Times long since gone but fondly remembered by those of us who grew up in the 60s and 70s. A simpler, slower paced life, still with plenty of social and economic challenges but faced with a more positive attitude and a more communal, friendlier spirit
@@tetraquark2402 car strikes , miners strikes…Thatcher,high unemployment ,soaring inflation …and worse than all that put together..flared trousers and blood platform shoes…🤣
@@phildavies100 This was made the 60s Britain was booming jobs were plentiful and flares were years away, you are thinking late 70s and 80s when Thatcher came in.
Had a tear in my eye watching this....when we had an identity as a nation. A long time gone now...but..."Never Forgotten" When i watch this nostalgia, i always think of the great poet laureate....Sir John Betjeman. "A True Great Englishman!"
I want to go back to the sixties ! What charm , I don't like my country now. That was proper diversity when each region had a separate character, there was work aplenty, life seemed kinder, gentler, less materialistic, more sense of community and belonging. A great watch, I loved it ❤
Our Family were lucky enough, to grow up in Dawlish, Devon, UK, back in the 60's and early 70's. We had the best of both worlds living in a Seaside Town that had rolling fields and hills as its backdrop. It was a great place to grow up as a child. 😊👍🇬🇧
They are indeed Steve, the BFI have an extensive library, I don't know if these films are included though. They ought to be re-mastered and screened just like the fantastic Look at Life series. x
@@feline1104until a few years ago much of the Esso Film Unit archive was viewable online via their website, and they were they were very bullish about issuing copyright strikes against viewers who reposted many of them on UA-cam, particularly the James Hill-directed films such as The Home-Made Car and Giuseppina. I’m not sure what’s happening now because there’s multiple postings of either on YT and other platforms now.
All the people just look fantastic. Look at the clothes! I'm not sure how, but we allowed ourselves to lose this pleasantness. Just glad we still have snippets of footage.
I visited Northumberland last week and saw fantastic untouched beaches with sand dunes, seaside villages, and towns that remind you of long ago times. Small hidden harbours still with the fish smokehouses. Drive over to Holy Island, and you are again transportered back in time. The countryside is beautiful, with quite long meandering roads as you drive back on the Scottish & English border over the Tweed through quite sleepy towns and villages back home to the Eden valley. What a trip in our Vdub. It's still there, but find it before it goes. As a southern now living in Cumbria, i can say up north is the best. Fab film, reminded me of holidays as a kid in the 60's. Even the sunlight looked the same.
Mate honestly...... The reason nobody is on those beaches is because the weather is just awful most of the year. What good is a beautiful sandy beach if most of the year its in lashing rain and freezing strong winds coming off the North Sea. The sea is black, freezing and polluted, its proper inbred once you get past Newcastle aswell, pit villages that the people haven't worked for 50yrs, don't bother to go to school and have zero education. Go to Berwick, Shilbottle, Seahouses and see how bad the effects can be. Berwick is a desperate place. The other towns in Northumberland are full of unfriendly posh rich people. Or castles with evil owners. Holy Island has nothing there but some ruins and will wreck your car with sea water to see the most boring island. The rolling hills are all ruined by rubbish wind farms, the farmers hate anyone going there. A lot of the countryside is also military. The beaches have nothing but a car park, dogs poo all over them. if you park up over night or leave your car/van in the car park, you are likely to get broken into. To get there you have to drive the A1 motorway that goes all the way to the capital of Scotland. Worst motorway ever and the only motorway that goes to one lane. It will also take anyone a good 30/40 mins just to drive a few miles on the A1 through Newcastle.
@@MichaelCook84Untrue. Yes, the weather can be bad but that goes for any area of the country. That’s the UK for you. Days can just as easily be warm and sunny up there as any other stretch of coast and I’d rather have an inclement day in Northumberland than one in the overcrowded south.
@jupiterfive3379 Mate I live in the north east and work all over the country. The beach just isn't where you want to be when the weather is awful and the weather is awful in the north east for about 300 days a year. The winds at the beaches that come in off the North Sea aswell makes it extra pleasant alongside sidewards driving rain. Or without the rain the wind is blasting your eyes and face with sand. In the north east a clear blue sky day all day is incredibly rare. This year so far we've had less than a handful. You get up in the morning,clear blue sky and a lovely day. By the time you drive to the beach in Northumberland it's overcast, windy and lashing down. Sitting outside in your campervan freezing cold, soaking wet trying to be in good spirits because there's an empty beach. There's a reason those beaches are empty. Because nobody wants to go to the beach in litter weather. The beaches are packed in the south because its much better weather. Plenty of us from the north east go to the south west every year for the better weather and better beaches. Its just a fact mate, they get the atlantic ocean and the gulf stream that brings nice weather in the summer down there, we get the north sea and the cold winds, alongside heavy pollution. The whole coastline from Blyth all the way down to Saltburn by the Sea is heavily polluted. The most polluted coastline in the UK. From Blyth to Berwick it may not have the same pollution from industry but it certainly gets the brunt of it when the wind blows north and the smog clouds from teeside make their way to Alnwick.
