belmullet is like a wild card in poker you can use it anywhere you like. What the belmullet is up with yea.Im feeling a little belmulletish think ill go hme.He had a belmullet on his big toe and wudnt go to the doctor.
@philipodowd2272 ай бұрын
wud think most Irish men wud tell you the English man was fairer to work for.
@patrickjosephhenderson22223 ай бұрын
When the work got scarce them men were gone and forgotten about quickly
@TheByard3 ай бұрын
My father a Welshman demobbed from the army 1944 went into construction rebuilding London after the war. He worked rebuilding sewers, digging cable trenches etc. He rose to the rank of General Forman in a large civil engineering company that took on tunnel work for BR and the Underground. The photos show in the video were of the type of tunnels dug in stations to connect platforms, most of the face workers were Irish and dad had a little black book of phone numbers, pub names and maybe an address. So he could man up a section of work. I joined him as a 16 year old in 1960 and worked on a BR tunnel at Chalk Farm that needed to be enlarged for electric trains and as the video said just down the road at Camden Town would be the line of Green & Grey Murphy Ford tipper trucks Kennedy also had trucks lined up. There's a tune The Green, The Grey and the RSK, grey Murphy bought so many Fords he bought Cambridge Motors a Ford Main Dealer. 1962 came the construction of the Victoria Line and dads company won part of the Euston section and two sections from the Manor House to the end at Walthamstow. The Running Tunnels were dug using open faced clay diggers Tunnel Boring Machines and the tunnel lining was precast concrete segments to form the ring I drove one as part of a 5 man gang. The station platform tunnel were enlarged from the already constructed running tunnel. A large shield was erected with platforms within, these had hydraulic floors and face covering panels. The shield was propelled forward with hydraulic rams, the floors and face panels retracted at the same time. An 11 man gang would then excavate using air powered spades to bring down the muck, that was shoveled into chutes and whisked up conveyors to empty rail skips and taken to the surface. A ring of cast iron segments would be build inside a safety tail skin. Then the cycle would repeat three times per 12 hour shift to earn the miners a daily wage with production bonus. It was five 12 hr. day shifts and the next week 12 hr. night shifts for 3 months to build one platform tunnel. In those days I gave mum a share, had spends and bought a new Mini Cooper each month, not for myself but to sell on as there was a waiting list in those days and I found a way of putting my money to good use. The last tunnel I worked on was the KL Metro in Malaysia in 2015, after a career in tunneling around the world
@HorseMalone3 ай бұрын
Val Doonican was yer man !
@liamwalsh55954 ай бұрын
Slave labour, there own country sold them down the drain
@Signaman-z9d5 ай бұрын
The men that built the world's constructs, Irish men. It was the Irish woman who built up the irish men.✌️☘️
@jintsfan6 ай бұрын
Irishmen in Britain who most decidedly didn’t have their hands in their pockets.
@dhss3337 ай бұрын
Early 70s, Slough< > Reading stretch: railway ballast dropped from bellies of hoppers yellow chalked X every 60 ft. for shovelling level with sleepers.
@rayjones57718 ай бұрын
I think the british built Britain.
@briantreston21999 ай бұрын
Lived in Kilburn in the 70s back over in the 80s worked for Patsy Murphy Walls Brothers on a concrete gang drank in the Prince of Wales Willesden Lane met great people from all parts of Ireland forget the bitterness remember the good times god bless
@miger182410 ай бұрын
My parents came over from Ireland as teenagers in the '50's and despite unbelievable hurdles,they brought up 6 kids as decent, loving, hard-working people who now have our own families here in England. We have them to thank for everything we have. I can never forgive the way the British government (and a lot of the British people) treated the Irish back then and continues to ignore the plight of elderly single Irish men who (due to lack of money) had no choice but to stay here, despite giving their working lives to building England/Britain. I have family in Ireland still and I feel we missed out on the sense of belonging and closeness that they have with their large extended families there.
