An Oral History Documentary of London Bus Workers Check out the Fares Please! Podcasts: digital-works.co.uk/podcasts.html www.faresplease.org.uk www.digital-works.co.uk
Пікірлер: 972
@danking83797 ай бұрын
The London I knew . Decent people . Great place to live and be brought up . I truly miss that time and those good people
@PreNeanderthal7 ай бұрын
I started on the buses as a driver at Kingston in late 1970 on route 71 (RTs) having worked in a bank from age 15 until I was 26. I knew Jill Viner (at 07:08) when she was a conductor and was there when she became LT's first woman driver. In early 1971 I went onto the OMO routes (216 and 218/9) at Kingston. When all the OMO routes were transferred to Norbiton garage (about ½ mile away) in 1984 I went there. I was at Norbiton throughout the industrial action of the late 1980s when LT tried to cut wages by 20% and was eventually offered (in 1988) a transfer to Fulwell garage at existing wages. In 1992, wage cuts raised their ugly head again and I was offered (and took) severance. That wasn't my end of work on public transport as, in 1999 I became one of the first half-dozen drivers on Croydon Tramlink where I was involved in the initialization and testing of the system before it opened, and then joined the training team as new recruits came on board, helping get them up to standard before the opening in May 2000. I was with Tramlink until retirement age, in 2009. During my time on the buses I drove RTs - RMs - RFs - BLs - LSs - DMS - Metros.
@arbutus273 жыл бұрын
Well. What an absolute gem. Full marks to all involved. How I wish mainstream TV would stick to this formula: letting people tell their stories, and no mind-numbing music track or tricksy editing - just a bit of judicious cutting and pasting to lend coherence to the whole. Thank you so much.
@gdj62983 жыл бұрын
Have to say, I agree with you - and I'm a musician !
@SpaceAgeMark7 ай бұрын
Couldn't agree more. What a superb piece of work.
@silvertongue30037 ай бұрын
Makes you warm seeing a time when working was still seen as a respectable thing to do
@bernadettekavanagh99848 ай бұрын
I remember those buses, the leather seats in the hot weather would stick to your legs. You go to jump up to get off the bus, didn't half sting.😂😂😂
@alanmichaellincoln3 жыл бұрын
I once worked as a bus conductor in Morocco and when I said Fares Please!, everyone took off their hats !
@alex-E7WHU7 ай бұрын
😂😂 fez plz.
@Alanoffer3 жыл бұрын
The day London got those buses with the closing doors was a shame . You could just hop on and off a bus if it was at the traffic lights . In fact I just miss old London
@paultimson66742 жыл бұрын
i've had drivers shut the doors on me, one second longer and i'd be on the bus? the open door would have solved that?
@Chebawitch8 ай бұрын
I miss old everything!
@Beerpopnana10 ай бұрын
My Grandad was a Bus conductor for Crosville in Chester in the North West of England. He did that job from when he got Demobbed after the War until he retired in the mid 70s and I am very proud of him.
@topopops3 жыл бұрын
Great film, really interesting. Sadly London has gone down the pan now.
@SR-xk8cd3 жыл бұрын
True, you could say that for most western cities. Ie.overpriced real estate, congestion, lack of jobs, too much immigration ( immigrants is not bad thing per se, but too much of it doesn’t work).
@themasteryourdaddy.63073 жыл бұрын
@@SR-xk8cd apart.... from that i agree with everything else you say.
@patriciatreslove44493 жыл бұрын
London is a dump and dangerous place to be, we had a bus driving around London advertising that the FBI wanted to question Andrew, who has been protected and enabled Andrew for years by the queen, who has no respect for the people she vowed to serve.
@mrbigarms3 жыл бұрын
@@SR-xk8cd I agree about the immigration, I get the impression people are frightened to regulate it. In so many things you can have too much of a good thing!
@rodrollingstone23623 жыл бұрын
@@patriciatreslove4449 Andrew should be extradited to face questions by the FBI, the Queen has no say in it.
@user-ky6vw5up9m3 жыл бұрын
Every London schoolboy learned the knack of safely leaping on/off moving buses.
@johnlundy5363 жыл бұрын
How things have changed and not for better those were the days sadly gone forever
@probablygraham3 жыл бұрын
I have no idea how he got away with it, but a bus driver friend of our family back in the 50s used to stop his double decker right outside my Grandparents house in between stops and let my Grandma off so she didn't have to walk home from the bus stop :-)
@Kidraver5553 жыл бұрын
Using the seating fabric as a backdrop was a clever touch.