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In the 1960s, we spent many holidays in Blyth, Northumberland. Visted places like Whitley Bay, South Shields, Cullercoats and other nearby places I can't remember the names of now.
Totally fascinating. I was a child when this was made and I was struck by how it's a world that has virtually disappeared. Shipbuilding has almost disappeared, along with much of the fishing industry. The lighthouses are automated. And so on. Life moves on of course, but it is amazing to think of the pace of change. One might also consider just how much time and effort went into making the film as well.
Yes, by dad was a shipbuilder I went to several launches at his shipyard on Teesside, my mining village was thriving with full employment and my uncle was a fisherman with a Salmon licence making a bomb on his boat off Seaham! Over my lifetime all these industries have gone and the the world became a bleaker place
I was born in February 1964, so my earliest memories of holidaying in the UK are in the late 60s. Such lovely times, just wish we could have held on to this for so much longer than we did! Great download, thanks for sharing it. 💕
Great times. Sadly, gone, but never forgotten. A time when life was much simpler, uncomplicated. Great Britain now is unrecognisable. I’d like our country back, please. We’ve been corrupted by social media, big business and corrupt politicians, ( All of them.) I feel sorry for the young of today who will never understand the freedom and quality of life we had in the 6o’s and 70’s. And, we had very little, but did’nt whinge endlessly.
I was born in early 60s i remember simple times like these. I loved going to Herne bay , Swanage and Weymouth as a child. i have so many happy memories. Everything seems so crowded and fast paced now. We spend a lot of our holiday time in Lanzarote a very chilled place , its Spanish in culture obviously, but a little bit old fashioned in some ways.
When we appreciated who we were , sadly now we “stand for nothing” and have “fallen for everything”. !!! We have surrendered the heritage that was bestowed on us
We at the Miserable Old Farts Society are always on the lookout for new members. Having read your post, we feel that you would make an ideal person to join our ranks.
@@johncraskenot funny, you've got Stephen totally wrong , myself like him , we are actually grateful for the amazing childhoods we had in this once great country , nothing to do with being old or miserable or flatulent , if you understood what Stephen said , you would realise his very lucid observations .
@@andyking6051 I am 80 next birthday, so i grew up in the 1950s and 60s. Yes, there were good things to enjoy in my youth, but life is far better nowadays. Jesus, Sundays were SO boring, thanks to the Lord's Day Observance Society. No, give me 2024 every time.
Everything, nature, people and the countryside looks so much more healthy than today. Yep we've rely screwed the place up and I don't see how it can be fixed along as were still around.
Ah that was very pleasant to watch thank you..and a bonus of seeing my home port at 20:30 nobles the boat yard fraserburgh building many fishing boats hence the boat regestration starting FR..once often seen in scarborough...thanks again very much appreciated
Thank you Gordon, it is amazing how people can indentify on a local level with these nostalgic travel films. It is also a shock to the system how things have so rapidly - so it seems - changed. x
My how things have changed 😢😢😢😢 born in 1954 remember the good old days , England has been ruined by weak self serving greedy politicians over the last 30 years 😡
You know very well what they have done to us, sold us down the river, big time starting with the arch scum bag Blair, inviting the worlds riff raff in just so he can get more labour votes. A pox on him and his ilk. i hope he rots in hell.
How did England ever manage to survive before "cultural enrichment" was forced upon us? My childhood, in the 60's & 70's, was simple, well mannered, disciplined, forward looking and, most of all, safe.
What a great film. I had to be one of those in the old days, but you know things we're simpler and more straight forward. Hard work yes, absolutely, but simpler
@@Dani92670 … I thought about it and I’ve come to the conclusion that they must all be hard at work whilst the indigenous population are lounging around claiming benefits!
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We had our own diversity, southerners, midlanders, northerners, Cornish, English, Welsh, Scottish, Irish. We didn't need more than that.
After the war, so 20 years before this film, the government was making plans to find cheap labour to rebuild the country. They have been finding cheap labour ever since. It's not the fault of the cheap labour, it's the fault of those of us who haven't held politicians and big businesses to account.
@@StephenKing-ee5nnThat’s not true. It’s another lying trope, that “Britain invited people from the former colonies to help rebuild / man the buses / staff the NHS”. None of those things happened. We’re being lied to still today. The ostensible reason is the ageing population and to keep the economy growing. That too is a lie. There was always a real reason & naturally we’re never told this. It was & remains the intention of the so called elites to literally destroy this nation and all others in The West.
I was born in 1962 and remember going on holiday in the 1960s and 1970s to the seaside. When you go back to these places nowadays there is so little to do and the weather is often poor. No wonder people go abroad…..
Thank you. What a beautiful trip. wonderful England, "rich in history and even more in beauty", before the terrible experience of the European Union, and the migratory invasion that violates and denatures her... forever.
