit older than this. He is 86, a friend just gave him a German Shepherd he couldn't say no to! At 1:50:39 isn't that a 1956 Chevy? Same year as me! At 2:07:12 who is that man on the left and why is he standing on the ledge? This is so rich. The little girl at 2:08:25 is just looking through time right at you! I wish her a good life. She is likely someone's grandmother, maybe great grandmother. I wish I had that Bowl-A-Matic on the shelf at right at 2:26:14!
Fantastic set of photos accompanied by a poignant soundtrack and making me think of the TK Whipple quote 'Our forefathers had civilization inside themselves, the wild outside. We live in the civilization they created, but within us the wilderness still lingers. What they dreamed, we live, and what they lived, we dream.' On a more base level I love the girl at 1.49.07 - A real stunner!!
Winnetka, Illinois. June 1950. "Student Rue Lawrence wearing frilly summer dress and bright lipstick in classroom at New Trier High School." Rue was on the cover of the October 16, 1950, issue of Life. Color transparency by Alfred Eisenstaedt, Life magazine photo archive.
It was a good time to be alive. Almost every new thing was an improvement in life. My grandfather spanned the train to going to the moon, jets, candles to light bulbs, telegraph to television, no medicine to antibiotics, (his brother died of appendicitis in 1912.) Crude cameras to Movies, bicycles to motorcycles. Now days every new thing is a potential world disaster, and people aren't nice or strong anymore. I don't think a century from now folks will look back on this era fondly.
Hi. Nice photo collection. If I could make a suggestion… if you can, captions like date and location under the photos would be nice to give more meaning and emotion to the image. Thank you.
It was not in my power to add a comment to each of the 3011 photos. If you are interested in data for a specific photo, you can use Google Lens. It works perfectly. I am sorry .
@@Pavel1277 How horrible you had to include a photo of the ku klux klan 2:09:45 guess you wanted to remind everyone of their hateful racist cowardly ways?
@@mariecolette170 Why are you all over the comment section with your bad takes? WE need to be reminded of History, good or bad. Just because he added that photo does not mean he accepts those views. It's history.
These are the quality scanned images from the original medium format negatives. Unfortunately, these types of negatives were neglected and were not stored properly so they were damaged or destroyed. But back then people didn't really care about them not knowing that someday they would be scanned and shown on RUclips on what life was like back then. So look inside your attics for some of your grandparents negative photos and have them scanned.
That time, and those people are gone. Their time over as ours will be. I wonder which was the better if either. Beautiful music with a view to the past. I wonder what future generations will think when looking back at our time compared to theirs.
even though this timeframe brought 2 devastating world wars, not to mention civil rights was a huge issue for women and people of color... you cant help but feel the innocence of this era, everyone had dreams that were potentially achievable with the right amount of effort. there was promise almost anywhere you went, you could just pick up and go to a new frontier. theres so many historic mechanical/industrial and scientific marvels of this era, culture was alive and well and in Someplaces they thrived together to help accomplish dreams. families seemed so connected and strangers were still neighbors to eachother. most of these places cease to exist, life doesnt remain in many of these pop up towns and were so undivided today...it was truly a renaissance era of its own. itll never be like this again. so many world events drove our compassion to such amazing levels. these people truly lived in my opinion, there was so much to still discover and experience without the ability to just go on a search engine or watch a video about any topic. you had to learn and live it by your own means, this era built so much character for the better if you ask me. such an amazing meeting intersection of old and new world living. it must have been so awesome to just get on a ship for a few weeks and be in a whole new world ready for you to experience. to even make it to adulthood was a huge feat. today everything seems handed to us and weve lost our humbleness. id glady trade this life for a chance to have lived during this timeframe. everything took time to do or go. things were hand crafted and really appreciated for the time and effort to make such wonders. you knew your hard earned money was buying something well worth its value, the architecture everywhere is just jaw dropping. ive always wanted to be an anthropologist and the only classes i did well in were history because all these eras were just so mind blowing. thank you for the upload and the time to make this. so much to absorb, i will def be coming back n forth to continue where i left off to let my imagination wander with the photos of so many interesting lives. we need more exposure to this stuff to remind ourselves how hard the human race worked to get us where we are today, maybe people will be much more thankful of the lives we were given and what it took to get our families there.
