Yes but not possible!… Almost all the cities today in America have been turned into 3rd world dumps.
@donaldwilson77177 ай бұрын
I did too. When I was going on seven, my dad bought his first house in 1944 for $ 6,500 (now listed for $ 90,000 on Zillow).
@TopHotDog7 ай бұрын
@@donaldwilson7717 only 90k? You mean 900,000.
@HacksignKT7 ай бұрын
NO. Lol
@dr.skipkazarian55567 ай бұрын
The clothing, the billboards, the vehicles, and the characters....the fat kid with the yo-yo and the little girl coaxing her mother into the ice cream shop...the elevated train and the people all seeming to have a sense of going somewhere significant...the Kress store with its iconic 5-10-25 cent boast...the grocery store and price of food and the sheer life of the city in every form. Thank you for another excellent restoration.
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
thank you very much ;))
@TopHotDog7 ай бұрын
The five & dime was the period Dollar 🌲 Tree.
@siddrajput10297 ай бұрын
I believe Kresge was the founder of K-Mart
@gustavoperez54807 ай бұрын
Were those cars capable to work out to drive them from East to west coast?
@paul7TM7 ай бұрын
@@gustavoperez5480Oh sure. Ever read On the Road by Jack Kerouac. Many people made the journey from the dust bowl states in the thirties out to California. You just needed to change the oil a lot more as most of these cars didn't have oil filters. And they really pumped out some fumes. Great looking though. My favourite period for cars 🛺
@londi33337 ай бұрын
People are watching where they’re going, which is no longer the case with mobile phones. The definition is beautiful. Another beautiful moment in the time machine. A huge thank you!
@rockerdowns60517 ай бұрын
My parents were born and raised on the North side. They would have been kids in middle school. They were the most loving, giving, and honest people I have ever known. I lost them 4 months apart in 2017. They couldn’t understand how the world turned into what a mess it is today and the last 7 years even worse. Thank you so much for these videos. Miss and love you mon and dad.
@christinacarey4657 ай бұрын
Where...my folks were from Rodgers Park...
@rockerdowns60517 ай бұрын
@@christinacarey465 Armitage Ave. Old Town & Lincoln Park. Mom gave birth to me at St. Luke’s and I was raised at Irving Park and Pulaski. Different days then. How about you.
@christinacarey4657 ай бұрын
@rockerdowns6051 Well my grandparents came over from the Ukraine...Ashkenazi Jews..off of Harding in Rodgers Park. I was raised in Aurora.
@sonjagatto99817 ай бұрын
I can't understand it either. I very much understand your missing your wonderful parents...I miss mine too. 💔 All the best for you❣
@petrasant54956 ай бұрын
God Bless you and your parents. Greetings from Wales, UK.
@frankchambers81016 ай бұрын
I've seen a similar film. It was produced by a billboard company. That's why there are so many shots of billboards in this. But the dead giveaway is near the end when we see an employee of the billboard company counting people or cars going by the board. Professionally shot which makes it so much easier to watch than home movies
@JohnNorris4117 ай бұрын
I love these videos, because they show what absolute slobs we have become.
@rongendron87057 ай бұрын
I'm 78 & was alive for part of the 40's ,but would you really want to go back to a time where you had to get dressed up, even to go to a darkened movie? Men had to wear suits & women dresses, that they couldn't afford, to go to jobs that paid too low salaries!
@sandrafreedom7 ай бұрын
@@rongendron8705Melhor é o DESLEIXO então ??? E com 78 anos vc nasceu em 1946 ...4 anos após esse vídeo ...era um bebê .Crinaça nos anos 50 ,logo Não sabe o que está dizendo.
@brianboye80257 ай бұрын
Men wearing suits, ties and hats. Women in dresses, stockinged, some hats. Really not a one that isn't thin and walking strong. Oh yeah, one old guy taking his time. I'm fat so don't think I'm bias.
@mikepetrik9077 ай бұрын
@@rongendron8705 We've gone way too far the other way. People don't even dress up for church or funerals. Gents with sandals on an airplane. People used to dress with self-respect and respect for others.
@NICO6ride6mosh67 ай бұрын
We live in a world where you have to get undressed in the airport in order to be let on the plane - so what if people wear sandals??