Maes. Beautiful British name 😮. I never left the EU and it gave me a total escape from the wilfully ruined economy of North East England 🇨🇵🇪🇺. Enjoy your pils 🍻.
What complete and utter rose tinted, xenophobic codswallop….. it’s dismal xenophobia that has been a major factor in the startling decline of the UK since brexshit
Those were the days. When older men still wore suits to sit on the beach. You had a knotted handkerchief on your head to keep off the sun. Also perhaps, like the younger me, you wore knitted bathing trunks that would fill water and hang down! Ahh those were the days!
Made in 1956 and sponsored by Esso. Great footage - I especially liked the few seconds of the Queen Mary being pushed away from Southampton? docks. The UK has not changed for the better in the intervening years.
You weren’t living in abject poverty in a slum in Liverpool in the 60’s then. With no toilet in the house only one tap of running water, horrific sanitation and nightly terrorized going to bed because of the epidemic of burglaries in your street. Even the coal wasn’t safe from people breaking into the yard to steal it.
@@davidtaylor6793 No I was living in Manchester. Born 1964. Nobody had any money in those days. Would you rather have what is going on now in broken Britain ?
I agree. O for the days of back street abortions, gay-bashing gangs, no central heating, no supermarkets, lower life expectancy etc. Yes, those wer the days...
@@johncraske Abortion is murder, regardless of who dies it. Can you actually refer to any actual incident of the bashing you refer to? Assault was already illegal and there are more violent crimes today. Some in my family had central heating in the 60’s abroad and the rest had traditional ceramic and cast iron heaters or fireplaces, maybe even AGA ovens. My grandparents had a very cleanly burning bread oven that heated the entire house. It worked fine, a lot of people regret replacing these. Life expectancy statistics are up for a debate, especially as they are in decline and people get chronically sick at a young age. Even in Britain, supermarkets were common in the fifties. Regardless, there were a lot of independent shops, larger shops and department stores and the quality of food was better, with less chemicals, additives and processing.
@@johncraske Abortion is m@@der, regardless of who dies it. Can you actually refer to any actual incident of the bashing you refer to? Assault was already illegal and there are more violent crimes today. Some in my family had central heating in the 60’s abroad and the rest had traditional ceramic and cast iron heaters or fireplaces, maybe even AGA ovens. My grandparents had a very cleanly burning bread oven that heated the entire house. It worked fine, a lot of people regret replacing these. Life expectancy statistics are up for a debate, especially as they are in decline and people get chronically sick at a young age. Even in Britain, supermarkets were common in the fifties. Regardless, there were a lot of independent shops, larger shops and department stores and the quality of food was better, with less chemicals, additives and processing.
@@ComeJesusChrist I have no wish to get into an argument. Let me just say that although I'm both an atheist and an anti-theist, I don't shout my lack of belief from the rooftops. Nor do I ever go out of my way to pick a fight with believers regarding their faith (note the word 'faith'). So I dislike people who put their religion 'in my face'. Just as I am sure you would find it distasteful and unnecessarily aggressive if ,my user name was 'Jesus is never coming back' By the way, don't knock abortion. In the highly unlikely event that Christianity is true, abortionists save more souls for Jesus every year than a whole army of preachers.
The picture for this video is one of Seaside Heights in New Jersey, USA. I spent many days there during the summer.
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Way too crowded to be the UK.
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It's hard to believe British beaches were ever that crowded. Certainly none of the beaches I ever visited in the 1960s were like that, but we went to places like Rhyl, Barmouth and Blyth, Northumberland.
5:14, Sandwich, Kent. I worked ten minutes walk from that gate, 1995-2011, for the company primarily responsible for the greatest crime in human history, which is still being perpetrated today.
In a democracy the people are responsible for the politicians. Besides which, so many things, like Asian steel production, shipbuilding and heavy industry simply out competing Britain’s industries, and containerisation killing her ports, were beyond any politician’s control.
The BBC either archived these films or had to hand them back to the film producers. If archived by the BBC the films may be of broadcast quality, or may be restorable.
@@GarethWelch-cb6wv Thanks for the confirmation - mind you, the film does tend to depart from the seaside theme after a while to concentrate on the history side of things...
The BFI list this film as dating from 1956, and certainly the vessels and so much more look to be more from that period than the 60s. Perhaps the most telling footage is of the huge fishing industry, now largely unrecognisable from then.
I remember it well. Untreated sewage floating in the sea on the wonderful beaches. better keep your mouth closed when you swim. Day trips to Tynemouth on the working men's club bus, cold wet and windy with nowhere to shelter except those great big packed shelters on the seafront. Nostalgia is a great leveller.
Some of the original trade test colour films have been broadcast by Talking Pictures TV. A channel devoted to solely these films is probably not viable. Perhaps with the help of AI some of the films not beyond redemption can be restored to HD standard.