@tillybinkieking72583 жыл бұрын
I thought that!
@195Bucks Жыл бұрын
A thoroughly interesting and poignant look at the golden years on the buses!...Blakey would be proud!!
@Baltihunter2 жыл бұрын
I love the way you had good canteens and sports clubs. It helps employees bond
@frankhadley26827 жыл бұрын
great memories worked on the buses from 1964- 2010 . best times were when it was London transport.
@vincentdeguard47265 жыл бұрын
absolutely
@BristolRE4 жыл бұрын
Absolutely loved watching this. I started on London Buses as a driver back in 1986, and I'm still doing it now, though the job has changed, and not for the better. A couple of people in this video I have worked with over the years.
@NextSound1704 жыл бұрын
Ah Peter, even up to the 90s it was all good
@Hellserch7 ай бұрын
You are a hero. Working through the Covid Murders, low pay for what is an intensely difficult and complex job. Workers like you should be on bankers wages.
@prideofdurham47768 ай бұрын
Went to school in the 1960s on a bus like this. Cold draughty and uncomfortable and we never missed a day during the '63 winter!
@lawrencesimmons50934 жыл бұрын
Some conductors wore steel capped shoes because passengers kept treading on their feet. Bad day when the clippies were axed.
@xriskiex7 ай бұрын
I just found this vid and it was so good to watch. My dad was a bus driver and it was like hearing his stories over again. Telling me about the Chiswick bus test and the buses being spun on two wheels. He worked at Ponders End and then Clapton (now called Hackney Central) and then Ash Grove in Hackney at the end of his bus career. Really good watch. X
@droge1928 ай бұрын
Are you kidding me? This film was made by Year 6 primary school children (10 and 11 year olds) !!!! It was of the best, most professional, fascinating documentaries I've seen in years! Well done to all involved. I'm a primary school teacher myself (Year 5 though!) and I would love to do something like this with the children. I bet they got so much out of it.
@donnasmyth458 ай бұрын
I think the interviewees really opened up to them because they were children.
@Hellserch7 ай бұрын
It was so refreshing to hear a primary school teacher engaged with their children as you are. It’s amazing given the way your profession is mistreated that you still have the care and enthusiasm to even make this comment. Well done.
@peterx7277 ай бұрын
Great to see the contributions of my old friend Steve Cushion - I drove Routemasters (as did Steve) out of Leyton garage, 1982-86. His final comment, about privatisation, is spot on. Steve was the garage union rep.; the bit about 'punching up' made me smile as I recall driving into town on a 38 going down Rosebery Avenue and seeing Steve toiling up the hill driving a fully-loaded 38 coming the other way with 6 (yes, six!) near-empty 38s following tightly behind him, clearly having no intention of overtaking!. I regard that period as one of the happiest of my life, and only left because I feared being forced to go OPO, which I'd tried before on Eastern National and absolutely hated. Finally, nice to see a pic. of Alan Payling from Stamford Hill garage near the end - Alan got forced out of the job because of his union activities.
@carolineolsenarnold70393 жыл бұрын
When I was young I rode up top. Would literally run down the stairs, and jump off before bus came to a full stop in order to catch mysecond bus to work. All while in high heels.
@niallp3427 ай бұрын
My mum worked on the buses during WW2 as a Clippy, she had fond memories of this time of life.
@JazzFunkNobby19643 жыл бұрын
In the seventies, we'd get our bus fare from Mum and then off to school on the 279 Route Master. The aim was to try and bunk the fare so that you could buy sweets at the sweet shop. The Conductors were so good at their jobs it was hard to dodge the fare. The rush hour buses would be jam packed, upstairs in a cloud of fog from the Smokers but they still knew who hadn't paid their fare yet. Different fares for different journey lengths on the same route, they really needed to be on their game to catch us fare dodging Urchins. Just when you thought you'd managed to outwit the Conductor and your mind was set on the bag of Black Jacks, Fruit Salads and Mojos you'd be munching on with your ill gotten gains you'd here those dreaded two words from behind you...'Tickets please' ... Oh no, it's Blakey the Ticket Inspector. Busted again!
