Anthony Mackem
Anthony Mackem
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Once upon a time in Sundeland we made ships
This film was shot in the North East of England on the River Wear, in Sunderland, once the biggest shipbuilding town in the world, with the co-operation of the workforce at Austin and Pickersgill (holders of the Queen's Award for Industry).
zhlédnutí: 20 350

Video

Going Places Sunderland Transport
zhlédnutí 29KPřed 11 lety
Abandonment of the Sunderland tramway system in 1954 in favour of motorbuses.
Nice One Sunderland
zhlédnutí 1,5KPřed 11 lety
A celebration of Sunderland Football Club winning the Football Association Cup in 1973.
Redevelopment of Sunderland
zhlédnutí 4,1KPřed 11 lety
Interview with Councillor Slater about Sunderland's biggest redevelopment since World War II.

Komentáře

  • @tonypaddler
    @tonypaddler Před 4 měsíci

    Oh wow, the memories! Cheers 🙂👍

  • @kenmeade9924
    @kenmeade9924 Před rokem

    Look how much better Sunderland was back then, plus all that nice central easy to get to parking.. Then along came these changes discussed in the video which ruined Sunderland.

  • @johnc5160
    @johnc5160 Před rokem

    czcams.com/video/WjFf2P9Qbsg/video.html

  • @lornarobinson1089
    @lornarobinson1089 Před rokem

    Absolute shame.

  • @andrewf9041
    @andrewf9041 Před rokem

    I was born off Chester Road, High Barnes side, in 71, when I was little, and a ship launched, you could hear it from there. Sad the country now has sod all industry. No ships, pits, iron and steelworks. With utilties being so high now, we could do with the pits, and the cokeworks, to have town gas again.

  • @michaelroxby3937
    @michaelroxby3937 Před rokem

    Everyone is so smartly dressed. I wish we could return to those days even though it was 11 year before I was born.

  • @mehcol
    @mehcol Před 2 lety

    Pennywell comp and our badge was ' the Torrens ' Torrens (1875 - 1910) was a clipper designed to carry passengers and cargo between London and Port Adelaide, South Australia. She was the fastest ship to sail on that route, and the last sailing ship on which Joseph Conrad would serve before embarking on his writing career.

  • @mehcol
    @mehcol Před 2 lety

    from a fellow mackem we did build some bloody good ships

  • @gordoncarter348
    @gordoncarter348 Před 2 lety

    Ex j l thompsons Sunderland shipbuilders north sands yard on the wear mate served my time there

  • @OJawsome
    @OJawsome Před 2 lety

    What a fantastic place until the bad planning decimated our town

  • @johnbarnes7274
    @johnbarnes7274 Před 2 lety

    Has a big effect on me watching this video, as an apprentice Doxy man 1959 to 1966. Hey this whole northeast downgrade with shipbuilding ,don’t take my word look at the admission of most of the family of the shipbuilders, they admitted they were asleep not upgrading equipment and methods of working. The rest is history the North east shipbuilders were taken over by informed Far East clever engineers who just did it faster and just as good. This country let it happen to the decline of its amazing world class clever people, check out Mrs Thatcher involvement with gadansk and the Sunderland involvment . Contradiction in terms there if you look at it. Writing this I may get a knock on the door.......Why oh why does a country like ours let go so many many talents and world class skills. I have lived with ,worked with men and women with so much skill and talent to do above and beyond. I dunno maybe I’m adinosor born in the past it’s a foreign country and we do things different there....

    • @boyfromblackstuff7859
      @boyfromblackstuff7859 Před rokem

      John , I could converse with you for many hours on this subject. After much research into political and industrial history my conclusion is that this country has been deliberately deindustrialized by its own political elite . They have no interest in the wellbeing of the nation or its people and are beholden to other interests, supranational bodies etc. A nation cannot survive when it has traitors moving freely within the corridors of power.

  • @imaginecreativesol
    @imaginecreativesol Před 3 lety

    Hello Anthony, We are currently doing a project involving the old Crossley busses. Just wondering how you have sourced the original content from? Kind regards, Liam

  • @stephendavis5530
    @stephendavis5530 Před 3 lety

    Not sure about the tinkly silent era style piano accompaniment, but otherwise great!