You go to the seaside today and you're virtually on your own , my mam used to take me and my seven siblings to Blackpool in the mid 60's and it was chocka block now if full of Tramps , druggies and alcoholics
Lincolnshire tulips, annual Spalding flower Festival, no more. Dover has become a channel crossing nightmare never ending border checks, e.IDs, Last of the river coracles at Cenarth sth Wales, enjoyed hol 1989.
So clad these days are in the past ,much better today with homelessness, drugs ,machetes and kinfe crime all over the place ,disrespectful people and selfish people, and police of the establishment instead of the bobby on the beat that was respected and made sure all was well ,yes today so good .
I wonder how long the no doubt Oxbridge-educated, patronising narrator would last doing one of those back-breaking/dangerous/soul destroying jobs. They all seem so happy with the twee music playing in the background but the reality of their lives was very different. The women look ground down and old before their time and one can only imaging how the cockle-pickers would have suffered with their backs and rheumatics in later life.
@@johngibson3837 so many naive comments about the 'good ol' days'. Imagine gutting those fish in the winter. The painful cracked hands. Freezing cold feet. Weather-beaten faces. Poor wages.
Times long since gone but fondly remembered by those of us who grew up in the 60s and 70s. A simpler, slower paced life, still with plenty of social and economic challenges but faced with a more positive attitude and a more communal, friendlier spirit
Amen to that....
Spot on.
And we did not regret our past and hate ourselves
@@tetraquark2402 car strikes , miners strikes…Thatcher,high unemployment ,soaring inflation …and worse than all that put together..flared trousers and blood platform shoes…🤣
@@phildavies100 This was made the 60s Britain was booming jobs were plentiful and flares were years away, you are thinking late 70s and 80s when Thatcher came in.
Had a tear in my eye watching this....when we had an identity as a nation. A long time gone now...but..."Never Forgotten"
When i watch this nostalgia, i always think of the great poet laureate....Sir John Betjeman. "A True Great Englishman!"
It's nothing short of criminal what governments have done. We have lost too much, for what?
So positive, prosperous and real! This is the Britain I was born into, and how I’ve watched it decline in so many ways in my lifetime 😢
The calmness and orderly atmosphere is most salient. A trip down memory lane when freedom was taken for granted. A more sane world.
I want to go back to the sixties ! What charm , I don't like my country now. That was proper diversity when each region had a separate character, there was work aplenty, life seemed kinder, gentler, less materialistic, more sense of community and belonging. A great watch, I loved it ❤
i was not born then but it looks lovely when Britain was Britain
Irretrievably totally ruined.
@@martindoman7315And worst of all, completely avoidable.
The degradation has been intentional, relentless and it isn’t going to stop.
A total and disgraceful betrayal of its people and their country.
Our Family were lucky enough, to grow up in Dawlish, Devon, UK, back in the 60's and early 70's. We had the best of both worlds living in a Seaside Town that had rolling fields and hills as its backdrop. It was a great place to grow up as a child. 😊👍🇬🇧
@@iamgod6464 in the 50s there was a little bungalow on the left going down to the beach i used to dream of living in..
@@griswald7156 Is it still there?
An absolute gem.I do hope that these films are archived,they are historical documents.
They are indeed Steve, the BFI have an extensive library, I don't know if these films are included though. They ought to be re-mastered and screened just like the fantastic Look at Life series. x
@@feline1104until a few years ago much of the Esso Film Unit archive was viewable online via their website, and they were they were very bullish about issuing copyright strikes against viewers who reposted many of them on UA-cam, particularly the James Hill-directed films such as The Home-Made Car and Giuseppina. I’m not sure what’s happening now because there’s multiple postings of either on YT and other platforms now.
Sadly todays society won’t be interested in any of it. It’s a me, me throw away generation.
Fills me with a longing. Thanks for putting this on 😊
All the people just look fantastic. Look at the clothes! I'm not sure how, but we allowed ourselves to lose this pleasantness. Just glad we still have snippets of footage.
I visited Northumberland last week and saw fantastic untouched beaches with sand dunes, seaside villages, and towns that remind you of long ago times. Small hidden harbours still with the fish smokehouses. Drive over to Holy Island, and you are again transportered back in time. The countryside is beautiful, with quite long meandering roads as you drive back on the Scottish & English border over the Tweed through quite sleepy towns and villages back home to the Eden valley. What a trip in our Vdub. It's still there, but find it before it goes. As a southern now living in Cumbria, i can say up north is the best. Fab film, reminded me of holidays as a kid in the 60's. Even the sunlight looked the same.
Mate honestly...... The reason nobody is on those beaches is because the weather is just awful most of the year. What good is a beautiful sandy beach if most of the year its in lashing rain and freezing strong winds coming off the North Sea. The sea is black, freezing and polluted, its proper inbred once you get past Newcastle aswell, pit villages that the people haven't worked for 50yrs, don't bother to go to school and have zero education. Go to Berwick, Shilbottle, Seahouses and see how bad the effects can be. Berwick is a desperate place. The other towns in Northumberland are full of unfriendly posh rich people. Or castles with evil owners. Holy Island has nothing there but some ruins and will wreck your car with sea water to see the most boring island. The rolling hills are all ruined by rubbish wind farms, the farmers hate anyone going there. A lot of the countryside is also military. The beaches have nothing but a car park, dogs poo all over them. if you park up over night or leave your car/van in the car park, you are likely to get broken into. To get there you have to drive the A1 motorway that goes all the way to the capital of Scotland. Worst motorway ever and the only motorway that goes to one lane. It will also take anyone a good 30/40 mins just to drive a few miles on the A1 through Newcastle.