@merseydave111 ай бұрын
I am from/living in Liverpool ... we in Liverpool have Irish connections, so we welcome the Irish. I have one observation to mention here ... The Irish came to Britain looking for work, as there was None in Ireland, many stayed here so they chose to live here and marry have kids and have the use of our N.H.S. benefit system and housing. As I said, I embrace The Irish yet the Question is This ... All the things they have here, they Did Not Have in Ireland and that makes you Question Ireland itself ???
@miger182410 ай бұрын
I take your point,but the only ones who benefited were their descendants.Poor housing, working conditions and out and out racism and contempt by many in British society, made them feel lost here. Having their own families,meant for many that they were tied here.The Irish/British governments could have and should have set up schemes and support to help those who wanted to return home.
@merseydave19 ай бұрын
@@miger1824 The point has been missed ... Ireland was an economically inactive rural outback (I blame De Valera for that) yet ignorant people voted for the man who set up Michael Colins to die ... (I'm more of a James Connolly - Irish Citizen Army person). No Industrial Commercial Plan in The 26 Counties, hence the people went West to Britain or crossed over to North America. Even Now with the two Constructional Referendum votes, Ireland Still has negative "Magdelen Sisters" undertow !!! ... That is The Ireland I Hate.
@merseydave19 ай бұрын
I love your Land ... yet I have many disagreements on The Nations Psyche - Body Politic.
@jamesbradshaw3389 Жыл бұрын
Those were brutally hard-working days, you may not get paid, some contractors would try to trick you hard earned money, and poor lodgings, you would be looked down by seme and be called a Paddy when often you may be far smarter than the person who was insulting you. Those were hard times and yet they were better than being unemployed in Ireland
@mikekavanagh8952 Жыл бұрын
Good Historic,
@donalcosgrove8673 Жыл бұрын
See you this Christmas again Pierce. Best present I’m going to get!
@jerryodonovan8624 Жыл бұрын
One of the greatest Irish compositions of the last generation. Fantastic Pierce. I’ve been listening to this song for thirty years and it never fails to captivate.
@staffy4389 Жыл бұрын
I lost my ol man to work in England. He came home twice a year , Easter and Christmas, until he stopped coming home. So I grew up quick and I grew up mean , 😂😂😂😂😂 but I wasn't called Sue. I went over in later years and patched things up, as best we could. Ah sure, that's life.
@MariTeabag-lf1ly Жыл бұрын
…a
@brickie59 Жыл бұрын
DESENT BREED OF HUMAN BEING WHO HAD PRINCIPLES, HARD WORKING MEN AND LADYS. NOT LIKE MOST OF THE SHIT HEAD PEOPLE THAT ARE IN THIS COUNTRY TODAY.
@ja50nicstealth Жыл бұрын
October is officially Irish History Month 🍀🇮🇪
@ja50nicstealth Жыл бұрын
The Men Who Built Britain 🇮🇪🇬🇧❤️
@peterfitzgerald53 Жыл бұрын
My father and his brothers came over from Sligo in the late fifties ,and sixties ,yet nowhere is their a statue erected to thank the Irish for rebuilding the infrastructure of post war damaged Britain ,?????