@hyena1313 жыл бұрын
Nobby Norberto Those conductors had eyes in the back of their head. I can count on one hand the amount of free rides I got on a bus. More often than not, it was an empty bus you got a free ride on, as you'd go upstairs and the conductor simply couldn't be bothered to go up there.
@user-ky6vw5up9m5 жыл бұрын
Every London schoolboy learned the art of jumpin on/off moving buses without harming themselves.
@TomClarkSouthLondon3 жыл бұрын
Is Colin dead🤷♂️
@dodgydruid3 жыл бұрын
One lad I knew he liked to swing out and round the pole, then one day whacked a lamppost hehe He never did that again lol
@Kidraver5553 жыл бұрын
Yea, corners were the place.
@insertnamehere51463 жыл бұрын
i jumped off at 20 mph once and ended running beside the bus for 20 yards before i could slow down. yes i learned the hard way
@alexchung8653 жыл бұрын
And they say kids of today are stupid
@michaelsandford10157 жыл бұрын
Those were the days..
@YJB8CCFC2 жыл бұрын
Looked like London Transport was a fantastic company to work for. They seemed to really look after their employees; you had the canteen, then the social clubs. Nowadays companies are more concerned about the profit and satisfying the shareholders.
@beendoneagain3 жыл бұрын
Phil was fixing Buses the day I popped into the world. Good old British people with heart and soul. Good luck to you all!
@tattyshoesshigure57312 жыл бұрын
The bus drivers of that era were superb, really well taught & total professionals.
@monkeytennis88618 ай бұрын
What are you on about? It's just driving a bus
@tattyshoesshigure57318 ай бұрын
@@monkeytennis8861 that’s what I’m on about… and you?
@michael72862 жыл бұрын
I'm not from London but think that this marvelous film reflects this countries buses, drivers, conductors, and passengers, in different towns and cities alike from a fantastic bygone era the 1960s. As a young kid back then and going into town with my parent on the bus it was so exciting and I always sat upstairs ( the top deck) on the very front seat if available, with the window directly facing and pretending ( obviously lol ) to drive the bus. Good memories. Ding Ding fares please 😁
@ibana84498 ай бұрын
Victor Turton you absolute legend. "left a lovely warm Island, to come and work in the cold" - Love it.
@Ian-hv1dc5 жыл бұрын
33 brilliant years on the buses and worked with some brilliant people. Chiswick was the place everyone went to before 1986.
@suzyqualcast62693 жыл бұрын
What happened to Chiswick, Aldenham, Park Royal ¿?
@Bob.Jenkins8 ай бұрын
A time when you could find a job, a friend, a laugh, a love and a life - all at the same time. Todays workplace is just a days miserable grind, followed by another... ad nauseum.
@ianworley81698 ай бұрын
I passed my driving test in a 'London Bus' in Manchester back in 1979 at the age of 20. From a provisional licence to driving a bus full of passengers in service, within four weeks. Seems like madness today. We called those buses PD1's but actually drove a slightly different style, the PD2 with an automatically opened door at the front. No powered steering. No airbrakes. No synchromesh gears, so you had to double the clutch to change gears. My legs would ache after a full shift. An empty bus was relatively easy to drive, but fully laden with passengers, the steering was so heavy. First day in service, I nearly drove straight over the grass on the first roundabout I came to. I left after 7 years and went to Uni. Aged 65 now, I havent driven a bus for almost 40 years, but I still occasionally dream I'm driving a bus to this day. I never know the route or how much the fares are! I never dream about any of the many other jobs I've had.
@donnasmyth458 ай бұрын
The older lady mentioned about the exhaust fumes. My father was a bus driver for most of his life. He passed away age 63, 10 years ago from lung cancer. He had been ' a dawn man' for many years (1 of a group of drivers who drove the first buses of the morning) which meant they were in the depot when all the buses were starting up = excess exhaust fumes Before he passed he wondered if it had a bearing on developing lung ca. I later discovered there was increased incidences of lung ca in bus drivers.
@squirehaggard47494 жыл бұрын
This is a wonderfully done documentary. Nice mix of personal recollections laid over really good quality old footage. No jittery editing and best of all...no distracting soundtrack blaring away the whole time. It assumes the viewer actually has an attention span. It almost feels like I'm sitting in on a very interesting conversation. Terrific job, this.
