The City Of Sydney

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  • Опубліковано 27 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 237

  • @karynbenson6318
    @karynbenson6318 3 роки тому +8

    My parents were born in the 1920s and this is a great insight into the world they were born into. My mother passed away last year and it is incredulous to imagine the changes she had witnessed over the course of her life.

  • @daninthelionsden
    @daninthelionsden 3 роки тому +21

    The architecture is so remarkably British in style and form, if it wasn't for the more tropical flora scattered throughout the video, one could be forgiven for thinking it an Old World city.

  • @larryparis925
    @larryparis925 3 роки тому +14

    It's great these film clips still exist and are shared with the world. Many thanks. - Larry, San Diego, California, USA.

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  3 роки тому +1

      Glad you enjoyed it. Thanks for letting us know Larry.

    • @petersinclair3997
      @petersinclair3997 3 роки тому

      👍🇺🇸🇦🇺

  • @Jennifer-mv9pg
    @Jennifer-mv9pg 3 роки тому +6

    Instantly recognisable as the city generations of my family have known and loved! So much of that vision from 1927 was still there for me to enjoy in the 60s and 70s. I was so amazed at how well the public transport systems were working back then - the ferries, the trams, the buses, the importance of Central Railway Station and Circular Quay.

  • @paulscountrygarage9180
    @paulscountrygarage9180 3 роки тому +7

    What a brilliant film. Thanks so much for putting it up.

  • @AndrewSmith-qs1ob
    @AndrewSmith-qs1ob 3 роки тому +11

    Some of the finest images of Old Sydney I've seen. What a stunning city it was!

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  3 роки тому

      Thanks for the feedback.

  • @zorbalight3933
    @zorbalight3933 3 роки тому +45

    The worst scar ever made on the beautiful Sydney Harbour is the Cahill Expressway and these images prove it, completely mutilated the Quay. Such a stunning harbour back then made even greater with the Harbour bridge 5 years later. The style of the city is so much more elegant and peaceful back then. I remember catching the tram from Maroubra Beach into Elizabeth Street many times in the early 50s for the big trip to David Jones (Elizabeth St) and Farmers on Broadway always an adventure. I was sad as a young lad when they killed the trams in 57 the buses were nowhere near as reliable. Thanks heavens they developed good tunnel boring machines.

    • @jonahbock6605
      @jonahbock6605 3 роки тому +2

      What are you thoughts on the cities potential plan to demolish the Express way and have the Quay looking similar to what it did in this time?
      I would link a concept image but UA-cam won’t allow that

    • @sanctuaryism
      @sanctuaryism 3 роки тому

      would have been odd to remember a time before the freeway... taking all the back roads etc. yeah I can say the same thing for the M5 east and how it divided the suburbs in half.

  • @ktkt9982
    @ktkt9982 3 роки тому +17

    Wonderful. Particularly enjoy the people seen walking about in these films. I'm surprised how many substantial structures there were in 1927. Love these historical treasures of films. Thank you for preserving and sharing them.

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  3 роки тому +3

      You're very welcome. We love sharing them and appreciate the feedback.

    • @danrobinson572
      @danrobinson572 3 роки тому +2

      @@NFSAFilms great video thanks 🙏

  • @davegoldspink5354
    @davegoldspink5354 3 роки тому +10

    Funny looking at George Street we’ve come full circle with the light rail now running down it. Great old film thanks for sharing.

  • @michaelallen3918
    @michaelallen3918 3 роки тому +24

    The younger generation could do with watching these type of historical videos, might appreciate what a wonderful country we used to have... Great video, thanks for sharing.

    • @thevannmann
      @thevannmann 3 роки тому +6

      Behind those pretty building façades were people who supported the ill-treatment of the first nations people and held extremely xenophobic and conservative views. Great nation! /s This is not to mention all the scientific breakthroughs since. Life was probably quite shite for the average person. If anything it makes me appreciate life as it is now, minus the buildings that were knocked down with pretty exteriors.

