My first trip to New York City was in 1953. Went to the top of the Empire State Building & the RCA building. Saw The Today Show on the air live when it was Dave Garroway, Frank Blair etc. I think J. Fred Muggs did the weather!! Took a Circle Line boat trip around Manhattan. Remember the S. S. United States was docked near where our tour boat left. Went down the Hudson, around the Statue of Liberty, up the East River & under the Brooklyn Bridge, up the Harlem River by Yankee Stadium, under the GW
@@boblackey1 I am sorry. But Since You said your first trip was in the early 50s I assumed you were in your early 20s at that time but apparently you were a kid
@@tunisian_stats Yes I was born in 1946. But I remember the trip with my parents well. Empire State Building, SS United States, Statue of Liberty on the Circle Line, Times Square, etc etc. I'm 77 now. I've been back to NYC several times over the years. No need to apologize. I thought it was funny. Take care.
I was there for Halloween and for 8 days after that last November, and it was the best city I've ever been to. The people were sooo nice and helpful. They made this Aussie feel at home.
This was really cool to see, thanks for posting it. I'm a N.Y.C. girl, born and bred... really enjoyed seeing the city and what it was like 11 years or so before I was born. Great quality footage too. I enjoyed that immensely, thanks again.
Absolutely the best time to have experienced. When you got your money's worth, and the coins were silver. Kids today have no idea what they have missed out on. Hard to believe, but one day these youths will look back on 2013 and say...remember the good ol days! What a lost crowd if ever there was.
NYC in 1959 still had the big classy nightclubs - the Stork, El Morocco, Latin Quarter, the original CopaCabana, the Empire Room, the Persion Room, live television, like Ed Sullivan and Jackie Gleason and many more. The glamor (a little frayed by 59) of the 40's and 50's was about to be trashed by the explosive changes of the 1960's. We lost the old order and civility of the 50's and before in the 60's (esp late 60's). As a kid, I saw it all happen and i remember everyone talked about it.
I was ten years old when this video was filmed and living in New York what memories. I often go back just to visit. New York is New York is there anywhere else?
@madmaxninja08 All I know is, me and my family moved out of the city in 1991. When we were walking around the city in 1996 or '97, my dad kept remarking how much safer the atmosphere felt. I'm no Guliani fan, but you gotta give him credit for getting the place under control. But in a way, Bloomberg (whatever else you want to say about the guy) deserves even more credit, because he proved that it's possible to keep the progress going without antagonizing people the way Guliani did.
Great footage -- much of NYC in 1959 was very much the same as it was in the late 40's. This footage documents the end of an era in NYC - it was a more innocent place than it was ten years later. The City in 1969 was a completely different place. We were a different people by 1969. In 1959, we still had the original Penn Station with many long-distance trains (more than Amtrak), the big movie palaces -the Paramount, Capitol and Roxy, the Astor Hotel - All gone by 69. continued...
From 13:36-13:42 @ 46th and B'way: This was about a few months before WABC-TV took over that advertising billboard with that particular zipper, remaining there till late 1964.
One of the saddest days was when Willie Mays and the Giants left to go to SF. Love turned into hatred when they returned to play the Mets. Through all those losing years with Stengel, Throneberry, Ashburn, Coleman, etc. until the Championship of 1969, I remained loyal to the Mets until this day from afar. Born in 46 and left for good in 66, I still say that I'm a New Yorker, with pride.
Exact same story for me except my 1st love was the Dodgers. Been a Metsie fan since '61 and suffered all those years until '69. Moved out of NYC in '79 but am still a Met's boy and proud to be a NYker/Brooklynite even though I live in the South. Go METS!! Hope you get the WildCard this week!!
Born '52 in Brooklyn. Dad took me to my first MLB game at Ebbets Field in '56. Became a Mets fan in '62. We moved to LI in 1959, but my Italian extended family remained in Brooklyn for decades after. I had the best of two worlds!
I visited NYC in June '59,when i was 10,with my aunt & brother.The first and nonstop impression of the city was the population density of Manhatten(Mahatten Spritiial was on the charts then).We visited the Automat,had a great sandwich;the observation deck of the Empire State bldg;Radio City(was that Mayor Wagner in the Imperial convertible?);Liberty Island;etc.....Perhaps it's fortunate i have'nt been back,I can remember it from the time of 'Breakfast At Tiffany's'.