@simonewilliams90563 жыл бұрын
Yes agree, very sensitively handled, no irritating presenter interrupting these very interesting, dedicated drivers and clippies.
@euanelliott36133 жыл бұрын
RIP Bob Grant (Jack Harper) and Reg Varney (Stan Butler). Whenever I see old buses I think of you both laughing. Thank you.
@chrismaynard60163 жыл бұрын
Look 'ere Butler, get tha't bus aaaaaaattttt ...... says Blakey ?
@DeltaJazzUK3 жыл бұрын
I 'ate you, Butler!
@prp32312 жыл бұрын
"Come on chalkie mate, get awt of it."
@shaunigothictv10032 жыл бұрын
You stupid great nit! Source: Michael Robbins aka (Arthur) circa 1972
@colinchaves92858 ай бұрын
I was once a conductor on route 73 bus and I had a wonderful life working on the buses unfortunately those days are long gone what I missed most was the cameraderie between the drivers and the conductors. It was your family away from home.
@phillipecook32274 жыл бұрын
The buses parked side by side in the garage look as smart as guardsmen on parade.
@lawrencesimmons50934 жыл бұрын
iconic - I too used to buy a 3 bob Red Rover with school mates, spending whole Saturdays collecting bus numbers, getting chased out of many a garage. Proper bus service. Green Line buses too. Well structured and run.
@PreservationEnthusiast4 жыл бұрын
@@lawrencesimmons5093 This is how they use to break up old buses. *Busted the absolute crap* out of them with a sledgehammer. Then burned the frames and cut the chassis with gas torches. Brilliant scrapping action. Check out video below. kzbin.info/www/bejne/mqOoZJ-dlrmaiqM
@alangale56663 жыл бұрын
Hounslows Run-in park was like a knocking shop on some evenings, The top deck seats were getting a pounding in the dark! LOL Bus Groupies were a welcome distraction, especially in the evenings when it was quiet!
@michaelfrancis35127 ай бұрын
Incredible that this high quality, fascinating retrospective was produced by primary school students !
@t.p.mckenna2 жыл бұрын
Fascinating and what a bonus to know that it was made by school kids. They obviously soaked up the stories and made for the perfect audience. There never has been a beneficial privatisation, in my opinion.
@wumptywumpty44564 жыл бұрын
As a current bus driver I can relate to what some of the drivers were saying about the schoolkids and 'the twerlies'! But gimme those days anytime over todays standards!
@scat1a3 жыл бұрын
Agree . I too was a bus driver in the 80s and 90s . Saw the decline.
@CB-xr1eg3 жыл бұрын
@@scat1a Cam on Butler get that bus aht! Alright Blakey keep ya wig on. I'll 'ave you, I 'ates you Butler, 'ates ya!
@lornaneillcowper64963 жыл бұрын
I used to pay 2p to go to school and the bus conductor would always keep an eye open for us young teenagers( we were very different to kids today) I miss the old buses with conductors happy days
@Keepingitrespectfulmostly.3 жыл бұрын
@@scat1a Agreed. I did buses/coaches '89 - '94. Thatcher ruined a lot of it for us. We had our subsidised canteen taken away. Driving hours doubled, kerb side meal breaks. We were also taken over by another bus company and then again after I left. I still have my PSV badge at least. On the late shift stop off at the chippy for a fish n chips late supper. Great days.
@kh237973 жыл бұрын
@@Keepingitrespectfulmostly. Similar tale for us PO staff. The Thatcher years were seismic for us-before her, we union reps were respected and could get promotions-as her power increased, though, we became a dirty word. However, I never forget she was voted in by millions of other _workers,_ scared off by Militant, Momentum, etc., (as reported in the Tory-owned press anyway). British voters always pull the country back to the centre if Labour seems to be flirting with the far left.
@kevinralph53058 ай бұрын
Great times to be living in London.
@susiebrown63583 жыл бұрын
Good video from the "good, old days"
@Hazel5848 ай бұрын
This video brought back such good memories of my driving days at West Ham. I’m privileged to have worked for London Transport before it all went private. Great video 👍🏻
@anthonybrady-lb5ve7 ай бұрын
A gorgeous memory. Its proper to sir with love. Good old LONDON🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧
@diamondsapphire9997 ай бұрын
Very truthful and honest account of London transport.which was a part of my growing up in London and very much part of my employment history.Memories 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾💖
@Quebecoisegal3 жыл бұрын
As a pre-teen I found myself living in the UK because of my fathers work, & whilst living on the edge of London I would with friends get a red rover ticket and go to all the mainline stations and their loco sheds, such as Nine Elms & Old Oak Common, happy days and yeah, a girl can like the railway scene! Other times we'd get the Green-line and head out into the countryside, .