    • @Rikk_Klaww777
      @Rikk_Klaww777 3 роки тому +1

      More like "councils and developers" could watch this and think about putting in a planning permit..🤔😐😑

    • @louiseclifford5184
      @louiseclifford5184 3 роки тому

      @@thevannmann I don’t think much has changed regarding our indigenous brothers and sisters not to mention our treatment of refugees and and general racism that still persists and rears it’s ugly head frequently

    • @stuartcole4845
      @stuartcole4845 3 роки тому +1

      @@thevannmann Yep, venture a few hundred metres east of the picturesque Botanical Gardens or Oxford Street featured in this film from the 1920s and you had the absolute squalor of the slums of Darlinghurst, Surry Hills, Woolloomooloo, and Kings Cross. Disease ridden alleyways infested with rats and other vermin, inhabited by drug dealers and addicts, prostitutes, drunks and of course the notorious Razor Gangs.
      Back when you could scarcely tell the difference between the gangsters and the police, a minor bacterial infection could be a death sentence and healthcare for the most part was only for those who could afford it.
      If you were unemployed your family went hungry because there was no social safety net, illiteracy was rampant due to poor education, with most people achieving only a few years of high school.
      If you were lucky enough, maybe you could find legitimate work down at the docks, with no minimum wage, long hours of back-breaking work and where having a workmate die on the job due to zero safety regulations was a common occurrence.
      Yep, the good ol’ days for sure. At least everybody was white I suppose and those that weren’t of British decent were treated like animals. /sarcasm

    • @sirsillybilly
      @sirsillybilly 3 роки тому +1

      Sounds like some cities outside Australia that have helped enrich our cuisine.
      “How good is the food “ !

  • @thomaselliott573
    @thomaselliott573 3 роки тому +5

    This great city deserves this valuable memory. Wonderful. Thank you.

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  3 роки тому +1

      Our pleasure!

    • @LHRTW
      @LHRTW Рік тому

      @@NFSAFilmsno mention of Aborigine genocide

  • @AshPragasam
    @AshPragasam 3 роки тому +3

    I'm confident a time traveller from the 1920s could navigate around our city without a map today. So much of what is shown has been preserved. Just great!

  • @fouziakhan3303
    @fouziakhan3303 3 роки тому +9

    My beautiful city.. love to see how Sydney has progressed over time

  • @TheVaughan5
    @TheVaughan5 Рік тому +5

    It’s remarkable that despite some terrible losses in the 60’s to 80’s Sydney, unlike other major Australian cities, has preserved much of its unique heritage and is all the better for that. Virtually every important building featured in this film still exists though most overall street scenes are very different now. Sydney has always been my favourite Australian city and continues to be so.

  • @johnd8892
    @johnd8892 3 роки тому +20

    Commonwealth Bank at 8:04 looks like the inspiration of all those tin money boxes I had as a kid.

    • @bethsheeba1198
      @bethsheeba1198 3 роки тому

      It was and I have still got some.

    • @graemedurie9094
      @graemedurie9094 3 роки тому

      It was the source!

    • @James_Bowie
      @James_Bowie 3 роки тому

      That's because it is.

    • @daveg2104
      @daveg2104 3 роки тому

      That's because it is the inspiration for the money boxes.

  • @ihopetowin
    @ihopetowin 3 роки тому +9

    Beautiful in all its monochrome glory and the absence of an added on musical soundtrack is a blessing.

  • @susancorgi
    @susancorgi 3 роки тому +10

    I lived in Sydney in the 90s. I loved every minute of it. Still miss it.

  • @catalinagomez924
    @catalinagomez924 3 роки тому +11

    Thank you for uploading this video. In 6 years this film will be 100 years old. So much has changed in Sydney/Australia since then. I have only been in Australia for 20 years but footage like this makes me love Australia more even more. Thank you again :-D

  • @nysalor
    @nysalor 3 роки тому +7

    This is pure magic. I've spent the last several years researching daily life in Sydney in winter 1926. To see this is phenomenal.

    • @peregrinemccauley5010
      @peregrinemccauley5010 3 роки тому

      I know . Bloody marvelous . It wasn't that long ago . An eighty year life span is only 960 Months .

  • @danrobinson572
    @danrobinson572 3 роки тому +14

    What a beautiful city and the building structure is amazing. Especially how things were done back than without the technology we have these days.

