Good morning to you si you got my heart can I have yours Jackie ♥️
@alanvaughan6531Ай бұрын
Bad,bad area! Been to "Domino" club many times in the 1960's. Think it was Bernard Manning's club
@HughHolmes-d7h2 ай бұрын
Harris Susan Robinson Angela White Robert
@aceyace31503 ай бұрын
..i wouldn't get on that tram back in them days raaz it's as high as the Pepsi max ride 😲...maybe i would sit down-stairs ..am sorry tram 🚊 ..this vid is the works n educating ..respect for uploading ..😎
@darrensouthward18247 ай бұрын
Great memories. Ray school . What a Hall in Philips Park.
@michaelarnold47138 ай бұрын
Great music 🎶
@NikkNikk-qg5xs9 ай бұрын
I was born 1963. nelson st.
@ingerlander11 ай бұрын
I knew a Northern Irishman who had manned an anti aircraft gun in Malta. He told me that they were bombed and when he woke up, he was the only one left alive.
@StuartLomas Жыл бұрын
Hi, great video although scrolling is a little to fast. I was born in Clayton in 1960, went to St. Cross & Ravensbury St & extended family lived all around Clayton. Very happy memories of a great place to grow up.....I guess we were poor but happy! It's a shame councils did not realise what a mistake they were making breaking up communities as they did around Manchester!
@gerdsiebern9648 Жыл бұрын
Actually, Si Cranstoun is the best good mood singer of all. Love hime and his music.😊
@davidclarke6718 Жыл бұрын
A lost nation long gone.
@brenda6580 Жыл бұрын
Great video and song
@gilgammesh1 Жыл бұрын
4:47, wow that pipe is the same, heck everything is the same apart from the buildings in the background. I wish i could walk around my childhood town and experience the history.
@royksk Жыл бұрын
This makes it a little better than many of the slum dwellings really were - hell on earth and uninhabitable with consumptive people on bare boards with no food or clean water and 100 bodies to each shared non-flushing toilet. A ll rife with disease and mass burials 😞
@stedan121 Жыл бұрын
I LOVE YOUR VIDEOS OF CLAYTON YOU LL LOV E MY VIDEOS TOO KEEP UP THE GOOD WORK GOOD OLD DAYS, STEVEN
@domenicozagari2443 Жыл бұрын
The people of Malta are Italians, they did not like been occupied by the English
@rubypipa Жыл бұрын
Maybe they weren't too keen on the Brits but they hated the Axis more! They are not Italian's
@garnetlongano2271 Жыл бұрын
this is not the same Tony Worsley who sang "Velvet Waters" Tony Worsley, the singer, just performed at Arcobar, Melbourne on Thursday 06.04.2023. He was great.. still has a terrific voice.
@rubypipa Жыл бұрын
Read the title!
@berylmiller1968 Жыл бұрын
One of Malta's greatest singers
@jimmyroberts9528 Жыл бұрын
Grew up in Clayton Left in my early twenties,happy memories Still go back and see family but the town and the city in general have changed so much over twenty odd years that I barely recognise a lot of it anymore,and maybe that’s why I have the sentimentalities of the past.
@StuartLomas Жыл бұрын
Hi, just came across your video. Just t wanted to reach out. I was born in Clayton in 1960, went to St.Cross & Ravensbury St School & wanted to ask about the two photos of John St/Jardine St you show, if you could send me a copy of them as I was born in that street & lived there until 1975 when that whole estate started to be demolished. I have looked everywhere for pics if my old street with no joy,vso if you have these , it would be great, please let me know & I will give you an e mail address. Thanks
@rubypipa Жыл бұрын
Hi Stuart was your mam Jean Lomas?
@rubypipa Жыл бұрын
Or Sandra?
@StuartLomas Жыл бұрын
@@rubypipa Yes it was Jean.
