Sydney 1940
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- čas přidán 9. 11. 2014
- Old 16mm vacation films were discovered at a garage sale in San Jose, CA by Tim Peddy and digitally converted courtesy of The California Pioneers of Santa Clara County. The unknown photographer traveled throughout 1940's Australia, including Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane. All Rights Reserved.
I always feel a tinge of sadness when I watch old footage like this. When I look at some of the people caught on camera, people that are obviously long gone, I can't help but wonder who they were and what their lives were like. They lived, they loved and they were loved by others. The fact that we'll never know them, that those frozen faces will forever remain anonymous, is kind of sad.
Grace... I always feel somewhat the same way, except I wouldn't exactly call it a "sadness". Instead, I feel it is more like a melancholy experience. Either way, they never fail to bring moisture to my eyes, which makes looking at them in focus that much more difficult. Either way, I'm personally pleased you enjoy viewing them as much as I do.
I don't know where you're from but I feel the same way every time I drive thru a small town in the U.S that's nestled deep in the country and see some of its residents at play or at work. Knowing that I will never see these people again.
Well said Grace K. For me personally, watching footage like this takes me back to the world my parents knew. My Mother and Father were teenagers when this footage was filmed. The images seen here of 1940 Australia is the world of their youth. They did their bit for the war effort, they loved, they married in 1947, worked hard, built a home and raised a family. Mum died in 2012, Dad died in 2016. They were good people and good Australians.
A beautiful and poignant kind of sad :)
Hi Grace...what you are feeling, is called empathy.
To Tim Peddy and The California Pioneers of Santa Clara County, I thank you for preserving this record of a time way before I was born. I love my home and I absolutely love the history of Sydney.
Tim Peddy and The California Pioneers of Santa Clara County; 23 million thanks for preserving this footage.
Thank goodness you saw the value in these old films. A lot of people would have thrown them out. Great to see Sydney as it was in the 1940s.
Aren't they wonderful? A time when it was a sunlit city, comfortable to live in even as there was a war on and things were getting dangerous. So better than the cold, impersonal pile of rubble it is in 2018, scheduled to be far worse with the oncoming years.
Pubs closed at 6pm. You threw down all you could hold before then and stagged home completely shickered. We all know that.
But, I'm talking about the city which had buildings low enough to allow the sunlight to come in. You could find your way around and not get lost. You could actually LIVE in the thing. Have you looked at it lately?
There were lots of things it didn't have then, but you don't miss what you never had.
@Frank. T 😄😄😄😄😄😄
*KailuaKid* I was born May, 1943, went to primary school at "Our Lady Of Peace" in Gladesville, then on to secondary school at Marist Brothers "Villa Maria" at Hunters Hill. My first job was at Dymock's Book Arcade in George Street Sydney. Travelled to work on a double decker bus which came out of Ryde Depot to begin it's working day. I remember well bus number 2264, as it was the fastest. Other numbers spring to mind like 2149, 2083, and 2143. My favorite seat was the very front LHS on the top deck. I recall leaning to my right as the driver wheeled sharply into bus stops along Victoria road Drummoyne, as the top deck was above the footpath awnings and it appeared as if a collision was imminent . I rather think the reason 2264 was so fast, was because the driver was the proverbial lead foot, lol. Whist at Marist Brothers, my best friend and I picked up an NRMA map of the Sydney Metropolitan Area, and each Saturday we'd set out on our push bikes, our goal to cross off each suburb we'd pass through. We did this practically every weekend, when after many months most all the suburbs from Palm Beach to Sutherland, and from Hornsby to Sydney, Parramatta, and Liverpool were crossed off the map. Over 4000 miles clocked on a tiny odometer mounted to the front axel. Thank you sincerely KailuaKid, you've brought back some wonderful memories of my early childhood and working life, and this is one You Tube video that'll be saved permanently. Cheers...
What a stroke of luck to have found and been able to preserve this! It is pure GOLD! Thank you for your efforts! Bloody Magic!!