John Coltrane GIANT STEPS!!!! Miles Davis KIND OF BLUE!!!! Dave Brubeck TIME OUT!!!! Charles Mingus AH-UM!!!! All of them recorded in New York in 1959!!!!
NYC had by far the most beautiful skyline in the world up through the 1970s. Too many lame uninteresting, boring and cookie-cutter high rises have been built since then, sadly. This film makes me sad.
That Rambler is a beauty. The video brings back memories of my home town. Sometimes wish I should have returned after military service back to Hanover Trust where I met Teresa; the most beautiful girl I had ever met. Oh well, like two ships that crossed paths in the night. I will never forget NYC and all of the friends and people I knew. Thanks so much.
Yeah, you're right. I left in 66 and except for a couple of visits have never been back since 68. I know it got really bad in the 70's. I lost many family and friends to drugs. Sad. At least I took positive memories with me before it went down but NYC seems to get up from the canvass more than once.
Just think! You probably lived in the best time period in New York! I wish I could have lived in America through the 1950s!! New York now is much better compared to the 70s, but it still seems that the 50's were better then now! I found this interesting, it is a stat of crime through the 60s and now of New York, and you'll see of how it dramatically shot up! www.disastercenter.com/crime/nycrime.htm
I know this is an odd thing to notice, but if watch the video, look at the speed at which everyone is walking, they all seem to take their time, and all seem so open to conversation, nowadays everyone is practically running everywhere, and if you stop to talk to someone you don't know, you're quickly identified as a beggar or lunatic. It's and weird rant, I apologize, but I just can't get it out of my head.
Great video! I always thought it sad that they could not have maintained the Singer Building in Lower Manhattan, and it was demolished in 1968...would have been a great NYC historical landmark
Ernest Flagg designed some very beautiful buildings and that one was my favorite. New York had recently passed the landmark preservation law but did not have confidence it would hold up in court if challenged by the developers who razed the Singer building. Rather than risk having the law struck down they chose to not oppose demolition. Later the Supreme Court upheld the law but the loss of that building and another across the street where Zucatti park is now that was also very beutiful and also the City Investing building , all for one rather average modern replacement pains me to this day.
My Dad would drive into the Bronx to see the Yankee's play at the old stadium in the 1950's. He almost played for the Brooklyn Dodgers in the late 1940's. My Uncle played for the Yankees. We parked the car out on the streets because my father hated the parking lot at Yankee Stadium. It was safe to walk at night to the car.
This is one good find! I agree with the guys who say this looks better than a lotta videos from the 70s. But in my honest opinion, the New York of the 1930s and 40s is the most ideal.
For an auto history buff (like me) one of the most incredible sights occurs at about 5:30 when a '57 Rambler Custom 4 door hardtop enters, one of the rarest AMC products ever. '57 Ramblers were not particularly attractive cars and made even less so when they cobbled together a "hardtop" style out of their 4 door sedan As a result AMC, which had one of their worst years ever in '57 sold less than 500 of these for the entire year , about the same number as Chevy Bel Air hardtops made on a typical morning. Yet. here it is...
The powers that were should have left the skyline the way it was is 59. What a wonderful testament to art deco it was. The Manhattan Chase bldg., for those in the know, was the beginning of the end of the charm of southern Manhattan.
Back when the majority of people had self respect, didn't dress like trash, No Crackheads and mental cases walking the streets in Droves, when most actually interacted with each other and didn't have cell phones and ipods attached to their heads!! Must have been an amazing time to live in..
You're so right though!! It's fun to try and talk to people that you don't know when walking the streets in NY.....it's very easy to pick out who are the uptight dolts and those who are friendly and are loving life..
I love NY! That looks like a cool fall day; just like I remember them in the mid-late 90’s. I now live in NJ but NY will always have my heart. I might have to move to Manhattan in the next few years. Cheap? No. Worth every nickel of it - you bet!
@SatchmoSings I can't see the building in the film. They probably broke ground a year or two after it was filmed. However, you can see a clear shot of the building duing the last few minutes of the move Working Girl as the camera pans back.
