Тёмный

Portrait of the South Bronx 1965 | Full Film HD 

Buyout Footage Historic Film Archive
Подписаться 49 тыс.
Просмотров 79 тыс.
50% 1

Stock Footage link
www.buyoutfootage.com/pages/ti...
Ordinary people and life in the South Bronx with its crowded living conditions and poverty.
00:01:30 Bird’s eye view of the 3rd Ave El train cutting through the urban density of the Bronx borough of New York.
00:03:13 3rd Ave El train rumbling down the tracks in the South Bronx borough of New York. Passenger POV from the moving train as commercial buildings, neighborhoods and tenements flash by. Traveling motion footage is inter-cut with imagery of families living in crime ridden low income housing projects. Urban decay.
00:04:30 El Train pulls into the station and screeches to a halt as commuters wait on the platform. Eye-level view of bustling street with cars, shops, boards and posters. Uptown information signs. Diverse people of varied ages and ethnicities mingle. Focus upon a black man smoking, elderly, smartly-dressed white woman, black woman carrying a baby, white cop on a street corner. Sense of tension prevails. Newspaper traders busy, selling copies of black muslim publication “Muhammad Speaks”. Headline reads “America is Falling”
00:05:50 A multi-cultural street retail scene. Bustling spectator POV of a line of shoe shine cleaners busy at work as customers wait. Cut to storefronts. References to pricing, discounts and sales. Cinema with Spanish film titles, cabaret, cafes and restaurants, records, dance club, dress and clothes shops, Puerto Rican hats, religious effigies of Jesus Christ and a toy shop with two young black boys perusing items.
00:06:46 Busy, run-down street-market selling fruit and vegetables with an elevated bridge view in the distance. Traders ply their wares with a backdrop of store fronts. Customers of varied ages, creed and color, converse with traders, as items are weighed, priced and placed into paper bags.
00:08:26 Rooftop view of poverty and urban decay with houses, apartments, and litter-strewn streets in the South Bronx borough of New York. Zoom to clothes lines strung up high above the streets between tenements. Families with children sit half clothed on external, metal, fire escape stairs that wind downwards in order to escape the heat. Listless, shirtless man looks out of a window. Pan down to a view of rubble as a boy picks through litter and another plays in drain water.
00:09:17 South Bronx, New York City, 1960s. Shots include multi-ethnic groups of children playing in the street with a fire hydrant in the foreground. Black family members gather outside on the steps of an apartment building.
00:10:13 Black and white footage captures everyday life in a neighborhood in South Bronx in the sixties, with black families socializing in front of their homes, children playing in the street next to abandoned furniture, boys street fighting, and couples in fine clothes walking down the street.
00:11:54 Long rolling shot made from a car moving along a wide street located in the South Bronx during the Civil Rights era. The urban ghetto lifestyle of the low-income neighborhoods is faithfully presented through a series of picturesque snippets.
00:12:32 Young people in the South Bronx neighborhood are gathering in the street to play an impromptu stickball game with improvised equipment. This footage of an authentic street game made in the 1960s is full of emotion, as the game serves to bring the local community together.
00:14:19 In this black and white clip, we can see South Bronx men hanging out on street corners. A man is solemnly standing in front of a building and smoking a cigarette. Coming of age teenage boys are throwing a frisbee and playing catch. At risk youth. The clip ends with a police car patrolling the streets of the ghetto.
00:15:20 Urban youth hanging out in the streets of South Bronx, some of them are wearing gang jackets with the insignia LATIN CROWNS, typical for the 1960s in New York. One young man inhales drugs through a brown paper bag.
00:21:30 Train chugging and whistling, swiftly down the tracks. POV passenger looking out through a misty and grubby window, exposing the poor locale. Close up of a large Christian Cross overlooking the hazy street below. Front of the Bethany Christian Mission with well dressed black children playing in the foreground.
00:22:14 Sunday afternoon baseball game in St. Mary's Park. Girls are cheer for their team while young kids cool off in water gushing from a fire hydrant. The field's bleachers are filled with family and friends, including a couple of young latino men sporting hip sunglasses.
00:25:26 Black youths idly hanging out in the street depicting youth at risk and potential gang recruitment. Chalked text on the street reads VIVA PUERTO RICO. Cut to a family outdoors on a fire escape balcony in a high rise tenement apartment building. Overhead view of a young couple walking together down the broken sidewalks of the borough.