  • @stephendavis5530
    @stephendavis5530 Před 3 lety

    We used to get on similar buses to these to go to Silksworth Infants and Junior school. The blue coloured Sunderland and District I think they were. They ran those buses right up until the early 1970s. "Conky buses" we used to call them! :D

  • @disgruntledvet4849
    @disgruntledvet4849 Před 3 lety

    Thankyou communism for getting Mrs Thatcher to shut the puts and shipyards

  • @jimmystokoe6917
    @jimmystokoe6917 Před 3 lety

    The chimes of The old town hall 2 o clock was he the planning officer in 71 what decided to pull it down for the hotel that never came

    • @bassoprimo
      @bassoprimo Před 2 lety

      No that was the last Tory council

    • @jimmystokoe6917
      @jimmystokoe6917 Před 2 lety

      @@bassoprimo which he was part of people would not believe sunland was a Tory council and had a Tory mp back then leading to the shithole it’s become under labour

    • @bassoprimo
      @bassoprimo Před 2 lety

      @@jimmystokoe6917 That is Charles Slater, a Labour councillor. The Tories took over in 1968 to 1974.

  • @andrewhughes7092
    @andrewhughes7092 Před 3 lety

    The bus going to Ford Estate should have been armoured!

  • @themanftheworld8439
    @themanftheworld8439 Před 3 lety

    Before many years of safe seat Labour rule destroyed the city of Sunderland.

  • @davidalgar7318
    @davidalgar7318 Před 3 lety

    Nice one Anthony

  • @TinyDancerO
    @TinyDancerO Před 4 lety

    Sunderland looked better back then than it is today.

  • @thehardfacts4007
    @thehardfacts4007 Před 4 lety

    Austin Pickersgill is where my Dad worked under the Queen of Alexandria Bridge yard until it closed as did my Grandfather. Miss Seeing these Massive Ships being launched with such Pride!! Mothers Side were all Miners along at Boldon Colliery all my Uncles and Grandfather that side worked there.. GUTTED I Was not able to join in there footsteps! LOOK WHAT YOU DID MAGGIE?!?! All this happened in the couple years before I left school! You left us NOWT Maggie, absolutely F-All?!? No Reasons apart from to line the pockets of the South. Hope you enjoyed it ya Bitter Old Bitch! And they wonder why there’s a North South Divide...

  • @johnwilliamson3228
    @johnwilliamson3228 Před 4 lety

    I loved the old green corporation buses before Tyne and Wear PTE. The Economic bus to Whitburn and the Jolly bus to South Hylton. Also the dark blue SDO (Sunderland District Omnibus) all had their unique identity, until deregulation kicked in and the changes ever since. Probably a Thatcher change, so many great things from that woman. (Sarcasm).

    • @johnwilliamson3228
      @johnwilliamson3228 Před 4 lety

      Michael Garry apologies for that, I got into the habit of blaming Thatch for everything since 1066. 😆

    • @MichaelGGarry
      @MichaelGGarry Před 4 lety

      @@johnwilliamson3228 Well thats fair in my eyes!

  • @Egbert1957
    @Egbert1957 Před 4 lety

    Hervorragende Aufnahmen

  • @TheTmny876able
    @TheTmny876able Před 5 lety

    The bus conductors were great them days, i remember the 'open' buses like the seaburn ones, you would run along and jump on when the bus was moving ! the conductors were funny as well, one use to say "i than you" like arthur askey, and i paid one old penny to travel to the town from roker !.

  • @johno4521
    @johno4521 Před 5 lety

    The green & cream livery of Sunderland corporation looked smart and the vehicles themselves looked very well turned out

  • @mehcol
    @mehcol Před 5 lety

    Getting addicted to these old vids and pics of Wonderland-by-the-sea

  • @mikecollett9152
    @mikecollett9152 Před 5 lety

    enjoy the videos, it sad that like most cities get rid of trams, uk seems to better place ,

  • @MrBlueSky474
    @MrBlueSky474 Před 7 lety

    Excellent! I love the way you showed the driver changing his display to Football Ground then showed footage of a game at Roker Park. Very well put together despite the annoying piano soundtrack! ha ha

  • @TheDosshouse
    @TheDosshouse Před 7 lety

    0utmoded working practices and an uncompetetive, clapped out infrastructure post 1945 was fatal for UK shipbuildingThatcher merely accelerated the inevitable thank goodness..

  • @johnballard5095
    @johnballard5095 Před 7 lety

    who sang the song? good voice - sounds like Elvis Costello a little

    • @johnc5160
      @johnc5160 Před rokem

      Shipbuilding by Elvis Costello.

  • @benmacree3215
    @benmacree3215 Před 8 lety

    Videos like this show how superior municipally owned public transport was to the privatised shambles of today.

    • @michaelhammond5412
      @michaelhammond5412 Před 8 lety

      Couldn't agree more with you.