  • @RuthFogarty
    @RuthFogarty 3 роки тому +4

    Amazing to see how many buildings are still around. I also loved seeing the cabbage tree plams in the Botanic gardens and how how much they've grow in 100 years, I sit under them all the time on my lunch break.

    • @michaellewis5171
      @michaellewis5171 3 роки тому

      I studied geology in first year Uni - many years ago. We learnt about the seams of rocks forming the Sydney Basin. Wianamatta Shale, Hawkesbury Sandstone and Narrabeen rocks and shales - and lower. We went on a couple of field trips, north and south, and it was impressed on us the role of the Cabbage Tree palm as a marker between the Hawkesbury and Narrabeen layers. They pop out above Wollongong and going down to Narrabeen Lake and are luxuriant at Bilgola. Makes the drives more interesting.

  • @alfaman4113
    @alfaman4113 3 роки тому +15

    I teach Australian history at an catholic school in Sydney’s west. And often take the students on day trips around Sydney to show them aspects of early Sydney. And for those who have never seen this, if you are travelling along Liverpool road/ Hume hwy from Enfield to Liverpool, on the side of the road travelling west they still have the concrete markers that indicate how many km until you get to Liverpool,eg 20 km, 15, 10 and so on. They are small white concrete slabs around 1 m high and 50 cm wife. They have been there since the early 1900s.

    • @bert23337
      @bert23337 Рік тому

      Thats amazing, I did not see any metric road signs in NSW until 1974. I will make sure I check next time I am on Hume Highway.

  • @aristotleolympiada4540
    @aristotleolympiada4540 3 роки тому +10

    So much architectural cohesion. Beautiful!

  • @theaussiebackflipboy
    @theaussiebackflipboy 3 роки тому +10

    It's great to have these historical films to let us know what Sydney was like up to 100 years ago but it's sad that a lot of those beautiful buildings are now gone and we're stuck with replacements that are bland glass and steel buildings that have no character.

  • @BrassLock
    @BrassLock 3 роки тому +9

    Thanks for this nicely preserved (or restored) film from 1927. That large open-top tourer that drives into almost all road scenes with the guy sitting in the rear seat would be lovely to have, and drive around Australia. Plenty of room for modern camping gear and the family, complete with dog.

  • @robynstephens166
    @robynstephens166 3 роки тому +11

    Wow
    Sydney before the Bridge.
    .Great. Thanks for saving and sharing this.

  • @maymei6742
    @maymei6742 2 роки тому +30

    Sydney looked much more advance 200 years ago then now... Those convicts back at d old days proved to be better architects, craftsmen and builders with their horses and carts than our morden day builders with their excavators, automatic cement maker, modern electrical tools... We modern people sucks

  • @thomaselliott573
    @thomaselliott573 Рік тому +7

    These records are invaluable. Thank you

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  Рік тому +2

      You're welcome. Thank you for letting us know.

  • @dynamxx
    @dynamxx 3 роки тому +7

    Really interesting. I noticed the small newspaper booth in Martin Place is still in the same place today! Amazing, thanks for the upload.

  • @alanm6454
    @alanm6454 3 роки тому +14

    My word, how different, and beautiful, Circular Quay looks without the bloody awful looking Cahill expressway in the background. Fascinating film though. Thanks.

  • @jenniferharrison8915
    @jenniferharrison8915 Рік тому +8

    I recognise most of these buildings, have worked in a couple in the same condition, and visited others, very little has changed at all! Thanks Governer Macquarie! I don't know what these other commenters are so negative about? Sydney's history remains! 🎉🤗👍

  • @joshuataylor6087
    @joshuataylor6087 3 роки тому +15

    Sydney had an elegance back then which it sure doesn't have today. What a shame, it was so beautiful and now it is so ugly.

  • @ianbell3939
    @ianbell3939 3 роки тому +9

    I never knew that building was the old post office. I can see it from my apartment on Bridge St and am looking at it now as I write this comment! I love the ending with The Con. Such a beautiful and iconic musical establishment.

  • @juelbriggs447
    @juelbriggs447 3 роки тому +8

    Circular Quay without the Cahill Expressway "viaduct" looks so different!