Кино

Опубликовано:

 

18 окт 2022

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 200   
@niccoarcadia4179
@niccoarcadia4179 8 месяцев назад
My Parents and grandparents owned a building on 147th St. near St Mary's park between 1940 to 1954. They sold out to a private company that bought many (over 50) buildings in the area. Overall the building was in great condition and tenants there loved it. At that time, after the war 1945 the families who lived there were moving away to purchase their own homes in New York State, Queens and Nassau County. Built in 1938 the building had 16 units and a rooftop structure to hold roofing tools and building supplies. The new owners somehow turned it from 16 rental units to 40 smaller units and rented the smaller apartments out cheap with no security deposit. Even the basement was broken down into 4 apartments. The rooftop building even housed a family. Later the building burned down in 1975. I have pics of the building and area in the 1940s. It was a sharp looking all red brick building with white stone highlights around the windows. Back then the neighborhood was mostly lower middle class Irish & Italian and some Jewish. As a child I used to hear my parents reminisce about the Bronx all the time.
@marcchevalier3750
@marcchevalier3750 8 месяцев назад
That's why the WHITE FLIGHT occured. NOBODY WANTS TO BE AROUND WITH THE AFRICANS/HISPANICS/PUERTO RICANS! Once a GREAT WHITE NEIGHBORHOOD, THAT ALL TURNED AROUND WHEN AFRICANS/PUERTO RICANS vandalized, didn't keep it in great condition and turned it all INTO HAITI, AFRICA / MEXICO!!! AM so glad those art deco buildings were burnt to the ground. they dont deserve anything luxurious
@drpoundsign
@drpoundsign 8 месяцев назад
"1938??" WOW. That sounds like a Spring Chicken in that area. Again-I'm a Midwesterner. MY impression, However, was that the area had a lot of Tenements, built from 1900-1910...with a few Brownstones, and some Victorian houses scattered about. The 3rd Avenue Elevated Line spurred the growth of the Southern tip of the Bronx, with the IRT subway causing it to Explode in population. It was Really Prewar Immigration, of course, which contributed to the growth of All Five Boroughs, as well as Northeastern New Jersey and Connecticut. The Great African American Migrations from the Souh, also swelled the populations of the Northern cities. I lived for one year in a mid-rise building in Bay Ridge Brooklyn-built in 1931. It had one old-fashioned, rickety elevator. That area never got bad, because its' multiethnic, and anchored by Good, old houses. There were nice restaurants within walking distance. There was even an A&P(!) This was in 1989-1990, when a LOT of the rest of the City-and Nation-were Out of Control. I worked at then-Lutheran Medical Center in Sunset Park-the Hood immediately to the North. They had Crack, Crime, Hookers and AIDS. I wish I'd bought an Old house there. They are going for over One Million dollars now. There are still a lot of tenement apartments there, though. My Old Building got Cooped awhile back. It DID have a roach problem (Duh) but they were mainly breeding in the %$#!! Garbage chutes. Those used to lead to incinerators...problem Solved. But, then, Air Pollution worse.
@user-uo7fw5bo1o
@user-uo7fw5bo1o Месяц назад
I have a hunch people moved out of your old Bronx neighborhood because Robert Moses drove a freeway through it, the Cross Bronx Expressway. That highway destroyed the whole South Bronx. He will live in infamy!
@norakat
@norakat Год назад
Wow.. it’s great to be able to see the Bronx during this time. It was a little while before I was born. I know some people may view this as a sad state (especially with the video being Black and White, and the narrator is trying to paint a particular picture) but for many living there, it was great. Some areas were better, and upbeat. Many of the people were warm and humorous, and there was a sense of community/every one knew each other and were very friendly and it was a vibrant culture with music on the streets. If you were born there, nothing about it bothered you and you didn’t view it as run down. There was nothing else to compare it to. If you were a kid, all the kids were playing on the street and it was a blast, you go out and play every day w all sorts of street games. It’s actually exciting and every day is a new adventure. There’s always something going on. Maybe it was better as a kid because you didn’t understand any of the bad stuff and the struggles some of the adults may have been going through.
@ariesmichaelsayan4013
@ariesmichaelsayan4013 Год назад
We knew what was happening in the 70s. Those kids that experienced the fires firsthand knew something wrong. We saw our buildings/neighborhoods turn into ghost towns quickly. The kids in the 80s were the ones who saw the ashes/burnt out buildings. They may have experienced the crimes and other things, but the fires were the worst. Some families slept with their shoes on. Ready to jet!! That was something we got so use to. You can play tag or basketball and it was normal to just play nearby a burning building. Sometimes there were shootouts and nobody would run. They’ll just watch the 2 individuals run after each other. 70s were very different
@b2d327
@b2d327 7 месяцев назад
I’m torn between loving and hating this documentary: loving it for taking me back in time to my childhood in the South Bronx and hating it for showing me the days long gone that I can never relive. As rough as things were back then, it was a simpler time with a feeling of community among family and neighbors that doesn’t exist here anymore. Time can be such a cruel history teacher.