Thank you so much for this wonderful video . I thoroughly enjoyed this trip down memory lane and in spite of the fact that it left me feeling somewhat melancholy . It was a nice feeling . This is very much appreciated . Made my day , especially as an immigrant from Greece (came here as a baby in 1949) who grew up here in beautiful Australia . The only place on earth I call home Thank you once again , God bless
I was seven years old and living in Willoughby. My father never owned a car, so we always travelled by tram to the City, across the Harbour Bridge and into a tunnel to Wynyard
+John Lee me too John, from Willoughby, walking down to Artarmon station or catching the tram to Chatswood to get the train into town.
Long ago and far away eh?
Sure was a long time ago Carolyn, I lived in Tulloh Street, off Frenchs Road, Willoughby and we moved to Auburn when I was 17
+John Lee Not far from me John in Zara Road, across Willoughby Rd, up to Penkiville on the left. We were there from about 1953, I married and moved out in 1959 on to Mosman. Heck, it feels like centuries ago. :)
Damn.. This was a bitter sweet read. Hope you're both happy and healthy, John and Carolyn.
Thanks for posting these old films of Australian scenes KailuaKid, it is not often we get to see these times in colour and they are certainly evocative of the period. It is great that Tim had the foresight to save these images where others would have simply thrown them away and also wonderful that The Californian Pioneers took the interest to convert them to digital images. Cheers to everyone involved.
My mother was 20 in 1940, she lived with my grandparents in Clovelly, and on weekdays caught a tram to work in the City at the old AMP building in Pitt St. All these scenes are ones she knew well. I can just imagine her walking through them (in her hat and gloves) along with her family sister and friends. Thanks so much Kailua Kid for uploading them, you've brought a page of my family history back to life.
Those shots of 'Coogee' were actually Bondi, Bronte, Clovelly and then the shark net was at Coogee, followed by a view down Coogee Bay Road.
Thanks for sharing. So many familiar places in spite of the passage of time, although Circular Quay looks utterly different: no Opera House, no Cahill Expressway, no rail station, no skyscrapers. Have been writing a novel based on my mother's diary from this period. Excellent for getting the 'look' of people and places right in the text.
no bloody toaster...
Excellent footage lovely to see Sydney as it was in the 1940s. Sydney was a beautiful place then
Well in Present days Shops are still open late.
It still is. 😊
As a Kiwi I very much enjoyed watching the New Zealand films - but I also spent many years in Sydney and this footage is very precious. Thank you so very much for preserving this unique recording of our two country's during those early years of WW2. What a gift you have given us.
Oh man they've sure done a number on the joint since then. :(
This footage is pure magic! So is the accompanying music, thanks to everyone involved in preserving it. If it all was filmed during 1940 World War 2, no wonder the beach scenes don't show many people or lifesavers, most young (& not so young) were in the armed forces. The Harbour scenes are particularly wonderful as are the Manly scenes where my family worked and lived. And I'm still v. happily here. Cheers!
Would have been filmed much later than that - the war was over and life was back to normal. You can age it by the Holden you see in one shot. Brings back many memories and I think Sydney was a much nicer place then. Pleased I don't live there any more...
@@stumpor I tend to agree. The shots of Rosehill races (about 8.50) have far too many fighting-age men in civilian clothes to be wartime.
My grandparents were living in Sydney in the 1930's. I told them after I went to Sydney in 1990 that "they definitely saw the best that Sydney will ever be and ever has been". They said "that's correct!".
Affordable (Kodak) colour film only became available one or two years earlier, however WWII made it a complete luxury almost immediately. Colour footage of Sydney as early as 1940 is EXTREMELY rare.
0:22 Potts Point/Elizabeth Bay, probably taken from Point Piper area.
0:26 North Sydney/Kirribilli in the distance.
0:31 Looking over North Bondi towards Bronte in the distance.