@jody68517 ай бұрын
Any one of those bobby-soxers at 0:45 could represent my mother at that age at that time. So near and yet so far.
@J-ellO7 ай бұрын
Thank you for sending us on another stunning trip to the past! What a delightful video this is, Chicago at its best, so clean, so pristine! I love your work, and thank you always for allowing us all to be a part of what you do….❤
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
Hi!! Thank you!!
@inkey27 ай бұрын
1942......The year rationing started in the USA. This must be just before it started in 1942 as I see no gasoline ration stickers on car windshields and there is still enough gasoline to fill the streets with cars. No war effort posters and signs in store windows or billboards either. The rationing got pretty extensive after this. My late mother who died at 92 years old told me a humorous story about "ration stamps". She was with her younger sister in a store to buy something. She (the younger sister) dropped some of her ration stamps on the floor. Just as she went to quickly pick them up a big man grabbed them away from her. This kid actually jumped on the mans back and pounded her fists against his head and ears till he dropped the stamps and ran out of the store.
@knuteboy37787 ай бұрын
Shopping was so efficient. There's a Sears next to a Krogers grocery store which was probably next to a hardware shop then a shoe repair place and then a drugstore. You could walk down a city block and get all your errands done.
@TopHotDog7 ай бұрын
The problem was parking and traffic. You'd be lucky to find a space nearby and then face backing out of diagonal spaces and if the approaching driver wasn't courteous , you'd be fiddling with the clutch and accelerator pedal and brake, all three of your feet. In the street cars you'd be faced with being packed like sardines, stale cigar smoke and sweaty armpits. Congested downtown shopping gave rise to shopping centers on the outskirts of most big cities.
@pawelpap97 ай бұрын
You mean it was more efficient than shopping from your couch using an iPhone?
@EdwardM-t8p7 ай бұрын
And there's always the chance meeting up with friends and neighbors or meeting someone new. The automobile, the television, and the internet all destroyed all that.
@EmilyTienne7 ай бұрын
These are unfortunately tiny clips strung together. Would love to see the full footages of this magnificent city! BTW, loved the dress styles, and virtually everyone is fit and trim. That doesn’t exist anymore.
@corneliusthecrowtamer19377 ай бұрын
go back in time and film a longer video
@EmilyTienne7 ай бұрын
@@corneliusthecrowtamer1937 Yes, that would be nice.
@rsikes27 ай бұрын
A Walgreens on every corner and kids dragging moms into the soda fountains..priceless. Your work on these resto films is exceptional....but I wonder who the guy with the clipboard was? Traffic engineer? FBI? Reporter? Data resource gatherer for the Mob? Cameraman's brother in law? Some mysteries are buried in the past. Thx again NASS...keep em coming!
@furtim17 ай бұрын
I would guess it was a traffic counter for that billboard.
@salomoncisse77877 ай бұрын
Ça semble être un contrôleur du trafic bus...
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
Thank you
@Kerygmame7 ай бұрын
I thought mob, mebbe Frank Nitti
@21stCenturySpaceOdyssey7 ай бұрын
And no pillagers too.
@pilates687 ай бұрын
Anyone remember the Simon&Garfunkel lyric from the song America. “So we bought a pack of cigarettes and Mrs. Wagner pies”. Pretty cool in 2024 watching a video from 1940 and reminded of a song lyric from 1970.
@silvertube527 ай бұрын
Yes, the only place I'd heard of those pies was in that song. Now I know they were singing about a popular brand of pies, not woman they knew named Wagner.
@noblesvillepreservat7 ай бұрын
That lyric came into my head when I saw the billboard
@fratzogmopars7 ай бұрын
In a few of the shots L Fish furniture store is visible, that is Chicago’s west side, Madison St. just west of Crawford Ave. called Pulaski Rd. now.
@dc10fomin657 ай бұрын
I remember a L Fish store around North Ave and Rockwell St, in the same pic I see a MADIGANS store, I remember their big store in Melrose Park in the Winston Park shopping plaza, on North Avenue as well!
@ladyrg50407 ай бұрын
This was at the beginning for WW2. My mother might have been in the downtown footage... ps.. i wish you would have put the streets in as with the exception of downtown... no idea where this was taken... if you have anymore of Chicago.. would love to see them.
