Harlem, New York 1930s in color, [60fps, Remastered] w/sound design added

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  • Опубліковано 23 вер 2024
  • I colorized with new technique, restored, and created sound design for this video of Harlem, New York 1930, which gives a unique glimpse into daily life in Harlem during this period, highlighting the rich and diverse cultural heritage, Immerse yourself in the vibrant energy of Harlem's streets,
    Video Restoration Process:
    ✔ FPS boosted to 60 frames per second
    ✔ Image resolution boosted up to HD
    ✔ Improved video sharpness and brightness
    ✔ Colorized only for the ambiance (not historically accurate)
    ✔added sound design only for the ambiance
    ✔restoration:(stabilisation,denoise,cleand,deblur)
    ✔ Face Restoration
    ✔ added modern Noise grain for a natural result.
    Please, be aware that colorization colors are not real and fake, colorization was made only for the ambiance and do not represent real historical data.
    B&W Video Source: US National Archives
    Join this channel to benefit from exclusive advantages and also to support us: / @nass_0

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,8 тис.

  • @NASS_0
    @NASS_0  10 місяців тому +490

    Would you like to live in the 1930s??

    • @Edward-jn5pl
      @Edward-jn5pl 10 місяців тому +67

      I wold love a time machine to visit for a month or so. Your videos are always amazing and this is no exception. I'm always happy when a new one is released. Thank you for bringing history to life.

    • @trudytriad4574
      @trudytriad4574 10 місяців тому +64

      No. Lol but this is interesting to watch. I would love to visit the 70s though. But I will have withdrawal symptoms from my cellphone

    • @Michail_Ivanov
      @Michail_Ivanov 10 місяців тому +48

      Yes on one hand, and definately NO on the other...

    • @plunkervillerr1529
      @plunkervillerr1529 10 місяців тому +44

      Better then, than now. 11/15/23

    • @fleurstarable
      @fleurstarable 10 місяців тому +1

      It was THE GREAT DEPRESSION idiots! About what's almost here 23/24 . You'll get that vibe. Not good you can see too many on streets not working.

  • @eulawade3058
    @eulawade3058 9 місяців тому +981

    My son sent me this video. I was born in Brooklyn, April 12th 1930.family moved to Harlem 1931.Grew up there, got married,moved to Qeens in 1955, now live in Florida. The best days of my life was growing up in Harlem.Thank you for the memories. Iam 93 andstill remember.

    • @eulawade3058
      @eulawade3058 9 місяців тому +96

      We had so much pride in the way we looked and you captured it in the videos thank you again. God Bless.

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  9 місяців тому +34

      Thank you

    • @monica62888
      @monica62888 9 місяців тому +102

      93 on the internet is amazing! ❤😊

    • @brandonseyfried1251
      @brandonseyfried1251 9 місяців тому +46

      May you live many more years and share your stories. God Bless.

    • @BT_Spanky
      @BT_Spanky 9 місяців тому +19

      God bless you

  • @xineohp2810
    @xineohp2810 11 місяців тому +666

    It's weird, once I see these old videos In color and Improved framerate I can much more easily Imagine what It must've been like living In that time period. With Black & White footage I've always felt a sort of sense of 'detachment'... Like It's almost happening on another planet or something.

    • @bobchris11
      @bobchris11 11 місяців тому +25

      Exactly. The times have changed, but people went on with their lives as we do now.

    • @jo9354
      @jo9354 11 місяців тому +10

      It's funny how the pace of life back then suddenly slowed down...with the right framerate.

    • @mexican-americanpatriot721
      @mexican-americanpatriot721 10 місяців тому +7

      I'm using my phone to watch this video.

    • @robsemail
      @robsemail 9 місяців тому +3

      I can’t imagine it at all. I’m not sure I’d want to live in a time when my clothes would be changing color every time I move slightly.

    • @MariselaR.da1daOnly
      @MariselaR.da1daOnly 9 місяців тому +1

      ​@@mexican-americanpatriot721 that is kind of crazy to think about.

  • @righteousness8606
    @righteousness8606 9 місяців тому +313

    This is the closest thing to time travel. Magnificent.

    • @AmberSumerall
      @AmberSumerall 8 місяців тому +3

      They have time travel machines now, they just can’t let the public know, they mainly go back in time for destructive business purposes. Do you know what they’ll do to the cosmic balance of the universe if the public had access to a time travel machine?

    • @righteousness8606
      @righteousness8606 8 місяців тому +1

      @@AmberSumerall from what I understand, you can go back in time but you can't change anything.

    • @PeterJPickles
      @PeterJPickles 6 місяців тому +4

      @@righteousness8606 You can but it becomes an alternate reality. That's why the universe is expanding at an increasing rate, due to, too many alternate realities happening, someone is going back or forward in time, messing things up, simple quantum physics proves this.

    • @Wkwk-k7g
      @Wkwk-k7g 2 місяці тому

      😅😅

  • @buffalopatriot
    @buffalopatriot 8 місяців тому +168

    My dad grew up in Harlem in the 1930’s. He had an apple cart and sold horse manure to housewives for their flower pots. He learned to swim in the East River and went to the WMCA on 135th and Lenox. My grandfather was a Pullman Porter and his run was to Toronto Canada. He had a small meat operation and brought back Canadian bacon to sell (at a discount). He also served in WW1 with the 369th Infantry (the Harlem Hellfighters). My uncle Jack owned a ‘speakeasy’ on 131st and 7th Avenue called ‘The Hi Lo Club’. It was definitely a different time when people ’strived’ to improve their lot.

    • @auntie9077
      @auntie9077 5 місяців тому +15

      WHAT A RICH LEGACY!!

    • @janisameduri2212
      @janisameduri2212 5 місяців тому +9

      Loved your family history! The Speakeasy story was fabulous! My maternal Grandfather had a vegetable cart as well in the South Bronx. Precious to keep their memories alive, by remembering their work ethics
      back then. ❤

    • @olivia-x6y
      @olivia-x6y 5 місяців тому +7

      Ever thought about writing a book? Your family has a rich history that would benefit the youth of today.

    • @KarenRodriguez-bi7ft
      @KarenRodriguez-bi7ft 5 місяців тому +7

      No gangs terrorizing people.

    • @LeonFowler-rz4gs
      @LeonFowler-rz4gs 5 місяців тому +3

      That is so Dope....proud history

  • @robinafrica3456
    @robinafrica3456 9 місяців тому +248

    My mother was born in Harlem in 1931, she’s now 92yrs old. I watch these videos with the hope of seeing and recognizing my people…🤗

    • @Midlifesimmer
      @Midlifesimmer 9 місяців тому +5

      Wow! ❤

    • @tenbroeck1958
      @tenbroeck1958 9 місяців тому +4

      It's amazing to look back at another time/culture, while right here and now. You can kind of get the feeling of the place. For you it must be special, thinking of your mom and family

    • @geraldbarreno535
      @geraldbarreno535 9 місяців тому +3

      Who cares

    • @Midlifesimmer
      @Midlifesimmer 9 місяців тому

      @@geraldbarreno535 and obviously you’re a true asshole!

    • @jeremyblackwater439
      @jeremyblackwater439 9 місяців тому +1

      @@geraldbarreno535I care you taint 😒

  • @garycole520
    @garycole520 10 місяців тому +368

    Wow, amazing to see this footage of a bygone era. The streets were clean and the people were dressed sharply.

