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American Farmer Movie - 1953, Blazey Family | Ford Motor Company 

Ken Hook
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The following information is from a newspaper article in the summer of 1953 - likely Canandaigua's 'Daily Messenger'.
The article started with: "Mr. and Mrs. Everett Blazey of the Rochester Road and members of the family are the central characters in a 16mm color film being made on the Blazey farm for the Ford Motor Company.
This film entitled "The American Farmer" is being made by MPO Productions of New York for inclusion in the Ford Motor Company's series, "Americans at Home". With one exception the entire cast is made up of the Blazey family and their neighbors.
William (Tony) Imof, a non-professional actor from New York will be included in portions of the film. (The article further describes how the 600 acre Blazey farm nearly fit the requirements for the film.)
The Blazey farm produces cash crops such as peas, hay, grain, dry beans and sweet and field corn and usually carries between 50 to 100 Holstein heifer feeders.
The 30 minute movie will show the everyday activities of Mr. and Mrs. Blazey ; their son Everett Jr., who farms as a partner of his father; a younger son, Edward; and a daughter Roberta. The Blazey's have two other daughters, Mrs. William Borncamp and Mrs. Richard E. Hook whose homes are both near Cheshire.
Long active in community affairs and farm association work, Mr. Blazey holds the following offices; a member of the executive committee of the Ontario County Farm Bureau; president of the Ontario County Agricultural Society and a director of the Farm and Home Bureau and 4-H Club Association. In addition, he is vice president of the Farmers Production Credit Association, a director of Thompson Hospital, a Justice of the Peace in the Town of Farmington, a member of the advisory committee of the Canandaigua Office of the Lincoln Rochester Trust Company and a director of the Genessee Valley Regional Marketing Authority.
He is also a trustee of the Perinton Methodist Church. His hobby is flying his own light plane and he is a member of the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association and a charter member of the New York State Flying Farmers Associations.
Fully as active, Mrs. Blazey is chairman of the County Home Bureau Executive Committee, a member of the executive committee of the county 4-H Clubs, former chairman of the Mertensia Home Bureau Unit and leader of the Jolly Homemakers 4-H Club of which her daughter, Roberta is vice president. She is also active in church and Red Cross work.
When the film is completed and edited Mr. Baer (unit manager for MPO Productions) indicated that up to 200 copies will be available through Ford dealers and through other usual channels of distribution for 16 mm movies.
With favourable weather, Peasley Bond, unit cameraman, expects to complete operations by Aug 15. Including wives and children 11 members of the NPO production unit are staying at the Greenwood Inn, East Lake Road, Canandaigua.
About this RU-vid Movie.
A digital copy of this film was provided to me via Roberta Blazey a few years ago. It was digitized from a VHS film and hence lost much of the original 16mm quality. However, the story is there and the audio quality is quite good.
As a student in Canandaigua Elementary school I can remember seeing this filmed played over the years in our school auditorium. I was always proud of those days - in the mid to late 1960s.
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Blazey are now deceased as well as Everett Jr. Edward Blazey lives with his wife Mary in Lima, New York. Robert and her husband Patrick live in Canandaigua. Joan Borncamp (nee Blazey) lives in Canandaigua and Olive Hook (nee Blazey) lives in Kingston, Ontario Canada.
More interesting information about the movie was provided by Roberta Bolger (nee Blazey) in April 2015.
The cemetery shot was likely recorded at the Hathaway Cemetery across Hwy. 332 from the former King House. There was a cemetery in ‘the back forty’ but it didn’t have an iron fence around it.
Hwy 332 is the main highway in front of the Blazey home. Today the Hwy is four lane and all the Blazey buildings are gone with the exception of the large cinder block barn. Mr. and Mrs. Blazey sold the farm many years ago and the property become home to the Finger Lakes Race Track.
The Ford Motor Company was concerned that Mr. Blazey did not use Ford equipment (or implements manufactured by Ford) during the harvest. Some of the equipment was International Harvester- a competitor. Ford insisted the harvest scenes be re-filmed with Ford equipment. At this point the harvest was over at the Blazey farm and a new location needed to be found. Ford flew the film crew and Everett Blazey to Calgary, Alberta where grain was still standing and filmed the scene with Ford equipment. Roberta said ‘Dad was wearing a sweater in Alberta and it was way too hot in Canandaigua for wearing a sweater during the harvest’. She noticed MPO Productions also called her Alberta rather than Roberta…maybe they had Calgary on their minds?