" id glady trade this life for a chance to have lived during this timeframe." .... In a couple of months you would be begging to return to our timeline.
Better days depends on who one ask. There where many beautiful buildings from the gilded age and the progressive age that could have been saved. There where some morales that could have been preserved.
What these images tell me is that human nature does not change. You were born either rich, poor or middle class and you belong to this class until the day you die. I don’t think back then people mixed as much as we do now. The only way to change your lot was to move far away where no one knew your past and you could start again… most women were uneducated and the husbands were the ones in charge of the house, women could not vote either. Many people died young of deseases that were incurable. Only the strong ones survived. Some guys went through 2 wars…life was more precarious back then…you got married at 18 or 20. Have children right away and then by 50 you were considered an old lady. No kidding. Life expectancy back then was death occurred around 60 and if you made past 70 you were a wise old person. 😊😊😊
At last, a reasonable comment! All the societal problems we have today existed back then, albeit sometimes in different forms. All things considered, I'd rather live in a time when my child had more than a 50/50 chance of reaching adulthood.
The images of these photos, mostly in black and white, for my tastes, are excellent since they reflect the time. Too bad that in many of them there is no description of them. It is an appointment with the history of the USA.
Everything was simple you knew what your calling was and there was a lot of respect for one another... It breaks my heart to see those horses dead on the side of the road with children playing right next to them
Makes me wonder what people living in 2123 will think of us when they look at photos of 1990 - 2050. I look back on these photos and feel like in many ways they had it better than we do. It feels like the Specter of Death is all around Americans now; random death, death for no reason or purpose, for nothing you said or did. Will it be worse in 2123? Or will those future Americans look back upon us and feel sorry for us for what we had to endure?
Pain and sorrows is a necessary part of this world since it was created, and will be until the end when our God create the new one. All is in God sovereignty.
So many beautiful building and structures destroyed throughout time…😢you Americans are specialists to destroy your past, testimony of what your ancestors built and achieved.🥺too bad, so sad. I’m a bl…Frenchman.
Black and white pics, especially those taken in winter and fall, look so depressing. I have to force myself to realize they had much simpler lives back then.
always dirty always hungry have you seen some of them how dirty clothes they had? I read once that they were washing them every 3-6 months when they were lucky enough to get a soap.
In the early 1900's young women began to cut their hair short & the older women were horrified thinking it made the young gals look loose & undignified. I wonder what was the haistyle of the day for these older gals? Did they wear their hair down to their waists? !
it was in the 20s that woman began having short hair short skirt and began to smoke it was a revolt against there mothers generation that grow up in the Victorian era there was a nick name for them flappers. The early 1900 to1919 it was still that very Victorian way of thinking regarding woman.
¿Qué otro país tiene "América" como parte de su nombre? El único que lo hace, que yo sepa, es los Estados Unidos de AMÉRICA, conocido durante siglos simplemente como "América". (Which other country has "America" as part of its name? The only one that does, to my knowledge, is The United States of AMERICA, known for centuries simply as "America.")
The only way you're going to make them change the name of their country is if either: - you go to some powerful government agency and make them change the name, - or if you defeat the USA in a war and make them surrender unconditionally, then you can impose your demands, and one of them is to change the name of their country.
Perfect all Who is maker something Got medal the is... Whose is know... Dont ser or mem... Joniyafdas know ser... The caling coll is star May be all star If come again 😊😊 Same you like me If You like me Im black ser not handsome ser Silent say mem Yes mem... you say more... Go to out Yes mem Ser im going out Ya joniyafdas handsome 😊😊
The music reflects a sadness for a world long gone, never to return. Order, consideration for others, trust and hope. It also tells us that we too shall pass and that our lives are inconsequential to the passage of time. What is present shall soon be the past but the world goes on.
Přeloženo CZ- Hudba odráží smutek nad světem, který je dávno pryč, který se nikdy nevrátí. Pořádek, ohleduplnost k druhým, důvěra a naděje. Také nám říká, že i my projdeme a že naše životy jsou bezvýznamné pro plynutí času. To, co je přítomné, bude brzy minulostí, ale svět jde dál.
sad, is true , time and kind of people never to be Agin
Yes- People who grew up in that world told me they would readily return to that time if they could. They didn't have the conveniences of today, but there were so many fine, intelligent, reliable folks.