0:42 George Street at Martin Place
0:53 Martin Place looking east
1:10 Pitt Street, now the Pitt Street Mall
2:34 Watsons Bay
2:40 Watsons Bay ferry wharf
2:54 An eight year old Sydney Harbour Bridge
3:25 Spit Bridge
3:44 Manly ferry, either "Burra-Bra", "Barrenjoey" of "Balgowlah"
3:50 Manly ferry "Curl Curl"
4:32 Contrary to titling, this is Bondi Beach
5:01 Ditto
5:09 Bronte Beach
5:16 Clovelly Beach
6:52 Harbour ferry "Lady Scott"
7:04 Manly ferry "Baragoola" at Manly wharf
7:53 Manly harbour pool with Manly ferry wharf in the distance.
8:30 Horse racing, where the unfortunate poor have their money extorted by rigged races
Regards
00:26 looks to me as if it's taken from somewhere round about Fairfax Road in Bellevue Hill, with the curve of New South Head Road in the foreground and trees of what is now Blackburn Gardens beyond, with the western side of Point Piper just getting in on the right. That would mean the background is round about Bradleys Head.
What a great old piece of Footage, it brought back some long forgotten memories. Thanks for sharing :)
Fantastic, but just a point to clarify the first beach shown is not Bronte, it is definitely Bondi.
+GregBuist agree, definitely Bondi. 100% Bondi!
Still love this & so appreciated. Thankyou.
Excellent footage.Thanks for saving it.
A Wonderful Old Video, Thanks for Sharing, so many Memories, My Old Home Town.
Ah :) The city I grew up in, it's changed so much since then.
At 5:01 the first shot after the Coogee title is Bondi from the south looking to north headland, then the next shot is Bronte viewing from nth to sth, note the tram cutting up in the hillside
Beautiful video, cheers for uploading :)
Amazing 👍🏻. Beautiful ❤. Thank you
Interesting that the first few seconds we see W2 class trams in Melbourne.
Wow what a find! Beautiful insight into what Sydney was like then, my late grand parents time.
Fascinating. Thanks for posting.
Wow the Sphinx near Bobbin Head is just behind the High School I went to, its amazing to see it from 1940!
Thats fantastic footage.wonderful that it was found in usa and someone has gone to the trouble of putting it on here.thankyou.i must dig out my 60s stuff and do the same.
This is FABULOUS!
Fantastic
8 People dislike this... Must be from New Zealand
No, just 8 Queenslanders and Victorians who still cannot accept that Sydney is the jewel in Australia's crown
Trump supporters, no sense of logic
Rubbish! We love our ANZAC cuzzy bro's. Except during rugby and cricket tests lol.
@@lukewise1227 Corona virus capital of Australia and deservedly so
Watson's Bay kiosk @ 1:42....Waterhouse's Imperial Hotel Milson's Point @ 3:02
Hey look, It's pre-McDonalds Sydney!
Not so. Sydney had an extensive Chinatown from 1850s gold rushes. Chinese also farmed market gardens, ran many laundries and every suburb and country town had at least one Chinese restaurant. Their economic contribution to Australia is very significant.
G WS
Actually the Immigration Restriction Act of 1901 which goes by the neologism and misnomer ‘ White Australia Policy’ was in direct relation to the negative influence of the Chinese.
The Chinese were importing cheap labour undercutting local trade unions and sending gold out tax free.
This Act was later repelled in 1958
@G WS The Commonwealth census of 1948 indicated that 98% of Australians were of Anglo-Celtic origin. Of course most of them weren't immigrants but the progeny of the early pioneers.
@Al L Uuuh? And a lot of Irish. Where else did all the Catholics come from? (Not to mention Church of Ireland like my great-grandparents) British means something very specific; pertaining to the Island of Great Britain - England Wales and Scotland, not including the island of Ireland.
I have many precious memories of Sydney. Beautiful footage.
People were so elegant in those times;)
Love it thanks
If people don't like it , don't watch. Why waste your time . When people like to pick on , people , places & things . One has to assume that as I said ,they have time to waste. Or maybe they are Jealous...