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19 авг 2024

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Комментарии : 139   
@jeffmelchior8573
@jeffmelchior8573 8 лет назад
Oddly moving for a public service/promotional film. The equipment and stakes have gotten bigger, but the basic message resonates today.
@heehoo9687
@heehoo9687 6 месяцев назад
does it still hold up, 7 years later?
@arosefortes6507
@arosefortes6507 Год назад
A farm of his own! It's nothing like it is today! We poison the food we feed our animals and what we eat with chemicals Monsanto! Oh I miss the days when I was younger and working in the garden, feeding animals, putting up hey, lol and 4H! Nothing more wholesome than living on a farm. I remember watching the neighbor's in the field and the worry of the weather and such! They had a lot of acreage. This brought back good memories! I remember writing a poem for literature class about the fields the seed, the seeds of life and the future of the way we treat mother earth! To bad they didn't get what it was about. Maybe one day we'll learn better to take care of what we have, even people! ❤
@JeffLacina
@JeffLacina 4 года назад
A wonderful journey back to a simpler time for America and especially the American farmer. I DARE someone to remake this film today.
@bensboats-b9t
@bensboats-b9t 8 лет назад
This film had me rethinking my life!! I see my childhood in it so much!
@bondoly66
@bondoly66 8 лет назад
Mr. Blazey was a wise man.
@kennethhook
@kennethhook 8 лет назад
I agree!
@jacobeksor6088
@jacobeksor6088 6 лет назад
He has been farm a long time he has experience.
@buddyboy1953
@buddyboy1953 8 лет назад
What we once were. Great,great video !!!!
@kennethhook
@kennethhook Год назад
In 1958 or thereabouts when Mr. Blazey was ready to retire, 400 acres were sold to the Finger Lakes Race Track. Two years later another 400 acres were sold to Farmbrook for a housing development. A small number of acres were sold for the construction of the Trooper's Barracks. The only remaining structure of the Blazey farm is the cinder block building which is owned by MC Automotive. The cinder block barn (shown in the welding scene) was built in 1946 after the original barn burned down in December of 1945.
@SchnelleKat
@SchnelleKat Год назад
Jee that's sad. I was hoping it'd still be around. Any idea of the two Younger boys are still alive?
@charleslindley1596
@charleslindley1596 Год назад
That's too bad.I was in hopes the son would carry it on.
@Ray-Smith23
@Ray-Smith23 8 месяцев назад
What happened to the Blazey family after this was made
@kennethhook
@kennethhook 8 месяцев назад
I'm not totally sure although I do know they continued farming for many years. The parents (Everett and Elizabeth) are now deceased and all the children have passed with the exception of Everett Jr. who is still living in the area.@@Ray-Smith23
@fasx56
@fasx56 8 лет назад
Thanks for the wonderful nostalgic film, a time in our history when most people had to work hard to make a living to provide food for America's growing population.
@wastelandman198
@wastelandman198 2 года назад
Now the people are evil and are destroying the land. Funny how things change..
@kbunky69
@kbunky69 2 года назад
What a cutie that city boy is .. i love these films from the 1950s and 40s about farming
@godisgreatjesusislord2278
@godisgreatjesusislord2278 2 года назад
Man that would be a dream to live on that farm, I don't see how these rich people by little penthouse in the city or mansions, something like this is worth much more for your soul and happiness!
@crawwwfishh3284
@crawwwfishh3284 Год назад
GOD is great life is good but people are crazy. 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
@Antiquetractorsetc
@Antiquetractorsetc 5 лет назад
Beautiful Ford 8n. That’s what I learned to drive a tractor on with a Mott mower. The 53-54 F100 and the Ford Golden Jubilee tractor too. I like the 1952 Ford car
@rzellmer219
@rzellmer219 Год назад
my two older cousins lived in Kansas City and they would come down to our farm during the summer when they were in High School to work on the farm.. Good times.
@eightosaurusspelunk1598
@eightosaurusspelunk1598 7 лет назад
A family farm of 800 acres in 1953! That would've been a MASSIVE undertaking for multiple crops, that size of equipment, and only the family.
@leroy4065
@leroy4065 4 года назад
Eightosaurus Spelunk at 10:05 hes working on a 5 bottom plow so that means he has much bigger equipment then those small fords.
