And the uniforms were much better, now if you see a policeman you don't know if he's a policemen, digging up the road or bringing you a parcel. With hiviz vests they look identical to workmen or couriers now.
Me To, I can remember these on the roads when I was little, and when policemen were friendly and let you sit in them, blues and bells going, and showed you the horses at Hackney Police station, while my mum went shopping!!!, nice times, I love all classic cars and am restoring a 1974 (46 year old) Ford Cortina Mk.3 on my channel to brand new condition, if your interested in looking?. and have another 2 of them to do too.
Good old Austin Cambridge at 3:44 - that was our family car when I was a young boy, although ours was maroon with a black stripe. Mainly I remember how the sun-heated seats used to burn our bare legs in the summer, and recalling the metallic smell of the interior still has the power to make me feel car-sick! I hadn't realised they'd been used by the police. I certainly never expected to see one in a car chase.
Did you get a load of that grinning mother. She seemed pretty chill for, as the narrator said, " A frightened woman, to whom, ticking time is giving more fear."
You don't know what she felt. Fear is poweful especially when your son goes missing as one of mine did aged 3 . You can scoff but its no joke I assure you
Ah those were the days when Mace was just a convenience store.And you could be beaten senseless in custody without all that CCTV or tape recordings getting in the way
Exemplary script writing! The simple but ingenious choice of words and structure of sentences gracefully convey the intentions of the narrator. A style of english not found today in media, and all but lost to oblivion.
The days when they were friendly policemen/women. Not like today’s revenue collectors with attitude that cant be arsed to turn up even when a crime has been committed.
@@rexjolles diversity is an unsegregated nation, diversity isn't inherently bad, because we have diversity among European people, but when you throw sub Saharan Africans in the mix for example, you end up with both groups at risk of being bred out.
Crikey, it was lucky the cameraman was there on that bit of canal when the gun was found. Seriously though, the diver's a braver man than me, there's no way I'd go into that water.
He’s wearing a drysuit with full face mask, on a rope and has a back up diver on the surface, they do the same thing now but have the advantage of a coms unit so the surface guys can talk to the diver.
Yes, the Thames had a particular smell back then, there were rumours if attacked it was safer to get a kicking than jump in the river to escape as it was so polluted
@@s.sestric9929 True, but now days police protection goes beyond that. Try saying you disagree with the trans or gay lifestyle in public and the police will be on you. Vocal decent is being policed.
@@mjribes Oh get the hell out of here. You get to say that you disapprove of their lifestyle, and they get to tell you that they disapprove of your opinion. And no one is going to prison. You right-wingers are the most terrified, cowardly little males in the world.
@@s.sestric9929 I have a friend who was arrested in Scotland for preaching 1 Corinthians 6:9 on a street corner. Apparently he wasn't the first. But don't let facts get in the way of your opinions.
@@mjribes Ha. Was it the preaching, or was it the harassing or other disorderly conduct? Context is everything. I thought Christian extremism was more of a USA thing. Was he in the country illegally? Oh, and I've found that the biggest, most religious of homophobes are usually closet cases. "Friends of Dorothy" as they say.
@@carolineneale3017 Many thanks Caroline you are right. I found out after it was a ford 500 van my pop had in the 1950 s and i only found one on UA-cam.
It's not a Prefect, it's a Ford 7y from 1938 or 1939. The reason you think it looks like a Prefect is the body shape became the post war e04a Anglia, which in turn became the e494a Anglia and finally the famous Ford Popular. They are all the same basic design stemming from the Ford 8 bodyshape but with boot/rear end changes, grille changes and trim changes along with an upgrade in power for the Popular. The Prefect ran somewhat concurrently but was a different but similar design with 4 doors. Eventually the two names became almost interchangeable for the general public as the later 100e was the same bodyshape but with 2 (Popular)or 4 doors (Prefect). Boring to some people, but I've got and e494a so I'm biased :)
It's a ford popular the perfect( 100e) was a lot smaller and rounder and the Anglia( 105e) has find on the back and a small angled rear window( the Harry potter flying car)
Little Timmy grew up to become "Mister knuckles", a notorious East-End villain who never forgave the police for finding him when he tried to runaway as a boy.
🤸 fabulously like, especially the Austin Cambridge and the awesome Humber Hawk estate,🚓🤸☯️🌿🌈🏁🇬🇧and the missing boy got found and was safely returned to his mummy🤸🌿🌈
Why does a little country of 100,000sqmls need 43 different police regions plus all the chief constables etc etc billions to be saved by total reorganization I'll do it !!
Those thugs at the beginning got away with 8 thousand pounds. The guy in the back of the car had just picked up the money from the bank, as he does every Friday.
