I was born in the 1960's in a semi rural village and still remember the rag and bone man riding around on his cart! One of my first memories.
@HolloMatlala14 күн бұрын
5:30 George and Sentinels Children are still sworn ENEMIES to this DAY🤞🏾🤞🏾🤞🏾🤞🏾
@HolloMatlala14 күн бұрын
Some of the People TODAY you can swear they are Descendants of Prirate Captains....
@carolinecollett9565 күн бұрын
He authorised parking fees in Raleigh Road and ruined my friends hairdressing business 🧑💼
@carolinecollett9565 күн бұрын
Local architect and Bristol City Council Mayor George Ferguson buys one of the few remaining factories on Raleigh Road, the previous year (September 1993),
@carolinecollett9565 күн бұрын
I also grew up in this location, worked in Imperial Tobacco offices when I left school 🏫. WD & HO Wills built factories in Bristol and helped the city in many ways, including as a major employer and a pioneer of worker benefits : Yes, WD & HO Wills built factories in Bristol and helped the city in many ways, including as a major employer and a pioneer of worker benefits: Factories The company built factories in Bristol in the late Victorian period, including in Redcliffe Street, East Street Bedminster, and Raleigh Road Southville. The East Street factory, also known as Factory No. 1, was designed by Sir Frank Wills and is now the Tobacco Factory Theatre. Employment WD & HO Wills was a major employer in Bristol, especially at the turn of the 20th century. The company was known for its progressive employment culture, which included benefits such as paid holidays, health care, canteens, and sports facilities. Tobacco brands WD & HO Wills produced many popular brands, including Woodbine, Embassy, Capstan, and Wills' Fine Shag. The company also made cigar brands, pipe tobacco brands, and Golden Virginia hand-rolling tobacco. Imperial Tobacco WD & HO Wills was a founding company of Imperial Tobacco. Wills Memorial Tower The Wills family also left an architectural legacy in Bristol, including the Wills Memorial Tower on Park Street. The factories closed in 1988, and some were demolished, while others were converted for new uses. The former Wills Building, for example, was converted into luxury apartments and reopened in 1999. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tobacco_Factory😊
@carolinecollett9566 күн бұрын
Look at the empty roads in comparison to todays traffic jams
@carolinecollett9566 күн бұрын
Woolworths
@carolinecollett9566 күн бұрын
The statue of Colston
@carolinecollett9566 күн бұрын
The Young Princess Anne and the duke came to visit
@carolinecollett9566 күн бұрын
Concorde ,
@carolinecollett9566 күн бұрын
All the red telephone boxes
@onchnc35468 күн бұрын
What an incredibly busy and interesting place. What a shame its gone, great collection on the video well done.
@onchnc354611 күн бұрын
Lovely times. A shame its all gone now.
@onchnc354611 күн бұрын
Great video, captures the times. Tory and Labour crimes closed these places down. Very sad times.
@dodgy195414 күн бұрын
Nice to see a new one. Some good stuff. Pity the trams are gone ( I think). Thank you Dave
@puppy158417 күн бұрын
Where have you been young Dave? So good to see an upload from you. Brought back some memories for me. We lived in Kingswood when we got married (after two years in Ashley Down) and we had our wedding reception at The Linden Hotel…very posh. Anyway Dave, I hope you’re well, Happy Christmas 2024. 🇬🇧
@andymoore733717 күн бұрын
I remember Dad taking me into the bowling alley before it was pulled down to make way for the new precinct.There was a milk machine and a squash machine with a paddle going round and round.Must of been 1968/69.
@markm343618 күн бұрын
I've been going to Aust beach for about 15 years looking for fossils and have seen quite a change just in that time, so I found your knowledge and memories really interesting, cheers.
@rorus953020 күн бұрын
Strange seeing people hanging out along the portway. I wish it could be developed to become something like the watershed. Its a shame to have nothing there besides traffic.
@onchnc354620 күн бұрын
Tory crimes
@colinmccarthy792122 күн бұрын
I remember these days.❤️
@westhavengwr461323 күн бұрын
I think Eric Clapton played his final gig with the Yardbirds at the Corn Exchange.
@westhavengwr461323 күн бұрын
This was an excellent model shop. I think my early models came from here.
@westhavengwr461323 күн бұрын
I had that set of decimal coins. On the Portway for the arrival of SS Great Britain. Enjoyed the Rovers promotion with Smash & Grab.
@westhavengwr461323 күн бұрын
Even though I was in short trousers then, great memories especially proper Bristol buses and the Rovers ground.
@pepper41925 күн бұрын
Remember when the "Blue tits" would steal the cream off the top of the milk before people got the chance to bring the bottles in off the doorstep? Wow! I didn't expect that last picture.
