Bournemouth - All Seasons! (1930-1940)

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  • čas přidán 9. 07. 2024
  • 1930s travelogue about Bournemouth.
    Railway station including station clock and the "Bournemouth Belle" train. Steam train pulling into or out of station. People visible in railway carriages reading papers etc. Railway tracks from moving train. Forests of Southern Hampshire. Landscape shots. Sundial - shadow moves through time lapse photography. Three men representing the Victorians who foresaw the potential of Bournemouth. The "original" Bournemouth Belles - girls in old-fashioned long legged swimsuits cavort in the waves. The men ignore the Belles and talk of the potential for growth. The Pier Approach of 1870 - still photograph - contrasted with the bustling pier approach of "today".
    Street scenes, top shots of the town, beach scenes, cliffs, pier, gardens - "chines", promenade, the beach from a moving car. The town itself - the square is shown in a photograph from 1895 and compared to a contemporary shot. Bourne Stream running through natural park land. The Public Gardens. A woman walks by the stream and children play with toy boats. Men play tennis. Meyrick Park. Ernest Whitcombe and Don Curtis play golf on two different courses in the town. A dog retrieves a golf ball. Tree bordered streets. The Square. C/U of sign on a bus. Number 21 to Boscombe, Fisherman's Walk and Southbourne. Footage of the town from the bus. C/U of a conveyancing document detailing the sale of land in Bournemouth for £86. "Today" the site may be worth a million pounds. Municipal college and library on corner of Cambridge Road. Boscombe and Southbourne. Cliffs and bay. Boscombe pier.
    A park with many games being played - bowls, tennis and children playing by pond. Top shots of Boscombe. Promenade. Beach scenes. Women swim - contrasted with the belles of yesteryear. Pier Approach Baths and its sun terrace. A family sits in the sun - smiling.
    Indoor swimming pool. Log rolling in the pool by a man with a woman on his back. A crowd of people watch. Ice-skating rink. Skating on stilts. Man jumps over a row of barrels on his skates. The public skate on the rink. An indoor bowling green (the largest in the world). Couples dance in the ballroom of the Municipal Pavilion. A live band plays. Some women dance together. Top shot of the Pavilion.
    The world famous Municipal Symphony Orchestra plays under the direction of Richard Austin. Shot of the orchestra and conductor. Shots of the musicians. More still images of Bournemouth in previous years are contrasted with contemporary footage.
    Intertitle reads: "Those natural gifts Bournemouth offers to you. For both holiday or residence it is unrivalled". Voiceover states (in reference to the orchestra and its relationship to the town): "Nothing is good enough but the best".
    Note: the mute negative has intertitles. A soundtrack has been made for the film without intertitles. Therefore the track does not fit exactly with our mute. (The soundtrack is almost exactly the same as the intertitle text but has extra bits thrown in).
    This is a duplicate copy of *PM1827*. Check for best quality.
    FILM ID:3309.04
    A VIDEO FROM BRITISH PATHÉ. EXPLORE OUR ONLINE CHANNEL, BRITISH PATHÉ TV. IT'S FULL OF GREAT DOCUMENTARIES, FASCINATING INTERVIEWS, AND CLASSIC MOVIES. www.britishpathe.tv/
    FOR LICENSING ENQUIRIES VISIT www.britishpathe.com/
    British Pathé also represents the Reuters historical collection, which includes more than 136,000 items from the news agencies Gaumont Graphic (1910-1932), Empire News Bulletin (1926-1930), British Paramount (1931-1957), and Gaumont British (1934-1959), as well as Visnews content from 1957 to the end of 1984. All footage can be viewed on the British Pathé website. www.britishpathe.com/

Komentáře • 24

  • @Marty-hu7rw
    @Marty-hu7rw Před rokem +2

    Lovely clear footage of lovely Bournemouth in its heyday ,l remember it in the swinging 60s ,looked much the same ,no pvc ,apart from the cars .

  • @raymondtucker325
    @raymondtucker325 Před 26 dny +2

    I was so lucky to spend my teenage years in wonderful, beautiful Bournemouth.
    I wouldn’t live there now for a double pension. Overcrowded, just part of a huge conurbation, Poole and Christchurch now included.
    The heart has been ripped out of this once beautiful town .

  • @ianmillerphotography
    @ianmillerphotography Před rokem +1

    Thanks for sharing. My family lived in Southborne from 1946 then moved to Highcliffe a year later. It's lovely to see how the town I know and love looked decades before I was born, (even before my grandparents moved there).

  • @dannyboyy31
    @dannyboyy31 Před 7 měsíci +3

    I've lived in Bournemouth and Poole for all of my nearly 50 years, and even in that relatively short time I can see how badly the area has declined. Much of it is not specific to this area, it's just wider societal decline and erosion of manners, standards and respect. But, watching this video and others from the 1950s and 1960s, it's sad to see how pristine and beautiful these towns once were and how they've subsequently decayed.