    • @RayRay-i3w
      @RayRay-i3w 9 місяців тому +13

      And it was too hot to be overdressed! Thank God fashion has changed to be more kool and comfortable!

    • @artv.9989
      @artv.9989 9 місяців тому +7

      Is this what everybody is copy-pasting like NPC's on this channel?

    • @Veniamin7657110
      @Veniamin7657110 9 місяців тому

      @@RayRay-i3wyea,you look like homeless

    • @johnmc3862
      @johnmc3862 8 місяців тому +5

      They weren't going to show the slums.

    • @klavier285
      @klavier285 8 місяців тому +18

      rap culture didn't exist yet

  • @Hevynly1
    @Hevynly1 11 місяців тому +1060

    Everyone looks so sharp and elegant, so beautifully put together! Such a rare sight now. Fashion-wise, we have fallen hard.

    • @graficaink9601
      @graficaink9601 10 місяців тому +67

      It shows people were concerned or strived to look their best in public. Wonderful times make me really want to have a time machine... Thank you for the video!

    • @areguapiri
      @areguapiri 10 місяців тому +93

      We have hit rock bottom.

    • @aquaman199
      @aquaman199 10 місяців тому +8

      Mmm. Ok

    • @fluffy1931
      @fluffy1931 10 місяців тому

      @@graficaink9601 Wonderful Jim Crow & segregation & KKK strict race laws along with 'Great Depression' era enjoy !

    • @fluffy1931
      @fluffy1931 10 місяців тому +16

      @@areguapiri only in your fantasy.

  • @Arthur5260
    @Arthur5260 11 місяців тому +348

    People had serious style. Love this footage.

    • @jimzucker
      @jimzucker 11 місяців тому +40

      the style back then was amazing even more because people kinda dressed up to go out in public it was shameful not to be dressed up at least decently, even if you were poor.
      Now you see people around in pijamas, even if they have money.

    • @Ze_Moose
      @Ze_Moose 9 місяців тому +5

      And now people wearing Crocs? 🙄

    • @realityanalyst
      @realityanalyst 9 місяців тому

      Whatever the prison allows you. Nothing special.

    • @RoderickFernandez-ps5ci
      @RoderickFernandez-ps5ci 9 місяців тому

      ​@@Ze_MooseI wear Crocs and I'm very chic

    • @Ze_Moose
      @Ze_Moose 9 місяців тому +1

      @@RoderickFernandez-ps5ci exception to the rule 😉

  • @lessonsfromthequran924
    @lessonsfromthequran924 9 місяців тому +73

    I am not naïve to believe that there weren’t several forms of injustice and obscenity during any era, but the decency of the era is far more evident. Clean people, cleanly dressed, clean streets. I love it. Especially the decency of the women and girls in the footage; virtually none wore pants/slacks except where the children played in the water near the end. Much respect.

    • @christianamericandominican2470
      @christianamericandominican2470 7 місяців тому +16

      I'll take that any day compared to what we have now. No one can walk safely in the streets much less children, murder rate is out of control, aborted and fatherless children, men are no longer the head of household. The culture of drugs, thuggery and the degeneracy is what is applauded in Hollywood.

    • @Qtevwa
      @Qtevwa 5 місяців тому +16

      Romanticizing the past because the clothes are clean in an 8-minute video is also naïve, especially with the problems and misery that existed in the 1930s.

    • @jenniferlloyd9574
      @jenniferlloyd9574 5 місяців тому +5

      ​@@Qtevwa I'd rather live in decency than the misery and filth of now.

    • @hubriswonk
      @hubriswonk 5 місяців тому +13

      We are lead to believe racism and privilege has ruled our society but this video and others like it clearly show thriving communities living very well. Scenes such as this was the standard in cities across America prior to the welfare programs of the 60's, cocaine and crack epidemic of the 70' and 80's and still feeling the affects today amplified by rap music. Pun intended.

    • @repentyasharahla7632
      @repentyasharahla7632 5 місяців тому

      @@hubriswonkthis is how it was in New York but down south they where hanging black people.

  • @martynkingsley9805
    @martynkingsley9805 8 місяців тому +108

    This is how human-beings should look, everyone in this video clip looks so naturally authentic. The street looks like love. Thanks for uploading. I love this so truly much.

    • @williamlloyd5600
      @williamlloyd5600 3 місяці тому

      Back when people of all cultures had some dignity and self respect and actually knew what that meant not like the backwards vulgar Dumbasses we've got now!!😂😂

    • @rayhall6520
      @rayhall6520 15 днів тому

      Human- beings are not a monolith

  • @luciaterrizzi1881
    @luciaterrizzi1881 10 місяців тому +181

    Look at those clean streets back then! Look at the stylish and beautiful way of dressing! No sloppy jeans or ripped outfits!. Ladies and gents wore HATS when they went outdoors, and there was dignity! Dignity and respect on the outward appearance even if you were poor! WOW if it could look that way again!

    • @Maldoror200
      @Maldoror200 8 місяців тому +7

      @luciaterizzzi..I Agree..Soo Lovely."Where have all thee flowers gone..?"

    • @fluffy1931
      @fluffy1931 7 місяців тому +2

      you probably missed that dumpster fire WW2 circa 1939' along with the rise of nazi germany starting in 1933' when Adolf Hitler became chancellor. And the Holocaust was a major bummer also !
      @@Maldoror200

    • @adrianwalker2833
      @adrianwalker2833 7 місяців тому +7

      @@fluffy1931 ...but not in Harlem.

    • @fluffy1931
      @fluffy1931 7 місяців тому

      Harlem is in NYC dude. Feb 20, 1939, a Nazi rally took place at Madison Square Garden, organized by the German American Bund. More than 20,000 people attended complete with swatzikas & goose stepping goodness.@@adrianwalker2833

    • @初日の出_初日の入り
      @初日の出_初日の入り 6 місяців тому +1

      @@fluffy1931 bro what

  • @laca7676
    @laca7676 10 місяців тому +204

    Amazing to see our ancestors in coloured videos. No one is alive probably from this footage and it is weird to watch these people once lived and simply disappeared with that world they lived in.

    • @waynegruber9122
      @waynegruber9122 10 місяців тому +8

      That's what I said.

    • @palepride7530
      @palepride7530 10 місяців тому +10

      Ancestors? 😆

    • @ATHTA_
      @ATHTA_ 10 місяців тому

      Когда-то на этой земле жили индейцы, которых уничтожили ваши предки.

    • @1990758
      @1990758 9 місяців тому +6

      There are other videos of our ancestors and colored video.

    • @davidmitnick868
      @davidmitnick868 9 місяців тому +23

      There’s probably people still alive that we’re in this footage. A 90 year old would have been born in 1933.

  • @rickyparrilla2426
    @rickyparrilla2426 10 місяців тому +73

    This is the best restoration video I have ever seen. It's absolutely amazing. You can actually make out people's faces and everyone is dressed so elegantly. I have to honestly say we as a nation have gone down hill with the way we dress and the way we let our young people dress. Many dress up literally in pajamas to go shopping at the mall. How low we have become.

    • @escapetheratracenow9883
      @escapetheratracenow9883 9 місяців тому +3

      Same in England. We stayed at a good hotel in Chester last month and at breakfast a young couple thought it a good idea to come down in their pyjamas. They didn’t acknowledge the waitresses and left their cutlery all over the place when they left.