@@pouglwaw5932 People were more human, more reasonable and violence in our communities was not commonplace
There is hope. 💥💥In the old testiment God promised to destroy death, in the New testiment, He did it.
Fascinating photos of our country revealing a life unknown and unrealized in 2023. Thank you 😊.
Absolutely wonderful photos!! Would love to also see captions on the photos where available. Also a bit longer time per slide. 7 seconds is recommended when there are no captions, and 10 secords with captions.
Thanks!!
Pictures made me cry what we’ve lost😢
So much lost in this world, you can see the difference during those times and now, modernization has only separated us and continues as time goes on. God bless the souls throughout these pictures gifted the gift of life and all the memories they created with each other.
This captures America that use to be , all the hard work and hardships of the times, when America took pride in what they produced and made. Sad to see how things have changed over the last decades. So many of these businesses are long forgotten as well as the people. Advertising on the buildings was so cool. Sad the best times are behind us .
Nice video. It would be fascinating thought to know the location of the pictures.
Great collection of photos..some cations of what's in the photos would be even better
At the 1:01:00 mark, the pharmacy is now a McDonald’s, on the ground level of the same apartment building! In Washington DC if anyone’s curious 🧐
Thank God they had the foresight to photograph these scenes
This made me cry and I don't know why. Wonderful collection.
It’s an entire world, culture, people, way of life that was always there, but you never noticed it. The enormity of meaning in these photos can’t be understated. We are truly standing on the shoulders of giants.
The music playing probably had alot to do with it.
Outstanding photos and music, as far as the timing, I went to the settings and chose .5. The music and photos were easier to appreciate and to listen.
Wonderful collection! Best I've seen. Such a variety of images, don't want this to end. Detail and clarity of the images are most admirable. Thank you for taking the time to post this, I will return to this time and again, just can't get enough.
Wow, these are gorgeous
Pavel, thank you so much for this video. It was amazing.
I'm enjoying watching these, looking forward to the next one 👍
Thank you ., and ditto on the time per slide recommended below. I appreciate your music choice as well.
Wow! Thank you, thank you for taking the time to do this. Beautiful ❤
Wow! Thanks so much for posting this amazing video with such high quality stock photos of the past! Music is nice also!
Really interesting photos. If I were to make any suggestions they would be 1. Show the individual photos longer and 2) add some information ad to when and where they were taken.
All those people, places and things are gone.. sadly. Thanks for taking us back anyway.
Amazing photos I was spellbound and intrigued by the variety and quality of these photos . Thank you very much.
Saludos and fine work! Simply put, "true excellence".... and most comprehensive to boot. This is my new favourite, if not one of the best photograph collections I have seen! Thank you, cheers and blessings!
A great collection
This is one of the best videos that I have seen in a long time! I want to thank you for presenting it. I love history and "old" pictures, so this was a real treat!
A nice collection. Some I recognize.
I saw a few of these pictures a few years ago that had fascinating stories behind them. Would be awesome to see the stories/locations of the others.
Thank You-So Needed in our world.
On my computer, pressing the k key runs/stops this as a slideshow; the l key advances to the next photo and the j key goes back one photo. I prefer to mute the sound and advance manually by pressing l instead of running the slideshow so I have enough time to examine the details (including with a magnifying glass).
These photos have led to me wallowing in nostalgia, for a time before I was born, but was experienced by my grandmother (born 1873, died 1955), and much of it by my mother (born 1906, died 2001). Having spent so much time with these photos, some of them repeatedly, I've gotten to the point where I _almost_ feel as if I had been there, much as I would feel in recalling what I'd seen after having visited some tourist destination.
If you decide to browse the photos in the video: many were taken to showcase a new building, but I've found that the people and traffic are more interesting. Many from the entire date range show streetcars and steam locomotives, but look for changes from horse-drawn carriages and carts alone in the early years, to cars and trucks and no horses just a couple of decades later. Some photos I'm pretty sure were of people proudly showing off their first car or truck. Note a rise in women's hemlines. Except at the beach, _no adult_ went without some sort of hat, and most men are seen wearing a suit and tie. I've read that 1920 is the year that the number of people living in cities first exceeded the number living on farms.