Great video! Ignore all of the political arguments. They still think their party cares about them and looks out for their interests and not their own. The city must have been very interesting with most of the immigrants pretty fresh off the boat. Would have love to have experienced that.
The font used for the "zipper" on the Bond building (with the Pepsi-Cola display), was in use from c.1958 to the early 1960's, and again in the early to mid-1970's. From c.1965 to c.1970 or '71, the type on this zipper was the same as used on the "zipper" of One Times Square from 1965 to c.1971.
Let me correct that: The One Times Square 'zipper' type was on the Bond zipper from spring 1967 to 1970-71 and again to 1976-77 in alternation with that 'square, boxy' type.
@pannoni1 This is a really nice historical breakdown. I would break-up 1960-1980 to 1960-1970 coffee ahop/hippe era and 1970-1980 red light/punk era, 1980-1990 Real Estate era. 1995 to today is definitely the Tourist Age.
Actually in the Black and Puerto Rican working class neighborhoods after the Second World War, the burgeoning heroin trade and trafficking controlled by the Five Mafia Families and a corrupt Police Department laid the basis, along with deindustrialization and suburbanization of large portions of the White middle and working class for the massive areas of abandoned apartment houses and high crime and murder rates during the city’s nadir starting in the mid to late 1960s.
Oh? And what was the cause of the dramatic increase in building fires and the incredible number of false alarms starting in the late 1960's? The Mob and the NYPD? Is that was caused that?
- The dangers of NYC in the '60s, '70s and '80s were highly exaggerated by the media.... and all the vice for which those decades are (in)famous could be found in the '50s... just not so much out on display.
If you are talking to me, I was born in 1952 in Jamacia Queens. My family has been in the NYC/ New Jersey area since 1760. So watch who you say that to.
Is it weird for a fourteen-year old to want so badly to live back then? Cause jeesh, what I wouldn't give to live in this time period. Just everything about the fifties makes me more and more interested about it. Everything was so much different back then. I personally think it looks so much better than today. I recently visited NYC and people there are so obnoxious. Even more so then when I was around seven or eight. People just don't care like they used to.
@TLJAWSIMIB its film, the best stuff on earth... whats left of it. Buy a film camera, shoot a roll, develop it and love it. No LCD screen can ever compare
Not for nothing but did anybody happen to see that big ass bird that was flying thru the air,it was absolutely HUGE!!it looked bigger then an eagle,and I've never known the city to have eagles anyway,but u can literally see it's shadow on the building before it comes into view,it is a very LARGE BIRD!!
There is a strong striking resemblance of now and then. I swear if I could go back at that time, it'll be so similar to now. At least that's what I think.
You would be stiff uptight and joyless to living in a city with to many Rats,Roaches,Bed Bugs and Democrats,plus the A-Bomb.Don't forget the normal look for a Democrat is stiff uptight and joyless.
@redonionsauce While crime didn't START in the 60s, it did skyrocket. I've seen the United States homicide rates on Wikipedia---there's an enormous jump starting around 1965 and by the 1970s it was wayyyy up there. Then it started going down rather quickly after about 1993, and it's been going down ever since. I'm worried now though---with times being the way they are, I hope it doesn't start climbing up again.
That was probably the best years NYC ever saw. I remember 1959 in the City. It was good.
My first trip to New York City was in 1953. Went to the top of the Empire State Building & the RCA building. Saw The Today Show on the air live when it was Dave Garroway, Frank Blair etc. I think J. Fred Muggs did the weather!! Took a Circle Line boat trip around Manhattan. Remember the S. S. United States was docked near where our tour boat left. Went down the Hudson, around the Statue of Liberty, up the East River & under the Brooklyn Bridge, up the Harlem River by Yankee Stadium, under the GW
You are probably Dead now R.I.P
@@tunisian_stats No still here. But retired.
@@boblackey1 I am sorry. But Since You said your first trip was in the early 50s I assumed you were in your early 20s at that time but apparently you were a kid
@@tunisian_stats Yes I was born in 1946. But I remember the trip with my parents well. Empire State Building, SS United States, Statue of Liberty on the Circle Line, Times Square, etc etc.
I'm 77 now. I've been back to NYC several times over the years.