@AdaKizi2487 ай бұрын
Agreed. Even the names of the nearest intersections would help.
@Firestone17 ай бұрын
McCormick building at 01:13 is still there. 300 block of south Michigan ave
@geneval31517 ай бұрын
NASS........you just keep out doing yourself. I enjoyed that film very much. The resolution, color and frame rate are superb. You bring so many hours of enjoyment\education to so many people. Seems like saying "Thank you" just isnt enough. Please know when I do say "Thank you" it is with the most heartfelt sincerity and complete admiration for you and your work. So........Thank You NASS!!!! Thank you x1000.
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
Thank you ;))!
@matrox7 ай бұрын
1:55 I like how the kid forces her mother or big sister into the store.😁
@glennhavinoviski81287 ай бұрын
Everything at once immediately recognizable as Chicago but yet...everything looks different, Thanks for sharing my hometown 20 years before I was born.
@lordpitnolen21967 ай бұрын
It's great seeing the various car models.
@Jan961067 ай бұрын
I've been thinking lately that with all the SUV's on the road, we've gone back to the old shape of cars. Everything old is new again.
@EdwardM-t8p7 ай бұрын
Everything is so clean and well kept, and the people were dressed to the nines! Most of the shops were mom and pops or small chains. This country has changed completely and not necessarily for the better.
@TheAlixour4 ай бұрын
Except those old exhausts and lord knows what else is pumping into the air. Wasn't asbestos in the cereal? I think you're judging a book by its cover, no offense. It just feels like the new popular thing to romanticize this or that and take the moment for granted. (Yes, big corpo aside.) I think you need to go to Chicago sometime and see how beautiful it is thanks in part to those who came before us.
@merccadoosis88477 ай бұрын
This video DEMANDS at least one million views. I have no illusions about that era as there was a war going on and we just recovered from the Great Depression. Add to this is the fact that there was too much racial/ethnic discrimination going on. Despite all, I'd still love to have a TARDIS just to visit, for at least a little while. Thanks for making this highly entertaining production.
@gina55656 ай бұрын
My grandma told me about the streetcars in chicago. So cool to finally see them. Thank you 🙏
@levine0235 ай бұрын
They were still around in the mid 60's I remember them. Sadly "progress " got rid of them.
@CurtRenz4 ай бұрын
As a baby in 1946 Chicago in my mother's arms, a cement truck ran head-on into our streetcar. Of course, the streetcar couldn't turn. The window by our seat shattered glass that cut my mother's arm that was protecting me. The streetcar driver lost his legs. When I was a little older, we would ride the streetcar southeast on Clark Street to get to Wrigley Field.
@qeetta92Ай бұрын
Thanks to Chicago’s awful neglect of our city streets, you can still see exposed train tracks in some parts of the city that have never been fully covered up. I lived in Woodlawn for about 11 years until we moved in 2912 and I remember seeing tracks on 63rd and King Drive in this alleyway. I believe they may have been covered up since then. But it was interesting to see them and kind of visualize where the streetcars most likely went based on what I already knew about the history of it.
@thinkplease71147 ай бұрын
My parents were children in 1942, in Chicago. South shore for my dad. Roseland for my mom. They used to tell us stories about growing up in Chicago. Another time.
@The_best_days_are_yesterdays7 ай бұрын
I was born in Roseland, 1959
@wayneadams78297 ай бұрын
Did they ever go to raceway Park at 127th and Ashland?
@thinkplease71147 ай бұрын
@@wayneadams7829 I don’t know. Heard of raceway park
@thinkplease71147 ай бұрын
Think it was open when I was growing up. Never been
@goodtimefolkrock7 ай бұрын
Another trip in the NASS time machine......thanks NASS
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
thank you very much
@josdesouza7 ай бұрын
I'm amazed at how people used to dress so elegantly back then.
@markkinsler43337 ай бұрын
Office workers and shoppers usually dressed to go downtown. My parents did.
@46magno7 ай бұрын
How nice,peaceful and calm city at that time. And now😳😾🥲As I always say : historical footages. Thanks!