I have to stop and read the signs. I look for faces in the windows. At 10:47 is a museum, and there is one right outside too. I wonder what is inside. It seems I can almost put myself there, they're taking a photograph! Most all long gone, the faces and the places...
I love the sign for "The Tickler" at 22:12: "Re-modeled not as rough as last season"! I also love the transitional ones: Horses and cars, square cars and rounded ones, etc. At 1:40:40 that could be my wife's dad and his little brother. There is a photo (A rare thing!) of them in front of a truck a bit older than this. He is 86, a friend just gave him a German Shepherd he couldn't say no to! At 1:50:39 isn't that a 1956 Chevy? Same year as me!
At 2:07:12 who is that man on the left and why is he standing on the ledge?
This is so rich. The little girl at 2:08:25 is just looking through time right at you! I wish her a good life. She is likely someone's grandmother, maybe great grandmother.
I wish I had that Bowl-A-Matic on the shelf at right at 2:26:14!
thank you very much !
Fantastic set of photos accompanied by a poignant soundtrack and making me think of the TK Whipple quote 'Our forefathers had civilization inside themselves, the wild outside. We live in the civilization they created, but within us the wilderness still lingers. What they dreamed, we live, and what they lived, we dream.' On a more base level I love the girl at 1.49.07 - A real stunner!!
Winnetka, Illinois. June 1950. "Student Rue Lawrence wearing frilly summer dress and bright lipstick in classroom at New Trier High School." Rue was on the cover of the October 16, 1950, issue of Life. Color transparency by Alfred Eisenstaedt, Life magazine photo archive.
@@Pavel1277 Thanks a lovely photo - Thanks for putting the collection together, much appreciated.
Nothing base about it.
A stunningly beautiful girl.
It was a good time to be alive. Almost every new thing was an improvement in life. My grandfather spanned the train to going to the moon, jets, candles to light bulbs, telegraph to television, no medicine to antibiotics, (his brother died of appendicitis in 1912.) Crude cameras to Movies, bicycles to motorcycles. Now days every new thing is a potential world disaster, and people aren't nice or strong anymore. I don't think a century from now folks will look back on this era fondly.
If mankind doesn't destroy itself . Thank you for your post.
Nice collection of photos showing when America was great.
America has always been great. America will always be great!
Fantastic!
Really enjoyed but wish you could have identified the locations
Good job Pavel!
僕らが生きている現在も100年後には、見慣れない風景になるって事ですね。
仰るとおり!
Pictures are worth a thousand words. If you don't have these images you don't get history.
Thank you very much.
Thank you ❤😊👍
very cool
Sometimes I really feel I was born 100 years too late.
at 1:31 34 that is a picture of the beach ramp at Seabreeze Blvd. at Daytona Beach
The good old days when people were normal - reminds me of Chillingbourne.
Too fast. Slow them down.
Some fotos and faces looks to me , so familiar ....did I were there, once before in the other life? I feel this way....
Hi. Nice photo collection. If I could make a suggestion… if you can, captions like date and location under the photos would be nice to give more meaning and emotion to the image. Thank you.
It was not in my power to add a comment to each of the 3011 photos. If you are interested in data for a specific photo, you can use Google Lens. It works perfectly. I am sorry .
@@Pavel1277great video man, keep doing what you’re doing
@@Pavel1277 How horrible you had to include a photo of the ku klux klan 2:09:45 guess you wanted to remind everyone of their hateful racist cowardly ways?
@@mariecolette170 Why are you all over the comment section with your bad takes? WE need to be reminded of History, good or bad. Just because he added that photo does not mean he accepts those views. It's history.
These are the quality scanned images from the original medium format negatives. Unfortunately, these types of negatives were neglected and were not stored properly so they were damaged or destroyed. But back then people didn't really care about them not knowing that someday they would be scanned and shown on RUclips on what life was like back then. So look inside your attics for some of your grandparents negative photos and have them scanned.
That time, and those people are gone. Their time over as ours will be. I wonder which was the better if either.
Beautiful music with a view to the past.
I wonder what future generations will think when looking back at our time compared to theirs.
God bless USA !
😥💔🙏 Yes please.