@matthewstokes16087 ай бұрын
What a civilized piece of design was the Routemaster - with the excellent step on/step off back platform. Genius - far better… those buses were part of the landscape We have a bunch of thugs and vandals in power - and they have ruined so much.
@francescobertorelli74777 ай бұрын
Beautiful London. As I remember it. All gone now!😢
@IlfordRetro8 ай бұрын
Great to hear the accounts of the people we take (took) for granted, and a nice variety of them too. Tremendous archive footage as well!
@richardwaite57354 жыл бұрын
When they showed the skid patch i imagined Blakey sliding out of back. Errrr i hate you Butler!😂🤣
@garryharriman73494 жыл бұрын
😂😅👍
@janeokeeffe52974 жыл бұрын
😂
@keiko9094 жыл бұрын
ahahahaha! that scene was hilarious!
@allanallen18354 жыл бұрын
Oooooow that olive tho. Stan!
@normathomas82764 жыл бұрын
😁😁😁😁
@juliamaplesden13178 ай бұрын
Absolutely brilliant..really enjoyed this ..took me back to my childhood as my mum and my brother and myself used buses a lot.. we had the green double deckers..I used to love to sit up the front or sometimes we'd sit upstairs..when I was very young in the early 1960's I remember the 1st time I got on a single decker bus with the automatic door I'd got upset because I couldn't make out how we were going to get off the bus..once the doors had shut my very young mind must have thought that we were stuck on there.. lovely memories of our Surrey buses..🚌🚍
@cooler0663 жыл бұрын
Before the "Great" in Britain was removed by Privatisation. Great video thanks for the upload.
@cafsixtieslover2 жыл бұрын
I miss the old Route Masters. It has never been the same since.
@rwessenbarbie6 жыл бұрын
I followed my dad on the buses in 1960 as a conductor at muswell hill till 68 and I loved it. good mates made the job enjoyable. London transport was the best employer in the whole of London till Thatcher cattle trucked it. in 1993 I started back as a driver at barking garage and loved it till I retired I have very happy memories of the job. Dickie wessen
@errolnicholson94483 жыл бұрын
This brings back so much memories when I was 3 years old in 1966 while living in Brockley. 36a.. 141.. 171. 122. True Memories!!!
@louisedelacy65859 ай бұрын
I passed my test in 1998! I was one of 2 women in the whole depot and even then the old school guys would say “what are you here for? This ain’t no place for a lady” gradually started to fit in and drove buses around Hertfordshire for 16 years and then changed over to coach driving. The job is not the same. Miss the old days but make the best of the job each day
@romemancer79057 ай бұрын
Loved Stan and Jack and Blakey when i was a kid...Every night on telly with Benny Hill the 2 Ronnies or Carry on movie with Sid...Golden years...
@DoubleDeckerAnton3 жыл бұрын
Love these old nostalgia productions.
@octagon120116 жыл бұрын
Absolutely fascinating. My Grandfather came out of the first war and drove London buses, my Father was a conductor after the second war. I now use my bus pass all the time and am still in awe of bus drivers.
@davemould58683 жыл бұрын
Excellent video, The good old days.good job with a very good social aspect.👍👍👏👏
@peterallen29042 жыл бұрын
I remember in the fifties taking the No 101 RT from Wanstead Flats to North Woolwich to catch the free ferry to visit my grandparents in Plumpstead. The alternative was the 661 from Leytonstone to The Woolwich ferry. Those were the days.
@alex-E7WHU7 ай бұрын
Wanstead flats.👍⚒️
@rexterrocks3 жыл бұрын
I always loved the old London Routemaster buses. I used to see old ones at festivals that people had converted into homes and I thought it looked like a cool way to live. Having grown up watching 'The Double Deckers' it definitely appealed to me.