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
;))
@marywmiller7 ай бұрын
Growing up in a Chicago suburb , and loving this city, of course I recognize so much of the place I used to love. Michigan Ave, Downtown, Lake Shore Drive. So much history. We just went to a wedding at the church shown here, it’s beautiful! Now the city I love is so far from the wholesomeness you see here and when I grew up. Be careful taking parts of it in. It’s been ruined unfortunately.
@jerometurner87597 ай бұрын
278 views 13 minutes after posting. Not bad.
@shaunwest36127 ай бұрын
Great video nass, incredible footage,so beautiful, great work 👌😀👍
@briansierzega7 ай бұрын
6:51 I love how The Wrigley Building and the drawbridge shelter thing in the background on the left are the exact same look up Michigan Ave to this day! That’s pretty incredible!
@AllThingsFilm17 ай бұрын
Love these videos. It's interesting to see how people interacted on the streets years before my time.
@bobhoward66767 ай бұрын
American heritage and culture . What a great time capsule. Great work my friend. I didn't see a single bum/hobo.
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
Thank you!! ^^
@SMartinTX7 ай бұрын
My parents were 10 and 6 at the time and they are still around. My father lived in Melrose Park and my mother in Oak Park at the time of this video.
@wot23437 ай бұрын
Everyone in the comments is fawning over how "civilized" everyone was back then. I just wish we still had an extensive streetcar network.
@gengebhardt60667 ай бұрын
Cars were the worst thing to happen to cities.
@nthdegree12697 ай бұрын
Incredible Time Machine you got going! Great work as always!
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
Thank you! ^^
@stanleygabrel10457 ай бұрын
Thank you for your hard work and dedication to restore this video.
@GRABSTOCK7 ай бұрын
i wish i had a time machine so i wood go back to the 1940s and leave the year 2024 any one want to go with me
@furtim17 ай бұрын
shotgun!
@candyapple74457 ай бұрын
I was just thinking how cool it would be to wake up in 1940, just to spend one day-that would be enough for me.
@bardo00077 ай бұрын
Not for good, unless I am old enough to retire. I am sure I could find a paradise there
@donniekramer6607 ай бұрын
😂@@candyapple7445
@bardo00077 ай бұрын
@rowdyjr2318 I would love to change history. Sign me up.
@TopHotDog7 ай бұрын
The longcoat was essential attire of the time. Heavy and durable, but they were pricey. Some second hand stores sell them now, the real McCoy.
@Ann65.7 ай бұрын
Yes, those coats were de-riguer! Also in the 1950’s. I think that in Ireland they were called “Crombies”.
@katwil897 ай бұрын
We've all been there, Mom. Some things never change. 1:56
@nwicconsultants66407 ай бұрын
lol.....happens again with another mom @4:12 😁
@davidmendel14667 ай бұрын
good natured mothers, this is cute
@Sonnycorleone1627 ай бұрын
Nass, Great video. Love all your videos, especially New York, Chicago, and San Francisco in the 1930's and 40's. I just love the men's dress and the cars of the period. At 1:31 for a second, I thought man at far right was going to flip a coin up and down like Hollywood Gangster George Raft in the movie Scarface in 1932. LOL. I like the big billboard signs too! Oh Uh, At 1:55 Mother and daughter differences of where they want to go! LOL. Cute scene though! Thanks for the upload.
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
Hi!! Thank you
@drscopeify7 ай бұрын
This is an excellent video, it looks to me like this video is related to the advertisement boards, they show a guy counting people walking by maybe looking at the advertisement? The funny thing is I saw people doing that here in Seattle, next to advertisement sign also with a hand counter, I guess that has not changed in 80 years, pretty funny. I love the old store fronts for Walgreens, Kroger, Sears and the others. Walgreen Drug changed their name in 1948 to Walgreen's as it is today.
@aliceryan33997 ай бұрын
Thanks for telling me what that guy was doing! I couldn’t figure out what he was counting.
@randyscott33867 ай бұрын
Back when everyone dressed nice and people could afford to wear shirts with stuff like buttons , a collar , sleeves , ... Well people could afford to wear a real shirt ...... Back when pretty much everyone was smart enough to know what a real shirt was .... That kinda sums it up .... Back when ,,,,,, well things were just a lot better back then when it came to the clothes .