I agree, loved up there when I went in 2022. Went to Cumbria coastline just last August, I liked it there but not the beaches like Northumberland has.
@@MichaelCook84Untrue. Yes, the weather can be bad but that goes for any area of the country. That’s the UK for you. Days can just as easily be warm and sunny up there as any other stretch of coast and I’d rather have an inclement day in Northumberland than one in the overcrowded south.
@jupiterfive3379 Mate I live in the north east and work all over the country. The beach just isn't where you want to be when the weather is awful and the weather is awful in the north east for about 300 days a year. The winds at the beaches that come in off the North Sea aswell makes it extra pleasant alongside sidewards driving rain. Or without the rain the wind is blasting your eyes and face with sand. In the north east a clear blue sky day all day is incredibly rare. This year so far we've had less than a handful. You get up in the morning,clear blue sky and a lovely day. By the time you drive to the beach in Northumberland it's overcast, windy and lashing down. Sitting outside in your campervan freezing cold, soaking wet trying to be in good spirits because there's an empty beach. There's a reason those beaches are empty. Because nobody wants to go to the beach in litter weather. The beaches are packed in the south because its much better weather. Plenty of us from the north east go to the south west every year for the better weather and better beaches. Its just a fact mate, they get the atlantic ocean and the gulf stream that brings nice weather in the summer down there, we get the north sea and the cold winds, alongside heavy pollution. The whole coastline from Blyth all the way down to Saltburn by the Sea is heavily polluted. The most polluted coastline in the UK. From Blyth to Berwick it may not have the same pollution from industry but it certainly gets the brunt of it when the wind blows north and the smog clouds from teeside make their way to Alnwick.
In the 1960s, we spent many holidays in Blyth, Northumberland. Visted places like Whitley Bay, South Shields, Cullercoats and other nearby places I can't remember the names of now.
I wish I had A “time machine “ wonderful days
I have one for sale low hours but has electrical problem , will swap for unicorn , no more time wasters or dreamers serious enquiries only ..
Dial set to 1960.
Yes, I’d go home & never come back again & just keep rewinding 🙋🏻♀️🇬🇧
Yes halcyon days when l was young, happy days
Lovely stuff, many thanks for posting.
Impressively photographed.
Totally fascinating. I was a child when this was made and I was struck by how it's a world that has virtually disappeared. Shipbuilding has almost disappeared, along with much of the fishing industry. The lighthouses are automated. And so on. Life moves on of course, but it is amazing to think of the pace of change. One might also consider just how much time and effort went into making the film as well.
Yes, by dad was a shipbuilder I went to several launches at his shipyard on Teesside, my mining village was thriving with full employment and my uncle was a fisherman with a Salmon licence making a bomb on his boat off Seaham! Over my lifetime all these industries have gone and the the world became a bleaker place
I was born in February 1964, so my earliest memories of holidaying in the UK are in the late 60s. Such lovely times, just wish we could have held on to this for so much longer than we did! Great download, thanks for sharing it. 💕
Me too!! Feb 64!
Where did it all go?!
God Bless anyway
@matthewstokes1608 wow, Feb '64 also! I wonder which of us was born first?! God bless you also. 🙏
Great times. Sadly, gone, but never forgotten. A time when life was much simpler, uncomplicated. Great Britain now is unrecognisable. I’d like our country back, please. We’ve been corrupted by social media, big business and corrupt politicians, ( All of them.) I feel sorry for the young of today who will never understand the freedom and quality of life we had in the 6o’s and 70’s. And, we had very little, but did’nt whinge endlessly.
you're whinging now. bet you never stop whinging.
@@gomey70No, they’re not.
@@gomey70And you are whining aren't you!
I was born in early 60s i remember simple times like these. I loved going to Herne bay , Swanage and Weymouth as a child. i have so many happy memories. Everything seems so crowded and fast paced now. We spend a lot of our holiday time in Lanzarote a very chilled place , its Spanish in culture obviously, but a little bit old fashioned in some ways.
Ditto all round.
When we appreciated who we were , sadly now we “stand for nothing” and have “fallen for everything”. !!!
We have surrendered the heritage that was bestowed on us
We at the Miserable Old Farts Society are always on the lookout for new members. Having read your post, we feel that you would make an ideal person to join our ranks.
@@johncraskenot funny, you've got Stephen totally wrong , myself like him , we are actually grateful for the amazing childhoods we had in this once great country , nothing to do with being old or miserable or flatulent , if you understood what Stephen said , you would realise his very lucid observations .