  • @artscrafts4685
    @artscrafts4685 Před rokem

    Amazing Video!

  • @jimmeer
    @jimmeer Před 29 dny +1

    I bet thetrain journey took two hours as it does now- we are Low Speed Rail Project Number One. Unfortunately we have a completely incompetent Council who we in Christchurch have been forced to join totally against our wishes.

  • @unathleticutd
    @unathleticutd Před 11 měsíci +1

    At the end of the day the truth is imo Bournemouth was a far better place to live when it was part of Hampshire. Bournemouth was run by Dorset C.C. For only 23 years but in that time is when the damage was done and it started by splitting the town in too with the crazy Wessex Way (A338) which just goes nowhere tbh not thought thru properly when built

  • @marklatimer7333
    @marklatimer7333 Před 7 měsíci

    Can anyone tell me where the "Indoor Bowling Green" was? - I'm a long time Bournemouth resident and quite old and remember many places mentioned in this film but the indoor bowling green in the 1940s is a new one on me.

    • @lilacfloyd
      @lilacfloyd Před měsícem +2

      In 1937, the new Winter Gardens was opened as an indoor bowling-green. War intervened, and it was decided to convert it to a concert hall.
      The building was later converted into a concert hall in 1946.

    • @marklatimer7333
      @marklatimer7333 Před měsícem +1

      @@lilacfloyd Many thanks.

    • @gbentley8176
      @gbentley8176 Před 6 dny

      @@marklatimer7333 Winter Gardens now demolished. Loved it in the fifties not so much now; sadly the fate of many cities.

  • @bergssprangare
    @bergssprangare Před 2 lety +12

    Lived here for 10 years..The place has so much potential but is now a ghost town with closed stores, inflated rents and the council has filled its old hotels with refugees that doesn't seem to appreciate the town at all.

    • @rodrollingstone2362
      @rodrollingstone2362 Před 2 lety +1

      What a negative comment. Towns are like people - they have a youth, a maturity and an old age. Bournemouth is in it old age now, 222 years old this year and subject to all the stresses and strains of a creaking national economy, changing shopping habits as people go online more and more - recently exacerbated by a pandemic with lockdowns - and the follies of previous town planning decisions that put pedestrianisation before any thought of a more modern transportation system that does not need acres of car parks and parking meters - a monorail perhaps, connecting all areas of town. I was born there 74 years ago and remember eco friendly trolley buses, people choosing the town for their annual summer holidays and a time when it was not swamped with foreign students, conference delegates and binge drinkers out on the piss. It is up to residents, working within their communities, as much as the local BCP Council, to change things for the better. Other towns have a Neighbourhood Plan where residents are consulted on what they want to see put in place for their aspirations, which are usually very successful in combatting the 'ghost town' aspect you speak of. My advice, if you truly want to see changes for the better for dear old Bournemouth, is to find out who your local councillors are and tell them of your concerns and see how they intend to address them. They tend to listen, in my experience as an ex local government officer, especially coming up to elections!

    • @bergssprangare
      @bergssprangare Před 2 lety +4

      @@rodrollingstone2362 Thanks..I know that the council has a debt of 50 million..Bournemouth is a gem in so many ways..It's Art Deco and Victorian era architecture is world Class..But it's clear that they don't even see it..Everything is falling apart..

    • @ShinyBS4
      @ShinyBS4 Před 25 dny

      Castlepoint, A giant ASDA, and a John Lewis “at home” deliberately located away from the town centre has served to negate the need for locals to use any town centre stores.

    • @gbentley8176
      @gbentley8176 Před 6 dny

      @@bergssprangare Planners and councils put culture and visual beauty at the bottom of the spending list.

  • @gregtaylor6146
    @gregtaylor6146 Před rokem +4

    Bournemouth full of English people ..... now there's a novelty?

    • @chriskemp6272
      @chriskemp6272 Před rokem

      Hopefully as it's a tourist area it's full of all nationalities eh?

    • @gregtaylor6146
      @gregtaylor6146 Před rokem

      @@chriskemp6272 - Yeah, sure thing Snowflake, keep your cheeks pulled nice and wide, you'll find the pain slightly reduced!

    • @valeriezabienko3553
      @valeriezabienko3553 Před 7 měsíci

      All people and nationalities have to live somewhere. X

    • @gregtaylor6146
      @gregtaylor6146 Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@valeriezabienko3553 - THAT is a fallacy, 'they' can, by-and-large live in the country of their birth.

    • @DasTubemeister
      @DasTubemeister Před 2 měsíci +2

      @@valeriezabienko3553 Asia and Africa were made for these people. They should stay there.

  • @budte
    @budte Před rokem +12

    Bournemouth has gone downhill. Beggars and an overspill of drug addicts from the multitude of halfway houses in Boscombe, along with the spread of mass immigration have sealed the fate of this once, pretty pleasant town.