@eightosaurusspelunk1598
@eightosaurusspelunk1598 4 года назад
@@leroy4065 If that plow was his, then you're surely right
@frugalaudio
@frugalaudio 4 года назад
I'm not certain, but it seems to me that 800 acres would have been an unusually large farm for upstate NY even in the '50s. Growing up in the '70s & '80s, and having traveled the whole state often since then, most farms I've visited seemed to fall in the 100-400 acre range. Of course, I'm just another city boy, what do I know?
@TheVidSquids
@TheVidSquids 3 года назад
@@frugalaudio the real farm was 600 hundred acres. You’ll have to look it up!
@scottydog62
@scottydog62 2 года назад
@@frugalaudio I thought the same, that was a big farm
@davepayne9162
@davepayne9162 3 года назад
the good old years of farming,17 i was when i started working on a farm and loved it.it was a big farm back then.
@herbhouston5378
@herbhouston5378 2 года назад
To say it the an old farmer would have when I was a kid (I'm 78), "That's the way I was growed up." Ain't nothing like a farm. I'd go back to those days in a heart beat, if only I could.
@terrygood1204
@terrygood1204 8 лет назад
great brings back memories
@dnsmithnc
@dnsmithnc 4 года назад
I had a Ford 8n and a Ford 4000, old style. Great tractors, both of them. Wish Ford still made tractors and still made them in the U.S.
@shaun5944
@shaun5944 5 лет назад
When life was slower and people more grateful
@pamstine7669
@pamstine7669 5 лет назад
Really enjoyed the film. I live in Canandaigua NY. I drive by the former land every day. Always wondered about that barn. Thank you.
@Antiquetractorsetc
@Antiquetractorsetc 5 лет назад
pam Stine it’s so sad that the whole farm is gone. My dream since I was a kid was to be a farmer. I’ve had the American dream that was the same as people 60 years ago.
@JeffLacina
@JeffLacina 4 года назад
Pam, I've found the race track on Google maps, but I can't find the barn. Can you give me some idea as to where it is at with relationship to current hwy 332 and some of the current landmarks? Thanks in advance.
@muddysprings9746
@muddysprings9746 8 лет назад
Love this video
@MrCMVikram
@MrCMVikram 6 лет назад
I love farms too. I was born on a farm.
@jtoddjb
@jtoddjb 7 лет назад
this was a wonderful America. I don't know if I should consider myself lucky to have grown up in a time and area where most high school boys had part time/summer jobs farming or logging, or if I'm unlucky because I was there to see it all disappear. If you were born in the 90s or later maybe things seem ok?
@Antiquetractorsetc
@Antiquetractorsetc 5 лет назад
ToddtheWadd you were lucky. I would’ve loved growing up in the 50s and work on a farm and eventually own one. It was the American Dream back then and that’s my dream too but I’m about 60 years too late as I am only 25 years old.
@Cotronixco
@Cotronixco 4 года назад
@@Antiquetractorsetc It's not too late!
@NumberNineVideo
@NumberNineVideo 5 лет назад
I didn't hear the mention of this in the film, but Everett Blazey was President of the Ontario County Fair in 1953 when this film was made.
@5thcorps
@5thcorps 3 года назад
EXCELLENT POST!
@crawwwfishh3284
@crawwwfishh3284 Год назад
Oh oh grandpa tell me a bought the good ole days.
@royj8549
@royj8549 7 лет назад
Back when kids took on challenges early and became useful members of society. Now a days, 16 yr olds know nothing other than how to install apps on their smart phones...
@Sennmut
@Sennmut 7 лет назад
And wonder which bathroom they can use.
@f-j-Services
@f-j-Services 7 лет назад
lol yup.
@Autumn_Forest_
@Autumn_Forest_ 5 лет назад
Sennmut Yep, and which of the 72 genders to choose on Facebook.
@eboracum2012
@eboracum2012 3 года назад
Come on, now. That's not quite true, not of all 16-year olds. I have encountered a lot of young adults and even known a few that fit that description. I also work with adults who never let that phone leave their hand. No one asked or cares but I think these kids/sad adults haven't found and/or been exposed to anything that has sparked a visceral need inside them to learn more. Other than a song, a video, and believing you've joined the mega popular world of influencers that will impress people you don't know and will never meet if you just buy them a beer on Patreon or buy their product, these human beings are missing out on a great deal about what makes them them. What makes them human. Why do they like music so much, or the beautiful colors and art in those videos. Wait a minute, when I sing, I sound just as good as her or him! Well, maybe you just found yourself a hobby or even a new career. Open your eyes to why the things that interest you, interest you! My soapbox crumbled sometime ago and the wood shard is stabbing my toe so I will take my leave.