@stephendavies925 Жыл бұрын
I worked with lots of Irish men all over the country when they came to Wales they thought they were hard cocky full of stuff about how hard their lives were notice to Irish weve been through more shit your country has ever been through never heard the same when i worked in England i offered two paddies out on the same night not so hard both declined im Welsh ive no argument with anyone but if you come to any part of the UK doesnt matter where you come from you will get a fight paddies are nothing special believe me 😂
@noelfleming3567 Жыл бұрын
Rocky😂
@Irish780 Жыл бұрын
You live in dreamland irish fighting British occupation for 800 years u Welsh love being English.... don't remember Welsh standing up to them u have a government that might as well not be there anything important Westminster decides your outcome
@stephendavies925 Жыл бұрын
@@Irish780 And the EU decides yours
@Irish780 Жыл бұрын
@stephendavies925 I would rather be in than out look at the millions wales lost because of brexit ...... offcourse Boris said at the time not to worry .. England will make that up 😆 you know the rest
@stephendavies925 Жыл бұрын
@@Irish780 its the Labour party in Wales thats killing Wales not Brexit
@leonjames5685 Жыл бұрын
I'm London born n bred, in the late 80's. Mater and Pater were both from Mayo, but actually met in Manchester in the mid 70's. Both moved to London to find work. My aul fella and 2 of his brothers worked on the sites together for a good 15yrs. Jaysus, some of the stories my Mam tells me about them, back in the day. It'd finish off a Priest. 3 of my Mam's brothers came over, too. Worked on some good sites. Houses of Parliament, Ritz and Savoy hotels, to name a few. Worked like fuckin dogs. Got rakes of maternal/paternal family, as well as in-laws that worked themselves to the bone. No days off. No doleites. My aul fella had two fingers gone cos of work. Also had a deep tar burn/scar all up the inner/calf area of the right lef. An uncle lost an eye. My aunties husband sustained a head injury that essentially rewired his brain. Never the same after. Childlike in some ways. Another uncle, who died this past November developed serious lung problems due to absestos. I left LDN in 2018. Had to come back for family reasons, due to Covid and I'm sickened by the place. The country. What's it turned into. The people it walks on eggshells for, mollycoddles and gives false praise. We don't get a History Month. We were the first to be colonized. There's no rememberance for The Great Famine. All we get is a half hearted fuckin Paddy's Day. And it's fuckin dreadful. And now we've got the loud, aggressive, violent work shy eejits telling me about my 'privilege'. Get to fuck.
@noelfleming3567 Жыл бұрын
Yup
@miger182410 ай бұрын
too true
@JamieJudd-q9u6 ай бұрын
Well said so well said👍
@pjmccarthy8305 Жыл бұрын
Worked there in the eighties and nineties on the green duct real tough work 3:30
@angelakenny12152 жыл бұрын
The Irish lads did all the work in England
@fishtherapy1009 ай бұрын
The Irish and very good at digging holes….other than terrorism….they are no good at anything else.
@countycricklewood2 жыл бұрын
The extra counties of Ireland. Cricklewood, Kilburn, Willesden, Camden/Kentish Town
@anthonydowling3356 Жыл бұрын
ARCHWAY AND HOLLOWAY ROAD as well begorrah !!1
@kieranharford87554 ай бұрын
+ Hanwell W7 + Hammersmith W6
@fishersrow2 жыл бұрын
Onda Pierce me boy!
@michaelmaloney45172 жыл бұрын
No statues for the Irish in London.. The real people that built Britain back up.. No nonsense or lies, just facts..
@fifitz1002 жыл бұрын
America too
@ja50nicstealth Жыл бұрын
October is officially Irish History Month❗️🍀🇮🇪
@robertstopford1016 Жыл бұрын
A whole range of people built Britain. Irish people of course made an extraordinary contribution too. All groups of people should be remembered.
@robertstopford1016 Жыл бұрын
And yes, I look forward to seeing some monuments remembering these extraordinary people who quite often suffered atrocious working conditions and prejudice.
@robertstopford1016 Жыл бұрын
And yes, I look forward to seeing some monuments remembering these extraordinary people who quite often suffered atrocious working conditions and prejudice.
@mickdevlin2 жыл бұрын
I still don't mind a pint though...
@mickdevlin2 жыл бұрын
My dad came over in the fifties and my mam's side came over to build the Manchester Ship Canal. It was bloody bonded slavery. We were lucky.
@noelfleming3567 Жыл бұрын
Good hard working stock
@Danny-lz1ek2 жыл бұрын
Dont forget Galvins at Cricklewood lane, probably the best contractor that left kerry
@shadowtiger23632 жыл бұрын
None of the stupid high vis and stupid hard hats back then. I could careless about health and safety when your numbers up its up. Bunch of pansys today.
@mickosullivan38272 жыл бұрын
Did my time in Cricklewood late 80s.