@drscopeify7 ай бұрын
Yeah I know what you mean but on the other hand people were very up-tight and society was very formal, even too formal I would say. If you were to transport back to that time, maybe you would actually miss our less informal world of today, would you not? Having to dress in heavy clothing to go anywhere might get tired after a while, I wear Khakis and short sleeve T shirt all year even in winter but I do agree that seeing people like with nasty Tattoos or just ugly flimsy clothing or exposed people is not very civil but at least here in Seattle most of the year it's raining out so people tend to dress heavier clothing which makes everyone look more dressed up than say in Texas or Florida or California that's for sure.
@randyscott33867 ай бұрын
@@drscopeify I wear bluejeans , a khaki Red Kap workshirt with a collar , chest pockets with flaps , sleeve cuffs that button and a white t-shirt under it everyday with either nike air monarchs or carolina journeyman work boots . I own a small real estate investment company and I'm a Landlord Partner with a rapid rehousing program for the homeless . I've had to wear suits but everyone knows me by my khaki workshirts I wear that go way back . I get mistaken for a homeless person all the time because I'm always dirty and in the same places like thrift stores where all the homeless people are . I love old work clothes Oh and my everyday jacket is a black Red Kap panel jacket from the late 50's early 60's and it has chest pockets on it for cigarettes . They don't make em like that anymore . The people working at Famous Barr noticed . Told me I'd be killed in Tokyo for it .
@TopHotDog7 ай бұрын
@@drscopeify don't confuse being formal with contemporary fashion and conformity. None of those people were dress formally, they were just wearing casual attire of the period. Dime store dress shirts were 39¢. Sears and higher quality shirts were over $2.99. clothes were better cared for and lasted longer because many people used professional laundries. A nickel had a shirt laundered and a dime got that plus had it folded and wrapped.
@IDiggSocialMedia7 ай бұрын
Today it's a zombie apocalypse! Tea shirts, shorts, jeans with large holes, sneakers. pajamas worn in public, etc.!
@txquartz7 ай бұрын
It's not like clothes were proportionally cheaper. It was just simply what you had to do to be part of society. Lots of people only had one or two outfits and washed by hand daily.
@Alex_Christin7 ай бұрын
Watching these videos before sleeping. Such a soothing feeling.
@WAL_DC-6B7 ай бұрын
Nice seeing all the red Chicago Surface Lines (CSL), vintage streetcars and the newer PCC type ones as well. Back when it cost 7 cents to ride on them. Thanks for sharing!
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
Hii! Thank you!! ^^
@jjforcebreaker7 ай бұрын
Fantastic work as always.
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
thank you very much
@draff16627 ай бұрын
Another great video restoration - a piece of time. Thanks!
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
Thank you ;))!!
@terriealabama76127 ай бұрын
Please, people, this channel gives us great clips, and 100% people litter the comments with DEPRESSING things, which they would realize are not “it” if they took a moment to think it thru. Do not comment, “all of these people would be dead now” or how much better, cleaner, nicer those times were. It was extremely rough for all marginalized communities. So, no, not a universal thought or very nice. Do not be too sentimental for dead loved ones in the comments; it is depressing and not nice to us. We worry about your mental health. If the current times are not amazing for you, go make it better! Meet some friends! You can do it.
@peterpiwoski7 ай бұрын
What a depressing comment.😒
@taramahoney24127 ай бұрын
I also noticed in all the videos I watch whether it be New York Chicago, London in those days everybody was dressed up nice compared to today.
@harri26267 ай бұрын
Good to see the streamliner streetcars which had entered service a few years earlier. Ridership increased because of their superior riding qualities and speed. Chicago had plans to buy many more, but sadly wartime shortages and the rush to encourage car ownership meant these would be withdrawn by the 1950s.
@logicbender58927 ай бұрын
Really magnificent footage! So much fun to watch!!
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
Thank you
@critterscute36427 ай бұрын
My mom was born in 1923. She always talked about the streetcars, the Loop, how dressed up they would get just to go shopping. How relatable this made those stories. I felt totally immersed in that time. Brilliant work!