@burbank
@burbank 4 месяца назад
It sure is. A friend of mine sent a listing for an apartment in the Mott Haven section of the South Bronx that was going for like $4,000 a month in one of those new gentrified luxury buildings that are going up now. Sad
@curtis2299
@curtis2299 10 месяцев назад
This was Spanish Bronx (PR). The first true Latino Hub in Bronx NY. Thing is, the people were happy. The children had a ball. Played all day in the summer. Never in the house. I later learned that after the construction of the Cross Bronx Expressway, the Bronx was split in two. North and south. Very few blacks moved north. Even fewer Puerto Ricans. That came a little later. The people in this video were surrounded by “Black Bronx” on all sides. Then they soon spread. We all were a more well balanced people then because of socialization. Human interaction. Prospect Ave was the main drag. We flew kites , played street games, had ridiculous amounts of fun. Believe it or not, crime wasn’t that bad in those particular days. Not many people got badly hurt. A 6 year old kid could wander around and be safe. Other adults would protect you. 5 years after this film things got really bad. Drugs man. It destroyed everything’
@drpoundsign
@drpoundsign 10 месяцев назад
Drugs are Bad... The War on Drugs, however...has been WORSE. Most Burglaries, Muggings, Robberies, Car Theft, and Stripping of vehicles is done to get drug money. In the UK-Adult Heroin addicts have been able-for Decades-to get their drug for free. IDK if that's True for Cocaine. The addicts themselves are then Much less at risk or HIV(AIDS) and Hepatitis.
@niccoarcadia4179
@niccoarcadia4179 8 месяцев назад
Drugs has been destroying America for the past 65 years.
@benallmark9671
@benallmark9671 8 месяцев назад
Ya and it was all on purpose unfortunately. It should anger all.
@niccoarcadia4179
@niccoarcadia4179 8 месяцев назад
@@benallmark9671 It was on purpose, yes! The drug money that makes for kickbacks to politicians & law enforcement is what rus a city. People on drug payrolls ignore the problem and pretend they care. But we the people haven't seen nothin yet. Just wait, 'The Cartels have been here setting up business and have started to do the damage Cartels do. In all the large cities it will be like El Salvador, only bigger.
@benallmark9671
@benallmark9671 8 месяцев назад
@@niccoarcadia4179 glad you’re awake at least. The majority are still sleeping having fun fun fun.
@carlbowles1808
@carlbowles1808 10 месяцев назад
Life in Fort apache South Bronx during the 1960's was good because we were poor but didn't know it. The salsa music was tremendous. My happiest memories are of this supposedly horrible place. I'm black, the American poor elsewhere were considered middle class. Life in the Barrio was better than people think, better or worse is relative. Compared to today we had it good. ❤👏🌞🏖🙏
@user-fn2vp1sw1h
@user-fn2vp1sw1h 6 месяцев назад
salsa music was tremendously loud and very disruptive all day long !!! them percussion instruments - congas - bongos - *** non stop noise !!!
@DominicanManowarFan
@DominicanManowarFan 6 месяцев назад
Did the black people hang out with the Puerto Ricans and danced salsa?
@user-fn2vp1sw1h
@user-fn2vp1sw1h 6 месяцев назад
@@DominicanManowarFan : DO YOU THINK THET DIDN'T HAVE TURF WARS ??
@jimmyrodasmolestina979
@jimmyrodasmolestina979 2 месяца назад
Not really ​@@DominicanManowarFan
@DominicanManowarFan
@DominicanManowarFan 2 месяца назад
@@user-fn2vp1sw1h trying to figure out this racial dynamic. There seems to be conflicting stories with regards to Black and Puerto Ricans living together and their relationship with each other. Some people swear they got along and influenced each other culturally and then others say different.
@xavilopez4716
@xavilopez4716 6 месяцев назад
Came here to the south Bronx in 1980 it was like WW2 aftermath buildings abandoned burned rubble all over garbage it was crazy . But proud to be from the south Bronx and made it lots of good memories from my childhood and saw it change little by little . Now it’s changed a lot very crowded buildings all over every empty space a building is constructed over all this city is not that fun to live day to day it’s very hectic crowded in the Bronx . Even though these times was bad also in it’s way I’ll take the old Bronx than the way all this craziness is going on these days . Legget ave & Fox st I miss you 😢 is where I grew up from 5 years old . Cheers 🍻 my peoples stay safe 🙏❤
@Russell-rg2ej
@Russell-rg2ej 8 месяцев назад
I was a 1 year old at the time. Born in the Bronx, and still live here.
@pacmantravel2158
@pacmantravel2158 Год назад
That's my friend flying a kite @ 4:07. Today he's 83!
@roberthendrix6521
@roberthendrix6521 Год назад
Foreal
@DJRobbieTroncoRemix
@DJRobbieTroncoRemix 11 месяцев назад
cool , is he still Flying a Kite ??
@pacmantravel2158
@pacmantravel2158 11 месяцев назад
@@DJRobbieTroncoRemix Nope, he's just relaxing home now. He moved out of New York 30 years ago
@user-uo7fw5bo1o
@user-uo7fw5bo1o Месяц назад
So he was 24 then, fit as a fiddle and also working on his tan.