No need to apologize. I thought it was funny. Take care.
@@boblackey1 You too, have a great day.
I was there for Halloween and for 8 days after that last November, and it was the best city I've ever been to. The people were sooo nice and helpful. They made this Aussie feel at home.
Fascinating to see the New York of my childhood again in these pictures. A pity that so much is gone for good.
I love the old buildings and especially the old neon signs. A vanishing art form. Thanks.
This was really cool to see, thanks for posting it. I'm a N.Y.C. girl, born and bred... really enjoyed seeing the city and what it was like 11 years or so before I was born. Great quality footage too. I enjoyed that immensely, thanks again.
Great video of New York City in 1959! The color quality is Beautiful and Times Square looked better than ever! I love this video! It is timeless!
Skyline looks so different yet the same. Amazing footage. Wow!
Absolutely the best time to have experienced. When you got your money's worth, and the coins were silver. Kids today have no idea what they have missed out on. Hard to believe, but one day these youths will look back on 2013 and say...remember the good ol days! What a lost crowd if ever there was.
With technology the kids see what they missed out on. I see some of them commenting that they were born in the wrong time. 😢
NYC in 1959 still had the big classy nightclubs - the Stork, El Morocco, Latin Quarter, the original CopaCabana, the Empire Room, the Persion Room, live television, like Ed Sullivan and Jackie Gleason and many more. The glamor (a little frayed by 59) of the 40's and 50's was about to be trashed by the explosive changes of the 1960's. We lost the old order and civility of the 50's and before in the 60's (esp late 60's). As a kid, I saw it all happen and i remember everyone talked about it.
Love the neon light shots especially.
Absolutely!!
This footage is nothing short of magical. Just wish I could give it more than a measly "thumbs-up"!
I was ten years old when this video was filmed and living in New York what memories. I often go back just to visit. New York is New York is there anywhere else?
It's my honest opinion, but I believe Art Deco architecture needs a revival.
nope. immigrants and colored would vandalize and call out racism/anti lgbtq etc...
@madmaxninja08
All I know is, me and my family moved out of the city in 1991. When we were walking around the city in 1996 or '97, my dad kept remarking how much safer the atmosphere felt.
I'm no Guliani fan, but you gotta give him credit for getting the place under control. But in a way, Bloomberg (whatever else you want to say about the guy) deserves even more credit, because he proved that it's possible to keep the progress going without antagonizing people the way Guliani did.
Great footage -- much of NYC in 1959 was very much the same as it was in the late 40's. This footage documents the end of an era in NYC - it was a more innocent place than it was ten years later. The City in 1969 was a completely different place. We were a different people by 1969. In 1959, we still had the original Penn Station with many long-distance trains (more than Amtrak), the big movie palaces -the Paramount, Capitol and Roxy, the Astor Hotel - All gone by 69.
continued...
Because of urban decay.
I was born in August 1959, so this video hits home. There is a book "Everything Changed in 1959" It makes a good case!!!
From 13:36-13:42 @ 46th and B'way: This was about a few months before WABC-TV took over that advertising billboard with that particular zipper, remaining there till late 1964.
One of the saddest days was when Willie Mays and the Giants left to go to SF. Love turned into hatred when they returned to play the Mets. Through all those losing years with Stengel, Throneberry, Ashburn, Coleman, etc. until the Championship of 1969, I remained loyal to the Mets until this day from afar. Born in 46 and left for good in 66, I still say that I'm a New Yorker, with pride.
Exact same story for me except my 1st love was the Dodgers. Been a Metsie fan since '61 and suffered all those years until '69. Moved out of NYC in '79 but am still a Met's boy and proud to be a NYker/Brooklynite even though I live in the South. Go METS!! Hope you get the WildCard this week!!
The one irreplaceable that the Dodgers have always had was the great Vince Scully. Sad to see that era end. He was the best.
Born '52 in Brooklyn. Dad took me to my first MLB game at Ebbets Field in '56. Became a Mets fan in '62. We moved to LI in 1959, but my Italian extended family remained in Brooklyn for decades after. I had the best of two worlds!
Wonderful footage! Thank you so much whoever posted this!
Great video. Thank you for sharing with all of us.