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
thank you very much
@ashagon7 ай бұрын
Great video. I wish more time was spent for each clip. I recognize Madison Street on the West side where I use to live, but I wish I could see more of it.
@arneldobumatay37027 ай бұрын
Amazing how many people jaywalked and how beautiful they dressed!
@TopHotDog7 ай бұрын
It wasn't considered "jaywalking" at the time.
@georgelanders42714 ай бұрын
Had to be difficult finding your car in a parking lot back then
@ChevyBoyCallofDuty7 ай бұрын
To go back in time would be amazing. Nice clothes, kind people, family owned businesses, you name it!
@ronpalmer13717 ай бұрын
Thanks for another fabulous video
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
Thank you
@HGWTPaladin21 күн бұрын
I remember the A&P mart.(Atlantic & Pacific Grocery). Used to be one next to a Scott’s Dime Store, which was on the Northwest corner on Cermak Rd.(22nd St) and California Ave.
@hectorlamar8067 ай бұрын
From beautiful Chicago back then to horrible Chicongo today.
@luckyy36916 ай бұрын
Shitcago
@michaellinner77727 ай бұрын
Parts of the film were shot with a wide angle lens, but this is beyond cool 😎
@dougnewton30997 ай бұрын
no fear walking down the streets and the mass of people, no malls in the suburbs.
@marychaffee10657 ай бұрын
My home town! And I don't see anyone out in their pajamas and slippers like you see today.
@ArtfromBerwyn-cw5op5 ай бұрын
I like the aerial shots taken with drones and the popularity of the cell phones back then.
@JohnDoe-tx8lq7 ай бұрын
Not going to pretend these are the 'good old days', but you really notice how slim EVERYBODY is! And such formal clothing - really is a different time.
@onlythewise17 ай бұрын
was good o days only thing better now is tech
@JohnDoe-tx8lq7 ай бұрын
@@onlythewise1 🤣
@gengebhardt60667 ай бұрын
Not 'formal', just regular business attire.
@JohnDoe-tx8lq7 ай бұрын
@@gengebhardt6066 what?? formal compared with today, obviously...🤨
@nike25255 ай бұрын
Absolutely incredible video!
@henryzhang76612 ай бұрын
Thanks for your videos man! It's a time machine to let you see what the world in the past looked like
@gailhausmann13293 күн бұрын
Beautiful footage... Streets are clean, + everyone is dressed so beautifully.... Would love to go back in time... The cars were so sturdy back then... Looks like I could jump in there. Thanks for posting this on You Tube.. 🤗
@naomisgram17 ай бұрын
What I noticed right away was hardly or no, overweight people in this video. People walked a lot, no fast food, ate healthier meals at home, no cell phones or computers, and very few TVs to sit in front of for hours like we do now. Also, that people had more self respect to dress up when they went out and about. We have a lot better medicines, equality of the sexes, respect for other races, than they had then, but there are also a lot of things that were better during those years. Too bad we can’t seem to have all of it now.
@jrseitz216 ай бұрын
What do you think changed all that?...accepting all those people and things you pointed out. We used to shun them for a reason. We were warned and look what happened?
@AmbientWalking7 ай бұрын
Incredible! Love this video. Always glad to see something new from you!
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
Thank you
@marbanak4 ай бұрын
These clips are culled from another KZbin video, To Market, To Market (1942). It's black and white, with a narration explaining the strategy for placing outdoor billboards around Chicago. That's why these clips have so many billboards.
@wayneadams78297 ай бұрын
Outstanding job with your editing. My grandparents met in April of 41 and married in November of 42. This was the timeframe they were together in Chicago. We really did used to have a civilized society at one time.
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
Thank you
@WhazekTykorsky7 ай бұрын
Very nice footage. Thanks for sharing. One question, if you don't mind: where did you get those images from.?. Thanks again.
@Jeff-uj8xi7 ай бұрын
These films were obviously made by and for the outdoor advertising people. Great street car and bus shots.
@jasonminier67827 ай бұрын
This is amazing. Definitely subscribing.
@taramahoney24127 ай бұрын
I would most definitely love living back then. I didn't know that they had A&P foods all the way back then. I did not know Walgreens had been around that long. You could barely recognize Chicago back then.