    • @BlindMellowJelly
      @BlindMellowJelly 9 місяців тому +2

      If you go to NYU and check into their archives you might really be impressed. Same with the Library of Congress. There is footage from all over the country that has deep meaning and could answer lots of our questions. The prob is it all depends on who views it. This was just after black Wall Street was demolished in the midwest because of whites viewed black people as progressing with great success. This could never happen in NYC because people in general had no idea of racism because they were mostly from countries where they were treated poorly. That all soon changed once it became popular to demonize the black citizens.

    • @kathleenking47
      @kathleenking47 9 місяців тому +5

      Pajamas & bonnets today
      Then, they wouldn't wear a dress without a slip

    • @rickyparrilla2426
      @rickyparrilla2426 9 місяців тому +1

      @@kathleenking47 Exactly!!!👍👍👍

    • @madmanmechanic8847
      @madmanmechanic8847 8 місяців тому +1

      Well discipline and respect is no longer taught this is what you get . So sad

  • @genesisthepoet815
    @genesisthepoet815 5 місяців тому +31

    This was in the middle of the Harlem Renaissance era … so many famous ppl going through Harlem at that time: Louis Armstrong; Bessie Smith; Zora Neal Hurston; cab Calloway; Billie holiday; Langston Hughes … what a time to be alive ❤

    • @hubriswonk
      @hubriswonk 5 місяців тому +3

      Amazing time! Why is it no longer like this? Crime, poverty and what passes for music is ridiculous! I could not imagine going to a club to see Bessie Smith sing! Or a dance hall to see Cab Calloway!

    • @genesisthepoet815
      @genesisthepoet815 3 місяці тому

      @@hubriswonk agreed

  • @ericcummings9671
    @ericcummings9671 5 місяців тому +27

    My mom tap danced at the Lafayette Theater, and my pops knew Billie Holiday hanging out at 'spots' in Harlem. They moved to Brooklyn in the '50s because Heroin was becoming a problem in the neighborhood. I was born in the late '50s and they told me numerous stories about Harlem. God bless their souls.

  • @kingsittystudios2400
    @kingsittystudios2400 10 місяців тому +173

    Awesome! my parents came to NYC as part of the great migration . My dad came in 1930 from North Carolina, My mom in 1955,from Tuskeegee ,Alabama.

    • @kevingomez-johnson140
      @kevingomez-johnson140 9 місяців тому +11

      Yeah, My great grandma moved from SC to NYC, and my dad side moved from SC to the Mid Atlantic city of DC.

    • @Ze_Moose
      @Ze_Moose 9 місяців тому +3

      What caused the migration? 🤔

    • @starboy5177
      @starboy5177 9 місяців тому +23

      ​@@Ze_MooseLess racism, more economic opportunity.

    • @stephenkinq5425
      @stephenkinq5425 9 місяців тому +8

      Yep. My folks came from the Carolinas nd BAMA as well.
      Many uprooted; if you were in Tennessee, Mississippi, you more than likely would migrate to L.A , Illinois [Detroit] ..
      From The Carolinas , you came to D.C , Philly , NYC

    • @FBA_God_Emperor_Doom
      @FBA_God_Emperor_Doom 9 місяців тому +7

      Same here all 4 of my grandparents came up from South Carolina.

  • @FABRIZIOZPH
    @FABRIZIOZPH 11 місяців тому +85

    great work, this is not just a video, this is a historic treasure and a humanitarian contribution

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  11 місяців тому +2

      Thx ;)

  • @olivia-x6y
    @olivia-x6y 5 місяців тому +39

    I'm 75 years old now, remember my mother taking me to visit her friend who lived there. It was 1952 and I was 4 at the time. Everywhere the streets were clean of trash including the apartment buildings. The hallway floors were finished in mosaic tiles and the stairway railings shined like mirrors. A funny note when we exited the subway, my mother said "Welcome to Harlem". I looked up at her and said Holland thinking of the windmills She said no dear Harlem

    • @JudgeJulieLit
      @JudgeJulieLit 2 місяці тому +1

      In the 1600s Harlem, NYC began as Nieu Haarlem, named for old Haarlem in the Netherlands.

  • @jeanetteroberts4427
    @jeanetteroberts4427 5 місяців тому +22

    My grandmother and grandfather were in Harlem during the 1930s. She often said how beautiful it was then. Houses were clean, streets were clean, sleep on the stoop at night. People were kind to one another. Harlem Renaissance.

    • @vycanismajoris5501
      @vycanismajoris5501 3 місяці тому

      and what the hell happened to it afterwards?

    • @pistolpete8231
      @pistolpete8231 3 місяці тому

      ​@@vycanismajoris5501you're asking a random UA-camr about social economic issues? Can't you do your own research?

    • @bryanr.2649
      @bryanr.2649 3 місяці тому +1

      @@vycanismajoris5501Heroin happened in the 50s and the rest is history.

    • @krozareq
      @krozareq 2 місяці тому

      @@vycanismajoris5501 Drug abuse is the root. Most addicts can't hold down jobs. They become desperate. Desire to control the drug and sex trade builds, leading to gangs. This causes a breakdown in social capital (shared norms and trust in a societal group). Kids are born into dysfunctional homes fraught with abuse and neglect. Those who pursue a rewarding career often leave, creating a drain of education, ethics, and leadership away from the community. Fewer businesses want to invest in the area and that leads to fewer jobs except for low wage positions such as fast food and budget stores. Then it becomes a feedback loop, like placing a microphone too close to the speaker.

  • @ventromanable
    @ventromanable 6 місяців тому +37

    All of those folks have passed on, its nice to see them brought back to life in this clip.

    • @PHlophe
      @PHlophe 5 місяців тому +8

      Dave, the adults one for sure but the chirren . some are still alive. This right here is less than a decade removed from the Tulsa massacre and some of the kids from the 1920s are very much alive

    • @krozareq
      @krozareq 2 місяці тому +2

      Looking at the evidence in the video, it was filmed in the Summer of 1938. A 10-yr-old in the video would be 96 or 97 today. The Social Security Administration's actuarial life table shows that roughly 2.5% of kids that age then would still be alive today. A child of 5 years of age in the video would have ~12% chance of still being alive today. Since at least 40 children are shown, chances are at least 1 is still alive. :D

    • @FUNNYMANERICWHITE
      @FUNNYMANERICWHITE Місяць тому

      @@krozareqinteresting

    • @nikedoesthings
      @nikedoesthings 16 днів тому

      My grandma is from '27 and she's still around. She could very well be one of the youngsters in this video.

  • @GoldenBlissWithin
    @GoldenBlissWithin 9 місяців тому +38

    Compared to the usual black & white footage of it's time. It's amazing how this simple remastered colorized footage, instantly inspires such a deeper connection to the people, heritage, history and stirs my imagination of living during this time. 💖

  • @GregPeters1
    @GregPeters1 11 місяців тому +81

    Omg - Great footage! This was during the Harlem Renaissance era. The works that were fostered there had a global impact. Well done

    • @NoahBodze
      @NoahBodze 11 місяців тому +1

      Why do you compare black people squatting in a city they didn't build to the great manifestations of civilization?
      Blacks didn't build any part of Harlem and weren't there when it was built, but destroyed it within a generation. Why would you compare that to Michelangelo, Copernicus or Brunelleschi?
      It's vulgar. Stop calling it that. What were you even rebirthing that you could call yours?