13 дней назад
Born in 63. Grew up on 178th in the tremont section. By the 70s half the buildings were burned out. They wouldn’t tear them down. You just smelled smoke. I remember going for a ride the last day of the 3rd Ave El.
@margaritaortiz5810
@margaritaortiz5810 Год назад
I had lived in Bx since I was 8, born in PR. Of all my years here nothing has ever happen to me or my relatives. Now is when I'm afraid of going out. It's different in so many ways.I had live all of the Bx changes.
@johnstinson4026
@johnstinson4026 8 месяцев назад
Wow margarita I'm Sam Lopez de ohio . It's ok here a lot of the same white y blacks. Alot of hatrd no culture. Is it dangerous there now in bronx
@luislaplume8261
@luislaplume8261 Год назад
The mark at 4 minutes and 30 seconds we see the Hub where people transferred from the Central Bronx elevated to the subway at 3rd Avenue and 149th street.
@Patrick-il4es
@Patrick-il4es 8 месяцев назад
The South Bronx was destroyed between 1970 and 1980. During this time, over 40% of the South Bronx was burned or abandoned. Seven census tracts lost more than 97% of their buildings, and 44 tracts lost more than half. It didn't have to be destroyed. Blame that on the folks who moved. From the film, it shows that the South Bronx was a vibrant community before 1970.
@urbantraxx3756
@urbantraxx3756 8 месяцев назад
The first fires started around 1966/67 but in 1970 is whent it just spiked up all over
@Fritha71
@Fritha71 15 дней назад
Blame that on the folks who moved?? Anybody who could get the hell out of there got out of there! A sensible thing to do, quite frankly. Also, the families that moved in the 50s and early 60s, well, people with decent jobs had the chance to own a house with greenery around in a nice, fresh suburb, not going to blame them for wanting a better environment for their kids. And no, a filthy street in the South Bronx is NOT a suitable place for kids to grow up... no matter how much people praise the "community feeling". It was just overcrowded! BLAME THE LANDLORDS AND THE BAD ELEMENT.
@stephenheath8465
@stephenheath8465 10 месяцев назад
This was the end of the White Flight Era and the Ricans and Blacks took over.I am old enough to remember old Italians and Jews still living in the area
@drpoundsign
@drpoundsign 10 месяцев назад
On Charlotte street however (The Late Colin Powell's Old Hood) the Jewish people in the tenements were killing RATS with their shoes, I think, as early as 1960. And, Crime was already beginning to creep in. You see: The "New Law" tenements, while incrementally better than the Old Law "Dumbbell" type, were built from around 1900-1910, in anticipation of the IRT line. So...they were not exactly Spring Chickens, Sixty years later. Both Freeways and Subway lines made it easy to commute from further out (Westchester County, NY, Connecticut, New Jersey and Nassau County, Long Island.) That, and VA home loans for WW2 Veterans, facilitated the move to the Suburbs. Also, there were some factories in the Bronx, but they began relocating in the Fifties, reducing job opportunities. COOP City was built in the Bronx, and middle-class people moved into that newer housing, leaving the Poor behind. Blacks from the Second Great Migration North, along with Puerto Ricans seeking a Better Life, then poured into the South Bronx. It's Ironic that the Brooklyn, Williamsburg, and Triboro Bridges made New Yorkers able to move out of Manhattan's Crowded Lower East Side to "Better" housing in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, and The Bronx. The Verrazano Narrows Suspension Bridge connected Brooklyn to Staten Island in the 1960s. The Latter has some Real Fancy housing, but also crime-ridden Projects. It was the Lexington Elevated Line (1880s) and A Train Subway (Early 1900s) which caused the Population of East and West Harlem, respectively, to Soar. East Harlem was Always Poor, but the West side, was, in the Beginning-pretty Upscale. Realtors overbuilt, however, and then everything Crashed. The SoBro Did have the 3rd Avenue Elevated Line, already in the Late Nineteenth Century. Doctor's Row grew up around it, and some of those Brownstones and Victorians still stand. The Line was demolished in 1973.
@poetcomic1
@poetcomic1 Год назад
WONDERFUL memory trip before drugs and gangs fully ravaged S. Bronx.
@GSquid92
@GSquid92 Год назад
Minorities
@roberthendrix6521
@roberthendrix6521 Год назад
Your government
@roberthendrix6521
@roberthendrix6521 Год назад
​@@GSquid92 your parents
@tonyrivers8688
@tonyrivers8688 Год назад
The majority of the Bronx should be depopulated. The black, Dominican and Puerto Rican mix is very toxic
@soniasg8639
@soniasg8639 Год назад
You're wrong. Needle Park was based on a true story about a couple that was addicted to heroin in New York, 1965. Drugs have always existed.
@Truth_Serum_1
@Truth_Serum_1 Год назад
10 years later it was all burned down by the landlords. It wasn't the people it was the landlords that burnt it down.