@iseegoodandbad67582 жыл бұрын
Love the Irish. Their men are soo luscious!
@patrickglennon68342 жыл бұрын
And we have big mickeys
@noelfleming3567 Жыл бұрын
👍🇮🇪
@sedoniadragotta83233 жыл бұрын
Fact all white British people are 30to 36 % British. Research it
@Sean-jc6cu3 жыл бұрын
False
@Alphae212 жыл бұрын
all white british people are 30% british?
@PeterShieldsukcatstripey3 жыл бұрын
makes me cry.
@JohnnyPeacock19593 жыл бұрын
I was born in South London from a Kerry Mother and I used to do that work. Sometimes if we were working far away we didn't get home until very late because the Lads would be stopping off at every pub on the way. Great times.
@anthonydowling3356 Жыл бұрын
Pure Hell ,old bean. I lived in London in the 70 ,80s 90 s on and off but avoided the Navy scene .Lining up for work in Camden or Kentish town to be abused by fellow Irish ganger men .No thanks .
@barbarapineda57303 жыл бұрын
I heard the sames titles over and.over again.one thousands.befor big deal.so whats most.cames here.immigri... and no skilled.and also.educations, also can't reads or writes.literates, too the reason.most haves.too do this labors. Jobs.becuz...no indivi... is'nt going.too walked up.too you's gives.💸 🤑 💲. Cashs.n.yours hands.and is dangerous.too waked up.and realized if.the worlds,owes you any things.you's were.out cast from.yours.countries, okay. .
@Yaketyyak213 жыл бұрын
Worked in reading and slough in the eighties.those were the days..
@bastogne3153 жыл бұрын
I worked on the sites in London in the 80s. Just walk on and ask for the start. Might take 4-5 days going to dozens of sites but eventually you'd get taken on. Can't do that now with all the security and fencing. Harry Bonello and Dick RIP.
@damienmullen11753 жыл бұрын
We all work. Never mind where from
@fordy26043 жыл бұрын
I’m a south London bricklayer in my 36th year now. I have many a good memories working with the Irish back in the eighties mainly. Good honest hard working men. Sadly it’s all Eastern European now. Not the same as the old days. Regards from south London England
@Gommerell3 жыл бұрын
I worked in the London Buildings in the 80's and did all the Camden Town queuing. Back then London was full of Irish and some trades were exclusively Irish, like Steel-Fixing, Shuttering and Ground works. I did know Irish Bricklayers and there were a good many London Brickies as well , Trades like Scaffolding and Plastering were done by Londoners more I found, they dominated those. All in all I had great time in London and enjoyed the work and the money back in the 1980s Never realized the E Europeans had taken over as I left in 1990.
@antseanbheanbocht49933 жыл бұрын
My father a dublin man worked in London in the 60s and managed a dart team full of mainly London lads, he had a great love for English people all his life. Ar dheis Dé go raibh a h anam.
@simondunlop46282 жыл бұрын
Definitely mate
@72mossy2 жыл бұрын
My dad worked in Cricklewood area in the 60s
@KevinGroden7 ай бұрын
Best man to work for in England was a English man
@nhhan81244 жыл бұрын
Yes, they were treated badly by the English, not by the blacks, Indians, Aborigines and American Indians. They were (the IRISH) the one that plays the middle man for the suffering and murdering of these race of people. Also, they were exploited in the UK by their own race playing the middle man check out archives and history books
@scoyle17504 жыл бұрын
I am irish and working in South East of England I am a modern day version of these men and could even be thrown back in time and would be comfortable working in them trenches with them boys but difference is I get paid better and I bring it home every Fri night and come back for work early Mon mornings these poor boys never got paid so much that they could travel home every weekend 👍🇮🇪
@jessiejoemurkin6593 жыл бұрын
Are you at east anglia
@dannykelly71593 жыл бұрын
They got paid plenty. But mostly drank every pennie.