@rubypipa Жыл бұрын
@@StuartLomas my mam was friends so your dad was Bill I lived on Clayton lane Link to photo images.manchester.gov.uk/ResultsList.php?session=pass&QueryName=BasicQuery&QueryPage=/index.php?session=pass&Restriction=&StartAt=1&Anywhere=SummaryData|AdmWebMetadata&QueryTerms=Jardine%20street&QueryOption=Anywhere
@StuartLomas Жыл бұрын
@@rubypipa Most appreciated, thank you.
@flyingfox7854 Жыл бұрын
Hi All you happy Mancunians …. I was born and grew up in Chorlton-on - Medlock …. Went to Plymouth Grove infant school and did my 11 plus exam at Openshaw Tech …. ( didn’t pass 😂) then went to Vicky Park Secondary Modern … left school at 15 and worked until 65 … I’m now almost 70 years old …. Ahhhhhh …. The good old days …. Just a memory now …. But videos like these bring back the memories …👍🙏❤️
@stedan121 Жыл бұрын
love your videos of clayton you will like my videos too of old clayton
@manchesterman2622 Жыл бұрын
2:05 the earth just swallowed the Flower Pot on Ogden lane in Higher Openshaw
@manchesterman2622 Жыл бұрын
Many of these are not in Clayton
@Pob76 Жыл бұрын
Very nicely done , had to keep freeze framing ,cos it was flicking through too fast.(I’m old). My Dad worked at Stuart street power station as an industrial electrician, in the 30s and 40s. I think that’s where the Velodrome is now next to the Etihad.
@louiseholloway8118 Жыл бұрын
I was born on archer Street next to Stuart Street power station in 1956.we used to hear the electricity humming when in the front room of the house. Granellis ice cream depot just over Mill Street round the corner from the brew.
@suzannedwight9272 Жыл бұрын
My great great grandmother was the landlady of The Victoria. My grandad won his house on Iredine Street in a raffle at the Anchor Chemical. I was born on Eccleshall Street, but we had a cellar that used to flood in the rain, no bathroom (we used to go to my gran's on Iredine Street for a bath). We got brand new clothes for Whit week every year and my Mum used to go mad because when I got tired during the walks, I used to sit down in the middle of the road and pop the pitch bubbles! Thank you so much for sharing this
@margaretpierce5268 Жыл бұрын
Hi Suzanne. I remember one whit week we went up to my aunties behind the Calton bingo club . Best clothes on and there was a pitch field behind her house! Popping bubbles got me dirty shoes and lots of trouble😅
@suzannedwight9272 Жыл бұрын
My Gran lived on Iredine Street - we used to love going across the adjacent croft and fishing for tiddlers in the canal with nets. Gutted that it's all gone now
@martinwhitehorn2375 Жыл бұрын
I am interested in the history of Manchester would have much preferred to study the full pictures for a reasonable period of time. In my opinion this video has been spoilt by "clever" computer tricks.
@SisterDogmata Жыл бұрын
Lovely pics! A real trip down memory lane. Manchester was a great place to grow up.
@SisterDogmata Жыл бұрын
Born in Openshaw in 1966 and have a few fragmented memories of it. Lovely video, Made me feel nostalgic.
@paullathlane30472 жыл бұрын
Laddie Lucas story about the Malta dog, had me in stitches. Brilliant 👏
@throwachair2 жыл бұрын
did the domino club get turned in to a diy type shop in the 90's sounds mad but there deffo was a place near Moston, I bought a hammer there and lost it on a job in Huddersfield ha ha, top video anyway.
@alanvaughan65313 ай бұрын
Great nights spent at the "Domino Club"!!
@colinardron1982 жыл бұрын
The Lord Raglan was my grandfather's local. He was born in late Victorian times and worked at the GortonTank which is another story in itself. During the so called pandemic I went down memory lane to my old haunts and blow me the Lord Raglan was still open although my grand dads house round the corner had been demolished some years ago.
@davidclark36032 жыл бұрын
I'm an please guy now and I remember loads of those pictures like it was very recent. Times were better then. Where's the progress?
@braintighe47572 жыл бұрын
It was a different world, gosh how did we live it.