    • @paulyricca3881
      @paulyricca3881 10 місяців тому +5

      🚬👴🏿🥃WRONG THE RENAISSANCE ERA WAS IN THE 1920s MY MOTHER HERE CAN PROVE IT .

    • @yolandagaines1760
      @yolandagaines1760 10 місяців тому +1

      @@paulyricca3881 Yes, you are very correct.

    • @ElitePhysiqquesAndForm15
      @ElitePhysiqquesAndForm15 9 місяців тому +1

      The Harlem Renaissance was in the 1920's! Please study b4 u speak

    • @rayman5011
      @rayman5011 9 місяців тому +4

      Maybe you should take your own advice. The Harlem Renaissance Era was from 1918 to 1937.

  • @remote4719
    @remote4719 11 місяців тому +92

    No one left home without their hats . Classy , and well dressed..

    • @themessengacross1581
      @themessengacross1581 10 місяців тому +1

      Forreal😂

    • @ninoblakk
      @ninoblakk 9 місяців тому +7

      That was all they had......that was there cell phone....dont leave home without it

    • @thetruthhurts131
      @thetruthhurts131 9 місяців тому

      There was nothing classy about the southern Inbreds harassing people

    • @Gofroze
      @Gofroze 7 місяців тому +1

      @@ninoblakk😂

    • @monocomo1675
      @monocomo1675 3 місяці тому

      And from 60s to 90s violence began

  • @Getoutofthetimetrap
    @Getoutofthetimetrap 8 місяців тому +17

    My God , how we have devolved in the last 100 years …..so much for all the tech advancement we are less human for it. A simpler time and a different vibe back then .

  • @piemack9389
    @piemack9389 5 місяців тому +4

    The black dude at 0:35 was ahead of his time with what he wearing lol, could easily fit in today and no one would question it

  • @NicCageForPresident2024
    @NicCageForPresident2024 9 місяців тому +23

    I'm staying with my grandpa right now because Grandma passed away earlier this year and my grandfather was born in Chicago 1935. It absolutely blows my mind to think of all the different eras and times that he has gone through.

    • @hubriswonk
      @hubriswonk 5 місяців тому +1

      He has lived in an amazing time. get a notebook, write the year at the top on every page and ask him to write down everything he recalls from that year! I did this for my mother and was amazed how much she remembered. Family history :)

  • @SecretWars98
    @SecretWars98 11 місяців тому +45

    This has sincerely become one of my most favorite channels on YT. From the personalities & charm of everyday people, to the realistic colors added in, this is the Nostalgia that old movies just can’t quite capture. I am always on the lookout for a new upload notification from Nass.❤

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  11 місяців тому +5

      thank you very much god bless you

    • @SecretWars98
      @SecretWars98 11 місяців тому +3

      @@NASS_0 Thank you for your wonderful work. God bless. ❤️

    • @stevenkastein1374
      @stevenkastein1374 10 місяців тому +2

      Sad to see what we’ve lost.

    • @Maldoror200
      @Maldoror200 8 місяців тому +1

      💀..@SecretWars..Agree..Mr.NASS is doing Beautiful work..!!

  • @saudade369
    @saudade369 9 місяців тому +39

    People who say how good things were in their youth are often laughed at , well here it is in full colour, everyone looks well dressed , happily going about their day , walking safely in the streets , prosperous and purposeful . Amazing . It makes me a little envious .

    • @bootlegapples
      @bootlegapples 8 місяців тому +7

      All the old reels I access are the same.All of them. They had tougher lives then and may have soot on their suits but the people have spirit and you see people bonding,they don't look atomized as is common now.

    • @fluffy1931
      @fluffy1931 7 місяців тому

      You seriously think the period of 'Great Depression' 1929' - 39' the most serious economic downturn in history was prosperous & purposeful & people were happy. Hang on to your hat & bendover because by 1936' their whole world is about to slide into WW2 & Holocaust fiesta.

    • @LeydenAigg
      @LeydenAigg 6 місяців тому

      This is the era of lynching for black Americans, even in Northern states. Jim Crow segregation is in full effect in the South. The KKK de facto runs much of the country. The only jobs for black people are crooks, maids, Pullman Porters, shining shoes, sharecropping down South. Only a tiny few business owners (like my late Great Uncle, a Harlem grocer), and professionals like doctors and attorneys were anything but abjectly poor.

    • @brijmsn
      @brijmsn 5 місяців тому +1

      Safely?

    • @jenniferlloyd9574
      @jenniferlloyd9574 5 місяців тому

      ​@@brijmsn Safely. Are you ok? Something wrong with you?

  • @emylrmm
    @emylrmm 8 місяців тому +4

    a couple of comments have suggested 1936 or 37. Nice restoration. Thanks for uploading.

  • @MatthewGarcia-pl5tg
    @MatthewGarcia-pl5tg 3 місяці тому +4

    2:56 love how that guy took a free ride on the bus

  • @randomvintagefilm273
    @randomvintagefilm273 11 місяців тому +118

    Wow, this was great! Everybody cared about their appearance and dressed well.

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  11 місяців тому +4

      ;)

    • @Retrosigns1
      @Retrosigns1 9 місяців тому +11

      Looks like everyone took pride in themselves and their neighborhoods, look how clean the streets and sidewalks were. It could still look that way today if people wanted to make the effort

    • @Rasira2023
      @Rasira2023 9 місяців тому

      No flip Flops, no spaghetti straps, no tights, no skinny jeans, no yoga pants, No torn jeans-just love the way women were presentable as opposed to now where they dress like sluts with lots of Tattoos and piercings you would think they were branded cattle

    • @brandywineblue
      @brandywineblue 9 місяців тому +1

      ​@Retrosigns1 there's an old expression, where there's a will, there's a way. It is not heard much anymore...probably because no one has a will anymore, they just want to blame everyone else

    • @mrHoppedupford
      @mrHoppedupford 9 місяців тому +5

      Nobody is stopping you from wearing a suit the next time you go grocery shopping.

  • @NASS_0
    @NASS_0  11 місяців тому +52

    Please Like and Share

  • @theypeedonmyrug
    @theypeedonmyrug 11 місяців тому +52

    It's so beautiful it almost hurts, there's so much in it, Otto J Jürgs, 406 Lenox Av as one of the many German immigrants back then, the gentleman's impeccable style at 0:50, the almost meditative act of buying an ice cream 4:37, police officers ready to give a decent swing with their batons...

    • @siddrajput1029
      @siddrajput1029 11 місяців тому +2

      Indeed, that is one cool looking dude!

  • @punkanellylovejoy702
    @punkanellylovejoy702 8 місяців тому +4

    Did anyone notice the guy hanging on to the back of bus at 2:52? 😂

  • @TheVinci19
    @TheVinci19 8 місяців тому +6

    I believe it happens in every western country; watching a 30's footage, everything and everyone seem to be more clean, elegant, peaceful, than it is in our age. Harlem looked a very pleasing place to live, looking at the footage

  • @jnm2088
    @jnm2088 11 місяців тому +122

    Everyone is fit and well dressed. America has really changed.