@randymaylowski2485
@randymaylowski2485 Год назад
Yup nowadays city age teenagers are girlys cuz my brother had a 16 year old girlfriend once same age as we were that time, when he was in school long story short he asked her if she wanted to help rake hay, or help carry and stock hay, naturally she thought "i can do that" blah blah blah, than next thing after of each of it of waking or even carrying and stocking hay, she whine and complained about it.
@Lar308
@Lar308 7 лет назад
From what my dad told me being a farm hand back then (in Ireland) was not so much fun. Sometimes you were lucky if you actually got paid and I never heard him say that the employer left him eat with the rest of his family around the same table.
@jtoddjb
@jtoddjb 7 лет назад
At least 3 families I worked for in the 80s up until the mid 90s here in the US always took good care of me. The women always sent my lunch to the barn and fresh lemonade. I ate dinner with them, always got a new hat, coat and gloves in winter, and a Christmas gift. I even had keys to the house in case I needed something when nobody was around. It wasn't that long ago and it seemed such a different world. One place I worked at as a teen bought me new tires for my first truck to make sure I got safely to work each day. The farms are gone now and the fields all have houses in them belonging to people who don't even wave when you drive by.
@KCOCAEP67
@KCOCAEP67 5 лет назад
Great film Ken, Brings back good memories while I was growing up in Rural Ontario
@sb.c
@sb.c 4 года назад
why you repping that flag?
@ArmpitStudios
@ArmpitStudios 2 года назад
@@sb.c Who cares? It’s just a flag. Also, your grammar sucks.
@sb.c
@sb.c 2 года назад
@@ArmpitStudios it’s a youtube comment, idc about grammar. north beat south, easy clap, stop flying the flag 🤷‍♂️
@ArmpitStudios
@ArmpitStudios 2 года назад
@@sb.c Yes, it’s a RU-vid comment. That’s even more reason to care about your grammar and typing skills, otherwise you just look like an imbecile.
@sb.c
@sb.c 2 года назад
@@ArmpitStudios 🤷‍♂️ confederates lost, easiest dub of the 19th century
@ianBeer123
@ianBeer123 8 лет назад
Loved that. Thank you so much for sharing it. :)
@clarencetrice4442
@clarencetrice4442 5 месяцев назад
I 😊😊 do remember going 2 the fair when I was a kid 😊🎉 it was alit different back then from what it is now I 😮😮 didn't get 2 go 2 the fairs in the 1940s 1950s that was be 4 my time and back then they had the tractor 🚜 😊 dealers at the local fairs back U could see the new tractors and equipment they had unless U could go 2 town and the tractor 🚜 😊 dealership was on main Street in town 😊😊 back then alot of people knew U and U could get what U wanted brand new 😊🎉OMG 3 22 2O24
@leifsverregimrehaland6639
@leifsverregimrehaland6639 Год назад
that part whit 4H is funny since we in Norway still have lots of 4H clubs still alive and even I was once a member of one club when I was small and moved to a farm
@randymaylowski2485
@randymaylowski2485 Год назад
Wunderful video we live on a small scale farm, I understand what this video shown. Cuz we been noticing that farming is a gamble game, of planting crops in time, hoping they gotten a good amount of rain, holp they don't die due to drought, same thing with our hay fields, and hopefully we get hay cut, dried and baled and covered before the rain. But it's like my dad said once "if framing was easy, everybody would be doing it" but sides it's a 50,50 change of making good profit lots of people don't want to do it. So instead they whether to live in a city which is fine by me, they can eat food for only God knows how long it's been harvest/ made/ where it came from.
@PyChip
@PyChip 6 лет назад
Love this. Thanks for posting it
@benkammers465
@benkammers465 7 лет назад
awesome video! thanks for putting it on here makes me really appreciate the equipment we have now.
@randymaylowski2485
@randymaylowski2485 Год назад
I know, nowadays machinery is even bigger than they had, sometimes it makes me sad, but proud also of our legacy as a nation to make big machines. To get more crops planted/harvest before the rains.
@PercentageMedia
@PercentageMedia 6 лет назад
A wonderful, truly "American" promotional film. It's romanticized, sure, but compelling. The kind of life many of us have imagined. I looked into the film for more information. After watching the film I was hoping to find the Blazey family still on the farm, still carrying on the tradition. But sadly the Balzey farm is no more. Only a barn remains. The rest was sold off and redeveloped in the 1960s.