  • @lesklower7281
    @lesklower7281 3 роки тому +9

    I do love the old buildings and they are all still standing to day

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  3 роки тому +6

      Some are. Some not so much.

    • @morpheus2573
      @morpheus2573 Рік тому

      @@NFSAFilmsMost buildings featured in this video ARE still standing. Name the ones that aren't.

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  Рік тому

      Depends what you mean by "featured" perhaps. The T&G Building on Elizabeth St and the two next to it are gone. Circular Quay is significantly altered including the Goldsbrough building where the 1960s ANZ building now sits and most of the buildings on Oxford Street are no longer there. But yes many fine buildings remain.

  • @abu.bugatti
    @abu.bugatti 3 роки тому +12

    I work in Sydney CBD as a courier. I love this city it's my home. My heritage is Indonesian btw.

  • @purryellis
    @purryellis 3 роки тому +6

    Beautiful! Everything still highly recognisable

  • @ladleo2989
    @ladleo2989 3 роки тому +8

    Thanks so much for your hard work that's gone into posting this treasure. Much appreciated.

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  3 роки тому +2

      Our pleasure!

    • @danrobinson572
      @danrobinson572 3 роки тому +2

      @@NFSAFilms that video about the old house. What year was that made?

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  3 роки тому +1

      @@danrobinson572 1946.

  • @danrobinson572
    @danrobinson572 3 роки тому +10

    Awesome video

  • @joeanthony4459
    @joeanthony4459 3 роки тому +13

    How did they build those buildings back then? How did they place the large dome on the Queen Victoria building, presumably when they had no cranes?

    • @mrdino5101
      @mrdino5101 2 роки тому

      You are asking too many questions young man! We may have to put you into one of those mansion-like insane asylums.

  • @Celiaperez-j3v
    @Celiaperez-j3v 5 місяців тому +2

    Sydney was x it's a beautiful City...I LOVE it...have a lots of good times in 30 years when I used to live there.❤❤❤❤

  • @TheGreatSynagogueSydney
    @TheGreatSynagogueSydney 3 роки тому +7

    Lovely seeing our building with the trams going past at 5:17. Thank you!

  • @charliefine4274
    @charliefine4274 3 роки тому +26

    Back when cities were beautiful, built from local materials, not alien concrete, glass or steel. We should demand a more human-scale, local architecture.

  • @eduardoosaki9169
    @eduardoosaki9169 3 роки тому +5

    Sydney is a gorgeous city, I never get sick of it. Working in Kurnell I imagine captain Cook landing there and planning the next step 🤩

  • @mikhailfeshin1029
    @mikhailfeshin1029 3 роки тому +23

    On 4:02 I can see huge, probably light-up, signage on the Town Hall building that reads "CHALIAPIN". I guess it might be related to Fedor Chaliapin's (a famous Russian bass singer) recitals in Sydney in August 1926

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  3 роки тому +3

      Yes - those performances were at the Town Hall.

  • @charliepearce8767
    @charliepearce8767 3 роки тому +7

    Aah yes !
    The good old days...
    I remember them well .

  • @chrismaloney5213
    @chrismaloney5213 2 роки тому +35

    How did they build all of this?

    • @Lilnuker1337
      @Lilnuker1337 2 роки тому +14

      I think you're asking it in a way of "how did they manage to build so many significant buildings and trams within a period of time from when Australia was founded?" Easy really.
      All of the sandstone/trachyte buildings we're seeing in the video were made from materials that were sourced locally from Sydney, and there were quite a lot of stonemasons walking around the place + a lot of manual labor jobs as well. There wasn't that much to do other than work and sleep, so you probably would've guessed people didn't really beat around the bush, because they couldn't afford to do so.
      Combine that with the knowledge that came from England, and you'll have yourself a nice city in no time.

    • @dopaminedreams1122
      @dopaminedreams1122 2 роки тому +1

      Irish slave labour

    • @kyrieeleison1905
      @kyrieeleison1905 2 роки тому +16

      no idea... there are no pictures of it being built..

  • @itskindofemily
    @itskindofemily 3 роки тому +7

    Wild to me that so much of the old architecture remains!