@John-kl6tf
@John-kl6tf 11 месяцев назад
And the mayor’s of NYC allowed it….favoring the landlords for ins money, get rid of us, rebuild and charge more.
@stephenheath8465
@stephenheath8465 10 месяцев назад
If you call those people out,you are bigot smdh
@drpoundsign
@drpoundsign 10 месяцев назад
Mostly the landlords, but also some of the tenants. But, ALSO, it is claimed that the antiquated electrical systems in those buildings (and, I'm Sure, more than one gas stove and space heater) caused a good number of fires. I wonder if things would have been different if they had been retrofitted with fire sprinklers (not cheap-I know.) I guess the arsonists would have had to turn off the valves first.
@Truth_Serum_1
@Truth_Serum_1 10 месяцев назад
It was all for nothing,, if they thought they would drive out the blacks and Puerto Ricans. It didn't. That neighborhood still has the same demographics . And it was rebuilt. Hahaha 🤣😂
@drpoundsign
@drpoundsign 10 месяцев назад
@@Truth_Serum_1But...I was under the impression that they now have Latinos from Multiple Nations, along with First-Generation Africans, with a smattering of Other ethnic groups. You Know-they may no longer have the Really Bad Tenements (can't have your Hood and Burn it, Too.) They DO, however, have a LOT of Public Housing, built decades ago. That's where you fin All the Dysfunction.
@charlesharper9694
@charlesharper9694 Год назад
1965,. I was born then but I was born and raised in Washington heights but later on it started to get real bad in the 70 80 90 it was a big war out there then compare now it's a whole lot better then my era I use to walk to the Bronx by Amsterdam Ave it use to be a bridge crossing to the Bronx it was University avenue
@sharonbre9347
@sharonbre9347 8 месяцев назад
I love this video. This is where I was born and raised.
@RandomFlavor
@RandomFlavor 9 месяцев назад
Wow, seeing this video gives me childhood memories of Abuela taking me to the "Vivero" near Simpson St. off of Westchester Avenue. So many chickens for sale, but I was pained when the chickens were taken to the back to be slaughtered for sale!
@johnstinson4026
@johnstinson4026 8 месяцев назад
Que Paso thats awesome to hear u say that. I'm Spanish rom Ohio . That's cool ths to u got the experience. Was Carlitos way real
@0159ralph
@0159ralph Год назад
I grew up by Fordham University but we had to move out in 74, because the crime was out of control. This is testament of how Johnsons Great Society failed.
@fa1509
@fa1509 Год назад
Can you tell me about that of his great society I want to know more as a black man
@0159ralph
@0159ralph Год назад
@@fa1509 Ugh NOTHING....
@fa1509
@fa1509 Год назад
@@0159ralph the only thing I know he said he will have those n words vote Democrat for the next 200 years
@DeniseLopez-gt9wg
@DeniseLopez-gt9wg Месяц назад
​@@fa1509Black's will vote dem forever
@JosephJenkins-dm9ox
@JosephJenkins-dm9ox 5 месяцев назад
Amazing. Subway footage passed right by the building I lived in back then
@grahamperry3773
@grahamperry3773 Год назад
Wow, look at how much prettier these neighborhoods were before the fires destroyed most of the buildings
@bxdale83
@bxdale83 3 дня назад
The South Bronx in 1965 was the calm before the storm. It's incredible how much it it declined between 1965-1970 but to be frank it wasn't just the Bronx; Harlem/East Harlem, Brooklyn and Queens all went through the same transformation as crime began to increase in that 5 year time frame.
@urbantraxx3756
@urbantraxx3756 9 месяцев назад
The sad part is by the end of 1966 the arson rage would begin
@MrMarkgeller
@MrMarkgeller 9 месяцев назад
Grew up in Hunts Point during the 50s. Great neighborhood with no crime. Attended PS48.
@luislaplume8261
@luislaplume8261 Год назад
I used to play stickball in those days. Why didn't we play 1 block away where we attended school, I can't know. We never thought of it.
@diabetes1.564
@diabetes1.564 7 месяцев назад
When I spoke to ole timers and look at footage or read material I am confused as to how things deteriorated from the 1950s and 1960s to 1970s. I don’t know why people moved in such droves. Why buildings weren’t maintained on the Grand Concourse for instance
@aproverbshome173
@aproverbshome173 5 месяцев назад
Thank you for sharing. The Cordero Te Zion Church My grandfather pastor there all the way into the early 90's wow.! I visit there when I was a kid.
@theoneforgaveme
@theoneforgaveme 8 месяцев назад
Without the bronx hiphop wouldn't be borne. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
@tommycasidy3031
@tommycasidy3031 8 месяцев назад
what a wonderful contribution to society 😂
@theoneforgaveme
@theoneforgaveme 6 месяцев назад
@@tommycasidy3031 cheers buddy 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
@user-dw4kn9oi1m
@user-dw4kn9oi1m 2 месяца назад
Classic 1965 film of slide into urban decay of South Bronx.