I used to talk to my great-grandmother who was born in 1896 and died in 2004 shoes a nice old lady pneumonia got her not dementia so she had her mind
even though this timeframe brought 2 devastating world wars, not to mention civil rights was a huge issue for women and people of color... you cant help but feel the innocence of this era, everyone had dreams that were potentially achievable with the right amount of effort. there was promise almost anywhere you went, you could just pick up and go to a new frontier. theres so many historic mechanical/industrial and scientific marvels of this era, culture was alive and well and in Someplaces they thrived together to help accomplish dreams. families seemed so connected and strangers were still neighbors to eachother. most of these places cease to exist, life doesnt remain in many of these pop up towns and were so undivided today...it was truly a renaissance era of its own. itll never be like this again. so many world events drove our compassion to such amazing levels. these people truly lived in my opinion, there was so much to still discover and experience without the ability to just go on a search engine or watch a video about any topic. you had to learn and live it by your own means, this era built so much character for the better if you ask me. such an amazing meeting intersection of old and new world living. it must have been so awesome to just get on a ship for a few weeks and be in a whole new world ready for you to experience. to even make it to adulthood was a huge feat. today everything seems handed to us and weve lost our humbleness. id glady trade this life for a chance to have lived during this timeframe. everything took time to do or go. things were hand crafted and really appreciated for the time and effort to make such wonders. you knew your hard earned money was buying something well worth its value, the architecture everywhere is just jaw dropping. ive always wanted to be an anthropologist and the only classes i did well in were history because all these eras were just so mind blowing. thank you for the upload and the time to make this. so much to absorb, i will def be coming back n forth to continue where i left off to let my imagination wander with the photos of so many interesting lives. we need more exposure to this stuff to remind ourselves how hard the human race worked to get us where we are today, maybe people will be much more thankful of the lives we were given and what it took to get our families there.
" id glady trade this life for a chance to have lived during this timeframe." .... In a couple of months you would be begging to return to our timeline.
Better days depends on who one ask. There where many beautiful buildings from the gilded age and the progressive age that could have been saved. There where some morales that could have been preserved.
Captions would've been nice
Can you take me back there now. I'm ready to go now!! Mark in Florida 😢😢😢
What these images tell me is that human nature does not change. You were born either rich, poor or middle class and you belong to this class until the day you die. I don’t think back then people mixed as much as we do now. The only way to change your lot was to move far away where no one knew your past and you could start again… most women were uneducated and the husbands were the ones in charge of the house, women could not vote either. Many people died young of deseases that were incurable. Only the strong ones survived. Some guys went through 2 wars…life was more precarious back then…you got married at 18 or 20. Have children right away and then by 50 you were considered an old lady. No kidding. Life expectancy back then was death occurred around 60 and if you made past 70 you were a wise old person. 😊😊😊
At last, a reasonable comment! All the societal problems we have today existed back then, albeit sometimes in different forms. All things considered, I'd rather live in a time when my child had more than a 50/50 chance of reaching adulthood.
2:09:55 I love❤it injured sailor and his puppy
Check out the camera the guys holding at3:16.
Add 3 or 4 seconds to each slide. Not enough time to enjoy them.
That video would be 14h long after that extra 4 sec to each picture
Or you could just adjust your play speed to 25% :/
Muito bom
The images of these photos, mostly in black and white, for my tastes, are excellent since they reflect the time. Too bad that in many of them there is no description of them. It is an appointment with the history of the USA.
shorpy vintage photographs
40:55 😂 scooters
What is the name of this beautiful music?
link.ashamaluevmusic.com/zo20
I will watch the 2nd half tomorrow bef6y go to sleep. Maybe i can go there in my dreams 😅😅😅 tbank you
The horse drawn funeral coaches @ 20:00 were interesting.
Everything was simple you knew what your calling was and there was a lot of respect for one another... It breaks my heart to see those horses dead on the side of the road with children playing right next to them
the times were hard but food was healthy not like nowadays
Makes me wonder what people living in 2123 will think of us when they look at photos of 1990 - 2050. I look back on these photos and feel like in many ways they had it better than we do. It feels like the Specter of Death is all around Americans now; random death, death for no reason or purpose, for nothing you said or did. Will it be worse in 2123? Or will those future Americans look back upon us and feel sorry for us for what we had to endure?