@pepper41925 күн бұрын
My dad used to drive one of those BRS delivery vans around SOHO sixty years ago. I got to go with him a couple of times.
@pepper41925 күн бұрын
If we still had these today, the supermarkets wouldn't do the crap business they do now with the food, that isn't food. It was real then.
@mikerisbridger809527 күн бұрын
My dad Alec was born in Bristol (Westbury-on-Trym) 1907. I imagine he will of been familiar with much of these photos
@exploringmetaldetecting5989Ай бұрын
i went to russell town school from i think 1960 to 1967
@lagerhoundАй бұрын
Carry On Sergeant at the Kings Cinema Old Market, and What A Whopper ! at my local cinema the Rex in Bedminster. Remember going there for Saturday Morning Pictures when we were kids, I think it was 6d to get in. Very interesting video looking back, I lived in Bristol for 24 years up to 1980. Remember nearly all those places in the video, and our first TV set from Radio Rentals. Also the big flood, and I think that Stadium pic in the floods was Eastville, a hundred years of sport, football, and greyhound racing for almost 70 years, also speedway. Closed down in 1997, and now an Ikea superstore ! Stadium was next to a gasworks and in the early days remember that smell of gas fumes. We lived in Ashton Vale and Southville.
@MargaretChapman-k1yАй бұрын
Wish those rag & bone men were still on the streets. I have to pay £5 for each item my council collects these days and the limit is 5 at a time! We got milk by horse cart and then electric van, and bread delivered, with a veg and grocery van we queued up to. The new delivery driver with our bread found he and mum came from the same Welsh village, as he recognised her local accent. She hadn't lost it in 30 years and 20 of them in London!
@DavidFennessy-yj7duАй бұрын
You mentioned the French onion man, I remember a French onion man visiting Beckenham in South East London, he was treated with derision and unpleasantness by the right wing working class of Beckenham who used to..‘knock around’..the pubs, a pity for such a potentially nice area.
@christopherabbott8284Ай бұрын
I was born in 1958 these bring back memories we did not have a lot of money but we were happy we kids went out on our bikes to the local park and spent hours playing out fun times
@ForlornWhaleАй бұрын
Great work!
@ForlornWhaleАй бұрын
Great video! I live on Herbert Street and it's incredible to see how much Whitehall Road has changed over the years... It's definitely used to be prettier
@bambikeswick6053Ай бұрын
Horrendous visit to dentist in middlesbrough strapped to big brown leather chair and gas mask forced onto me....still traumatised😢
@alcatraz353912 сағат бұрын
Same! I was terrified! Never forgotten those experiences. I think we earned our "mental issues" them days 😂
@bambikeswick6053Ай бұрын
Who remembers the Bex Bissell man selling polish at the door?
@bambikeswick6053Ай бұрын
Born 1957 in yorkshire.i wud ask mum for a carrot for the rag and bone man's horse.happy days.😊
@puppets.and.muppetsАй бұрын
any old gender. best prices paid.
@TheTigersbayАй бұрын
Wake up people and get your country back . We Will Win 👍🏻God bless.
@jimloth6091Ай бұрын
I'm not sure - it's been 60 years since we left Bristol for Canada but I'm pretty sure this is the depot my Dad (Frank Pratt, conductor and later driver) worked out of. He took me into the canteen, where as a young boy, I was able to add to my vocabulary...
@samrowell3314Ай бұрын
Aaww the coal man,as a kid i followed the coal lorry on my trike it had a bucket on the back so all the bits of coal they dropped i would collect it and take it home to my dad i loved it ❤ 😊
@MargaretChapman-k1yАй бұрын
In the late 40's it was the milkman's horse we looked out for. My dad made us go out and check for horse poo before anyone else got it. Fantastic fertiliser for the garden and got excellent results but we did suffer for it!
@Susan.19582 ай бұрын
I remember the coal man and rag and bone man he used to give a donkey stone if he was given rags they were the good old days not like today 2024
@ScruffyTubbles2 ай бұрын
Goodness. Recliffe Hill if it had been kept as it was stretching down to Bedminster what a lovely prospect. There was something uncanny at work laying waste to the whole area.
@davidfrodsham48222 ай бұрын
Worked ten plus years in Queen Square now 40 years ago. Fabulous City and people. Best years of my life.
@PeteHarris-q6t2 ай бұрын
As it was, now full of Aliens (Pakistanis and the Muslim culture.)
@Rog54462 ай бұрын
Time point 3:45. That's a Barrel Organ, not a Hurdy Gurdy.
@paulryan15782 ай бұрын
I’m a 51 model 😂😂 and grew up all through the 50s with a clear memory of these days !! We had zip but didn’t have muggings or any real amount of house break ins as most people had nothing to steal ,easy life no pressure no bullshyte