Crouch End New To Old Photo 'Time Ripples' (HD)

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  • čas přidán 15. 06. 2017
  • Crouch End New to Old Photo ‘Time Ripples’ (HD) Locations and historical details below.
    Pull up a chair and travel back in time with this short video I've created, featuring modern day photos of Crouch End, London, transforming seamlessly (well, for the most part) to exactly the same view, with images dating back to as long ago as the 1870s! Time Ripples indeed! Enjoy….
    (0:12) The Clock Tower looking from Crouch Hall Road - and the same view c1905
    (0:43) Looking down Crouch Hill from the junction of Haringey Park - and the same view c1925
    (1:10) Hornsey Town Hall - and in c1935
    (1:35) The green opposite the Town Hall - and in 1939 (a Hornsey Civil Defence group on parade outside the town hall)
    (2:00) The Parkland walk looking towards the back of the old Crouch End Station - and the same view c1969
    (2:25) Park Road from the junction of Middle Lane - and the same view c1935/40
    (2:51) Virgin Active Health Club on Topsfield Parade - formerly the Queen's Opera House and then the Crouch End Hippodrome, which sustained bomb damage in the 2nd World War and subsequently pulled down - apart from the frontage.
    (3:15) Another view looking down Crouch Hill from the junction of Haringey Park - and the same view, this time c1880/90
    (3:40) Crouch End Hill, looking over to Christ Church - and the same view with this lovely colourised photo c1910
    (4:06) Weston Park, looking towards the Clock Tower end - and the same view c1900/10
    (4:32) A unique ‘triple ripple’ of Crouch End now - and c1925 - and c1890!
    (5:12) Opposite the Arthouse on Tottenham Lane - and the same view c1910 when the Arthouse was a Salvation Army Hall
    (5:36) Looking up Crouch Hill Rd - and the same view c1880 (the old Kings Head - built about 1790 - on the right was moved to its current position at the corner of Coleridge Road in 1892)
    (6:03) The Clock Tower looking towards Park Road - and the same view c1875 (Topsfield Hall, behind the trees, was demolished in 1894)
    -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Many thanks to the Hornsey Historical Society and Bruce Castle Museum (Haringey Culture, Libraries & Learning) for permission to reproduce the archive photos in this video
    Video and Music By Tam Neal © 2017
    Check out my 'Hornsey New to Old Photo Time Ripples' video at • Hornsey New to Old Pho...

Komentáře • 67

  • @afc358
    @afc358 Před 5 lety +9

    This is wonderful. I grew up in Crouch End in the 70's, and although I've moved around North London since, whenever I see the Clock Tower, I know I'm home.

  • @andrewockenden
    @andrewockenden Před 5 lety +8

    In the first picture of a group of people my late Uncle Bernard, who lived in Middle Lane with my Grandma, is standing under the last 's' of Sainsbury's. I believe this must have been taken in 1945 at the end of WW2. We stayed there when my parents, both born in Islington, brought us home from S. Rhodesia in 1940, and although I was only 3, I remember it well. My Aunt still lives there. Even though I have lived n many other places, I regard Crouch End as my 'home' town and I love it. Thank you for this lovely video. It is a real treasure.

    • @Augustes1
      @Augustes1 Před 3 lety

      Now I live in France....but Crouch End was my Home...born and lived in Dashwood Road...fabulous plaice!

  • @davidrichardfox1
    @davidrichardfox1 Před 7 lety +13

    Beautiful Tam. The pictures of old Crouch End make you want to weep. Can I please live there - and then!?

  • @Gavlarbavlar
    @Gavlarbavlar Před 3 lety +2

    Well played, all the angles are spot on. Mental how close the art house cinema back in the day, is to what it looks like now.
    Ain't nothing changing but the rent, as they say.

  • @PianoDanny
    @PianoDanny Před 3 lety +2

    Fascinating. I’ve lived off Middle Lane for years.
    The awnings were so much longer then. Horse and carts. And I notice how many men wore hats in those days. Everyone was far more stylish.
    Plus I didn’t realise that the Hippodrome theatre used to be where Virgin Active is now situated!
    Well done on this great piece of work.

  • @itsroger
    @itsroger Před 3 lety +2

    Thank you for uploading this. I've lived in Crouch End for 30 years + so its great to see how things use to look.

  • @chrisarnold3553
    @chrisarnold3553 Před měsícem

    Always brilliant to watch.