    • @jamesfrench7299
      @jamesfrench7299 Рік тому

      So much was lost. Only a fraction exists, Sydney is a money grubber town.

  • @Elitist20
    @Elitist20 2 роки тому +6

    3:53 - Sydney Town Hall - The great Russian opera singer Feodor Chaliapin toured Australia in 1926 and gave a recital here - Sydney was on the world artistic map!

    • @AlphaGeekgirl
      @AlphaGeekgirl Рік тому

      When did they pull down the front of Sydney Townhall and build the steps as they are today?

    • @Elitist20
      @Elitist20 Рік тому +2

      @@AlphaGeekgirl 1934 - Town Hall Station underground had opened two years earlier (connecting to Sydney Harbour Bridge) and there's now an entrance to the station under the stairs.

  • @lesgriffiths8523
    @lesgriffiths8523 3 роки тому +5

    We should give thanks to the astonishing architects , stone masons, artisans and builders whose wonderful legacy has been largely preserved, for us to enjoy. I will certainly will when I move to Glebe from living most of my life in FNQ. Good to read also, that some teachers are exposing students to their architectural heritage.
    Les Griffiths

  • @GiuseppeBasile
    @GiuseppeBasile 3 роки тому +6

    Brilliant thanks for sharing from a Sydneysider

  • @TillyOrifice
    @TillyOrifice 3 роки тому +6

    "Pioneers' Camp" is very good. Very tactful.

  • @sayshelljoy
    @sayshelljoy 3 роки тому +3

    Here I was trying to turn up my volume haha. How good would've it been to hear the hustle and bustle! Crazy to think this was almost 100 years ago. I wonder when they removed the old light rail system. It's back now.. should've just kept it!

  • @birdiedog5
    @birdiedog5 2 роки тому +10

    Breathtaking even in black and white. I hope saint Mary's cathedral and the governors house are still standing. Gorgeous. We need to go back to building like this instead of brick boxes and glass towers. I feel we've messed things up along the way.

    • @fishnchips8132
      @fishnchips8132 2 роки тому +3

      they do look magnificent, but Sydney's stone buildings are cold, dark & damp in winter & they're not really suitable for the climate.

    • @fishnchips8132
      @fishnchips8132 2 роки тому +1

      Gothic & satanic I've heard

    • @safstar0184
      @safstar0184 2 роки тому +4

      You will never build these buildings again like they r.

    • @thomaselliott573
      @thomaselliott573 Рік тому +2

      thank goodness they are still there and entirely suited to their place architecturally and geographically

  • @erroleabrown4317
    @erroleabrown4317 3 роки тому +3

    Charming sites and incredible people

  • @billyhong5071
    @billyhong5071 3 роки тому +28

    This is fantastic. What a brilliant snapshot in a great city’s history. Where did it all go wrong?!

    • @jonnies
      @jonnies 3 роки тому

      It didn’t. Stop catastrophising everything.

    • @thomaskember3412
      @thomaskember3412 3 роки тому +2

      Too many skyscrapers have turned Sydney into a mini New York.

    • @eginb
      @eginb 3 роки тому

      It became too expensive to live in, still beautiful though.

    • @LittleJohnaton
      @LittleJohnaton 3 роки тому +1

      Sad isn't it :(

  • @bevanml
    @bevanml 3 роки тому +7

    I would love to have seen the Garden Palace survive into the 20th Century at the least. That was probably the best of the lot with Sydney. Even grander than Melbourne's Royal Exhibition Building

  • @vladsnape6408
    @vladsnape6408 3 роки тому +5

    5:35 Oxford street was certainly more busy in those days than it is now

  • @quentinhuxley5010
    @quentinhuxley5010 2 роки тому +10

    Sydney is still the most beautiful city in the world.

  • @andgate2000
    @andgate2000 3 роки тому +8

    Got a whole 16mm real in colour of the 56 olympics if the archives wants it. Sitting in a cupboard at home…taken by my grandfather. He was a cameraman in the airforce in ww2 Compared to today’s olyimpics it looks like a high school sports day..lol.

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  3 роки тому +3

      We'd love to know more about that 16mm film! Please contact Richard.carter@nfsa.gov.au. Thanks.