@@andyking6051 I am 80 next birthday, so i grew up in the 1950s and 60s. Yes, there were good things to enjoy in my youth, but life is far better nowadays. Jesus, Sundays were SO boring, thanks to the Lord's Day Observance Society. No, give me 2024 every time.
Everything, nature, people and the countryside looks so much more healthy than today. Yep we've rely screwed the place up and I don't see how it can be fixed along as were still around.
what's that word salad even meant to mean, apart from something AI generated on a Russian troll farm?
Nice blue skies I see no certain white lines with naught a crosses in the sky
Wonderful times
2:37 Chesil Beach, we moved to Weymouth in the mid 60s. Lovely film and glorious music. Cheers.
I sure enjoy these old first color films, especially these old sponsor films! thanks for posting. Great state of Texas.
Ah that was very pleasant to watch thank you..and a bonus of seeing my home port at 20:30 nobles the boat yard fraserburgh building many fishing boats hence the boat regestration starting FR..once often seen in scarborough...thanks again very much appreciated
Thank you Gordon, it is amazing how people can indentify on a local level with these nostalgic travel films. It is also a shock to the system how things have so rapidly - so it seems - changed. x
My how things have changed 😢😢😢😢 born in 1954 remember the good old days , England has been ruined by weak self serving greedy politicians over the last 30 years 😡
45 years
No accountability for anything or anyone.
What have politicians done to us.
And we paid them top dollar to do it, gold plated pensions too.
They have ruined everything and it’ll never be the same
Empires come and go
No accountability for anyone's actions.
You know very well what they have done to us, sold us down the river, big time starting with the arch scum bag Blair, inviting the worlds riff raff in just so he can get more labour votes. A pox on him and his ilk. i hope he rots in hell.
That was one country back then
How did England ever manage to survive before "cultural enrichment" was forced upon us? My childhood, in the 60's & 70's, was simple, well mannered, disciplined, forward looking and, most of all, safe.
What a great film. I had to be one of those in the old days, but you know things we're simpler and more straight forward. Hard work yes, absolutely, but simpler
Beautiful people. Just look at our nation now.
Absolutely
@@BluntyBlue-e1l The nation is now greatly improved. Mind you, we still have more than our fair share of miserable old racists.
‘Nation’?
@@johncraskeDon’t forget the unfair share of illegal immigrants, the young male asylum seekers, the Turkish barber shops!
@@ComeJesusChrist Strange name, I have to say...
Where are all the diverse people that ‘built Britain?’
You are too funny.
@@Dani92670 … I thought about it and I’ve come to the conclusion that they must all be hard at work whilst the indigenous population are lounging around claiming benefits!
We had our own diversity, southerners, midlanders, northerners, Cornish, English, Welsh, Scottish, Irish. We didn't need more than that.
After the war, so 20 years before this film, the government was making plans to find cheap labour to rebuild the country.
They have been finding cheap labour ever since.
It's not the fault of the cheap labour, it's the fault of those of us who haven't held politicians and big businesses to account.
@@StephenKing-ee5nnThat’s not true. It’s another lying trope, that “Britain invited people from the former colonies to help rebuild / man the buses / staff the NHS”.
None of those things happened.
We’re being lied to still today.
The ostensible reason is the ageing population and to keep the economy growing. That too is a lie.
There was always a real reason & naturally we’re never told this. It was & remains the intention of the so called elites to literally destroy this nation and all others in The West.
BRILLIANT 🙂
Sadly many people didn’t realise how lucky they were to be alive then.
Tbf most people did realise it and made the most of it too if my memory serves me right, tough but still happy with less
I was born in 1962 and remember going on holiday in the 1960s and 1970s to the seaside. When you go back to these places nowadays there is so little to do and the weather is often poor. No wonder people go abroad…..
Thank you. What a beautiful trip.
wonderful England, "rich in history and even more in beauty", before the terrible experience of the European Union, and the migratory invasion that violates and denatures her... forever.
Maes. Beautiful British name 😮. I never left the EU and it gave me a total escape from the wilfully ruined economy of North East England 🇨🇵🇪🇺. Enjoy your pils 🍻.
What complete and utter rose tinted, xenophobic codswallop….. it’s dismal xenophobia that has been a major factor in the startling decline of the UK since brexshit
Those were the days. When older men still wore suits to sit on the beach. You had a knotted handkerchief on your head to keep off the sun. Also perhaps, like the younger me, you wore knitted bathing trunks that would fill water and hang down!
Ahh those were the days!
Just look at us now…it’s criminal 😢
It’s tragic 😢. Treasonous politicians have destroyed this country and its culture. We’ll never get it back. 😢
Made in 1956 and sponsored by Esso. Great footage - I especially liked the few seconds of the Queen Mary being pushed away from Southampton? docks.
The UK has not changed for the better in the intervening years.
Now, those were the days :) Fishguard in Wales was my fav beach.