    • @eileenweeks1815
      @eileenweeks1815 9 місяців тому

      They had their town owned by black businessmen. Then jealous white business and politicians👹👿👺😟😟 took it all away. The basterds!!.

    • @omegaweapon116
      @omegaweapon116 9 місяців тому +3

      There was nothing to do at home probably lol

    • @artv.9989
      @artv.9989 9 місяців тому +1

      skinny doesnt mean fit

    • @Mr.rukus1
      @Mr.rukus1 9 місяців тому +3

      @@artv.9989better of than those with too much blubber on their skeleton but you’re absolutely right.

    • @UnDark1
      @UnDark1 9 місяців тому +18

      @@artv.9989 fat is definitely not healthy

  • @rileyb2752
    @rileyb2752 11 місяців тому +133

    As someone who moved to Harlem last year, this is amazing to see. Quite sad how fast things can change

    • @robfut9954
      @robfut9954 11 місяців тому +3

      How’s the jazz scene there these days? You a fan?

    • @rileyb2752
      @rileyb2752 11 місяців тому +5

      There’s a spot called Bills Place in my neighborhood that’s good but other than that there’s not much in Harlem. I haven’t been to the Cotton Club mainly because the bad reviews. Sounds like they’re just using the name since the original is gone.

    • @robfut9954
      @robfut9954 11 місяців тому +3

      @@rileyb2752 yeah I heard they tore down the original a while back, didn’t even know someplace was trying to use the name. That’s a shame. That whole area was jazz paradise in the 40’s. Now it’s no so much I guess

    • @DerrickW30
      @DerrickW30 11 місяців тому +9

      When I watched this I thought to myself, "Nicky Barnes destroyed that city and its culture." Maybe if he hadn't it would have been someone else anyway. I just don't know. It's a sad story though.

    • @NoahBodze
      @NoahBodze 11 місяців тому +5

      Just over a decade before this video, there would be no black people there or, really, in any American city.
      They hollowed out Harlem within a decade of this video, you know.

  • @bisonkambaine5628
    @bisonkambaine5628 11 місяців тому +55

    Fantastic work as always. Everyone looks elegant, classy and presentable.

    • @SeamusMcGillicuddy0
      @SeamusMcGillicuddy0 10 місяців тому +4

      So, WTF happened 🤔 ?

    • @yolandagaines1760
      @yolandagaines1760 10 місяців тому

      Communism. Same fate as Newark, New Jersey@@SeamusMcGillicuddy0

    • @fluffy1931
      @fluffy1931 10 місяців тому +2

      @@SeamusMcGillicuddy0 Those were Jim Crow & segregation times in US along with 'Great Depression'.

    • @Danzo1212
      @Danzo1212 9 місяців тому +3

      @@fluffy1931 i dunno seems to me that black people had more class and style in the 1930s

    • @sniffiejoe9370
      @sniffiejoe9370 8 місяців тому

      @@SeamusMcGillicuddy0 They voted Democrats that is what destroyed them

  • @PhilippeOrlando
    @PhilippeOrlando 5 місяців тому +2

    This is amazing to see this, this was almost 100 years ago.

    • @PHlophe
      @PHlophe 5 місяців тому

      Orlando, give it another 13 years to reach 100 .

    • @Scott-up3bq
      @Scott-up3bq 10 днів тому

      Thanks Columbo for pointing that out

  • @Petermomo5050
    @Petermomo5050 5 місяців тому +9

    The kid riding the rear bumper of the bus was pretty cool 2:56. Today he'd probably got 30 years for that one. Could i say nothing has really changed but the health of the people, I would get a one way ticket back to that time.

    • @Papawcanner
      @Papawcanner 5 місяців тому +3

      I’m 78 . Growing up in Chicago we climbed on trucks and buses . We were poor and respectful . My parents ran a house of ill repute but I never saw anything I shouldn’t .

  • @rbj1jcp
    @rbj1jcp 11 місяців тому +68

    Nass, as always your wonderful work is really fantastic. You've gotten so good that it's hard to believe that this wasn't filmed in color. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. JoAnn

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  11 місяців тому +13

      Thank you very much ;)

    • @TS-1267
      @TS-1267 9 місяців тому

      .... If there was only Footage of The 1700s MMmmmm 4:04

  • @mister_bojangles
    @mister_bojangles 10 місяців тому +145

    everybody looks respectable, clean and well-dressed. I am sure they would be appalled to see NYC as it has become today

    • @joachim5080
      @joachim5080 9 місяців тому +4

      Ever seen w130 street today? Much more upscale than back then

    • @Kevin-e3s6i
      @Kevin-e3s6i 9 місяців тому +5

      @@joachim5080It’s starting to become that way because of gentrification. There are still pockets of “ghetto” all over Harlem though. Which would still make this look better. You don’t see homeless people, drug addicts, etc. like you find now. Even though it’s changing for sure, you can tell the overall pride during this time was different.

    • @franklinhernandez683
      @franklinhernandez683 9 місяців тому +6

      This is not just an era or past time gone by know this is the way it should be even better and it's not so what does that tell you and I'll tell you why is that humans were not divided so much and so many this and that and also did not fragmented humans

    • @joachim5080
      @joachim5080 9 місяців тому +5

      ​@@franklinhernandez683 Let's also not forget, that in this glorious past, people used punctuation in their writings.

    • @nicktaylor1015
      @nicktaylor1015 9 місяців тому +11

      @@joachim5080dude, in this “glorious past” unemployment was well over 10%, life expectancy was barely over 50, and the citizens you’re watching faced racism you couldn’t imagine . The good old days are now!!! Stop glorifying a past that doesn’t need it.

  • @bawillard2578
    @bawillard2578 11 місяців тому +46

    Folks of all ethnic backgrounds dressed clean and pressed ..
    Most times folks had only afew good pieces of clothing but the best one could afford..no one would think of going in public like most dress today!

    • @kipdr
      @kipdr 9 місяців тому +8

      All ethnic backgrounds? It's literally a segregated Black american neighborhood with white police and firemen.

    • @sew_gal7340
      @sew_gal7340 9 місяців тому +1

      @@kipdr There was a black police officer there too. People in those days did not like ghetto culture so white flight was a thing, white flight is still a thing now which is why the hood still exists. It's not that different now and will never change for all of time.

    • @riaa8689
      @riaa8689 9 місяців тому

      ​@@sew_gal7340Ghetto "culture" was created by the government. It doesn't mean black smfh 🤡

    • @BigBoss-zi5ss
      @BigBoss-zi5ss 9 місяців тому +7

      ​@@sew_gal7340where do you see a ghetto?? Maybe lower income but everyone back then had respect for the city and was clean and clean dressed

    • @theredmistiscoming609
      @theredmistiscoming609 5 місяців тому

      @@BigBoss-zi5ss yeah but they’re not exactly wrong, lol. people don’t talk about the lesser known “black flight”. back then whites were not the only ones fleeing from areas where (poor/“urban”) blacks lived, more established blacks were also fleeing. You can even find black and white vids like this of more upper class black peoples expressing their concerns about poorer more urban blacks moving into their neighborhoods and towns and wanting to flee to a different area. Not saying whites who did white flight weren’t racist, some of them were, but not all of them were and were fleeing solely for safety. And whites also weren’t the only ones trying to get the heck away from certain blk ppl
      In a segregated area like this, most of the power was in black peoples hands (they were still oppressed ofc, but in their own communities they pretty much had most of the power) As in the mayors were usually blk, or the sheriff was black, business owners etc, were black. So 5/10 if a white cop was in a black neighborhood/town it’s bc a black sheriff/chief hired him and put him there.
      I’m black btw so I’m in no means defending racism or anything, just speaking up about history is all lol.