@michellefalleur9606 ай бұрын
You're a person after my own heart ... I too absolutely Adore the Routmaster beyond any words I can begin to try to describe, and I also used to love "The Double Deckers" , both make my heart feel so warm . xx ( I used to get the no.7 Routmaster bus to and from secondary school every day in the '70's, in west London ).
@stellayates42274 жыл бұрын
I can remember as a child in London buying a Red Rover ticket with friends in the school holidays. We took packed lunches with us and spent a whole days sight seeing and exploring the city and the outer suburbs. Your ticket allowed you to hop on and off a bus with complete freedom which was great fun and educational. Overall, having a conductor with a driver meant the buses moved faster and there was someone to help older or less able people on the bus, also parents with small children and buggies. Bus conductors could often be very sociable and on some routes real comedians. The work of a single bus operator must be less enjoyable and more stressful.
@padglove3 жыл бұрын
A great job with a clippy.
@RR-qu2oz3 жыл бұрын
AHH, the red bus rover 😀, we did the same as kids, plenty of sandwiches and off we went. We were safe and had a great time.
@stellayates42273 жыл бұрын
@@RR-qu2oz Ah! Happy times!
@stephenhumphrey47483 жыл бұрын
I remember the red rover tickets it used to be ten bob
@drjanecox3 жыл бұрын
My husband often reminisces about trips with his mates using a Red Rover - apparently they always ended up at Heathrow as in their 15yr old imaginations there might be some willing stewardesses! Boys!
@johnrider57017 ай бұрын
Proper buses built by craftsmen especially for the streets of London with well trained bus crews who knew every inch of London like the back of their hands .
@RobbyFindlay-uq2dy7 ай бұрын
I remember a conductor on the no.8 bus in '78 who would have us passengers in tears with some crackin' banter from Oxford circus, where I'd get on,to willesden garage. Also I was guilty of pulling the wire twice if a conductor got off, to say, buy a newspaper. Sorry!! Route master, best ever, blindin'. Great memories, 😊 thanks ❤❤
@itcfan6 жыл бұрын
Wonderful documentary.....very true. I caught the last 10yrs on LT buses, trained at Chiswick. It was a great job back then. Tory privatisation in 1994 was an act of vandalism on a grand scale. Bus drivers today on poor pay and conditions, they deserve better. Well done to the makers of this film.
@kingwestfilms51264 жыл бұрын
I've been making documentaries for 40 years and I take my hat off to the kids (look at the end credits, they're primary school kids) who made this informative and interesting program. Well done to all involved and the people who re-lived a piece of history for all of us. As a kid growing up in Stevenage I'd buy a "Green Rover" and have a days adventure on the green buses, all around the west of London (never into red bus areas) down to Windsor, or the film studios of Pinewood and Elstree. As a 12 to 14 year old, the crews always seemed to look out for me on my travels and I always felt safe. Not to sure about today!
@karendegenerous80443 жыл бұрын
👍🏻.
@ianmangham45703 жыл бұрын
As a kid here in Doncaster with South Yorkshire Transport I'd buy a scratch card called an Out and About for £1 , I could catch any bus or train after 9:30am within South Yorkshire , the good ole days.
@anylex53283 жыл бұрын
I used to do it the other way round. With a Golden Rover (green buses and Green Line Coaches) from Biggin Hill through London and out to Stevenage for the day.
@robertp.wainman40943 жыл бұрын
Amazing - I was watching without realising who made it! You were lucky - as a kid I only managed to travel on LT RT's when visiting relatives in Blackheath. Would love it's musical sounds travelling up Shooter's Hill Road, always driven smoothly by a true professional - and well remember the friendly and often humorous conductors - they were great assets. What a wonderful organisation London Transport was at that time. When no one's listening I still attempt to imitate that musical transmission!
@johnlaslett53392 жыл бұрын
I don't know if you're gonna see this comment or not but I have a really good idea for a documentary I'd like to run past you.
@explorewithgeoff8 ай бұрын
I rode on the Routemaster buses often as a school kid. You weren't cool unless you stepped off the bus while it was still moving. I recall seeing a middle aged man regularly who'd sit there reading poems to everyone on every trip. Nobody took any notice, we all pretended not to hear him. Those were the days!
@fireballxl57683 жыл бұрын
I remember going to the Cinema on the 'Green Line' bus,happy days how life has changed now !
@brucedibben76044 жыл бұрын
Wonderful memories, a beautifully crafted video, well done. Why did life always seem better then? I think it's called nostalgia.
