Drums and keyboards
8:11
4 жыл бұрын
14 May 2020
5:38
4 жыл бұрын
An Interview with Katie from Y.A.T
5:08
An Interview with Toby from Y.A.T
2:39
Archeology Interview with John Oxley
2:21
About us
3:11
8 жыл бұрын
Ebor Morris Dancers
4:21
8 жыл бұрын
Clifton - Throughout the Ages
7:11
8 жыл бұрын
York - Merged Through the Years
3:45
Images fromYork Prison
3:32
9 жыл бұрын
York Market and Cattle Market
3:06
9 жыл бұрын
York Minster   Views from a Bygone Era
6:27
The River Foss
4:45
9 жыл бұрын
The illuminating York In Coppergate
4:42
York Station   Images through the Ages
3:31
Castlegate & Goodramgate
3:25
10 жыл бұрын
Common Hall Lane
13:26
10 жыл бұрын
The Shambles   The History & the Images
4:39
Stonebow   Before and After
2:06
10 жыл бұрын
Guild Hall Hutments   Room 1
1:29
10 жыл бұрын
Wartime York
7:40
10 жыл бұрын
Пікірлер
@crissydsouza73
@crissydsouza73 2 ай бұрын
That was exactly what I was going to say!
@Idahoman61
@Idahoman61 4 ай бұрын
My las name is Heslington. I live in Nampa Idaho USA.
@Savetheworldfirebidennow
@Savetheworldfirebidennow 4 ай бұрын
Thank you
@chrissabds6975
@chrissabds6975 Жыл бұрын
2:47 ollivanders
@thunderboltisthebest
@thunderboltisthebest Жыл бұрын
The station was destroyed, one A4: 4469, B16: 925 were destroyed upon impact.
@vonroon23
@vonroon23 Жыл бұрын
I was a student in York 1966-9 and remember the Cattle Market well. The bus to Heslington used to pass through it. Going back recently, it's hard to imagine it ever existed.
@deeppurple883
@deeppurple883 Жыл бұрын
I believe all these raids on the historic parts we're ordered by Goring. His reason was jealousy what he couldn't steal he destroyed. He wanted to possess it all, he was a trophy Hunter and hoarder of stolen tresures. Right down to his pet lion cubs who should have been with their mother. He was just a low life scumbag, no a murdering low life scumbag. 😠
@abigailknab4216
@abigailknab4216 2 жыл бұрын
Anne, the little girl whose house got bombed, is my grandmother! Hearing her tell stories of this day is fascinating
@ralphbernhard1757
@ralphbernhard1757 2 жыл бұрын
For hundreds of years, the British Empire went around the world bomb(ard)ing and terrorizing nations around the world. Not a week goes by and some new attrocity is unearthed from dark archives: for example, search "The Bombardement of Alexandria in 1882" (then click on "images"). Looks a lot like Coventry, doesn't it? Kagoshima, Canton, Sebastopol (Krim War), and and dozens of others. Such fun to have own leaders coining the term *"Copenhagenization"* to mock the children they burnt alive while cheering on the historical heroes committing such acts. Victims? Who cares about victims? Right? From wiki: *"Oh, that example of Copenhagen has worked wonders in the world!...I (would) like to see the name of that city become a verb ... 'cities will be copenhagenized' is an excellent phrase."* William Cobbet en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copenhagenization Excellent indeed... *So around the world they went, turning towns and cities and entire kingdoms into "mere verbs"...* Such great fun, bomb(ard)ing everybody else, but not being bomb(ard)ed oneself. Terror bombing countless villages as the weapons improved, but the practice remained: creating uncounted victims because nobody cared enough. In Mesopotamia, and Aden, the Sudan, and then euphamistically terming this "Air Policing". Makes you think "terror" is really just your friendly neighborhood Bobby, right? When they invaded half the planet, their "heroes" wrote stories about how exiting it was to "dodge bullets" and bomb(ard) countries without declaring war. The locals defending their own? Mowing down natives armed with spears, with machine guns? Pfffft. Who gives a... Famines accompanied by racial slurs of "breeding like rabbits anyway", sticking women and kids into concentration camps, scorched earth policies, torture chambers, slave labor camps (called "penal colonies"), and the list goes on... No doubt getting a bit of their own medicine when their own cities burned down, and V-2s killed their kids, and they finally knew what it felt like. Not so "exiting" dodging rockets, right? Not so nice "reaping" what had been "sown" for a few hundred years, eh? Not so great having own *cities turned into verbs, right?* Londonization, Liverpoolization, Hullization, Doverization...Coventrization. All of a sudden, they were sooooo tired of all that "Empire"-stuff... Brits are nice today, but back then they simply had to be taught a lesson they wouldn't forget.