@PyChip
@PyChip 6 лет назад
See the notes: It was turned into a race track. Hmmm
@fasx56
@fasx56 5 лет назад
Chance Russell Appreciate the information you provided about the Balzey Farm. It would have been a nice way to end this story and a happy one if that farm would have still been there. The film was promotional but that is what gave one a warm feeling as you go through the summer on farm with this young man who was not afraid of hard work.
@GG-fs7vo
@GG-fs7vo 7 лет назад
thank you so much. especially all the information about what happened to the farm and family
@AsocalRedneck
@AsocalRedneck 6 лет назад
How sad to hear that mr blazey sold off the farm... especially since in the movie they mention he could never live without it. :/ farming is in my blood.
@NumberNineVideo
@NumberNineVideo 5 лет назад
The Blazey farm is better known today at Finger Lakes Race Track.
@patilresume
@patilresume 8 лет назад
excellant movie .. life is worst in india for farmers.. today .. 2016 ..till they are far behind the farmer in this movie
@ox6942
@ox6942 7 лет назад
I see no mention of any dairy herd! Imagine having to work at these crops all day and having to milk cows and do chores taking up around 3 hours both ends of the day at the same time! Welcome to the world of dairy farming - the hardest type of farming there is. Some of it I miss, most of it I don't. This film looks like a walk in the park compared to what I had to do in my younger years. Which means these folks are smarter than I was!
@jbbuzzable
@jbbuzzable 7 лет назад
I know what you mean about the dairy farming. At least the way it used to be. There was one year when things were tougher than usual and my dad had to get a factory job for the winter. I was 12 and had to milk 20 cows by myself before school. I could only fill the milk cans half way as that was all I could lift into the water tank. I could have made farming my career but my heart just wasn't into it. I still love farms, but it takes a special type of person to operate one.
@nflisrigged1395
@nflisrigged1395 4 года назад
This was fantastic!!!!!!
@eutimiochavez415
@eutimiochavez415 Год назад
That when people wanted to work ❤
@nonh8nsk8r
@nonh8nsk8r 3 года назад
I live right near there!
@jacobeksor6088
@jacobeksor6088 6 лет назад
This old film so interesting I’m Montagnards indigenous I grew up on farm I know what it look like.
@Ray-Smith23
@Ray-Smith23 8 месяцев назад
I would have loved to have gone to their farm repeatedly for the summer job
@cementer7665
@cementer7665 9 месяцев назад
The question that remains unanswered is, what tractor did Mr. Blazley (?) have that was big enough to pull the 5-bottom plow that he was welding on. At the time that this picture was made FORD had nothing bigger than 25, maybe 30 horsepower, and to think that he farmed "about 800 acres" is equally improbable. It was not until 1960-1961 that Ford manufactured a tractor (the 6000) that MIGHT have been capable of pulling a 5-bottom plow, so, something is missing, something that was NOT a Ford product.
@kennethhook
@kennethhook 9 месяцев назад
Good point. Far down in the description might be the awnser: "The Ford Motor Company was concerned that Mr. Blazey did not use Ford equipment (or implements manufactured by Ford) during the harvest. Some of the equipment was International Harvester- a competitor. Ford insisted the harvest scenes be re-filmed with Ford equipment. At this point the harvest was over at the Blazey farm and a new location needed to be found. Ford flew the film crew and Everett Blazey to Calgary, Alberta where grain was still standing and filmed the scene with Ford equipment. Roberta said ‘Dad was wearing a sweater in Alberta and it was way too hot in Canandaigua for wearing a sweater during the harvest’." Hope this helps. Ken Hook, grandson of Everett Blazey.
@clarencetrice4442
@clarencetrice4442 Год назад
yes people worked hard back then just like they do 2 day then money went alot futher and everything was alot cheaper than 2 day people back then enjoyed 😉 😊 there self alot and when the fair came 2 town people took a break and went 2 fair and enjoyed there self after WW2 was over people and America 🇺🇸 😀 went back 2 work then new cars, trucks ,tractors were being made again and everything didn't have go 4 the war effort any more and when the drive in movies came a bought U could stay in the car or truck outside and watch a movie I still remember the drive in movies when I was a kid growing up years ago now kids 2 day they don't know what a drive in movie is 2 day but I do yes I can still remember it wasn't that long ago 2 me OMG 11 25 2O22
@clarencetrice4442
@clarencetrice4442 Год назад
IVE seen this movie be 4 U leave the city and go 2 country that's where the real work begins on a farm IVE heard of a big farm 10,000 acres the corn 🌽 rows must been 10 miles long or more OMG 11 25 2O22
@all-cropharvester3388
@all-cropharvester3388 3 года назад
This movie was remade many years later..."Son in law" starring Pauly Shore...