I visited NYC in June '59,when i was 10,with my aunt & brother.The first and nonstop impression of the city was the population density of Manhatten(Mahatten Spritiial was on the charts then).We visited the Automat,had a great sandwich;the observation deck of the Empire State bldg;Radio City(was that Mayor Wagner in the Imperial convertible?);Liberty Island;etc.....Perhaps it's fortunate i have'nt been back,I can remember it from the time of 'Breakfast At Tiffany's'.
Thanks for this marvelous video. I loved it. Awesome!!!
wow what a time capsule...thanks!!!
John Coltrane GIANT STEPS!!!! Miles Davis KIND OF BLUE!!!! Dave Brubeck TIME OUT!!!! Charles Mingus AH-UM!!!! All of them recorded in New York in 1959!!!!
You stole my words! BLUE IN GREEN from the album Kind Of Blue, was recorded this year ! 😍
this was my favorite year everything came into perspective. if I had to pick my favorite yr it would be 1959
If you could stay there. Because after that came the 60's when this country went down the drain.
I agree Joseph.. even if for nothing else but the fabulous cars of 1959, the Cadillacs and the Imperials!
Let me guess. The 60s started the downfall of America because of civil rights?
@@FormerlyNYVulgarian..ahh yeah, that’s right.
There’s something about NYC looking better than NYC today
NYC had by far the most beautiful skyline in the world up through the 1970s. Too many lame uninteresting, boring and cookie-cutter high rises have been built since then, sadly. This film makes me sad.
That Rambler is a beauty. The video brings back memories of my home town. Sometimes wish I should have returned after military service back to Hanover Trust where I met Teresa; the most beautiful girl I had ever met. Oh well, like two ships that crossed paths in the night. I will never forget NYC and all of the friends and people I knew. Thanks so much.
I would say it was good that you stayed out of the city. Around the 60s is when it went down hill. Drugs, gangs and what not!
Yeah, you're right. I left in 66 and except for a couple of visits have never been back since 68. I know it got really bad in the 70's. I lost many family and friends to drugs. Sad. At least I took positive memories with me before it went down but NYC seems to get up from the canvass more than once.
Just think! You probably lived in the best time period in New York! I wish I could have lived in America through the 1950s!! New York now is much better compared to the 70s, but it still seems that the 50's were better then now! I found this interesting, it is a stat of crime through the 60s and now of New York, and you'll see of how it dramatically shot up! www.disastercenter.com/crime/nycrime.htm
Agreed, but be advised that the chart you are citing is for NY State, not just NYC.
I know this is an odd thing to notice, but if watch the video, look at the speed at which everyone is walking, they all seem to take their time, and all seem so open to conversation, nowadays everyone is practically running everywhere, and if you stop to talk to someone you don't know, you're quickly identified as a beggar or lunatic. It's and weird rant, I apologize, but I just can't get it out of my head.
May've been partly that . . . but on the Times Square footage, I wonder if the film was run at 18 fps rather than 24 fps.
We live in Bizarro world now! Where bad is good, black is white, ignorance is strength, war is peace, and freedom is slavery!
Not a weird rant at all!
That was my thought. There are parts of this that aren't running at the right speed.
I was born in 1958 so i love this.
I just want to say is this video was posted 16 years ago and here I am on July 11, 2024 watching it. ❤❤
Great video! I always thought it sad that they could not have maintained the Singer Building in Lower Manhattan, and it was demolished in 1968...would have been a great NYC historical landmark
Ernest Flagg designed some very beautiful buildings and that one was my favorite. New York had recently passed the landmark preservation law but did not have confidence it would hold up in court if challenged by the developers who razed the Singer building. Rather than risk having the law struck down they chose to not oppose demolition. Later the Supreme Court upheld the law but the loss of that building and another across the street where Zucatti park is now that was also very beutiful and also the City Investing building , all for one rather average modern replacement pains me to this day.
@@3markaw Yes. Singer and Penn Station should never have been destroyed. Criminal .
My Dad would drive into the Bronx to see the Yankee's play at the old stadium in the 1950's. He almost played for the Brooklyn Dodgers in the late 1940's. My Uncle played for the Yankees. We parked the car out on the streets because my father hated the parking lot at Yankee Stadium. It was safe to walk at night to the car.
its like looking at a different world.