@sean.furlong1989
@sean.furlong1989 2 жыл бұрын
Using your logic did Tokyo deserve to be incinerated? did Hiroshima and Nagasaki to be nuked? Did Berlin, Hamburg, Cologne, Dresden, Aachen deserve to be bombed and burned to ash and rubble.
@ralphbernhard1757
@ralphbernhard1757 2 жыл бұрын
@@sean.furlong1989 "Deserve" is an appeal to emotion (which you can google for more information). Using appeals to emotion, is a typical trick in manipulation, and therefore common in politics, news, or other circumstances where people's opinions need to be influenced. I prefer to use other more scientific criteria, for example whether a choice was "wise" (criteria) or "necessary" (urgency).
@JamesRichards-mj9kw
@JamesRichards-mj9kw Жыл бұрын
@@sean.furlong1989 The British bombed Germany first in both world wars.
@sean.furlong1989
@sean.furlong1989 Жыл бұрын
@@JamesRichards-mj9kw I know Munich was bombed in 1916 but not much else about World War I bombing of Germany.
@JamesRichards-mj9kw
@JamesRichards-mj9kw Жыл бұрын
@@sean.furlong1989 The RNAS bombed Cologne and Dusseldorf in 1914.
@plhebel1
@plhebel1 2 жыл бұрын
The German Bomber officer that was shot down said he thought some of the people that found him, after crashing in England, must hate him for being German. I thought instantly after hearing this statement No, I feel these people that might be feeling hate towards you is because you were just shortly before this time, in the act of dropping bombs on a city full of human beings. You could be from anywhere in the world and still have hate directed at you when you take part in an act of bombing cities full of people. This is an example of the warped thinking of human beings, when nations go to war and somehow makes acts like this ok. It's not enough to have a killing fields full of soldiers, war somehow needs innocents blood at well, , ,
@JamesRichards-mj9kw
@JamesRichards-mj9kw Жыл бұрын
Churchill began civilian bombing.
@KarmaPowers
@KarmaPowers 2 жыл бұрын
Wow
@UnrepentantWolf
@UnrepentantWolf 2 жыл бұрын
My Grandparents lived in Hungate until it was knocked down, the photos match what little my Gran ever said about the area.
@FantomWolf.
@FantomWolf. 2 жыл бұрын
I have one of the images and I was trying to find it all over the internet and I found it in this video
@FantomWolf.
@FantomWolf. 2 жыл бұрын
I have the 4th picture
@cal-king
@cal-king Ай бұрын
@@FantomWolf. the original?
@PeterShieldsukcatstripey
@PeterShieldsukcatstripey 2 жыл бұрын
Mentioned in the Secret Diary of Adrian Mole.
@user178gone4
@user178gone4 3 жыл бұрын
crazy new earswick acctually looks like a nice place to live here
@wns1503
@wns1503 3 жыл бұрын
All well put together great to see the mix. Thanks to those who contributed that's what makes york past and present work.
@64gorrilla
@64gorrilla 3 жыл бұрын
Remember Howard on market shown in clip with his banter and not one not two but.... banter?