@Gommerell3 жыл бұрын
@@dannykelly7159 In fairness they only had the digs at night staring at four walls , so they went to the Pub and got a drink problem , which only the wages on a building site could keep going. They were brought over and had no family or houses to call a home- I mean you could not finish work early and tidy up your garden or build a shed etc, you only had the digs and you were not staying long and you had to travel light as you were carrying it in between jobs. In my 20's I had a bag of tools and a sleeping bag/ bag of clothes' and that kept me going. Only got a car when I was 27 and settled down married at 30. All the time prior was working and drinking, and I consider myself lucky that I got out when the chance arose. I would not blame anyone that was not so fortunate.
@dannykelly71593 жыл бұрын
@@Gommerell I agree. As I’ve been working away since 18. I moved to oz for 5 years then have worked in England and Scotland in bad digs this past 6 years. I love a drink. But deffo couldn’t afford to drink in bars every night of the week like these boys. Lol. If I could I’d have a farm bought in Ireland 😀😂
@Gommerell3 жыл бұрын
@@dannykelly7159 To give you an idea of my own experience ; The basic rate at Camden Town in 1988 was £30 in the hand for days work (some would try to get it for £20, usually if it was a small builder and they got their job done they would give you a drink as well maybe £40 all in. ) For that you could get a meal in a Cafe for £2-£3 say and a pint was a £1.50 . I tired of laboring and chanced my arm at Shuttering and they pay doubled to £65 a day- did get sacked a good few times for being a chancer though. Eventually got the hang of it and I worked on Canary Wharf for 18 months getting £400 a week clear with overtime. That was digs at £50 a week (a room in a shared house) and travelcard was £10 .) You could easy save £100- £200 a week with a good Saturday night as well. A Farm in Scotland was about 100k then so a good motivated lad could save 5k in a year easy. A House would be £30k, so you could definitely work on the buildings a few years , have a good few pints at night and still save towards something. I don't think wages and houses are in the same sentence now. Good luck
@bigc15654 жыл бұрын
🇮🇪 love it the Irish built Britain
@Horriblebastad3 жыл бұрын
As sure as leprechauns is leprechauns 🤓
@jamesaherne65424 жыл бұрын
These Irish sub contractors were very bad to their own còuntrymen
@tommitchell18264 жыл бұрын
dead right james i was in London in 80's i found the English treated me better i was 19 whn i wnt over but i enjoyed myself
@michaeloconnor98094 жыл бұрын
In the main, very true
@MrFootballfu4 жыл бұрын
I remember just loving having continuous strenous work because otherwise it was just macho bullying by foremen , luckily I never succeeded, and so my limbs and lungs are still alive 40 years later. It was a humiliating culture trap and most of them are dead I think. A waste of the creative human brain.
@cathedralImages3 жыл бұрын
Worse kind was your own ..
@ihonestlydontcare11582 жыл бұрын
If you ever get the chance to have an Irishman as your foreman…run it’s not worth you time he will absolutely break you up with the amount of lifting and the speed you have to do it at. No excuse not even a snowstorm would stop and Irishman from getting paid. I know from experience as an Australian who worked many different Irish foreman and they treat you the exact way they were treated. But they are a great laugh and very good drinkers
@georgel744 жыл бұрын
Those men ended up with serious injuries and illness but they were abandoned by their so called employers and British and Irish governments.
@jamesbradshaw3389 Жыл бұрын
what you say is true.
@TheByard3 ай бұрын
A lot of the problems were not known back in the 1960 like asbestosis from caulking yarn used in caulking tunnel joints. Which my brother has. Tinnitus hearing problems from the air drilling, White finger from using air powered clay spade and jiggers. Both of which I have. We didn't have hard hats ear defenders or thick gloves and soft handles on air tools, we had to wait for them to be invented.
@HalfDeadGeezers4 жыл бұрын
Coming from three generations of symphony musician snobs, only classical music was allowed in my home. Eventually, with 8 kids, that rule didn't hold up. Absolutely and Completely was the first non classical music introduced into my home. Father Riley says Goodbye moved me deeply as a child. It remains a sentimental favorite.