@rnettles62416 ай бұрын
Order, productivity, common courtesy, no crime, no litter, no graffiti, no gangs and no diversity.
@RickGrossmanAttorney7 ай бұрын
Pulaski (Crawford) and Madison Street
@josefradisz21337 ай бұрын
Beautiful real street life ! Better colours and sound design. A survey inquiry about billboards ?
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
Thank you!! ^^
@thomaslong84017 ай бұрын
Jeez. Traffic was bad even back then! But looked like it was moving. Unlike Lake Shore Dr at 5pm today.
@whiteelephantvideos13437 ай бұрын
Some clips I recognize as being Madison and Crawford now Madison and polaski since they change the name of Crawford Some clips are of the loop and I would suspect state and Madison because at that time it was considered the world's busiest intersection
@smokenjoe37457 ай бұрын
Looking back fond memories when we had a civilized society.
@johndodson84645 ай бұрын
"Hey buddy, what's the big idea cuttin' into my lane?" "Well, on accounta ya movin' too slow." The road rage was outta control back then.
@TopHotDog7 ай бұрын
As you can see, the 1940s were full of 🟣 purple. The people eater was born then.
@mikeyincalif7 ай бұрын
I miss when you could actually go down town and shop or go to the movies, or stop off and have a hot fudge sundae. I was hoping to see Ma and Pa Kettle driving by. 😮😅
@cynthiamincher51547 ай бұрын
Dress so nicely
@Rqs797 ай бұрын
The first thing I notice in this video is how uniform in design are the cars driving down the streets. Not a lot of variation in design. The second is how busy and crowded the Chicago streets are with people.
@TopHotDog7 ай бұрын
One thing totally missing are jeans. Men wore trousers or slacks.
@LMays-cu2hp7 ай бұрын
Looking very nice!!😊
@765kvline7 ай бұрын
Fabulous look at the 1940s, similar to the downtown 1930s motion pictures of Los Angeles. The unvarnished look at yesteryear. It was incredible that someone had the foresight to take these motion pictures. A lesson to us today: we need to do the same thing now for future generations.
@skylilly17 ай бұрын
I miss the aunt Jemima buckwheat pancake mix. It was my favorite not only that I miss aunt Jemima. What the heck? Love the video! ❤ happy it just popped up in my feed
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
Thx!!
@OwenLoney9 күн бұрын
Excellent old film of Chicago street scenes in the 1940s
@JamesWoodring-mu2iz7 ай бұрын
thanks nass love all ur work ! never miss an old school history lesson.
@NASS_07 ай бұрын
thank you very much!!
@mikewilder67287 ай бұрын
The differences between ethnic groups go much deeper than skin color. The morphology is also very different. Noses, the shape of faces, the textures of hair, the muscles, the heights, the dimensions of the skulls....There are also the IQs, the histories, the cultures, the traditions, the languages, the mentalities, the beliefs....So, those who tell you that it is only a matter of skin color, they are wrong.
@djosbun7 ай бұрын
You can tell their IQs by the shapes of their faces? The difference in the city then and now is SOLELY on the attitudes of those that live there, and skin color absolutely plays a part. Back then, Democrats actually cared about the citizens they severed instead of only caring about staying in power (and getting rich via crooked means) for as long as possible.
@2shy7367 ай бұрын
Life’s one big movie🦋🕶🦋
@jody68517 ай бұрын
Consider you are living ancient history at this very moment because the day will come when it will be.
@calm10479 күн бұрын
I'm from Chicago, and I recognize Michigan Ave, River North, Drexel Ave, Hyde Park on the Southside, and more.
@LastCommodore5 ай бұрын
I've lived in the Chicago area since 1970. I still recognize many of these locations despite the changes. Sadly it's a bygone world.
@corki99305 ай бұрын
I love looking at the buildings and seeing how they're vaguely familiar... Probably because they're jus that old and/or they were renovated in a similar style. I should know, given I've lived my whole life here
@shadykatie1007 ай бұрын
This is wonderful footage! A different world!
@juliemcgillivray33947 ай бұрын
It shows the prosperity which we used to have as a country before outsourcing.
@rout66music567 ай бұрын
Parabens o obrigado por nos mostrar essas belas imagens !! verdadeira maquina do tempo !! ❤