@stattoborough
@stattoborough 3 жыл бұрын
As a frequent visitor to York I know Hungate well and the photos are fascinating. But some identifying labels of the lost streets would have been great. Maybe a side by side map showing then and now
@Robert_Manners
@Robert_Manners 3 жыл бұрын
It's interesting to understand the full impact on the various land marks in removing the bridge. As no trains have passed under the bridge in my lifetime I have always thought of it as a hill with a bend in the road while travelling up it from Blossom Street.
@ninfilms
@ninfilms 3 жыл бұрын
I like to share this bomb crater in South Wales. kzbin.info/www/bejne/nHfUgGqbaK-le6M
@steeveedee4307
@steeveedee4307 3 жыл бұрын
@1:12 - I remember as a kid there being the underground toilets shown here (on the left) with what I believe was a taxi rank alongside them in early '70's. Later on they built the underground 'Splash Palace' ones at the opposite end of Picadilly after removing these. Splash has also now gone, I guess under disabled access laws. @2:12 the cattle pens were still around near the Barbican gate at the same time but there were no longer markets there.
@daviddalby9699
@daviddalby9699 3 жыл бұрын
My mother's asches are scaterd on the niavsmire
@daviddalby9699
@daviddalby9699 3 жыл бұрын
A trip i though I would never see again. Amazing sensation thanks
@rileywilliams9799
@rileywilliams9799 3 жыл бұрын
'I'm sitting on a bomb. I can hear it ticking.' Chills right there.
@steeveedee4307
@steeveedee4307 3 жыл бұрын
Fantastic film. I remember the extra two tracks through the center of the station, now reduced to two. I also remember the platform guards in the little kiosk and the metal gates next to them and paying 1d for a platform ticket around 1970.
@jaykaye7025
@jaykaye7025 3 жыл бұрын
How old is this documentary?
@ianthompson9201
@ianthompson9201 3 жыл бұрын
I love the Dennis Lancet bus at 1:12: big 4-cylinder engine thumping away, I imagine.
@Biffo1262
@Biffo1262 3 жыл бұрын
If German planes flew that low you can tell the age of the crew at night, well......I call BS on that one. We dropped our bombs in the direction of the industrial quarter......again, BS, what industrial quarter? A convent school killing pupils and nuns. Their sanctimonious attitude about RAF 'terror fliers' makes me want to puke. They start another war, bomb Warsaw and Rotterdam to the ground, murder millions of innocents in concentration camps, commit horrific war crimes and the bitch about their cities being bombed. It beggars belief and even more astounding is that many of our own people vilified the bomber crews who died in their thousands for them.
@ralphbernhard1757
@ralphbernhard1757 2 жыл бұрын
For hundreds of years, the British Empire went around the world bomb(ard)ing and terrorizing nations around the world. Not a week goes by and some new attrocity is unearthed from dark archives: for example, search "The Bombardement of Alexandria in 1882" (then click on "images"). Looks a lot like Coventry, doesn't it? Kagoshima, Canton, Sebastopol (Krim War), and and dozens of others. Such fun to have own leaders coining the term *"Copenhagenization"* to mock the children they burnt alive while cheering on the historical heroes committing such acts. Victims? Who cares about victims? Right? From wiki: *"Oh, that example of Copenhagen has worked wonders in the world!...I (would) like to see the name of that city become a verb ... 'cities will be copenhagenized' is an excellent phrase."* William Cobbet en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copenhagenization Excellent indeed... *So around the world they went, turning towns and cities and entire kingdoms into "mere verbs"...* Such great fun, bomb(ard)ing everybody else, but not being bomb(ard)ed oneself. Terror bombing countless villages as the weapons improved, but the practice remained: creating uncounted victims because nobody cared enough. In Mesopotamia, and Aden, the Sudan, and then euphamistically terming this "Air Policing". Makes you think "terror" is really just your friendly neighborhood Bobby, right? When they invaded half the planet, their "heroes" wrote stories about how exiting it was to "dodge bullets" and bomb(ard) countries without declaring war. The locals defending their own? Mowing down natives armed with spears, with machine guns? Pfffft. Who gives a... Famines accompanied by racial slurs of "breeding like rabbits anyway", sticking women and kids into concentration camps, scorched earth policies, torture chambers, slave labor camps (called "penal colonies"), and the list goes on... No doubt getting a bit of their own medicine when their own cities burned down, and V-2s killed their kids, and they finally knew what it felt like. Not so "exiting" dodging rockets, right? Not so nice "reaping" what had been "sown" for a few hundred years, eh? Not so great having own *cities turned into verbs, right?* Londonization, Liverpoolization, Hullization, Doverization...Coventrization. All of a sudden, they were sooooo tired of all that "Empire"-stuff... Brits are nice today, but back then they simply had to be taught a lesson they wouldn't forget.