@Jackhandless
@Jackhandless 5 месяцев назад
Man. I am so lucky to have been born in the country in Indiana. Im so dang lucky
@markogarcia7578
@markogarcia7578 3 месяца назад
Yall cought that a graffiti taggedd on the wall 1965 Imperial Playboys Same yr as Cornbread 1965 in Phily
@johnmaldonado3932
@johnmaldonado3932 Месяц назад
I grew up in the the southbronx until I was 6y on 172st and hoe av.it got I guess bad after that 1966 but I'm proud of being from DA.BRONX
@simonyip5978
@simonyip5978 Год назад
20 years later many of the kids would be caught up in the crack epidemic of the mid 80's and 90's.
@peterguindo1576
@peterguindo1576 7 месяцев назад
Watching this documentary make me see how important studies are, these people did not have the opportunity to study and get a career. I hope some had it.
@fellazfilmz
@fellazfilmz 7 месяцев назад
The Pharmacy at 6:41 is still there lol
@markogarcia7578
@markogarcia7578 7 месяцев назад
I LOVE THIS VID So much history The Graff allready On walls The tag Ruben Cuban n in the Blk hoods as well And then a Street Gangs name too. Here the language Look at the Blocks And the rest is History SOUTH BRONX BUT OF COURSE NY IS ALOT BIGGER WITH MANY BARIOS.
@nereidaarroyo7387
@nereidaarroyo7387 Год назад
I use to live 729 prospect ave. Where is milagros, rivera from longwood ave and her sister carmen rivera. Miss the good old days.
@uy7munir
@uy7munir 8 месяцев назад
haven't seen carmen in AGES
@jashary15
@jashary15 8 месяцев назад
I came up during those troubled times, only I lived in East Harlem, where there was a large concentration of Puerto Ricans on my block, which was 115th Street, between Park and Lexington Avenues. Times were hard, but at least people then still had a sense of personal and ethnic pride. At least people went to church on Sundays, even the gang members, pimps and prostitutes went to church then. Times has sure changed a lot.
@marcchevalier3750
@marcchevalier3750 8 месяцев назад
going to church doesn't make you a good person. those were wolves in sheeps' clothing. stop trying to sugarcoat everything was good back then when you were/are immoral just like today
@peternagy-im4be
@peternagy-im4be 5 месяцев назад
They were trying to reserve a place in heaven ​@@marcchevalier3750
@madhatter1787
@madhatter1787 5 месяцев назад
Would anyone happen to know the Spanish song that plays at 12:32 I want to find it for my dad ...any help appreciated thank you
@drpoundsign
@drpoundsign 10 месяцев назад
A Prelude of the Horrors to Come.
@gboogie360
@gboogie360 7 месяцев назад
Love the BX
@ladislavjonas977
@ladislavjonas977 9 месяцев назад
How did they hang those clothes at 8:42?
@user-uo7fw5bo1o
@user-uo7fw5bo1o Месяц назад
Landlords would cooperate and have pulley lines installed - each a loop of thin clothesline with a pulley at either end. The person doing the laundry would clothespin the laundry on the lower line and pull on the upper line for the next item of wash.
@Katwoman4318
@Katwoman4318 2 месяца назад
People are people. Love one another. ♥️
@seanberry1969
@seanberry1969 5 месяцев назад
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@mgtowlevel5293
@mgtowlevel5293 3 месяца назад
I grew up with blank n bwown folks on the wrong side of NJ. As soon as I got away from all of them my life took owf. Take this and run with it.
@xavilopez4716
@xavilopez4716 3 месяца назад
Grew up in the south Bronx in the 1980s most buildings was burned down . But the people I grew up with was amazing good people Puerto Ricans and blacks good peoples it wasn’t as bad as it looked in some ways it though me how to survive get by with the little bit we had it was great. Now it’s getting messed up with Venezuelans el tren de arugua nd other migrants. El barrio was el barrio . Hunts point was hunts point it’s very different now I liked the old south Bronx not this stuff that’s now .
@garyeisenberg4251
@garyeisenberg4251 Год назад
My mom was charlotte street up there
@diabetes1.564
@diabetes1.564 7 месяцев назад
Actually doesn’t seem too bad back then.
@HMurphy
@HMurphy 10 месяцев назад
i lived off e 177st bx nyc in 65
@user-fn2vp1sw1h
@user-fn2vp1sw1h 9 месяцев назад
@thugpiece8038
@thugpiece8038 Год назад
I live here now 173rd & Bryant still horrible i hate sorry to say…. Back to Manhattan i go
@gerardorivera7828
@gerardorivera7828 Год назад
Yes the Bronx is tuff good luck the whole city is going too hell
@joedirt3449
@joedirt3449 Год назад
FR y'all!