  • @id70b40
    @id70b40 3 роки тому +7

    Fantastic

  • @marenb.1414
    @marenb.1414 3 місяці тому +2

    Sydney used to be such a beautiful city. So many beautiful historic buildings have been destroyed or burned down and have been replaced with ugly and soulless sky scrapers. Luckily a few of the beautiful buildings remain. The Garden Palace in Sydney used to be an incredible building which mysteriously burned down with all important papers and records about Australia's history. It would be amazing if this palace still would be around.

  • @johnd8892
    @johnd8892 3 роки тому +5

    Good to see these rarely seen films.
    No sign of the Harbour Bridge or construction under way so this may have been filmed prior to the 28 July 1923 bridge construction start. Unless that was not considered scenic enough.

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  3 роки тому +4

      The film is dated 1927 and some of the footage in there confirms this date - some footage may have been shot earlier. It would be interesting to know how much of the bridge was constructed at that 1927 stage. Also interesting, as you say, that no mention of it is made though.

  • @mathewtoll6780
    @mathewtoll6780 3 роки тому +1

    Love this so much. Makes me miss Sydney

  • @ShawarmaFarmer
    @ShawarmaFarmer 3 роки тому +7

    Wonderful insight into Sydneys past. As an urban/Australian history enthusiast it's so interesting to see what buildings from this era still remain. The work NFSA and sites like Mirror Sydney and Past Lives of a Near Future do is amazing!
    I was wondering if you fellows had any footage providing a look at the firearms culture of Australia prior to 1996? It's one of a few topics I can't find a lot of information on.

    • @MisanthropyAnD123
      @MisanthropyAnD123 3 роки тому

      'It's one of a few topics I can't find a lot of information on'. Yes, it was intended this way.

  • @romanjenkins9340
    @romanjenkins9340 3 роки тому +2

    I'm very proud that I'm able to say that I've lived in Sydney (Elizabeth Bay) probably would try to move there again the future.

  • @ryurazu
    @ryurazu 3 роки тому +3

    there seem to be a lot more people in the city moving about, just hoping on to trams and walking about.

  • @AB-kx4nc
    @AB-kx4nc 3 роки тому +2

    Thoroughly enjoyed this

  • @nicolestewart
    @nicolestewart Рік тому +3

    This is incredible

  • @barefootmellow
    @barefootmellow 3 роки тому +3

    Wow! Love the footages

  • @donwhite7319
    @donwhite7319 3 роки тому +4

    many thanks

  • @bebox7
    @bebox7 3 роки тому +15

    Really enjoyable to see Sydney before it became overdeveloped. Let’s hope the Quay can be returned to its former glory. By the way it might be worth putting 1927 somewhere in the title rather than just City of Sydney.

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  3 роки тому +4

      Thank you. We publish the title as it exists on the film. The date is in the description along with other credit information.

  • @HistorySkills
    @HistorySkills 3 роки тому +3

    Another great piece of historical footage. These make great resources for my history teaching. Thank you.

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  3 роки тому +1

      Our pleasure! Glad they are useful to you and thanks for letting us know.

  • @ashspeaking7910
    @ashspeaking7910 3 роки тому +5

    It's amazing that 100 years later everything is almost the same...like time has frozen...except for the dusty roads :)

    • @davechristian7543
      @davechristian7543 3 роки тому +13

      IDK about that my-friend. i think its very different indeed.

    • @kayseek1248
      @kayseek1248 3 роки тому

      Go out to the suburbs and it’s an entirely different story.

  • @Jackson-rf6rv
    @Jackson-rf6rv 3 роки тому +41

    Sydney used to be beautiful. Now it's full of bland glass box skyscrapers, casting huge shadows in their wake. Successive governments and councils have failed this city

    • @EndTikTokandTwitter
      @EndTikTokandTwitter Рік тому +2

      Imo the skyscrapers there today are pretty low-key considering Sydney’s size. Some of them are bland and unnecessary but we’re lucky they haven’t torn entire parts of the city down and replaced it with dense apartment towers like what happened to many similarly sized US cities

    • @AlphaGeekgirl
      @AlphaGeekgirl Рік тому +2

      In every single shot in this video, the streets look pretty much the same (I know because I have lived and worked in the CBD since the 70s) and the majority of the buildings are still standing today almost 100 years later. The only eyesore that’s not in this video is the Cahill Expressway above circular Quay?