@None-zc5vg
@None-zc5vg Жыл бұрын
The politicians turned their backs on the bomber-crews and the Poles because they were no longer politically expedient.
@nursemarn
@nursemarn 3 жыл бұрын
I can’t imagine what the people of England experienced during the blitz. It must have been beyond horrific. God Bless the people who died and those that survived this awful period in world history. 🇨🇦
@JamesRichards-mj9kw
@JamesRichards-mj9kw Жыл бұрын
The Blitz was in response to the RAF bombing cities and towns in Germany.
@skilly58
@skilly58 4 жыл бұрын
Thank You so very much for sharing this important part of my ancestry . I never dreamed that I would be able to see videos like this .
@charlieholtby2887
@charlieholtby2887 4 жыл бұрын
Richarlison >Firmino
@mindrolling24
@mindrolling24 4 жыл бұрын
The most amazing aspect of this documentary was learning about the contributions of the German people, given to help rebuild the church that was bombed. It angers me that in this day and age we have tin pot dictator types leading large nations and shaking their fists and threatening ‘retaliation’ instead of learning from the past and striving to support and care for ALL of humanity.
@wor53lg50
@wor53lg50 Жыл бұрын
They was lucky the germans got their church rebuilt because Coventry never and that was a cathedral...
@otiebrown9999
@otiebrown9999 4 жыл бұрын
After this, Germans got it back with the Hanover 1,000 plane raid. Horror, begets horror. I remember blacked out homes, and ration cards - at age 4 years.
@None-zc5vg
@None-zc5vg Жыл бұрын
Hamburg: "40,000" dead
@jameswebb4593
@jameswebb4593 7 ай бұрын
Cologne , the first 1000 bomber raid.
@lentilgirl3000
@lentilgirl3000 4 жыл бұрын
great video. thank you.
@Robert_Manners
@Robert_Manners 4 жыл бұрын
Some of the tram roses that helped to support the overhead power cables can still be seen on some buildings, copper gate onto Ness Gate has a good few. I have also noticed that the tramline traction poles that guided the overhead power cables have been placed in various parts of the city. Even in places where no tramlines run. There is one on the mount and Haxby road that are in there originally sited place.
@steeveedee4307
@steeveedee4307 3 жыл бұрын
The iron brige on The Mount appears to have mounts along the top ironwork where overhead cables would have attatched.
@Robert_Manners
@Robert_Manners 3 жыл бұрын
@@steeveedee4307 Yes interesting to note that I have observed this too while walking down Holgate Road to Blossom Street and I have read articles that say during the building of the bridge in 1911 the tram car would stop just before the build in progress and the passengers would walk across the unfinished bridge to a waiting tram car on the other side to continue the journey up Holgate Road to the Acomb terminus. Once the bridge was open/finished the journey became a seamless event as the tram car was able to travel over the bridge, so it's reasonably to believe that mounts and brackets are still left over, that once supported the power cables that overhead traction poles and tram roses did before and after the bridge was passed. If you look up at the old Co-op building just before you turn off onto Blossom Street you will see a remaining tram rose that held the power cable up, with a visable mark at top bracket on the building/house on the other side of the road. the electric tramway in this part of York was running in 1910
@Robert_Manners
@Robert_Manners 3 жыл бұрын
@bonniedog The Bridge on Holgate Road or the Co-op building? You won't be able to see the bracket mounts on the bridge using Street View, you would need to walk along the path and glance up at the top middle of the structure to see what is left.