  • @TUCOtheratt
    @TUCOtheratt 4 місяці тому +2

    Enjoying my time travel experience. What happened at 8:14? People not happy.

  • @Rock486-bg4zg
    @Rock486-bg4zg 9 днів тому +1

    I just looked up Lenox Ave and W 130 St, New York City on Google Earth. Lenox Ave is now Malcolm X Blvd. In the 1930s Lenox Ave was jazz capital of the world. Changed but not changed. Almost 100 years ago. Real times, real people. Grateful these videos were preserved.

  • @shotelco
    @shotelco 11 місяців тому +17

    "Opened in 1937, the *Harlem River Houses* were the first government-funded housing complex in New York City. At that time, the development was meant to be an environment in which African Americans could live safe from the effects of discrimination. Even though it was _Segregated housing_ by today’s standards, the Harlem River Houses were a safe community for its residents.
    Designed by John Louis Wilson, Jr., the first African-American graduate of Columbia University’s School of Architecture, the complex still stands today. Because the families that occupied it were _not allowed to purchase their flats,_ the city ownership has recently changed to Private ownership, and the threat of Gentrification looms.

    • @themessengacross1581
      @themessengacross1581 10 місяців тому

      Good and sad...thanks for the info

    • @JohnTaylor-bd1uy
      @JohnTaylor-bd1uy 9 місяців тому

      The Queensbridge Houses: Future projects where Nas and others would come up.

    • @dbrown9495
      @dbrown9495 9 місяців тому

      This wasn't the reason. It was an affordable place for working class to live. Wasn't for whites

  • @rosieparez
    @rosieparez 9 місяців тому +16

    My grandfather is 91 and alive and well. He was born 1932. I know he has seen so much in his life.

    • @hubriswonk
      @hubriswonk 5 місяців тому

      he has lived in an amazing time. get a notebook, write the year at the top on every page and ask him to write down everything he recalls from that year! I did this for my mother and was amazed how much she remembered. Family history :)

  • @1001Hobbies
    @1001Hobbies 11 місяців тому +11

    Thank you for your efforts to give us this window back through time.

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  11 місяців тому

      thank you very much

  • @ericb8004
    @ericb8004 4 місяці тому +2

    Notice the sign- "keep your sidewalk clean and don't sweep refuse into the street. Guess people forgot about that one." I don't care what people say, there was a lot more respect back then

  • @mariestreeting4213
    @mariestreeting4213 5 місяців тому +3

    The sign says clean your sidewalk and Curb your Dog 😆 Brilliant footage ❤️

  • @edmorrisonline
    @edmorrisonline 10 місяців тому +10

    NASS, now, you have outdone yourself! Seeing Harlem during "The Harlem Renaissance," made me want to shout! This bit of video should be shown to those who thought Harlem has always been associated with failure. Seeing people going about their everyday business is quite normal, but, yet, extraordinary. Sir, continue your excellent work.

  • @MrRiceandbeanz
    @MrRiceandbeanz 11 місяців тому +51

    Also, based on the construction of the Harlem River Houses, this puts the video around 1937. They were a precusor to the "projects" built in the 1960s.

    • @grahamsmith6210
      @grahamsmith6210 9 місяців тому +11

      They were also projects, but one of the earlier ones. At the end of this video, you can see them constructing the Queensbridge Houses

    • @robinsss
      @robinsss 9 місяців тому +3

      you can see them constructing projects at 6:53

    • @mickyboymccoy7632
      @mickyboymccoy7632 9 місяців тому

      So nice to see what Harlem was like, Before Robert Moses and LBJ rebuilt the physical and mental slave plantation.

    • @mickyboymccoy7632
      @mickyboymccoy7632 9 місяців тому +2

      @@grahamsmith6210 Queensbridge House were downtown, not Harlem.

    • @grahamsmith6210
      @grahamsmith6210 9 місяців тому +2

      @@mickyboymccoy7632 they're in Astoria, not Manhattan at all

  • @Jack908r
    @Jack908r 9 місяців тому +7

    I love these old movies. You get to see and feel the people, and the styles of clothing that were popular at the time. While its only a snapshot in time, I get to see it. Actually see it. Its amazing. All these people are gone, but we get to see them. Its almost like time travel. And everyone is so very well dressed. And all the little shops. I grew up in the 60's before malls. My mom would take us downtown to the shops. And I remember it so well. All the little shops, and their shopkeepers, and the smells. I miss it, but thankful I got to experience it before it was all gone. Makes me realise that the world I grew up in is gone. And this could just as easily be me.

  • @vanillasmerk5742
    @vanillasmerk5742 8 місяців тому +10

    Look how clean the streets are. Ooooooooo beautiful

  • @daveweiss5647
    @daveweiss5647 11 місяців тому +16

    Another great video! I truely wish I could go back... the modern world seems so foreign, alien even... these old videos, I look at them and feel at home.

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  11 місяців тому +1

      thank you very much ;))

    • @helisoma
      @helisoma 11 місяців тому +1

      perhaps you were there in a previous life

    • @edwardalamo2507
      @edwardalamo2507 11 місяців тому +1

      We see no hatred

  • @kennethnero2011
    @kennethnero2011 11 місяців тому +41

    Wish I grew up in this era… love the fashion & Cars

    • @bawillard2578
      @bawillard2578 11 місяців тому +7

      One can still dress beautifully 😍

    • @fluffy1931
      @fluffy1931 10 місяців тому +12

      You would have not enjoyed WW2 or Holocaust and Jim Crow era along with segregation strict race laws ffs.

    • @runawayuniverse
      @runawayuniverse 10 місяців тому +6

      This was just the beginning of the Great Depression, so the odds are very good you wouldn't have the money for that fashion or a car.

    • @SanaasimonB-tu9qm
      @SanaasimonB-tu9qm 9 місяців тому

      ​@@fluffy1931she Dreams hell

    • @SanaasimonB-tu9qm
      @SanaasimonB-tu9qm 9 місяців тому +3

      No darling Klux Klux Klan wasnt playin black then

  • @mikemasiello9625
    @mikemasiello9625 11 місяців тому +22

    Nass the colorization done on this video is spot on, amazing work. Really shows folks in a nice community. When I grew up in NYC I can remember police on the main streets like in this video, always gave you a feeling of security.

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  11 місяців тому +3

      Thank you so much!

  • @momofaleotv6506
    @momofaleotv6506 9 місяців тому +3

    The lack of spandex and other stretchy fabrics back then shows how important tailors and seamstresses were! I love the shoes and hats!

    • @Maldoror200
      @Maldoror200 8 місяців тому

      @momofaleotv..I hear ya..I , also, loved how honest , and "candid", or, un-rehearsed.., Natural..(smfh)~Peace, K

    • @LIVETODAY_0
      @LIVETODAY_0 8 місяців тому

      A lot of black women back then made their own clothes and their husbands and children’s

  • @Zulu-jz7jt
    @Zulu-jz7jt 9 місяців тому +4

    This person did a Remarkable job. It's actually reminiscent of a movie set. The colors are Fantastic and the skin tones are Very Good. 1930s Harlem N.Y. Wow.