  • @howards8301
    @howards8301 Před 2 lety +1

    Beautiful, thank you

  • @professionalgun6674
    @professionalgun6674 Před 5 lety +3

    THINK YOU from the bottom of my heart. I grew up on the Elthorne Rd near the no 14 bus from the late 60s. Crouch End and Highgate was where the posh people lived. A great time to be alive. I miss the 70s and 80s so much.

  • @stephenkennedy2281
    @stephenkennedy2281 Před 2 lety

    Very fab photo engineering and a splendid soundtrack.

    • @tamneal
      @tamneal  Před 2 lety

      Thanks Stephen - hope you're keeping well! Tx

  • @sidhwen
    @sidhwen Před 5 lety +2

    Wunderschön . Als Kind habe ich dort mit meiner Schwester und meinen Eltern gelebt . Es war die beste Zeit meines Lebens . Für mich ist es immer noch meine Heimat .

  • @johndodd6575
    @johndodd6575 Před 3 lety +1

    Fascinating piece of work Tam. Thank you very much.

  • @delcatto60
    @delcatto60 Před 6 lety +2

    Thank you for that. I grew up in Hornsey during the 1960's and '70's and that brought back many memories for me.

  • @WordMusicImage
    @WordMusicImage Před 7 lety +4

    And beautiful music too.

  • @catherineelizabethhallahan9446

    Crouch End looks so much better then!! Real old fashioned which is great!! :)

    • @Augustes1
      @Augustes1 Před 5 lety +1

      YES...it was it was wonderful...even with Dunns then with a Lyons across with servers using with Pinnafors....(sorry about the bad spelling)

  • @kennethgiles-nu9dk
    @kennethgiles-nu9dk Před 23 dny

    this piece of music stopped me having a massive heart attack

  • @Augustes1
    @Augustes1 Před 5 lety

    thank you Tam ,very much....I was born here in 1947.....great memoir...wonderful

  • @kennethgiles-nu9dk
    @kennethgiles-nu9dk Před 5 měsíci

    love that music

  • @NickEdgington
    @NickEdgington Před 7 lety +2

    Having gone to Bishops Wood, I regularly passed through there, that was some 50 years ago but your picture bring it all back.

    • @Augustes1
      @Augustes1 Před 5 lety

      withe the school named next to the swimming Pool where I saw the Kinks playing there. I went to Crieton Avenue School 'William Grimshaw' at the same time as Sir Rod Stewart and the Kinks

  • @itsjayden8267
    @itsjayden8267 Před 3 lety

    I went school here good go see it has memories

  • @RezFalih
    @RezFalih Před 4 lety +1

    Really cool that You have done this, i always tried to imagine what it looked like when I was a kid. I think at st.marys we had one picture. Really good work! 👌

    • @tamneal
      @tamneal  Před 4 lety

      Thanks for that Adam!

  • @Augustes1
    @Augustes1 Před 6 lety +2

    brilliant!

  • @patholley4475
    @patholley4475 Před 5 lety

    Excellent video!!

  • @jahno7154
    @jahno7154 Před 4 lety

    Remarkable stuff well done.

  • @sonyaross946
    @sonyaross946 Před 4 lety

    Wonderful. I love how in the first pair of pictures, the clock is showing the same time 😊

    • @tamneal
      @tamneal  Před 4 lety +1

      Ha! You're the first person to comment on that Sonya. Well spotted! Tx

    • @sonyaross946
      @sonyaross946 Před 4 lety

      @@tamneal it's a really nice touch!

  • @TheLambdaTeam
    @TheLambdaTeam Před 4 lety +3

    People still lose their way in Crouch End? Some lose it forever?

  • @kennygiles4647
    @kennygiles4647 Před 3 lety

    Love that music

  • @ॐSrimanArcharyaJBC
    @ॐSrimanArcharyaJBC Před 9 měsíci

    The Corbin Memorial Hall is not named properly as it was first made in the 16th century and was my family’s residence. My family brought many of the residents to crouch end that descended from all over the world. Crouch end that time was a forest area it was not the open town like we find today. He even privately made the train to Alexandra palace along he parkland walk, it was my Great Grandfather that carried his victory celebration in the train when it was first made leading to Alexandra Palace his residence. From 16th century to 19th century it is the Successful history of Crouch end London N8. He was known as Prince Albert to King Albert to his ancient crouch end people. Rev Corbin has nothing to do with it as the residents are older to a sovereign history with my family. Great work it will be mentioned in my Hindu Shastras.
    🛕🤴🏽
    ⚡️🤴🏽🕉🔺➕

  • @michaelberg9656
    @michaelberg9656 Před 7 lety +2

    Where did you find the picture of the Tube Stock and Battery Loco?