@gerardorivera7828
@gerardorivera7828 Год назад
@@joedirt3449 your name said it all stay dirt
@joedirt3449
@joedirt3449 Год назад
😆😉
@ariesmichaelsayan4013
@ariesmichaelsayan4013 Год назад
If you think 173rd and Bryant is bad now… time travel back to 1970s when we lived on that block!! We watched the whole neighborhood burn down!!! My family had to move to Vyse and Boston because they were tearing down/burning everything. Bronx is was worse it was in the 70s/80s and the early 90s.
@Me-ll4ig
@Me-ll4ig 2 месяца назад
This is now the UK 2024
@Truth_Serum_1
@Truth_Serum_1 3 дня назад
This place is where Hip Hop was Born!!!
@johnnynoirman
@johnnynoirman 8 месяцев назад
Too bad you posted this with all those numbers running.
@glenngalligan6604
@glenngalligan6604 7 месяцев назад
952 Sherman avenue !!
@user-uo7fw5bo1o
@user-uo7fw5bo1o Месяц назад
Ten years later it was a city of "grate businesses". Two years after that the grates were busted and the businesses got cleaned out. Then the arsonists, hired by landlords looking to cash in on their fire insurance, started torching buildings. Sometimes there was no work for the fire-setters so they targeted vacant public buildings for practice. Howard Cosell notices during a Wotld Series game broadcast from Yankee Stadium and says the famous line, "Ladies and gentlemen, The Bronx is burning." Five years after that the South Bronx was a sea of blight, filled with abandoned, derelict buildings and rubble.
@luisar6136
@luisar6136 9 месяцев назад
My grandmother said she would never give up her Spanish language No matter how much they put her down
@jamesmack3314
@jamesmack3314 8 месяцев назад
So…stay in your home country then
@luisar6136
@luisar6136 8 месяцев назад
@@jamesmack3314 what are you white Irish, German what?? What is your ethnic language? Spanish is the dominant language in this part of the world But ignorance is bliss
@jamesmack3314
@jamesmack3314 8 месяцев назад
@@luisar6136 Spanish is the dominant language in South America, Central America, and Mexico. It’s not the dominant language in the United States although it’s certainly slowly, but surely becoming that way I just feel there’s too many people that moved to this country with no intention of trying to learn English and are very dismissive of trying to assimilate and have an over abundance of pride in their own language and culture which is a common trait of Hispanics -don’t get me wrong. I have many many coworkers who are Latino and I love most of them but there’s a certain percentage of immigrants that come to this country these days and don’t have any intention of learning English and I think that’s wrong. Yes I’m of Anglo-Saxon background, but if I were to move to say, France or Germany or even South America I would at least try to learn a little bit of the language I don’t expect a person to be fluent but just to say that they have no desire or refuse to learn is to me disrespectful it’s just that’s how things are now in this day and age, it wasn’t like this 50 or 60 or 70 years ago when people actually had to learn the language now we make it too easy
@luisar6136
@luisar6136 8 месяцев назад
@@jamesmack3314 the language was Spanish Besides the Indian language Also what is a "Hispanic"?
@peternagy-im4be
@peternagy-im4be 5 месяцев назад
​@@luisar6136you would know about ignorance of course....
@user-fy6ux3mp2y
@user-fy6ux3mp2y 4 месяца назад
Как в СССР
@amok918
@amok918 22 дня назад
Eye-opening? Nope. EYE-PUNCHING!!
@bobbydigital1982
@bobbydigital1982 8 месяцев назад
aint shit change
@jamesmack3314
@jamesmack3314 8 месяцев назад
At least back then the people would assimilate eventually now no incentive to assimilate and very little incentive to learn English. Unfortunately, the language is slowly being replaced over time by Spanish and not just in New York. Definitely here in California and Florida and many other places.
@markthompson8246
@markthompson8246 8 месяцев назад
Good, since Spain colonized the United States and the Americas a century before the British. 😁
@mtanyctrainatlantamartatra7164
@mtanyctrainatlantamartatra7164 6 месяцев назад
​@@markthompson8246Typical colonizers
@user-fn2vp1sw1h
@user-fn2vp1sw1h 6 месяцев назад
@@mtanyctrainatlantamartatra7164 : latter day colonizer !! **** The ALIEN INVASION ****
@user-fn2vp1sw1h
@user-fn2vp1sw1h 6 месяцев назад
@@mtanyctrainatlantamartatra7164 : latter day colonizer !! **** The ALIEN INVASION ****
@phoenixherbert
@phoenixherbert Год назад
Nothing has changed . Still poverty still poor living situations still crime.
@jamestiburon443
@jamestiburon443 10 месяцев назад
Where I came from. Quite a good Karma, wouldn't ya say?
@markogarcia7578
@markogarcia7578 3 месяца назад
Julio tag in a Latin Crowns gang hood NYRicans.