When the UK was the best place to live in the world 🌎
When the UK actually worked.
You weren’t living in abject poverty in a slum in Liverpool in the 60’s then. With no toilet in the house only one tap of running water, horrific sanitation and nightly terrorized going to bed because of the epidemic of burglaries in your street. Even the coal wasn’t safe from people breaking into the yard to steal it.
@@davidtaylor6793😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
@@davidtaylor6793 No I was living in Manchester. Born 1964. Nobody had any money in those days. Would you rather have what is going on now in broken Britain ?
Well…living in Manchester with no money sounds horrendous 😂…not quite sure what’s broken in Britain…but I’m having a ball😂
..
We have lost so much. 😢
I agree. O for the days of back street abortions, gay-bashing gangs, no central heating, no supermarkets, lower life expectancy etc. Yes, those wer the days...
@@johncraske Abortion is murder, regardless of who dies it.
Can you actually refer to any actual incident of the bashing you refer to? Assault was already illegal and there are more violent crimes today.
Some in my family had central heating in the 60’s abroad and the rest had traditional ceramic and cast iron heaters or fireplaces, maybe even AGA ovens. My grandparents had a very cleanly burning bread oven that heated the entire house. It worked fine, a lot of people regret replacing these.
Life expectancy statistics are up for a debate, especially as they are in decline and people get chronically sick at a young age.
Even in Britain, supermarkets were common in the fifties. Regardless, there were a lot of independent shops, larger shops and department stores and the quality of food was better, with less chemicals, additives and processing.
@@johncraske Abortion is m@@der, regardless of who dies it.
Can you actually refer to any actual incident of the bashing you refer to? Assault was already illegal and there are more violent crimes today.
Some in my family had central heating in the 60’s abroad and the rest had traditional ceramic and cast iron heaters or fireplaces, maybe even AGA ovens. My grandparents had a very cleanly burning bread oven that heated the entire house. It worked fine, a lot of people regret replacing these.
Life expectancy statistics are up for a debate, especially as they are in decline and people get chronically sick at a young age.
Even in Britain, supermarkets were common in the fifties. Regardless, there were a lot of independent shops, larger shops and department stores and the quality of food was better, with less chemicals, additives and processing.
@@ComeJesusChrist I have no wish to get into an argument. Let me just say that although I'm both an atheist and an anti-theist, I don't shout my lack of belief from the rooftops. Nor do I ever go out of my way to pick a fight with believers regarding their faith (note the word 'faith').
So I dislike people who put their religion 'in my face'. Just as I am sure you would find it distasteful and unnecessarily aggressive if ,my user name was 'Jesus is never coming back'
By the way, don't knock abortion. In the highly unlikely event that Christianity is true, abortionists save more souls for Jesus every year than a whole army of preachers.
The lost land invaded and given away enough to make you weep!
Yes. Those bloody Romans, Anglo Saxons Danes, Jutes and Normans.
If you don't like our country -LEAVE!! Britain is a great diverse multicultural nation.
"Our flat and vulnerable seaboard tempted successive invaders"........it still does, daily!!
Great Britain, how we aren't anymore alas. Wonderful old times when we were who we were.
What does that actually mean? ''Who we were''.
A golden time freedom great fantastic days .
A different world , literally, never mind that nice Mr Starmer has pledged plenty of improvements.
What about the last 14 years of the corrupt conservative government?
Heartbreaking 🇬🇧
Our once great civilised country, a great place to live.
Now sadly destroyed by spineless and incompetent politicians.
Not spineless and incompetent but bought and paid for by the globalists.
The picture for this video is one of Seaside Heights in New Jersey, USA. I spent many days there during the summer.
Way too crowded to be the UK.
It's hard to believe British beaches were ever that crowded. Certainly none of the beaches I ever visited in the 1960s were like that, but we went to places like Rhyl, Barmouth and Blyth, Northumberland.
What a wonderful civilised nation we once were. Sadly, due to an abundance of "cultural enrichment" our wonderful British way of life is no more. 😢
I seasides still look like this, just 60 years on without a penny being spent on refurbishments
So many ships in those days, I sailed on a few.
How did we let all of this go to waste… 😢
By consistently voting Tory for the last 14 years
Greed and sloth , jump to mind.
5:14, Sandwich, Kent. I worked ten minutes walk from that gate, 1995-2011, for the company primarily responsible for the greatest crime in human history, which is still being perpetrated today.
Pay per mile is already being paid via fuel pricing. The vast majority of car tax does not go on roads or other motoring projects.
Fond memories of Scarborough, Filey, gt Yarmouth, in the 60s and 70s. What went wrong!
Politicians!!! 😡
"Everything laid on"! Ha ha ha, they loved that phrase!
You can blame politicians for the change in our country
In a democracy the people are responsible for the politicians. Besides which, so many things, like Asian steel production, shipbuilding and heavy industry simply out competing Britain’s industries, and containerisation killing her ports, were beyond any politician’s control.