How much had policing changed, they didn’t mention forensics once, though in the UK it’s a civilian role. If it still takes two to three years to become a PC, why do they seem to look younger and younger? We had a Austin Cambridge estate, when my grandparents were with us my sister and I were relegated to the boot. I think I’ve answered my own question here.
@Js S Ha ha , wish that was true , but anyway, back in the day if you got pulled over for something a 20 or 50 in with the license usually did the trick ,,at least you knew where you stood ,
@@peter-coates Series four Humber Super Snipe.They also used Ford Zephyr Mark 2 Farnham estates,same with the Mark 3 Ford Zephyr 6 and Zodiac,Austin Westminsters and Wolseley 6/110s.
They knew how to polish their cars.
But they dont know how to save the Polish in 1939
P.S its a joke.
The Polish are the only ones able to polish cars in GB these days!
@@pedclarkemobile it's the Romanians more apparently. That's the new cheap labour
And the uniforms were much better, now if you see a policeman you don't know if he's a policemen, digging up the road or bringing you a parcel. With hiviz vests they look identical to workmen or couriers now.
It isn't polish. It's 2 thick ass layer of paint.
1:03 I think I would be ringing in sick if she was my wife!
She is very beautiful.
Yo, dont talk about my grandmother like that
I dated her
@@david6532 No you didn’t cos if you had she would be dead 😂 Isn’t that right Mr Bundy
@@khiggins7231 she was crap in the sack so I ditched her.
and thats why i never stop to help people from 1963
@Niko Peludo yup.
Yup
wow they were drifting in 60s
On cross-ply tires in the wet you didn't have any choice :-D
So drifing its not japanese thing, its british police
Can you hear that ?
"......deja vu i have been in this place before..."
Yeah like and totally wow and that
Or RUNNING IN THE 90’s
I’m sorry
Imagine living in a country where you can actually respect the police force. Imagine....
My country is just that.
I'm a fan of old British car design. Even the utilitarian vans look regal.
Very well said 😄
Back then: Patroling the river Thames for smugglers.
Today: Patroling Twitter for wrong thinkers.
Comrades, that is NOT Party Approved Correct Thinking and Speech.
@@waterheaterservices kek
Damn is that what my brains for, hope that's pc. Lol
I'm glad UA-cam recommend this channel/video it was quite interesting
I personally love the cars
Me To, I can remember these on the roads when I was little, and when policemen were friendly and let you sit in them, blues and bells going, and showed you the horses at Hackney Police station, while my mum went shopping!!!, nice times, I love all classic cars and am restoring a 1974 (46 year old) Ford Cortina Mk.3 on my channel to brand new condition, if your interested in looking?. and have another 2 of them to do too.
Those old cars getting beat up on the obstacle course would be worth a fortune restored today.
Good old Austin Cambridge at 3:44 - that was our family car when I was a young boy, although ours was maroon with a black stripe. Mainly I remember how the sun-heated seats used to burn our bare legs in the summer, and recalling the metallic smell of the interior still has the power to make me feel car-sick!
I hadn't realised they'd been used by the police. I certainly never expected to see one in a car chase.
The Mini estate that brought the dog was cool.
@@robert3302 Yes - Wolseley 6/90's - lovely straight 6 motors
The year I was born..life in London seemed so calm compared to today.
Did you get a load of that grinning mother. She seemed pretty chill for, as the narrator said, " A frightened woman, to whom, ticking time is giving more fear."
She's actually grateful her son went missing.
More likely very happy to get paid portraying a fearful mother.
You don't know what she felt. Fear is poweful especially when your son goes missing as one of mine did aged 3 . You can scoff but its no joke I assure you
@@Isochest You do realise that this was a made up scene, right ?
That's how panicking looked in the 1960's.
Does that wife come come with the job? 😃
Watching pathe is like watching someone play civilisation on easy mode.
Police today: Oii you got a licence to be outside.
Sigh a graceful piece of yesteryear
A policeman's lot has certaintly changed.
Rip dog we will always remember you as a hero 😔
These videos are great
Love them , they're gorgeous !!
That was the most polite robbery ever, even the crims were gentle,my heart went out to that poor car.😂
I love those old Rover P5's that the British police used in the 60's. Very classy cars.
Are they the 'bandit' sequence at 4.47? They do roll nicely...
Ah those were the days when Mace was just a convenience store.And you could be beaten senseless in custody without all that CCTV or tape recordings getting in the way
Not fair is it.
🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂.
Thanks to 🚔 police officers out there for keeping us safe
the world over
Exemplary script writing! The simple but ingenious choice of words and structure of sentences gracefully convey the intentions of the narrator. A style of english not found today in media, and all but lost to oblivion.
Exactly! Not like today's short films and documentaries treating adults like children and drawing everything out.