This is one good find! I agree with the guys who say this looks better than a lotta videos from the 70s. But in my honest opinion, the New York of the 1930s and 40s is the most ideal.
Amazing quality.
I was like 4 then. 50+ years later in the blink of an eye... Oh well.
Thanks for this!!
love the cars!!!!!!!!!
WOW this footage is a jewel. Thanks for posting.
"Midnight Matinee" Pullman Standard lyrics/song on UA-cam completes this:
DEFINITELY worth listening(and sing).
PEACE!
I wish I was living back in those days.
For an auto history buff (like me) one of the most incredible sights occurs at about 5:30 when a '57 Rambler Custom 4 door hardtop enters, one of the rarest AMC products ever. '57 Ramblers were not particularly attractive cars and made even less so when they cobbled together a "hardtop" style out of their 4 door sedan As a result AMC, which had one of their worst years ever in '57 sold less than 500 of these for the entire year , about the same number as Chevy Bel Air hardtops made on a typical morning. Yet. here it is...
I want to time travel back to 1959 New York City
fantastic!
who would film a neon sign now?
Does anyone else ever want to take a time machine back to era's like these?
Hell yeah.
💯
I was born in Manhattan's French hospital, 8-8-1959
It was a very good year.
great quality for the 50s!
i was born in nov 59, on Long island east meadow hosp. grew up in Freeport ny. great place for kids to have fun .
The powers that were should have left the skyline the way it was is 59. What a wonderful testament to art deco it was. The Manhattan Chase bldg., for those in the know, was the beginning of the end of the charm of southern Manhattan.
city started to get "cleaned up" in 96 under guiliani. he became mayor in 94 but it took him some time to get things done.
Back when the majority of people had self respect, didn't dress like trash, No Crackheads and mental cases walking the streets in Droves, when most actually interacted with each other and didn't have cell phones and ipods attached to their heads!! Must have been an amazing time to live in..
definitely 93. 418. 666
"People interacted with each other"? What part of NYC was that?
Stranded NYer rekt
She was killed 3/13/64. This was the 50s. Wrong decade, imbecile.
Amen!!
You're so right though!! It's fun to try and talk to people that you don't know when walking the streets in NY.....it's very easy to pick out who are the uptight dolts and those who are friendly and are loving life..
sigh, Chinatown without hipsters....mustve been an awesome time
Love it man. Great attitude. Great generation.
I love NY! That looks like a cool fall day; just like I remember them in the mid-late 90’s. I now live in NJ but NY will always have my heart. I might have to move to Manhattan in the next few years. Cheap? No. Worth every nickel of it - you bet!
Possible suspicious Mafioso keeping an eye out in little italy @5:35. Beautiful footage by the way.
Chinatown
Excellent Quality
@SatchmoSings I can't see the building in the film. They probably broke ground a year or two after it was filmed. However, you can see a clear shot of the building duing the last few minutes of the move Working Girl as the camera pans back.
Great video! Ignore all of the political arguments. They still think their party cares about them and looks out for their interests and not their own. The city must have been very interesting with most of the immigrants pretty fresh off the boat. Would have love to have experienced that.
wow. How it's good to watch this ..
I was five years old going on six. And I would start school(1st grade) for the first time in September.
this was 2 years after i was born , nice video !
The font used for the "zipper" on the Bond building (with the Pepsi-Cola display), was in use from c.1958 to the early 1960's, and again in the early to mid-1970's. From c.1965 to c.1970 or '71, the type on this zipper was the same as used on the "zipper" of One Times Square from 1965 to c.1971.
Let me correct that: The One Times Square 'zipper' type was on the Bond zipper from spring 1967 to 1970-71 and again to 1976-77 in alternation with that 'square, boxy' type.
I love you new york! Always!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This is beautiful including the pick of the USS United States in New York Harbor!!
Most of this footage is from Little Italy and Chinatown, just for the sake of accuracy, here.
i am too! i went there in 44'
@pannoni1 This is a really nice historical breakdown. I would break-up 1960-1980 to 1960-1970 coffee ahop/hippe era and 1970-1980 red light/punk era, 1980-1990 Real Estate era.
1995 to today is definitely the Tourist Age.