  • @brownhornet1975
    @brownhornet1975 9 місяців тому +5

    This remastered video was perfectly executed. It actually feels like im there with those folks in Harlem, at that time! Also as a teenager I used to surf the back of the bus in NYC back in the early 1990’s. I see there really is nothing new under the Sun, because I caught a shot of that young boy surfing that Bus in this video. Once again thank you so much for posting this

  • @alexcicada5805
    @alexcicada5805 11 місяців тому +13

    I am delighted to watch this video.Thank you so much for the work done!

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  11 місяців тому

      Thx ;)

  • @nfucied
    @nfucied 11 місяців тому +19

    it feels like traveling back in time.

    • @beard6160
      @beard6160 9 місяців тому

      It kinda is

    • @monocomo1675
      @monocomo1675 3 місяці тому +1

      From 60s to 90s violence began was soo high

  • @hill16gs83
    @hill16gs83 5 місяців тому +2

    Look how clean and peaceful the streets are

  • @davidsmith8417
    @davidsmith8417 5 місяців тому +1

    My Mother's family owned a number of "Speakeasies" or "H**tch" joints as the papers called them. I came across quite a number of articles about the nefarious activities in those businesses. Still wish I could find some photos which had those clubs in them. I watched this video hoping I might find their clubs, however this video gives me a glimpse into what their world was like. Thanks for sharing the video.

    • @PHlophe
      @PHlophe 5 місяців тому

      Dave, interesting your Momma was a trust fund Baby from the prohibition era. Y'all are Old money caucasians from the segregation era that could navigate back and forth between Black neighborhood and the caucasian ones without restrictions.

  • @brianmcghee9313
    @brianmcghee9313 11 місяців тому +9

    Love these videos it’s great just watching people being people observing things through there own eyes and not smartphones like we see today keep doing what you do ❤

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  11 місяців тому

      thank you very much

  • @BradThePitts
    @BradThePitts 11 місяців тому +20

    6:58 The Queensbridge Houses were, and still are in Queens, not Harlem. I always thought they were post-war buildings, and I was wrong.

    • @grahamsmith6210
      @grahamsmith6210 9 місяців тому +1

      me too. I didn't realize how many projects were built before WWII.

  • @jeffreyworthen7033
    @jeffreyworthen7033 9 місяців тому +10

    It looks like they recorded it live yesterday....it looks so sharp and clean.

  • @bermudaguy5003
    @bermudaguy5003 4 місяці тому

    I can't compliment you enough on the great work you accomplished! This is an extraordinary chance for us to see & feel this time period. I'm an "old timer" now & it reinforces my thoughts lately that we were Blessed to be "Just Passing Through". Thank you.

  • @merlinceltic4387
    @merlinceltic4387 4 місяці тому +2

    Danke,für diese Zeitreise.Sehr gute Arbeit.Respekt.

  • @lorascelsi8102
    @lorascelsi8102 10 місяців тому +21

    ❤ Love the fashion. Looked like happy times in NYC. Everyone looked like movie stars.

  • @j1st633
    @j1st633 11 місяців тому +9

    Glad you posted the cross Street. Born and raised in Manhattan. Know the area. Great channel.

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  11 місяців тому +1

      thank you very much

  • @johncornell3665
    @johncornell3665 11 місяців тому +21

    Great footage, thanks for your efforts!

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  11 місяців тому +1

      thank you very much

  • @AllanGildea
    @AllanGildea 8 місяців тому +2

    Absolutely extraordinary. Very tough times and yet people look impeccable. Your video is of outstanding technical quality, also.

  • @kimmy3469
    @kimmy3469 4 місяці тому +2

    I love to see how stylish and well dressed people were in public. Very classy and proper. Love the 🎩 hats too

  • @queenree-v2l
    @queenree-v2l 9 місяців тому +7

    The construction of the housing projects floored me!

  • @jody6851
    @jody6851 11 місяців тому +22

    Amazing how Harlem seemed to be a very vibrant, thriving community in those years. There's no sign of homelessness or squalor or drugged-out souls wandering the streets. Not even any litter. The Federal and NY City Housing Authority public works buildings shown already inhabited (not counting the footage of other apartment buildings still under construction) -- today often referred to disparagingly as "the Projects" -- seem to be pleasant places to live while today they are often places of great dysfunction and troubled souls, and a lot of crime.

    • @rodneybatts9784
      @rodneybatts9784 11 місяців тому +1

      There were no projects in the 1930's

    • @rodneybatts9784
      @rodneybatts9784 11 місяців тому

      My bad. Harlem, River Houses were built in the late 1930-s. They were built for working class people, and were successful. The philosophy later changed and things went South.

    • @DerrickW30
      @DerrickW30 11 місяців тому +1

      When I watched this I thought to myself, "Nicky Barnes destroyed that city and its culture." Maybe if he hadn't it would have been someone else anyway. I just don't know. It's a sad story though.

    • @NoahBodze
      @NoahBodze 11 місяців тому

      Because that's just after the neighborhood turned.
      White people would have been all you saw in those streets just over a decade before. The only thing new there was black people, not the buildings or streets or structure.

    • @krazyfan2000
      @krazyfan2000 10 місяців тому

      ​@@DerrickW30it happened way before Nikki. Harlem was flooded with heroin by the Mob purposely to destroy the community and it worked.

  • @giuliom8520
    @giuliom8520 11 місяців тому +99

    Wow, back when Americans looked and acted classy abd respectful. 🤔

    • @Billy_Bad_Ass
      @Billy_Bad_Ass 11 місяців тому +5

      The micro-cosmos of 1930's black Harlem can hardly be generalized to all "Americans." That's patently absurd.

    • @azul8811
      @azul8811 11 місяців тому +7

      @@Billy_Bad_Ass But he did not say “all” Americans. I wonder how many street scenes could be filmed today in the USA that would leave many of us with an impression of class and respect?

    • @Billy_Bad_Ass
      @Billy_Bad_Ass 11 місяців тому +6

      @@azul8811 _"I wonder how many street scenes could be filmed today in the USA that would leave many of us with an impression of class and respect?"_
      Not many! 😥

    • @Sacred_Fire
      @Sacred_Fire 11 місяців тому +4

      ​@@Billy_Bad_Assin the context of the OP's comment of classy, etc., it can be said of all Americans. People dressed like this in small towns and cities.

    • @dxwallace55
      @dxwallace55 10 місяців тому +4

      And nobody on the cellphone.....

  • @Timetravel1819
    @Timetravel1819 3 місяці тому +1

    Wow look at how the people dressed! Look at how clean things look. Look at the expression on their faces. They look more relaxed and less stressed compared to today. The women all wore dresses. Amazing. 😊

  • @richietavarez1200
    @richietavarez1200 4 місяці тому +3

    Good to see when people didn’t have their pants halfway down their crack 😂

  • @Mr.Rico.101
    @Mr.Rico.101 11 місяців тому +14

    Thank you for making these video's.