The street scene at 00:40 mark showing a constable on point duty directing traffic is actually a scene from Melbourne. The Tram is a "W" Class car of MMTB. Further comment points out the mis-identification of Eastern Suburbs beaches so troll down for more info. I now live in Qld, former RSL taxi owner in Sydney & policeman. These scenes pictured taken two years before I was born.
Sydney and Australia has change and not for the better, unfortunately.🌴
Awesome, Rosehill racecourse. 8:22. And the refinery over the back of the course is still there.
The jingoistic soundtrack detracts from the visuals. I suggest viewers turn off the sound and concentrate on the film.
Much better without the dreadful music! It was driving me nuts!
Wouldn't it be great to travel on the Harbour Bridge with no traffic like in the film...
Couldn't help noticing the people crossing the roads and Jay walking in front of busy traffic.
Ahhh look at those cars!
Chilling to see so many young boys on the beaches so carefree and happy unaware that within only a few years most would be killed in war.
Wonderful 1940 views of Sydney City
08:27 Rosehill platform hasn't changed but I haven't seen an electric train like that since I was a kid in the 1960's. This is an original wooden electric train from 1924, converted from steam hauled around 1927 when the lines were electrified. They were the first of the red rattlers to be withdrawn in the 60's.
At 4:24 the title is for Bronte beach but the footage is Bondi beach
this was during WW2 when Europe was in turmoil
Then at 5:22 is Clovelly gulch and after that not sure whether the net fence is Coogee but probably is as next shots before 'The Gap title are Coogee streets.
I remember all this so well been all these placers at that5 time how lucky I was
That was fascinating!Thank you for posting this awesome historic footage!I wish Sydney still had its trams. Considering the date the film was made and the fact it was found in California I assume it was filmed by a visitor from the US. Is the 1940 date certain because technically Australia would've been at war by then and my parents (who would've been in their early teens in 1940) always led me to believe that thing were fairly grim during the war with shortages and rations and blackouts, and one of my history teachers at school was aboard the Sydney ferry that was sunk in the harbour by a Japanese midget submarine (think there was only one ferry lost that way).
The introduction to each location looks professional and the film has a high production value overall so I wonder if it was filmed for promotional purposes of some kind.
Love the description that says Australia's beaches are "infested with man-eating sharks"!
Sydney was of course where General MacArthur's HQ was - his bunker is in tunnels under Hyde Park and although it's all sealed off now you used to be able to get there from St James Station - and MacArthur was Allied Supreme Commander in the Pacific so during the war the city was full of American military personnel and it was also a destination for R & R, but in 1940 all that was yet to happen since the US was neutral until Pearl Harbour.
The last title screen said "Adios Sydney, looks like a rough trip ahead", which made me wonder if that remark was a reference to the war or to the film maker's own trip home across the Pacific?
Thank you again for posting this superb footage!
Definitely well post War. As I mentioned in an earlier reply, the Holden in one scene dates it as very late 40s at the earliest. It was a different world then. I used to catch the bus to the ferry terminal at Woolwich, the ferry to the Quay and the tram to school at Moore Park. In the late 50s I would do that trip at least once a week carrying my .303 rifle for shooting competition and no one batted an eyelid. Try doing that now!!
@@stumpor Yes stumpor, things have changed a lot. People tended not to get hysterical about everything in those days. In the 50's my Dad and his mates (in their early teens) would walk through the streets with a 22 rifle, they would shoot rabbits on the edge of town or down the river bank. Just typical behaviour for kids in regional Australia back then...they'd call in the Tactical Response Group today!
martin place with cars ? mind blown
Great footage but the music just doesn't fit. Sorry.
@ Vintage Mixer: Agree, the first piece is a piece of Multicultural triumphalism in a nation which was 98% Anglo-Celt, seeking to appropriate that reality for its own ends; the last piece is pure English fantasy with, in its favor, no pretensions to be otherwise. The middle piece (today made laughable by the privatised/degenerated QANTAS which used it for commercial purposes) wasn't about 80% of Australians, but those who blew back every now and then from their cosmopolitan jaunts.
it's 2018. 49% of australians were born or had a parent born overseas. it's time to stop living in the past.