@georgiabigfoot
@georgiabigfoot Год назад
Of note there is a John Blazey tractor dealer 12 miles from Farmington that their website says has been in business since 1935. Also I found that tombstone market of Joseph Wood, died March 22, 1867 as buried in Hathaway Cemetery, in Farmington, NY. It shows up on google maps now surrounded by development. I’ve yet to locate the original Blazey farmhouse. I’m willing to bet Mr Blazey bought his Ford tractors from that Palmyra dealership.
@kennethhook
@kennethhook Год назад
Thank you for the comments - all good information. I believe you are correct in saying that Everett Blazey purchased his equipment from the Blazey dealer in Farmington. Regards, Ken
@georgiabigfoot
@georgiabigfoot Год назад
Your welcome Ken. The John Blazey tractor dealership has been in business since 1935. After looking at obituaries, John Blazey is Everett Blazey’s brother. Currently that dealership is in Palmyra. Also of note I came across this lecture from Pat Bolger, who is Everett’s nephew. Eddie Blazey who is in the film also talks. The audio sounds muddy on my tv, but on my iPhone it’s much clearer. Enjoy. This gives additional info about the making of American Farmer. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-pQ_diU6d83o.html
@kennethhook
@kennethhook Год назад
@@georgiabigfoot Wow! This is great info and news to me. I know Eddie and Den very well but was unaware of their speeches. I will share this with family. Many thanks!
@georgiabigfoot
@georgiabigfoot Год назад
Your welcome. I love how this film touches the hearts of all who see it. My grandfather was a peach farmer in Texas, born the same year as Everett, my Uncle is the same age as Eddie. Everyone I watch this film. I see the Blazey family as though they were my family, and I have a hunch many others feel the same way. Now, if I can just get my 1949 8N to get a good spark.
@georgiabigfoot
@georgiabigfoot Год назад
Your welcome. I love how this film touches the hearts of all who see it. My grandfather was a peach farmer in Texas, born the same year as Everett, my Uncle is the same age as Eddie. Everyone I watch this film. I see the Blazey family as though they were my family, and I have a hunch many others feel the same way. Now, if I can just get my 1949 8N to get a good spark.
@haweater1555
@haweater1555 6 лет назад
Quite a prosperous farm family to own a TV in 1953.... even one with a tiny B&W screen. With the very small grain bin on the combine, it wasn't worth the effort to tarp it from the rain storm and then get soaked.
@frugalaudio
@frugalaudio 4 года назад
Wonder of the production company brought the TV in for the film?
@Knotyourbusiness
@Knotyourbusiness 3 года назад
Nice
@starywilk9942
@starywilk9942 3 года назад
Ameryka jakiej już nie ma. O takiej Ameryce śnił mój ojciec osadzony w więzieniu jako polityczny w czasach Stalinowskich.
@clarencetrice4442
@clarencetrice4442 5 месяцев назад
when U 😊😊 grow up in the country U get use 2 other sounds that U grew up w the birds singing 🎶 😊 crickets 🦗 😊 frogs 😊🎉 Bob whites 😊🎉 whip wills hoot 🦉 owls 😊 bobcats 😊 coyotes 😊 now or then it isn't like it was when I was growing up and all of the old people then didn't mind fixing U something 2 eat or drink back then they didn't like 2 see anybody hungry or wanted something 2 drink now 2 day none of those old people are left no more 😮😮 OMG 3 22 2O24
@johnnypoppyhead4116
@johnnypoppyhead4116 7 лет назад
i made 2 cents a pound picking string beans in CA in 1967// great work for us high school kids...now what illegaals??boo
@bstevermer9293
@bstevermer9293 4 года назад
Madden Master My dad worked at a truck farm in those times. Seems every story he tells some how relates.
@mindymills2182
@mindymills2182 4 года назад
Madden Master well, good luck getting young Americans to do manual labor.
@mrbuck5059
@mrbuck5059 Год назад
No crap. The gen z and millennials are a bunch of puzzies.