The days when they were friendly policemen/women. Not like today’s revenue collectors with attitude that cant be arsed to turn up even when a crime has been committed.
I could watch those cars sliding all day.
Wow most of the police officers are probably now in their late seventies and eighties.
Or 6ft in the ground.
@Mike Nolan that’s life.
1963 i was 3 years old...
I'm now bloody 60 and wondered where the times gone...
Good fun living...but hate being old...a dirty old man !!
@@charliepearce8767 everyone has to get old one day that’s life what can you do no one wants to get old.
When British police officers peaked
It's just before Western Civilization fell to diversity.
@@MuddyBubby are you trying to say that diversity is bad? Because if that's what you're saying, that's an issue
@@rexjolles diversity is disgusting, and if you have a problem it's an issue.
@@MuddyBubby ok maybe there's some sort of language barrier here, I'll give you the benefit of the doubt. Define diversity in your words
@@rexjolles diversity is an unsegregated nation, diversity isn't inherently bad, because we have diversity among European people, but when you throw sub Saharan Africans in the mix for example, you end up with both groups at risk of being bred out.
Mum looked pretty chilled considering her little boy was missing in the woods in essex!
It's the old British stiff upper lip and all that.
Mit Happy End :-)....echt Klasse ,diese Filme.
When they didnt have ego and served the community and were trained well what the hell happened?
System
That was never a thing. My grandma was lured by a cop in the 40s.
Crikey, it was lucky the cameraman was there on that bit of canal when the gun was found. Seriously though, the diver's a braver man than me, there's no way I'd go into that water.
He’s wearing a drysuit with full face mask, on a rope and has a back up diver on the surface, they do the same thing now but have the advantage of a coms unit so the surface guys can talk to the diver.
@@johnchurch4705 I'd be more concerned about the pollutants in the water.
@@aidy6000 and that’s why you use a full face mask, drysuit with a sealed glove kit so no water gets in.
Yes, the Thames had a particular smell back then, there were rumours if attacked it was safer to get a kicking than jump in the river to escape as it was so polluted
We need caring and curious people to be our Police
Those thugs , they took the briefcase that had the recipe for perfectly baked scones .
6:34 The mother looks very concerned.
It's a bit painful to see those vintage police cars so dinged! Hello from St. Petersburg, Florida. Luv u Brits!
Better times - when the police were less concerned with rainbow affairs and more concerned with police work.
Everyone is deserving of police protection even the people you don't like.
@@s.sestric9929 True, but now days police protection goes beyond that. Try saying you disagree with the trans or gay lifestyle in public and the police will be on you. Vocal decent is being policed.
@@mjribes Oh get the hell out of here. You get to say that you disapprove of their lifestyle, and they get to tell you that they disapprove of your opinion. And no one is going to prison. You right-wingers are the most terrified, cowardly little males in the world.
@@s.sestric9929 I have a friend who was arrested in Scotland for preaching 1 Corinthians 6:9 on a street corner. Apparently he wasn't the first. But don't let facts get in the way of your opinions.
@@mjribes Ha. Was it the preaching, or was it the harassing or other disorderly conduct? Context is everything.
I thought Christian extremism was more of a USA thing. Was he in the country illegally?
Oh, and I've found that the biggest, most religious of homophobes are usually closet cases. "Friends of Dorothy" as they say.
A frightened mother seen grinning from ear to ear.
I wanna know what poor fellow lost his car and found it rolled on its side on a country lane.
This was when the police were well trained and knew how to deal with the public in a respectful manner. Happy days.
If my mother was as scary looking as her I'd go missing too 😂
Who's scary? Whichever one, that's offensive.
Police interceptors 1963 😁
Lol
Intercept only cats and mouse on the road
love it, no clue about gun safety
Where can a little Boy have Wandered.....some things never change!!!...
Can anyone tell me whats the name of the car they overturned at the beginning. .? think my dad had one .
2-door Ford Prefect.
@@carolineneale3017
Many thanks Caroline you are right. I found out after it was a ford 500 van my pop had in the 1950 s and i only found one on UA-cam.
It's not a Prefect, it's a Ford 7y from 1938 or 1939. The reason you think it looks like a Prefect is the body shape became the post war e04a Anglia, which in turn became the e494a Anglia and finally the famous Ford Popular. They are all the same basic design stemming from the Ford 8 bodyshape but with boot/rear end changes, grille changes and trim changes along with an upgrade in power for the Popular. The Prefect ran somewhat concurrently but was a different but similar design with 4 doors. Eventually the two names became almost interchangeable for the general public as the later 100e was the same bodyshape but with 2 (Popular)or 4 doors (Prefect).