  • @randomlight2395
    @randomlight2395 Před 2 lety +1

    I prefer to live old time .

  • @bertspeggly4428
    @bertspeggly4428 Před 3 lety

    Where did you get the picture of the 1938 LU stock being pulled by the battery loco through Crouch End Station? I lived near the line and saw this a few times. Great video, thanks. In 1080HD and full screen it looks great!

    • @tamneal
      @tamneal  Před 3 lety +1

      Hi Bert - from a site called [disused-stations.org.uk]. Interesting site, although I've just noticed it's 'not secure' in the URL bar. Should be ok for a quick browse though. Just thought I'd mention it.

  • @trevorbarre5616
    @trevorbarre5616 Před 7 lety +2

    The same, "with awnings"?

  • @flyinghedgehog3833
    @flyinghedgehog3833 Před 2 lety

    Have house there still

  • @ॐSrimanArcharyaJBC
    @ॐSrimanArcharyaJBC Před 9 měsíci

    It is worth finding out who the brown iris colour Christians where in Crouch end where as they where part of this quest my father started in crouch end and they need to get there recognition as part of my GreatGrandfathers coronation parade and quest in the 1980’s. These people had Indian Gujarati Hindu translated surnames and where of Hindu heritage not Jewish or African. ⚡️🤴🏽🕉🔺➕

  • @whyohwhy3407
    @whyohwhy3407 Před 3 lety

    This proves one thing- Change is NOT always for better! Now, every high street looks the same. Thankfully, Europe has avoided where we have failed. We were too busy following the Yanks!

  • @tonyblast4592
    @tonyblast4592 Před 2 lety

    Very nice! But if I may, the ripple effect is a bit annoying and counterproductive. A clean fade would have been much better with a stronger "effect"...without any :)

    • @tamneal
      @tamneal  Před 2 lety

      I understand where you're coming from Tony - if not necessarily agreeing with you. I felt at the time that the 'ripple effect' transition in iMovie was the best option - it also had the added benefit of covering up any discrepancies between the framing of any two photos (I am, after all, a musician by trade and not a film editor!) Also, the ripple transition gave birth to the titles of these little videos... 'Crouch End Time Cross Dissolves' doesn't quite work for me! ;-)

    • @tonyblast4592
      @tonyblast4592 Před 2 lety

      @@tamneal Fair enough, thank you anyway for these vintage photos and your work. I lived in Crouch end for a few years and it was nice to get to see these. Cheers!

  • @trevorbarre5616
    @trevorbarre5616 Před 7 lety +2

    These are all very well, but it would be far more interesting, and worthy of your efforts, if you could feature photos of, for example, the area of the Town Hall pre-1933, with Broadway Hall, Lake Villa and Old Crouch Hall, when it would have all looked completely different. Otherwise, it's all "it's essentially the same", which it isn't/wasn't.

    • @tamneal
      @tamneal  Před 7 lety

      Trevor Barre - Well thanks for that (hem-hem). If I could have found the photos you suggested, I probably would have used them. You can only work with what you've got.

    • @trevorbarre5616
      @trevorbarre5616 Před 7 lety

      Yeah, ok, Tam. Point taken. Sorry for appearing arrogant, it genuinely wasn't intended.
      There are loads of photos of this site from Victorian times, but it's very difficult to make sense of how the various buildings were configured in that relatively confined space, in front of the later Town Hall. But photos of Lake Villa, Broadway Hall, Linslade House and Old Crouch Hall do exist. The point I was trying to make, probably very crudely, is that there was a massive change in socio-economic/socio-cultural terms, in those post-WW1 years, and stressing continuity (through photos) is slightly misleading.
      That's all. For one thing, the previous wealthy landowner sites were replaced by a civic representative area, however venal. Despite the fact that the Victorian landowners had sold off their holdings ( at no doubt a massive profit to themselves), what emerged was a civic identity of immense positivity. Which has, of course, now been pretty much demolished by our current 'government'.
      Have a gander at the Hornsey Historical Society (hem-hem). They have plenty of material that will back me up.
      Chin up,
      Trevor

    • @rumpraisin
      @rumpraisin Před 5 lety +2

      @@tamneal You've made my day. This is a fine piece of work. It might interest you to know that Crouch End featured in the music video of Bank Robber released in 1980 by The Clash.

  • @charntayegreen5106
    @charntayegreen5106 Před 2 lety

    Old city wrong