@Robert_Manners
@Robert_Manners 3 жыл бұрын
@bonniedog Holgate Rd maps.app.goo.gl/sEnTaQzJriz5MCJa9 This is the location of the surviving tram Rose on the former Co-op building.
@JasperCountyNative
@JasperCountyNative 4 жыл бұрын
Is it possible to obtain prints of some of these photos?
@tesssam7658
@tesssam7658 3 жыл бұрын
Cheeky bugger
@rogerwalton8160
@rogerwalton8160 Жыл бұрын
The Pharmacy in Fulford has/had postcards of some of them. Try also York City Library.
@naguerea
@naguerea 4 жыл бұрын
Picked up from a huge bed , as a tiny child, a voice said:: where's his mum?: another voice said "Down the pub"
@prben2
@prben2 4 жыл бұрын
Bit rich of Hitler calling Churchill a criminal.
@NastyWoman1979
@NastyWoman1979 3 жыл бұрын
Sounds sadly familiar
@jessgallagher2657
@jessgallagher2657 4 жыл бұрын
good shit
@robtt997
@robtt997 5 жыл бұрын
My Mum was a 17 year old clerk at Barclays Bank in Scarborough. The morning after the raid she was sent to York to help clear up the main Barclays branch in York. She could remember walking through loads of glass and looking at the burnt out and burning buildings . She came and went by train for quite a few days. Would you see a17 year old girl doing that today !
@stevejauncey3086
@stevejauncey3086 3 жыл бұрын
Yes I would.
@NastyWoman1979
@NastyWoman1979 3 жыл бұрын
Amazing but some... Fewer Americans.
@indiana146
@indiana146 2 жыл бұрын
Yes there were 17 18 yr old killed in falklands
@wor53lg50
@wor53lg50 Жыл бұрын
​@@indiana146 yep and alot gave their lives for their islander countryfolk and for a little slice of britain far away..
@anthonyl9961
@anthonyl9961 5 жыл бұрын
My Grand parents house in Alquin Ave York still bears machine gun marks from that night!
@thomassmiththekingbee
@thomassmiththekingbee 4 жыл бұрын
I wouldn't say the exact street of your relatives' location!
@peterjohnson617
@peterjohnson617 5 жыл бұрын
good grief, people were so strong & true than. the people today are so soft and whinny and expect so much .
@timhancock6626
@timhancock6626 5 жыл бұрын
I recently attended the funeral of an ex colleague whose house was bombed in York. He was about three at the time and he and his sisters were buried. They were found because his crying attracted the attention of the rescuers.
@flyhi2773
@flyhi2773 5 жыл бұрын
I watched this just because my fathers house was hit and demolished in this raid of April 42 - bit surprised to see the street - Lavender Grove get a mention in this. Due to some earlier bombing they'd decided to move out to Scarborough a few weeks before though so they escaped it - just. They sheltered in the house during the raids.
@johnmorey9426
@johnmorey9426 5 жыл бұрын
The evil that men do!
@mariekatherine5238
@mariekatherine5238 5 жыл бұрын
WWII trauma? You didn’t talk about it; you put it on a shelf in a dark corner of your mind and forged on. It shaved years, sometimes a decade or more from many people’s lives. Others managed to keep it hidden or keep themselves hidden from it, and live on.
@mariekatherine5238
@mariekatherine5238 5 жыл бұрын
Glad the budgie survived!
@hurricanedorian4897
@hurricanedorian4897 5 жыл бұрын
I live near york so sad that it was bombed RIP the people who died:(
@ericadeighton8385
@ericadeighton8385 5 жыл бұрын
Very well put together, especially the Blake St 1942 view when it was discussed recently
@CARLOS62B
@CARLOS62B 5 жыл бұрын
Well done Everyone.