@AFaceintheCrowd013 жыл бұрын
I think it's called "life WAS better then." And richer and fuller, and I don't mean the ale.
@johndean47652 жыл бұрын
Bruce it WAS better then ,much less violence,much less traffic and pollution. And our English culture still intact.
@jasonmymail4 жыл бұрын
Kudos to all London’s bus drivers. Your skills never cease to amaze me, every day negotiating London’s crazy roads, drivers, pedestrians and bikers/cyclists, all the while getting hundreds of passengers safely to their destinations. Thank you!
@Mod-rw9cw3 жыл бұрын
AeroJ KUDOS??? You fkn loser!!
@fortniteinreallifeepic44973 жыл бұрын
I was on Manchester buses, from 1974 until 1987 , & the banter , tricks we got up to were the same . Good times .
@mickfalvey60458 ай бұрын
So many memories brought back to me by this documentary. 13’s 26’s 17’s and 82’s out of Nth Finchley in late 80’s. Best job I ever had. Canteen ladies at Tally Ho canteen kept me well fed too😀
@simonewilliams90563 жыл бұрын
Such characters... Wonderful memories for me of my London life as a kid at school, work and final trip to Heathrow
@malcolmnicholls28934 жыл бұрын
What a great film, what a shame it changed.
@CB-xr1eg3 жыл бұрын
How did the film change? I didn't notice any difference.
@redbird96583 жыл бұрын
Loved those days and miss the clippies.
@ibana84498 ай бұрын
How impressive the production created by students, thoroughly loved this warming, humourous and importantly diverse documentary, Thank you.
@davidtanycoed8 ай бұрын
Fantastic- but also tinged with sadness to see how workers rights, benefits and social perks have been completely destroyed by privatisation and unreliable heartless modern technology. Society has gone backwards and replaced with modern day slavery and disrespect for the modern day working class
@Hanzilla753 жыл бұрын
I have fond memories of living in London in the 1990's and using various routes for school, college and later my first jobs. My favorite central London route was the 38 that used to take me to Covent Garden from Victoria. My daily bus routes were the 68 to Croydon, then the 54 or 366 between Beckenham and Croydon, the 227 to Bromley and finally the 176 that took me all the way from Penge to Oxford Street. This was a great little documentary. Thank you and greetings from Copenhagen where buses are yellow and pretty boring.
@TerryMurrayTalks8 ай бұрын
Excellent independent oral documentary, a lot of the changes in LT were reflected in the changes I experienced working for the GPO in the late 1960's.
@poppy59868 ай бұрын
My grandad worked as a clippie for Southdown Buses down in Sussex. We often rode his bus when we went into the town.
@dianesilva10783 жыл бұрын
It's lovely to see how these people really loved their jobs and took pride in working on the buses. I grew up in London and have lovely memories of riding on the old red buses as a young child in the 60s and 70s.
@paulbroderick84387 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. There was an obvious comradeship between members of the old school, sadly missed, no doubt. Brit in Arizona!
@favesongslist3 жыл бұрын
The UK is completely losing any sort of comradeship, what's it like in Arizona?
@Dreamchaser683 жыл бұрын
Keep chasing down your dreams friend. Keep calm and carry on. You's British you know. 😉
@michaelcostigane5528 ай бұрын
The good old days ❤
@AFaceintheCrowd013 жыл бұрын
This is just great! Makes we yearn for the London of my youth when it was sixpence to go from Oxford Street to Prince Albert Road, just past St. John's Wood roundabout, on the 74/74B.
@mrcockney-nutjob38323 жыл бұрын
There was a time when we had pride and order surrounding us in our everyday lives from clean safe streets to toilet attendants that kept the pipework and porcelain gleaming, railway porters who looked more like smart soldiers, milk always left on the doorstep no matter what the weather thanks to the milkmen police on the beat but now, sadly, our society is collapsing and it's deliberate for it is our political parties along with fifth columnist, these self-hating people who loath their own country that has played a huge part in creating havoc and rejecting logos.
@peterperryman28003 жыл бұрын
For sure "things ain't what they used to be" but we can still relish our memories.