Boring to some people, but I've got and e494a so I'm biased :)
It's a ford popular the perfect( 100e) was a lot smaller and rounder and the Anglia( 105e) has find on the back and a small angled rear window( the Harry potter flying car)
@@shanedebarra4986 thanks for this... don't you just love these classics... simple but beautiful..
I am happy they found little Timmy 👦🏻
Little Timmy grew up to become "Mister knuckles", a notorious East-End villain who never forgave the police for finding him when he tried to runaway as a boy.
@@Altavista006 😂
"protect the public" shame they dont still do that job
Great stuff.
That wife.... hnngggggg
Ay man chill they are probably dead or 100 now
Lol
Drifting before its cool
He pointed that gun right at the guy he was handing it to. I know it’s wet, but still.
Back when they weren't painting their nails rainbow colours and taking the knee.
Truly the worst events going on in the world today, people putting the wrong colour pigment on their nails. Boo hoo.
Fr
You need to research the 60s. That's when all the stuff you hate started. Maybe you should find a time machine.
@@dicktipton5912 I do have one, my memory.....
Absolutley!
🤸 fabulously like, especially the Austin Cambridge and the awesome Humber Hawk estate,🚓🤸☯️🌿🌈🏁🇬🇧and the missing boy got found and was safely returned to his mummy🤸🌿🌈
This is epic.
The crash helmets the police motorcycle riders are using are most peculiar!
I think it's called a custodian helmet. Its design is what I call pretty iconic.
0:43 all that movement for so little turning
Back when Britain was a meritocracy… The difference is unbelievable
Before the days of NEAL recorders “it’s a fair cop governor you got me”
Still much better actor than troom troom..
Congested streets
Hahahaha they dont know the meaning
Why does a little country of 100,000sqmls need 43 different police regions plus all the chief constables etc etc billions to be saved by total reorganization I'll do it !!
4:48 “the police issue wheel shuffle”
Cool video
7:40 Could be searching for an escaped convict or a lunatic at large! Sounds like a Harry Enfield sketch!😂😂.
Ah, the days when even boats had fancy large steering wheels and for going in a straight line you had to do like at #4:45 ❤.
Those thugs at the beginning got away with 8 thousand pounds. The guy in the back of the car had just picked up the money from the bank, as he does every Friday.
Wish time travelling was real so as to go to golden times 🤗
Congested Roads lol . I'll beem you from 1963 into 2021 and compair notes just to see if there's any difference 😉
Man, in these times in most African countries you won't find police investigating an accident. They leave at that; An Accident.
_"...On today's congested roads"_ some things don't change.
When life was so much easier. Too many people now.Breathing in other peoples germs
and now uk cops are joke
very good
The police woman wearing seamed stockings. She can arrest me any time.
Now they arrest people for speaking heresy online
How they used to get exact same voice for every tv show back then
4:22 mind you ladies and gents, this is no Tokyo Drift.
when they dressed like real policemen, now they dress like construction workers or street sweepers.
How many cameras to record inside and out side.with clarity and no fluctuate
I cant believe that those cars didnt understeer out of the corner, their suspension isnt too good by the looks of it
Anyone know what the make of those cars are on the slick course? They look like such cool beaters.
So true that is!
great acting bravo
Bloody Balfour Declaration! What a sham!
Lovely film in today's world the thieves would sell the car they overturned for £4000 and leave the briefcase
Police searching , they all walking together 😂
Wow that's, a Austin Cambridge.
If only we could have seen into the future!
The Law is the Law.
Specialists who don't use gloves while touching the evidence, Duh.
Found out where spongebob gets some of its music 😌
How much had policing changed, they didn’t mention forensics once, though in the UK it’s a civilian role. If it still takes two to three years to become a PC, why do they seem to look younger and younger?
We had a Austin Cambridge estate, when my grandparents were with us my sister and I were relegated to the boot. I think I’ve answered my own question here.
Nowadays the number plates are worth more than the cars!!
What..what did they just do to that Anglia??!!!
What film was that 1st sequence from?? 🤔
A police man lot is never done... And one else start to hear the G&S song?
*bruh the spongebob song at the start*
Before unprecedented corruption,,,lol,,
@Js S
Ha ha , wish that was true , but anyway, back in the day if you got pulled over for something a 20 or 50 in with the license usually did the trick ,,at least you knew where you stood ,
"Protecting the public"...oh....thats what its called...
5:12 - 5:26 Can anyone tell me the make and model of this "fast estate car"?
Humber Super Snipe I think
Yea
@@peter-coates Series four Humber Super Snipe.They also used Ford Zephyr Mark 2 Farnham estates,same with the Mark 3 Ford Zephyr 6 and Zodiac,Austin Westminsters and Wolseley 6/110s.
Ullo' john-gotta new mot' or?