@mindymills2182
@mindymills2182 4 года назад
With a farm that size, they would have been milking in the dark at both ends of a day. Or maybe mrs blazed and her daughter do the milking mostly. I'm a retired dairy farmer.
@ericlakota6512
@ericlakota6512 4 года назад
He was running 8n or 9n and on dealers lot they had ne jubilees or 100 serious haha thats the next up to be on his farm id love to see his farm 40 years latter all the new tecnolagy
@crawwwfishh3284
@crawwwfishh3284 Год назад
A time when you were glad to have what you had and didn’t waste. No sleeping pills needed.
@triple6758
@triple6758 Год назад
My God ...what has happened to us?
@georgiabigfoot
@georgiabigfoot Год назад
Thanks for posting, can anyone point me in the direction of building plans for that spiffy parts bin rack at 10:25 ?
@ericlakota6512
@ericlakota6512 4 года назад
Amazing pilling combin do all the work with a little 8n now days people keep them to pull the wagon every farmer with 400 acres has 200hp tractor and 6 70 hp to do all other work powre combines and bailor. Power windrows. And hard day is when ac quits
@user-xh9js9qu2m
@user-xh9js9qu2m 5 месяцев назад
Great video, are you still alive to comment?
@kennethhook
@kennethhook 5 месяцев назад
Everett and Elizabeth Blazey passed away many years ago. Only one son remains today. I am one of Everett's grandsons.
@francomtz7115
@francomtz7115 Год назад
The evil he described is now our cell phones and computers
@PyChip
@PyChip 6 лет назад
I think he was hittin it with Roberta in the hay loft, but that's for another movie
@ArmpitStudios
@ArmpitStudios 2 года назад
Alberta.
@PyChip
@PyChip 2 года назад
@@ArmpitStudios Her too?
@mberge1
@mberge1 7 лет назад
before gmo and round up?
@kennethhook
@kennethhook 7 лет назад
You bet and long before the term 'organic' was frequently used...
@fulvioruffino259
@fulvioruffino259 Год назад
💪💪💪👍👋
@highwayexplorer
@highwayexplorer 2 года назад
Is that the Hawthorne House in Farmington, NY?
@kennethhook
@kennethhook 2 года назад
If you are referring to the Blazey home in the movie it no longer remains. Apparently the cinder block barn is still standing on Route 332. Cheers.
@willcamp6319
@willcamp6319 Год назад
Is that farm still in operation
@kennethhook
@kennethhook Год назад
Sadly, the farm is not in operation by any family members. Some of the fields may still be used for agriculture.
@warrenanderson4550
@warrenanderson4550 5 лет назад
Who was the young guy who narrated this?
@robertclark4929
@robertclark4929 4 года назад
What's on that property now?
@frugalaudio
@frugalaudio 4 года назад
Finger Lakes Race Track.
@davepayne9162
@davepayne9162 3 года назад
wonder what that boy is doing now, must be old .
@davepayne9162
@davepayne9162 3 года назад
about 80
@chrisswin8976
@chrisswin8976 3 года назад
That's not true he shouldn't say that.
@darlakeller4127
@darlakeller4127 4 года назад
B
@artman40
@artman40 7 лет назад
I don't know. The film quality is too grainy and the acting is corny.
@kennethhook
@kennethhook 7 лет назад
Re: the film quality, it was originally shot on 16mm film in the early 1959s so the quality would have been quite good, This digital copy was made from a VHS tape which was downgraded from film and lost a lot of pixels. Unfortunately, it was the only copy I had to digitize. Re: acting, the only 'actor' was the child actor Tony. All the rest are real life people do their normal day-to-day duties.
@ArmpitStudios
@ArmpitStudios 7 лет назад
artman40 OMG.
@jbbuzzable
@jbbuzzable 7 лет назад
It didn't take long for me to see that these were real farmers. You can tell by the way they do things. Like checking the wheat heads to see if it is ready for harvest.
@Antiquetractorsetc
@Antiquetractorsetc 5 лет назад
It isn’t acting. This was a real farm in the 50s and so are the people who are the owners
@frugalaudio
@frugalaudio 4 года назад
There is now a better transfer of this film at: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-mn8ySyvv6Ko.html
@jeffmelchior8573
@jeffmelchior8573 8 лет назад
Oddly moving for a public service/promotional film. The equipment and stakes have gotten bigger, but the basic message resonates today.
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