@terencebarrett28973 жыл бұрын
Absolutely right,completely right,100% ,its such a shame all of our industry's, everything associated, connected with industry,even to a tiny corner newspaper,tobacconist's,all of our British traditions, the list is endless
@xaraxania3 жыл бұрын
My opinion, i dont expect people to agree, but the fall of this country began when Maggie Thatcher sold everything off to private companies, it may have given us a boost in the 80's but now we have no assets of our own to generate cash for us, the profits keep getting shipped off to other countries. she destroyed this country, nasty woman as have her successors
@mrcockney-nutjob38323 жыл бұрын
@@xaraxania Thatcher, and Blair are the two biggest disasters to happen to this country.
@CB-xr1eg3 жыл бұрын
@Denise Bond Do you mean civilised Asians?
@seantreacy26374 жыл бұрын
Good to see the 108b. Used to get it every morning in Sydenham High Street to Crystal Palace on my way to school in Streatham. That was the 137 from Palace to Streatham.
@kashers58847 ай бұрын
Great video. Took me back to the 60's and 70''s. I used to love hopping on and off the buses. There should be more videos like this. Well done to all who contributed, behind and in front of the camera. Ding-ding!
@PeterShieldsukcatstripey2 жыл бұрын
Serving the Great British public for decades.
@jazzman16264 жыл бұрын
11:12 that was my favourite seat on the bus as a wee boy. Never sat on it much. I knelt on it for this veiw ‘til my mum told me “c’moan wir gittin’ aff noo”.
@andyrbush4 жыл бұрын
What a wonderful documentary and so professional.
@terrybaxter92802 жыл бұрын
I joined as a driver in 86. Wandsworth closed. Off to Streatham Garage, closed. Ended up at Brixton Garage. Great job till the Tories sold the buses. 96 joined London Underground. A great company at the moment. Although most of the things we had have now gone. Still it pays well, and the pension is second to none.
@nicholasroberts69542 жыл бұрын
A smashing bit of social history & BBC quality . . .very good. Well done kids. Here's hoping some go onto professional film making and go on, in some small part, to revive the tradition where lots of public service companies had film making units. And well done Unite for sponsoring Remember as a kid, no school holiday in the 1960s was complete without at least one day ranging all over London with a Train and Bus Rover - They started off @ 2shillings and 3pence (11 pence in today's money) in the mid 60's and by 1969 were 5 shillings (25 pence) for a day of virtually unrestricted travel on Tube and bus (From memory, the ticket only excluded travel on what is now the extreme outer zone tube, Met line past Rickmansworth and the furthest extent of the central line in the East and some Heathrow express buses and Night buses). Such days always started-off with the intention to go and see something specific thing, e.g. the Science Museum, but after a whistle stop tour of all points there, then usually degenerated into a random tour of London, jumping on one bus or train and then off onto another to see where it would take us. I don't think parents would be comfortable allowing 12-15 year olds that sort of freedom today. But then, dual operation, driver/conductor, driver/guard did offer a small margin of extra safety then and London then was more subdued and less busy than it is today - the overhang from the war, both economic, social and psychological still prevailed.
@richardc94163 жыл бұрын
I remember Vic from when he was a Conductor and Driver, a lovely chap as were all the crews at Plumstead at the time. I was at his wedding.
@PhilT9934 жыл бұрын
Beautifully done! Thank you. I used to go to school on these buses in Northern Ireland in the late fifties. I forwarded this to my brother who is an avid bus fan. I'm sure he will enjoy it.
@donnasmyth458 ай бұрын
I was born n raised in Belfast and still here 👋. My father (r.i.p.) drove the buses for most of his life. Started with The Belfast Corporation in his '20s , then Citybus and finally Translink. I grew up listening to them (my parents) talk of 'the old trolley buses' . I have a vague memory from childhood (I'm 51 ) of being on a bus that had the open door at the back.. to hop on and off.
@jamwri67188 ай бұрын
My Dad was a conductor and driver with Edinburgh corporation in the 60s. The driver was Alec Happy Howden the comedian. My Dad walked up the bus on this day shouting the fares please. One guy kept on looking out the window as my Dad walked up and down. Dad gets Alec to stop the bus,jumps off runs round to the window where the young guy is still looking away bangs on the window and shouts Fares please. Priceless 😂
@SpaceAgeMark7 ай бұрын
Absolutely superb documentary. Some lovely and fascinating people featured. Another victim of British privitzation, wrecked our society. Thanks Thatcher.