    • @HarryMollyNut
      @HarryMollyNut Рік тому

      No the people have failed. Where was the protesters?

    • @ttiroam7743
      @ttiroam7743 Рік тому +1

      I work in the city everyday, the harbour, the buildings,the people ARE BEAUTIFUL.

    • @bert23337
      @bert23337 Рік тому

      There used to be so many shops too, there is now only a small fraction of what there used to be before the move to the suburbs and the demolition of so much of the city. At least The Rocks was saved, thanks Jack Munday.

  • @OzScalemodeling
    @OzScalemodeling 3 роки тому +6

    Lucky there were no mobile phones back then! Imagine the accidents with pedestrians. :)

  • @nancygaston4095
    @nancygaston4095 3 роки тому +3

    Love it. thank you

  • @sophdog1678
    @sophdog1678 3 роки тому +1

    I love that the street urchins at 10:29 are wearing authentic urchin caps. On a serious note: I remember the Goldsborough Mort building at the Quay from the 1960's - I suppose it's long gone?

  • @deep-possum
    @deep-possum 3 роки тому +7

    Does the archive have any footage of the Trocadero dance hall? That was such an important part of the city in the 40 and 50s....

  • @pennypiper7382
    @pennypiper7382 3 роки тому +5

    Ahhh Sydney! You’ve come a long way, baby!

  • @dgil3704
    @dgil3704 3 роки тому +10

    I'm supposed to believe society has progressed..

  • @Skybar23
    @Skybar23 3 роки тому +2

    I wish they can do before and after shots of these locations. I know other major cities have done the same

  • @davidparsons3432
    @davidparsons3432 3 роки тому +2

    Some extraordinary buildings in their day.......The local Sydney sandstone unfortunately had some durability issues over the years

  • @Simon.the.Likeable
    @Simon.the.Likeable 3 роки тому +1

    01:35 Captain Cook: "I've dropped my tray."
    Captain Phillip: "It's on the floor over there."

  • @billmago7991
    @billmago7991 3 роки тому +2

    The Art Gallery is a great place to visit as is the Botanical gardens....have the flying foxes migrated elsewhere yet?

  • @ALAQSAHUB
    @ALAQSAHUB 3 роки тому +8

    Those days were much better than today

    • @pagnol5509
      @pagnol5509 3 роки тому +3

      Yes WWI &WW2 shortly after, and the Great Depression were a breeze.

    • @godfreypigott
      @godfreypigott 3 роки тому

      Yeah right - wouldn't you have just loved to have been continually breathing in all that industrial smoke. It would have been a hellhole.

  • @jackpubbo
    @jackpubbo Рік тому +2

    It’s nice they kept a lot of the old buildings like the QVB the old architecture is nice. I wonder if removing the trams was a good or bad decision tho? I think trams worked out good for Melbourne?

  • @10us73
    @10us73 3 роки тому +3

    I love Sydney

  • @hughupton875
    @hughupton875 3 роки тому +12

    Such a shame they got rid of the trams

    • @susancorgi
      @susancorgi 3 роки тому +2

      I know. What a bad decision.

    • @DavidDel88
      @DavidDel88 3 роки тому +2

      They’re back

    • @alixgeo
      @alixgeo 3 роки тому +2

      We have got them back now through the city! :)

    • @jamesfrench7299
      @jamesfrench7299 Рік тому +1

      That hideously costly split line can't be compared to the comprehensive system that used to go everywhere within thy inner ring.

  • @SirGregory
    @SirGregory 3 роки тому +4

    Thanks NFSA.

  • @kindred3259
    @kindred3259 3 роки тому +4

    Imagine our city if all the tram lines weren't ripped out!!! Funny how we are putting it back in with light rail..

  • @TheVaughan5
    @TheVaughan5 Рік тому +2

    Does anyone know the building @ 3:35 I can’t place it.