Humming "Somewhere in the Night" to this.
McBragg: Chess Monster says @ 48:00 depicts he main dock for the Staten Island Ferry near Battery Park !
Actually in the Black and Puerto Rican working class neighborhoods after the Second World War, the burgeoning heroin trade and trafficking controlled by the Five Mafia Families and a corrupt Police Department laid the basis, along with deindustrialization and suburbanization of large portions of the White middle and working class for the massive areas of abandoned apartment houses and high crime and murder rates during the city’s nadir starting in the mid to late 1960s.
Oh? And what was the cause of the dramatic increase in building fires and the incredible number of false alarms starting in the late 1960's? The Mob and the NYPD? Is that was caused that?
@sanfrancisco89 Yes, the Chase building was what ended the skyline of lower Manhattan; is that it with the scaffolding on the side?
- The dangers of NYC in the '60s, '70s and '80s were highly exaggerated by the media.... and all the vice for which those decades are (in)famous could be found in the '50s... just not so much out on display.
America at her apex, great days never to come again..
Wow 1959 city new york
Any film in coffee houses in Greenwich Village in 1961 when Dylan first arrived.
This video is amazing
@pennyf9 hehe, I remember watching them on the Hudson and wanting to grow up and work on one of them.
at the beginning of the vid we can see how the neoclassic style still shared space with modern buildings.
That TCR timecode is called VITS, right? 3/4" and SuperVHS can do that.
If you are talking to me, I was born in 1952 in Jamacia Queens. My family has been in the NYC/ New Jersey area since 1760. So watch who you say that to.
Beautiful color film. It appears to be Kodachrome film. At 5:35 a Nash Custom Rambler enters the picture.
Is it weird for a fourteen-year old to want so badly to live back then? Cause jeesh, what I wouldn't give to live in this time period. Just everything about the fifties makes me more and more interested about it. Everything was so much different back then. I personally think it looks so much better than today. I recently visited NYC and people there are so obnoxious. Even more so then when I was around seven or eight. People just don't care like they used to.
@TLJAWSIMIB its film, the best stuff on earth... whats left of it. Buy a film camera, shoot a roll, develop it and love it. No LCD screen can ever compare
THIS IS WHEN I FIRST ARRIVE IN THE CITY THAT I LOVE
Nice time tour video. It could use some music. Something like Frank Sinatra or Tony Bennett or any of the Rat Pack music about New York City.
When I see that Pepsi sign, it makes me want one.
You want to buy an advertisement?
Peter Hogan and that ladies and gentlemen was how the US brought an end to western civilization in favour of unthinking consumerism
My dad worked at the Pepsi plant in LIC in 1959.
Interesting! 1959 lower Manhatten skyline-NO Twin Towers! 2013 lower Manhatten skyline-NO Twin Towers!
amazing
Sound would be nice.
Not for nothing but did anybody happen to see that big ass bird that was flying thru the air,it was absolutely HUGE!!it looked bigger then an eagle,and I've never known the city to have eagles anyway,but u can literally see it's shadow on the building before it comes into view,it is a very LARGE BIRD!!
@TLJAWSIMIB Color film was freaking expensive back then :P
That's the year I was born
2 Broadway back when it was brand new. Glad they replaced the ugly window frames in 99 to give it a modern touch.
There is a strong striking resemblance of now and then.
I swear if I could go back at that time, it'll be so similar to now.
At least that's what I think.
Compared to the people in old videos from other past eras, the people in this 1950's era look stiff uptight and joyless.
You would be stiff uptight and joyless to living in a city with to many Rats,Roaches,Bed Bugs and Democrats,plus the A-Bomb.Don't forget the normal look for a Democrat is stiff uptight and joyless.
Yay it shows footage of the BIGU
Are those doughnuts? Or what are they?? 6:31
They're zeppoles.
Add some music and this will be a masterpiece
@redonionsauce
While crime didn't START in the 60s, it did skyrocket. I've seen the United States homicide rates on Wikipedia---there's an enormous jump starting around 1965 and by the 1970s it was wayyyy up there. Then it started going down rather quickly after about 1993, and it's been going down ever since. I'm worried now though---with times being the way they are, I hope it doesn't start climbing up again.