@@prismaticmarcus Thanks for sharing your latter day triumphalism sport.
@Pete Coolio bad guess
@A Munro cos it's not scottish? sad
Beautiful footage when Sydney was exciting and the folk very pleasant and everyone used to ask if you need a hand,strip shopping was exciting and you knew your local shop keepers always with service with a smile and a yarn,the cars the architecture, loved the milkbars miss those days love the footage can watch for hours
She was a fine country back then. The second gemstone of the Empire. Now look at it my family’s been in Queensland for 140 Years. It’s gone to shit. On the verge of not only giving our military but even our form of Government’s to the Yanks with AUKUS and the Republican Movement it really is a shame. 300,000 Homeless in Queensland alone bloody awful
Sydney looked great in 1940, even though I was born five years later.
My home town,and yes the best harbor in the world,bar none.
The ferries back then look in better condition then the 1's we run today lol
Are there credits for the music? "Maid of Australia" sounds like it might be a very young Martyn Wyndham-Read...
LoL, I thought an "older" Martin Carthy!! RjB
its like watching a different place. Sydney today is like a completely different place. different people. different culture. different everything. sad.
Only 15554.11 km. away. Another world
the song that plays at 8:29, does anybody by any chance know where a version of it is online? Ive tried searching lyrics and all but cant find anything - no mention of it existing which is a shame because its a beautiful song
czcams.com/video/903gZmAsqB8/video.html
Wonderful old footage of the city of my birth. However, Bronte looked suspiciously like Bondi to me. As for the musical accompaniment - truly awful. A little more imagination required to do the glorious imagery justice.
Try to buy a house there now,money crazy most there now
Good footage. It’s a pity the music is so syrupy and cringeworthy.
Beautiful! Not sure about our beaches being infested with man eating sharks though.
Love ❤️ it
Wonderful but the only thing which grates is the terrible background music. Surely something less embarrassing could have been found.
Shit jingoistic soundtrack. Would be much better silent.
It is. I turned the sound off and it was much better. These ghastly chewns need to be given a good burial.
Odd. At 36 seconds, there's film of a Melbourne W2 tram. Definitely not a Sydney tram.
That's because the film was taken by, and edited by (including title cards) an unknown American film maker for an American audience.
KailuaKid And hence the American spelling. Fascinating footage, thank you.
Agreed. Anyone recognise the location in Melbourne?
Australia I always call home ! its my home
an aussie thanks you for posting this
Buenas tardes alguien que que confirme si es posible utilizar fragmentos de esta película.
¿Cuál es el propósito de la película? Los segmentos cortos que suman menos de un minuto en total se pueden utilizar para fines de cine educativo. Dar crédito a:
'Rick Helin y los Pioneros de California del Condado de Santa Clara "
Walt Disney's Pinocchio in theatres back then!
There are some Melbourne trams in the opening scenes.
I noticed that too!
Sydney had 3 times the number of trams back then that Melbourne has today
No, Sydney trams, in fact the newer ones. They still had the old toast rack trams well into the 50s!
Why are they racing back to front ? That just weird.
Looking at it, you wouldn't know that it was a nation at war... were it not for the Imperial Japanese, it would have literally been a world away.
Not "literally," as you put it and the Japanese did not come into the war until the following year.
Mudflooded building's every where
AUSTRALIA AUSTRALIA AUSTRALIA PRIOR TO 2001 WAS THE GREATEST COUNTRY ON THE PLANET "EARTH" NOW DAYS THAT COMPLEMENT IS ONLY A MEMORY WHO KNOWS WHAT THE FUTURE HOLDS MAYBE IT CAN BE THE GREATEST NATION ON THE PLANET ONCE MORE WHO KNOWS MAYBE I AM DREAMING AND MAYBE I AM NOT WHATEVER THE CASE MAY BE LET US KEEP HOPE AS ALIVE AT LEAST AND DO A LITTLE DREAMING NEVER GIVE UP NEVER GIVE IN KEEP HOPE ALIVE FOR WHILE THERE IS {LIFE} THERE IS HOPE 💖☝👍
Wounder how much fuel was back then though
Its a pity..so few people speak english now
Where? Certainly not the case in Australia!