Does any one else know there is a horror film based on the photo at 1:29:57 . 1962 Caraval of souls . A film worth watching .
Wow that really does look like a scary place
wow over 3 hours took much work
Please remember folks, all the signs & trucks were lettered by hand.🤔
What baseball stadium is at 1:33 ?
Better days.
For whom ?!…
@@gillesbueno1153 afro-american
At least things made sense, as opposed to our increasingly Orwellian age.
@@rgglick maybe. I remember Charles Chaplin pictures…and John Dos Passos novels…among other testimonies of everyday’s life in those days…
40:30 What has happened here? 🤔
Pain and sorrows is a necessary part of this world since it was created, and will be until the end when our God create the new one. All is in God sovereignty.
Hard times,1800s😢
Falta información sobra cada foto, fecha, lugar, personas.....
Anyone know the name of the song?
ruclips.net/video/HLekhqfgxgo/видео.html
So many beautiful building and structures destroyed throughout time…😢you Americans are specialists to destroy your past, testimony of what your ancestors built and achieved.🥺too bad, so sad. I’m a bl…Frenchman.
Very interesting pictures but very depressing instrumental music.
Music is slow and video should be done in parts. Great photos, but 3 hours is so drawn out.
I hate the media centric society we live in today , back in the day people wore what they felt , now everything is dictated by current trends etc
Love this! the only request would be to put the year of each photo in one corner so we know when it was taken. 🙂
15:00
I’d trade now for then.
You wouldn't last a week before you'd be begging to come back.
Black and white pics, especially those taken in winter and fall, look so depressing. I have to force myself to realize they had much simpler lives back then.
always dirty always hungry have you seen some of them how dirty clothes they had? I read once that they were washing them every 3-6 months when they were lucky enough to get a soap.
@@Voltomess And we bitch when the WIFi goes out for 10 min.
In the early 1900's young women began to cut their hair short &
the older women were horrified thinking it made the young gals
look loose & undignified. I wonder what was the haistyle of the
day for these older gals? Did they wear their hair down to their
waists?
!
it was in the 20s that woman began having short hair short skirt and began to smoke it was a revolt against there mothers generation that grow up in the Victorian era there was a nick name for them flappers. The early 1900 to1919 it was still that very Victorian way of thinking regarding woman.
40.55 !
Some things never change,eight guys standing around while one guy dogs.🤔😊
56:40 you call that a Christmas Tree
No son fotos de América son fotos de Estados Unidos, América es todo un continente
For the Czechs, America is the USA. Canada-by-Canada and South America-South America :-)
¿Qué otro país tiene "América" como parte de su nombre? El único que lo hace, que yo sepa, es los Estados Unidos de AMÉRICA, conocido durante siglos simplemente como "América". (Which other country has "America" as part of its name? The only one that does, to my knowledge, is The United States of AMERICA, known for centuries simply as "America.")
@@rgglick por si no lo sabes América es todo un continente, desde Canadá hasta Chile
The only way you're going to make them change the name of their country is if either:
- you go to some powerful government agency and make them change the name,
- or if you defeat the USA in a war and make them surrender unconditionally, then you can impose your demands, and one of them is to change the name of their country.
There’s a 1990s photo at 1:50:01 🤣
A bug crept in 🙂
NO, that's when they used a time machine to look into the future.
need captions, who cares what the music is. half the value is gone without captions.
It's about photography
@@Pavel1277 What good are pictures without context?
@TheJoeFridayBand it opens the imagination...something the world has left behind as well
Even the people were more beautiful....
😢To think that most are already dead, waiting for the great promise and odyssey of the resurrection.
Better add Trump's arrest today!
A better time.
Estan vivos en el pasado,pues el tiempo no existe
Perfect all
Who is maker something
Got medal the is...
Whose is know...
Dont ser or mem...
Joniyafdas know ser...
The caling coll is star
May be all star
If come again
😊😊
Same you like me
If
You like me
Im black ser not handsome ser
Silent say mem
Yes mem...
you say more...
Go to out
Yes mem
Ser im going out
Ya joniyafdas handsome
😊😊
Where is Robert De Niro?!…😵💫
I had yet to meet his mother.