    • @johnwilliamson3228
      @johnwilliamson3228 Před 5 lety

      Exactly, Sunderland Corporation for years and years. Then Tyne and Wear PTE took over and since then countless private companies and different colours. I remember also Seaburn beach packed in the 60s, the local economy must have been fizzing. I remember being on the beach at Roker and going up to the paddling pool and couldn't find my mam on the beach and they had to tannoy to say I was lost, I wad crying my eyes out, I was only 18 at the time!!

    • @unanimousanonymity1836
      @unanimousanonymity1836 Před 4 lety

      We all (even the younger generations) can see and dispise what the council are. Pretntious bunch of twats do a repair and wait an hour outside in the van.

  • @caughtintime2464
    @caughtintime2464 Před 8 lety

    hi this is a long shot but did you serve your time at doxfords as a shipwright

  • @juliecook8890
    @juliecook8890 Před 9 lety

    what a sad day we saw our whole heritage die under thatcher, I cried when the last ship went as did most of us x

    • @lewisner
      @lewisner Před 2 lety

      And the cranes. As a kid I was fascinated by the cranes, especially the big one next to the Queen Alexandra Bridge.

    • @Janus-fn2uz
      @Janus-fn2uz Před 10 měsíci

      You couldn't be more wrong son. Our greatest pm was far sighted to see the economics of shipbuilding in our was doomed and had plans for the future. Unlike your useless labour lot who were blind to this, as you seemed to be. A brilliant woman.

    • @zeddeka
      @zeddeka Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@Janus-fn2uzyou're actually both way off. British industry had been in serious decline since the 1800s, accelerated by two world wars. The writing had been on the wall for many years, and everyone failed to grasp the nettle. At a time when Britain needed a real industrial strategy, Thatcher offered nothing but a catastrophic flirtation with monetarism (which she later disowned) which sent a lot of good businesses to the wall too; and a quasi religious belief in the market as the saviour for everything. The all too obvious market failure still scars Sunderland. We are all to blame. We were still dreaming dreams of empire and acting like we still had its captive markets, while the rest of the world was running rings round us. But to imagine Thatcher was some kind of saviour is a historically illiterate joke.

  • @robpk63
    @robpk63 Před 9 lety

    Rot in hell Thatcher

  • @donsimpson6139
    @donsimpson6139 Před 9 lety

    Why did you use footage of the tyne? Not the Wear? FTM Stronger than thou.

    • @johnwilliamson3228
      @johnwilliamson3228 Před 5 lety

      Its not the Tyne its the river Wear Sunderland. The tug that probably misled you was the Wearsider, the company that owned the tugs was Newcastle based, which could explain Wearsider, Newcastle on the stern. The shipyard was JL Thompson's. This yard launched the largest ships built on the river Wear up to 150,000 tons.

  • @originalshadowfax
    @originalshadowfax Před 9 lety

    32 apprentices??? .................. thats F..k all for the number of people they employed, I worked for a engineering company down in Rugby and we had over 70 apprentices on our books and we didn't employ a 5th of full time employees that they did. Bit of rose coloured specs I believe. Oh and before anyone has ago, I worked down the pits and went through the strike 30 years ago, but I've moved on

  • @cardmakingbuddy
    @cardmakingbuddy Před 9 lety

    Brings back memories my dad was a conductor on these buses and my great uncle Joe was the driver. My dad was on the buses in the 1960

  • @Marcus4president
    @Marcus4president Před 10 lety

    FUCK THE MAGS AND MAGGIE

  • @lewisner
    @lewisner Před 10 lety

    A&P and Doxford's were closed because the EU decided they wanted to "reduce shipbuilding capacity in the UK". All the more reason to vote to leave the EU if our masters ever allow us to vote on it.

    • @ooohcheese
      @ooohcheese Před 9 lety

      WE did make ships! JLs, Laings, Doxy's, Pikkies, the Tyne. I was a welder in all'. Court Line, British Shipbuilders? You're right. but! We will never have that vote.

    • @nigelmetcalf852
      @nigelmetcalf852 Před 6 lety

      lewisner i

    • @lewisner
      @lewisner Před 5 lety

      The Doxies Ghost can stop rattling its chains.

  • @leerichardson3752
    @leerichardson3752 Před 10 lety

    as i run past the glass centre, you can still see where the launch strip ran into the river...

  • @mickpickering48
    @mickpickering48 Před 10 lety

    Excellent!!!!

  • @bobhodgestransportDVDs

    Lovely film, just caught a glimpse of a tram in the distance, great quality transfer to video

  • @WiZiWiGCrew
    @WiZiWiGCrew Před 11 lety

    WOW how things have changed, that's brilliant thanks.