Few people 😂😂. Can you imagine what the indigenous people thought, the convicts invaded this country and claimed it ad their own.
from 5:50 to 5:50 it's McKeon St Maroubra right??????????
ivor biggon
er.... I mean 5:50 to 5:55.............................
@@ivorbiggon9494 Looks more like the lower end of Coogee Bay Road. The film-maker has moved south showing Bondi, Bronte, Coogee Baths, Coogee Bay and Coogee Beach. It does not look like he has gone any further than that, Malabar Point and the rifle range are way off in the distance in the shots of Coogee. The wooden tram stop ( now a bus stop ) would be visible if it was Maroubra.
Some of you people are absolutely clueless!
Have to laugh. The first images of beaches are all Bondi, not Bronte or Coogee as the txt states!
No Holden cars. First Holden 1948.
But what did the bogans drive back then?
Fem Chick Haha nothing like arrogance and snobbery to get the blood boiling hey!
+boogiefever1985 Pontiacs, lol.
Why did you have to stuff up brilliant footage of one of the world's greatest cities with trite cheap attempts at comedic comments? They are irrelevant, especially when decimal currency was not around at the time. You are am ignominious jerk.
However, thanks for preserving this priceless footage.
I still call australia home!!!
Why did people dress more elegant than these days..
1947 ?
YesYesYoureRight Early 1940
How quaint the original trams were. Now the main street of Sydney is a railway with eight car trains running up and down it every couple of minutes. Thank you Clover for all your stupidity. Hopefully they will be ripped out as the old ones where. Billions wasted.
C Quay looks bad without the Cahill Expressway.....
+Ariel Cohen i'm sure you made a typo , surely you mean " it looks MUCH BETTER without the Cahill E''sway " which it does .
the worlds best harbour blighted by an ugly eyesore !
richard jagger : it's a marvellous combination of natural & man made values...modern urban art..not everything is a fucking postcard.....
+Ariel Cohen the C E'way isn't fucking marvellous " modern urban art " , it's an ugly man made eyesore !
Interesting footage, but the soundtrack reeks.
tell em yo...................................
sfc
san fran to me LAX
Use this now: maps.six.nsw.gov.au/
747 planes no bigie
There is an FJ Holden on the Bridge at about 3:00
Brian. I studied this many times & its not a FJ, yes at first it looked like it but no, check it out again & let me know what you think..
Brian Critchley
OK, probably not, after a closer look.
Thanks
I think's a brand new 1940 Chevrolet. They were still being sold in Australia in 1940.
Obviously this was made by a Yank, We don't call them "streetcars", we call them by their CORRECT name, *TRAMS!* (1:21)
Only Australia could take a city with soul and turn into cheap and tacky Surfers Paradise.
That’s when Australia was run by respectable actual Australian people, now it’s been destroyed by corporations , Chinese money and ungrateful immigrants, such a grand city in those times, and the people where proud of this city and respected the people in it.
Ungrateful immigrants, in my town, the most patriotic, hardest working, community minded people are in fact immigrants. They come here, see a land of opportunity and prosperity in exchange for hard work and grab it with both hands.
@@Ozgrade3 what about those Abusive Lebos?????
Well not too sure about respectable people. Corruption amongst politicians, police and the "upper" class was rife. Illegal gambling with a premier as a frequent attended. The razor gangs of the 30s. Mr Big running all sorts of crime. BUT it was still a place where decent people lived and which I remember fondly. I prefer Sydney of the 40s, 50s and 60s to Sydney today.
@@Ozgrade3Ungrateful immigrants? That is a very unaustralian comment. I am an immigrant and my parents worked their asses off since they arrived, we always appreciated the opportunity. Can you give examples of some of these people?
@@gabrielsanchez2189 I think you misread my comment, the immigrants are the most gratful people we have in my town.