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  11 місяців тому

      thank you very much

  • @sophiabrown9423
    @sophiabrown9423 10 місяців тому +6

    Makes me want to spend 24 hrs there times we're hard for our people but at least we stuck together. These people took pride in themselves. Bravo to the person who restored this it's funny I only saw this in black and white color makes it more real THANK you

  • @monymony68
    @monymony68 11 місяців тому +75

    2:50
    Keep your sidewalk clean.
    You mean, no homeless, no tents, no drug users and no illegals loitering in the sidewalks?
    What a novel concept.

    • @dmitrykondratenko4116
      @dmitrykondratenko4116 11 місяців тому +2

      I wonder if there was such a sign on Kensington Avenue?

    • @NoahBodze
      @NoahBodze 11 місяців тому +3

      You know that Harlem would look like bombed-out Beirut in under two decades of them coming north, right?

    • @NothingToPointOut24
      @NothingToPointOut24 9 місяців тому +3

      And most of the footage shown in this video, is of poor communities too. Weird how "poverty" is used as an excuse for crime rates and filth these days, yet the people in this video suffered just the same if not more than they do today. For as long as we are on this Earth, there will be poverty. That much is certain. Something changed as far as humanity goes over the last 100 years.
      The more people have gotten from this country for free, the more they think they deserve.

    • @MissJK_
      @MissJK_ 9 місяців тому +1

      @NothingToPointOut24 Also ask yourself if the heavy influx of drugs pushed into the community is what was the catalyst that was/is the change. It makes humans turn into something unrecognizable. Pair that with poverty and you have destruction. All things ‘free’ aside.

    • @NothingToPointOut24
      @NothingToPointOut24 9 місяців тому

      @@MissJK_ The drug epidemic is definitely a reason. I'll even say its a big reason. I just dont think its the main reason. I think culture and DNA has more to do with it.
      Drugs can also be more excused for the breakdown of society in a lot of cases. Why people lose jobs, family, homes etc. But for simple filth? I dont buy that. There are a lot of videos of life 100 years ago and a lot of the neighborhoods are spotless.

  • @Sky-y5i1b
    @Sky-y5i1b 4 місяці тому +1

    Amazing, nice to see in color too with sounds, and not in bad condition, born in Harlem but way after. Nice to see how people lived and dressed back then. It's history, one we don't often get to see.

  • @finnhoydal2028
    @finnhoydal2028 4 місяці тому +2

    Watching it in color makes it seem so much more current, aside from the vehicles

  • @Silveradoman61
    @Silveradoman61 11 місяців тому +16

    Sad to think everybody in this film is deceased even the kids.

    • @bardo0007
      @bardo0007 11 місяців тому +15

      The smaller kids are in their late 80's or 90's so they could still be alive.

    • @WhenTheLionRoars
      @WhenTheLionRoars 9 місяців тому +1

      Why is it sad?

    • @Midlifesimmer
      @Midlifesimmer 9 місяців тому

      Probably not. People born in 1931 would be 92 right now. So if you were anything older, the odds are against them still being alive.

  • @girle5584
    @girle5584 11 місяців тому +8

    Clearly, something has gone off the rails since.

  • @sirchadiusmaximusiii
    @sirchadiusmaximusiii 11 місяців тому +11

    Look at that, people of all races getting along, everyone’s polite, and dressed intelligently with clean streets and no wacko’s screaming.

    • @warrenlewis3977
      @warrenlewis3977 10 місяців тому +6

      "Races getting along"??? Do you know what was happening to Black people all over America??

    • @aleaseknows8334
      @aleaseknows8334 9 місяців тому

      😂😂😂are you kidding.. remember this was the whites ONLY era. When they hated our very existence, now look what you got from the systematic oppression.

    • @samiswilf
      @samiswilf 17 днів тому

      @@warrenlewis3977 They were getting along in this video of Harlem NY. It's not a video of southern states.

    • @warrenlewis3977
      @warrenlewis3977 17 днів тому

      @@samiswilf It doesn't have to be a Southern state, for Black people during Jim Crow anything south of Canada was a Southern state.

  • @dexculpepper-py1jr
    @dexculpepper-py1jr 3 місяці тому +2

    Look how sharp everyone looks in Harlem back then. The streets our spotless.

  • @cisco2590
    @cisco2590 8 місяців тому +1

    Crazy to see this and knowing how projects are going to be in the future.

  • @pentagramyt417
    @pentagramyt417 11 місяців тому +7

    Looking at that time, the USA later between 1950-1970 was something else.
    Something that never been anywhere else before, and anywhere else after that.
    Like a different world, that most of us would like to live in.

    • @presspound7358
      @presspound7358 11 місяців тому

      Yes… it’s called Post WWII wealth. Baby boom, economic boom. No serious competitors worldwide. Lots of jobs that allowed a one salary household to earn a decent living in the suburbs. Consumer explosion without the consequences yet, pop music explosion and kids everywhere. Folks could sit on the porch with a beer or a lemonade and shoot the shit all afternoon and not feel guilty because they had been physically very active all week.
      Simpler times. What’s not to like.

  • @stevethompson-bey906
    @stevethompson-bey906 9 місяців тому +9

    Wow!!! No sagging pants , men and women look so neat and clean !!! No loud and crazy noises !!! Dignified!!! Just people going about life !!!

    • @PHlophe
      @PHlophe 5 місяців тому +1

      Stevie, there was always crowd noise. But what y'all don't know people could not step in Town without being dressed to the 9 . everyone had 3 clothing styles and the expensive one was reserved for city interaction and important family functions and milestones.
      this lasted well into the 70s were we started seeing people go shopping in their pajamas.

  • @rhazmel
    @rhazmel 9 місяців тому +5

    The last minute of the video is actually some projects under construction in Queens, not Harlem. Famous rappers like Nas, Mobb Deep, Roxanne Shante & NBA player Ron Artest are all going to grow up in those Queensbridge projects, years later.

    • @JailaSea766
      @JailaSea766 6 місяців тому +1

      And you can get lost in Queensbridge Houses if you did know what bldg to visit it takes up a entire block right?

  • @bcusaaus4749
    @bcusaaus4749 5 місяців тому +1

    Look at the style, classic elegance. People took pride in what they wore

  • @familylifetoo9541
    @familylifetoo9541 5 місяців тому +2

    People didnt have the distractions they do today. They ironed their clothes nice and neat. Fashion was important. No tv back then. Only radio. People talked more to each other ..maybe.

  • @francesfarmer736
    @francesfarmer736 11 місяців тому +5

    Love the colorized, you can see much more detail……..like a time machine and you’re there…..Thanks for posting! I’m a subscriber……

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  11 місяців тому +1

      thank you very much

    • @dxwallace55
      @dxwallace55 10 місяців тому +1

      They've come along way since that Ted Turner, TNT colorization a few decades back.....

  • @matrox
    @matrox 10 місяців тому +5

    Check it out...Peeps well dressed, minding their own bidness...no one getting car jacked, no bullets flying, no one blasting rap music, no mass store looting.

  • @alleyoop2017
    @alleyoop2017 10 місяців тому +5

    Nobody walking around with their draws showing

  • @NewYorkLens_Atl
    @NewYorkLens_Atl 22 дні тому

    Absolutely gorgeous footage! How are we go from being so dapper to absolute slobs? Even the streets were clean!

  • @tapanmukherjee7618
    @tapanmukherjee7618 4 місяці тому +1

    Effects to improve view are well done. Speed of people moving around seems a bit slower than the original.