Very true 👍
This film is by Esso. They have a vested interest in nice weather, and they’re doing all they can to make it permanent.
What stood out most to you
Clean streets people clean well dressed and no obesity
No multiculturalism.
@@davidmacdonald-bi1hy Spotted another racist.
No men in frocks
@@melanieberry8724 so!
That was the 1950's
Could do a remake of this for modern times ... call it " Our immigrant shores "
Spotted another racist.
Racist much? 💩
Fast forwarding 😅 take a look at the news before visiting the U.K ❤ Ahh some genius edit this please 😊
Wow.
The BBC either archived these films or had to hand them back to the film producers. If archived by the BBC the films may be of broadcast quality, or may be restorable.
IMDb gives the year as 1956, although the beachwear does indeed look later...
It is 1956 - the clothes, cars, hairstyles etc. are mid fifties not sixties.
Its just unusual to see colour from this period for domestic travelogs.
@@GarethWelch-cb6wv Thanks for the confirmation - mind you, the film does tend to depart from the seaside theme after a while to concentrate on the history side of things...
Hardly any obese people, most look healthy, compare that with today?
Set meal times ,home cooked meat and 2 veg and no snacking .
Good stuff 👍🏻 - Postwar governments had a backbone and defended us from invaders
Spotted another racist.
The BFI list this film as dating from 1956, and certainly the vessels and so much more look to be more from that period than the 60s. Perhaps the most telling footage is of the huge fishing industry, now largely unrecognisable from then.
Did the country need effective contraception and multi culture ?
Spotted another racist.
Ineffective contraception wouldn't be of much use.
I remember it well. Untreated sewage floating in the sea on the wonderful beaches. better keep your mouth closed when you swim. Day trips to Tynemouth on the working men's club bus, cold wet and windy with nowhere to shelter except those great big packed shelters on the seafront. Nostalgia is a great leveller.
Happy Days
Look!!!!....NO inflatables 😮😮😮
Ugh gave me goosebumps watching this, thank God we've moved on
Some of the original trade test colour films have been broadcast by Talking Pictures TV. A channel devoted to solely these films is probably not viable. Perhaps with the help of AI some of the films not beyond redemption can be restored to HD standard.
What have we become ?
What have we become? Tell me.
Arrr yes a sea that wasn’t polluted by the privatised water company’s. The good old days.
1950s, not 60s. I thought it looked a bit before my time - growing up in the 60s.
❤❤❤
You go to the seaside today and you're virtually on your own , my mam used to take me and my seven siblings to Blackpool in the mid 60's and it was chocka block now if full of Tramps , druggies and alcoholics
The reality was that by the mid 1960s Britain was in Post WW2 terminal decline!
It was later than that. The 1960s and 1970s were great. The decline started after the 1970s.
The beaches and the air was cleaner.
What has happened to this country/
"The oldest trade along the coast..." Fishing?
Nothing 1960s about this film. I would date it to the mid-1950s and no later.
I think the title just refers to when it was produced so footage would pre date the screening?
I think very early 60s I have a family movie from 1963 and yes the clothes are early 60s
Where are the Parkistarnis ?
Lincolnshire tulips, annual Spalding flower Festival, no more. Dover has become a channel crossing nightmare never ending border checks, e.IDs, Last of the river coracles at Cenarth sth Wales, enjoyed hol 1989.
Plenty of “Natives” turning up now.
Spotted another racist.
Racist. Reported
We’ll never see this ever again unless there’s a bibilical miracle….
From a better vanished time.
It’s worth noting that the obesity that is very common today really wasnt around then. The world has gotten fat
no Mackers and other sh1t.
The orchestra playing is loud and strange .
Yes exactly Our native shore. Not the rest of the world.
BUT IS IT A TRUE SNAPSHOT REPRESENTATION ? OR IS THE SILLY MUSIC CLOUDING THE CONTENT ?
Before the rubber boats crossed the channel…
Not a burka in sight.
So clad these days are in the past ,much better today with homelessness, drugs ,machetes and kinfe crime all over the place ,disrespectful people and selfish people, and police of the establishment instead of the bobby on the beat that was respected and made sure all was well ,yes today so good .
Not 'Our Native Shore' anymore!
Now we look like Africa
I wonder how long the no doubt Oxbridge-educated, patronising narrator would last doing one of those back-breaking/dangerous/soul destroying jobs. They all seem so happy with the twee music playing in the background but the reality of their lives was very different. The women look ground down and old before their time and one can only imaging how the cockle-pickers would have suffered with their backs and rheumatics in later life.
Not much noise from the rivet gun in that shipyard either
@@johngibson3837 so many naive comments about the 'good ol' days'. Imagine gutting those fish in the winter. The painful cracked hands. Freezing cold feet. Weather-beaten faces. Poor wages.
@@gmc9451 it's called life mate and did you not notice the woman's proud face whilst she was doing good work
@@johngibson3837 tough and resilient folk for sure. No data- entry jobs in those days.
Well said.