@braintighe4757 Жыл бұрын
In reply to my own question: the fact is we were all young and took life as it came to us, most of us were all in the same boat, our parents had been through the war as young and old children and were building our country up having to go through rationing and hardships, there was much more unity amongst people cos we were like a family all up and down the country, we could never have envisaged such a time as our time now and all the things we have, it is truly amazing the achievements we have made since the late fifties beginning with the rock and roll then the Beatles and all the greatest bands superb music and all the great inventions along with all the medicines cures for illnesses, transplants etc, it was all like an explosion on all fronts happening as life progressed, ab absolutely brilliant time to be young with youthful vitality we all had,so how could we even think about the future as life was truly great and could not be any better (or so we thought.) There have been many advancements in life for us all, fridges, washing machines, televisions, cars, lorries, ships, airplanes, and so many more, the digital era has spawned so many more, this was why I said “how did we live it” looking at the video brought back the times we lived through and makes people nostalgic for those times they wished they could have again, a truly great video to se as I remember all the places
@braintighe4757 Жыл бұрын
.
@margaretpierce5268 Жыл бұрын
It was great. Born in 58. Played in Braddon Street on my bike. Drove Margery at the end house mad playing ball on her wall! 50/50 dances at the cons club. Brilliant!
@chriscope72922 жыл бұрын
Delemere park bowling green 2.35 ....broke my leg on there when i was 7......happy memories ( :
@chriscope72922 жыл бұрын
Grew up on Rosina street, mum still lives neston street behind delamere park - great place to grow up in the 80s
@johnhankinson19292 жыл бұрын
i'm from swinton , great song and pic's , keep 'em coming
@doralie48882 жыл бұрын
Thankyou for sharing this ,my Grandfather Howard Bell is one of the veterans in this moving documentary and I have been unable to find a copy. So wonderful to hear and see him again ❤ He kept in touch with the landlady Jane and her family who visited the UK over the years. So very proud of these brave heroes.
@kittyc35252 жыл бұрын
Thank for the lovely journey. Very moving.
@EnglandAD9272 жыл бұрын
my relatives on my mothers side are Maltese the agius,s from vitoriaosa, never been have to go to pay my respect to our troops and the Maltese
@qualitygoldfish21982 жыл бұрын
Fantastic should be shown in every classroom
@davidm-1965tb2 жыл бұрын
Mum’s first job was at the Aneline (spelling?) and in later years as a teacher at Ravensbury street! She always told tales of working in the labs at the Aneline, she obviously loved it there
@suzannedwight9272 Жыл бұрын
My Gran worked there when I was a child. She used to come home a different colour everyday. The green was the hardest to get out
@Mr.Grimsdale Жыл бұрын
The correct spelling is Aniline . . . . as in Clayton Aniline.
@MrWhothefoxthat2 жыл бұрын
born in Openshaw store street, house was stolen from the council 1969, then moved into the hills, no work, no buses, no amenities, and not wanted, what a big change for a young lad, from swimming for whitworth street baths, Openshaw lads club member, to nothing but broken promises from the local council.
@stedan1212 жыл бұрын
I LOVE IT IF YOU LIKE THIS OF OLD CLAYTON YOU WE LL LIKE MY VIDEOS😀
@skc74502 жыл бұрын
doesnt matter be it ye olde clayton/ancoats/openshaw/droylsden/wherever.......the saddest thing is the demise of the sense of a community that happened to these places......the very thing that once make their fabric strong and a joy to behold....(being a southener who came up to my nans in the summer holidays to clayton....).....
@anthonymcadams83132 жыл бұрын
We lived in the old Collyhurst flats, Ann and Stan was my parents names. Kingsley Cresent. My mam worked in Mary Rayner's shop.
@emilycook48432 жыл бұрын
Poor people and may they all rest in peace 😢❤
@craigmullen90462 жыл бұрын
Not the same now certainly changed Demographically after 2003 more twinned with the congo.
@craigmullen90462 жыл бұрын
Clayton yeah twinned with the congo as it demographically changed for the worse.