@markogarcia7578
@markogarcia7578 3 месяца назад
Unknown Sinners Gang tagged Another Puerto Rican gang 1965 Now Blk spades were the first gang of the Blkyorks coming out the Bx 1968.
@markogarcia7578
@markogarcia7578 7 месяцев назад
🟧👊🟦⭐️23️⃣
@markogarcia7578
@markogarcia7578 3 месяца назад
A RUBEN TAG ON A NYR HOOD WHILE PLAYING STICK BALL ON THE BLOCK
@EraphaseContemplation
@EraphaseContemplation 10 месяцев назад
Looks alot like Ukraine or Russia buildings and life in old soviet times. and buildings.
@firesurfer
@firesurfer 9 месяцев назад
The problems of the s.Bronx was many and the least of them were racism. We had high inflation, high interest rate, the gas crisis, the default on bonds by NYC. All of these caused people who could leave, to someplace cheaper. Just like the pandemic caused people to abandon NYC. It happened quick and dirty. People in the South Bronx were least able to withstand it. Mortgages on buildings became unaffordable for landlords. It was cheaper to let the buildings burn for the insurance. Inflation was 11% in 1974!! Gas doubled in 2 years. The same thing happened in 78-80.
@BillMorse-jr2ou
@BillMorse-jr2ou 9 месяцев назад
agreed.... as a country we tend to look for a scapegoat or a boogie man that we can all point a finger at while the multiple "elephants in the room" continue to be ignored... I moved there in 1980 and eventually rehabbed a rowhouse on Vyse by 172nd... sold it in the late nineties.... a mixed bag, but people are people, just in different and extreme circumstances.
@michaelanzelino5068
@michaelanzelino5068 5 месяцев назад
If you are going to have a "Portrait" of the south Bronx, you must mention the names of the various neighborhoods and streets. For instance, Mottheaven 138th St. or Southern Blvd. and 149th street. There is none of that here. This is a generic bunch of crap. This could have been any place U.S.A. The south Bronx has a very rich history, no matter what group of people populated it at any given time in it's history. This so called Portrait doesn't even mention any landmarks that make the South Bronx the icon that it is. The people who presented this feeble attempt, who call themselves 'Buyout Footage Historic Archive' are just another bunch of sellouts for what little money they made from this junk.
@NiScontex
@NiScontex 7 месяцев назад
average age 28,5 lol
@KINGKOOKOS
@KINGKOOKOS 4 дня назад
That’s an awful lot of graffiti considering they said it was invented by blacks in Philadelphia in 1967! lol
@Amidat
@Amidat Год назад
So sad how racism destroyed the South Bronx. Blacks and Puerto Ricans were pushed in from Harlem and services and jobs disappeared.
@luislaplume8261
@luislaplume8261 Год назад
Blacks and Puerto Ricans fought each other and other whites. Not to mention other Hispanics. Besides it was the Department of the Interior that brought Puerto Ricans to the northeast as a social experiment to see what would happen if a people who had a history that was foreign born and forced to move to America and make them go on welfare to increase the voting base for the Democrats. Look at the real history of my old hometown of NYC during the Mad Men era.
@Supervillainmc
@Supervillainmc Год назад
Racism didn’t destroy the Bronx, blacks and Puerto Ricans did. 15-20 years before it was a paradise. It’s a fact. 2+2=4 no mater which way u slice it.
@Truth_Serum_1
@Truth_Serum_1 3 дня назад
They Burnt down the south bronx all for nothing,, if they thought they would drive out the blacks and Puerto Ricans. It didn't. That neighborhood still has the same demographics . And it was rebuilt. Hahaha 🤣😂
@VerifiedVIPMember
@VerifiedVIPMember 6 месяцев назад
Chithole
@videoprotectedcom
@videoprotectedcom 8 месяцев назад
Next film will show the positive and successful people who came out of the neighborhood.
@freddieblue6351
@freddieblue6351 7 месяцев назад
Laura Nyro is one!!!
Далее
Fort Apache the Bronx (1981) Filming Locations
13:14
Просмотров 45 тыс.
1977 SOUTH BRONX: "THE FIRE NEXT DOOR"
56:37
Просмотров 95 тыс.
I Built 4 SECRET Rooms In ONE COLOR!
29:04
Просмотров 3 млн
skibidi toilet 74
07:02
Просмотров 18 млн
Amazing Photos: Life in New York City 1950s
8:41
Просмотров 7 тыс.
Squeeze Play GoFundMe  Campaign
2:20
Просмотров 172
Big Vic's Truck Stop
2:03
Просмотров 38 тыс.
Simpson Street
23:10
Просмотров 17 тыс.
NY 77: The Coolest Year In Hell - Part 1
11:51
Просмотров 983 тыс.
NYC First Pride Parade 1970
1:04
Просмотров 18
#movie #фильмы #кино
1:01
Просмотров 2,5 млн
МАРШРУТ ПЕРЕСТРОЕН 🙄🤣
0:53
Просмотров 1,7 млн