  • @NoNameneeded1984
    @NoNameneeded1984 3 роки тому +8

    How good was public transport? Straight off the quick turn around ferries to continuous trams! Back in the day when Governments supported the working class.

  • @michaellewis5171
    @michaellewis5171 3 роки тому +3

    Contains unseen footage of Sydney trams, including M 738, at Town Hall from 4:02. This was built as a touring car but here is in ordinary service to Millers Point. It was a fully open car of 6, and 2 half, entrances. There were only 2 built. Not only are there few pictures of an M but those previously known, are posed. This is a revelation which I have notified to the Sydney Tramway Facebook Group. There is one other truly special and extremely rare clip and that is of the 1812 Government Stores at west Circular Quay. The camera pans along the George St facade. There are other scenes which have special meaning - that is they tell a story if you know a few, specialised facts. I'll leave a sort of cliff hanger. The scene from Hyde Park and Oxford and Liverpool Sts, corner at 5:35. It's to do with the new variety of transport options.

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  3 роки тому +1

      Wow thanks for sharing that information. We love it when knowledgable people are able to provide this kind of detail. Thank you. As for the cliffhanger..... Is it the buses?

    • @michaellewis5171
      @michaellewis5171 3 роки тому +2

      @@NFSAFilms Yes. They remind me of insects flitting about. The Government noticed that the unregulated - and very convenient - when business was brisk - but not prevalent late at night, buses were denting their income from the trams. The Lang Government in 1930, legislated the independent buses out of business, bought the largest company and created the Government buses we know today. So the neat little white White buses became Government owned - and quickly inadequate - leading to many decades of double decker buses.

    • @NFSAFilms
      @NFSAFilms  3 роки тому +1

      Fascinating history - thank you. It looked like a busy, and somewhat chaotic, intersection at the time.

    • @kindred3259
      @kindred3259 3 роки тому

      That's amazing. Is there a museum in Sydney where we can learn and admire this type of history =D

    • @michaellewis5171
      @michaellewis5171 3 роки тому

      @@kindred3259 The Sydney Tramway Museum has a very comprehensive collection of both running and stationary Sydney (and other) trams and photo displays. It is right next to Loftus Station and reopens this Wednesday 3rd November - then every Sunday and Wednesday.

  • @philhahn
    @philhahn 3 роки тому +3

    Are there any plans to colourize and restore this old footage? I think it'd be fantastic to see ^_^

    • @Hudpix16
      @Hudpix16 3 роки тому

      You can’t colorize this! That’d be like destroying it. The purpose of this is to restore it. Colorizing black and white doesn’t work, it looks too fake imo.

  • @davidsolah7440
    @davidsolah7440 10 місяців тому +2

    A pity some of the great buildings were torn down. Years ago we didn't appreciate the significance or some of those old buildings. Thanks to Jack Mundey most of the Rocks was saved. Pretty sure they can are going to remove the Cahill Expressway

  • @RiverDanube
    @RiverDanube 3 роки тому +5

    Those were the days when real men could pla and build sturdy and appealing buildings that could stand the test of time. Since then, idiots have torn many of them down, citing progress.

  • @pagnol5509
    @pagnol5509 3 роки тому +7

    The trams went and then came back.

    • @melissabarrett9750
      @melissabarrett9750 3 роки тому +4

      and the new ones are garbage.

    • @davechristian7543
      @davechristian7543 3 роки тому +4

      @@melissabarrett9750 agree

    • @ic9135
      @ic9135 3 роки тому +1

      @@melissabarrett9750 cmon now the new ones aren't that bad

    • @dopaminedreams1122
      @dopaminedreams1122 2 роки тому

      @@ic9135 they are literally slower than buses

  • @elainemurray3355
    @elainemurray3355 5 місяців тому +2

    Sydney was impressive, architecture amazing - something happened!!!!!
    Funny we retain buildings now as historical (not to be touched) but for some apparent reason these intricate monoliths were destroyed. Its like a child building with lego now.....

  • @noelleggett5368
    @noelleggett5368 3 роки тому +15

    Hmmm … in 1788, Captain Arthur Phillip set up a “pioneers’ camp”, did he? A century ago, we were so ashamed of Australia’s convict beginnings that we couldn’t even bring ourselves to mention it.