I was not born when these filming was done but I do love history ,my dad used to tell about how Trinidad was in the 40s and 50s ,and here I am seeing my country history and how it was in those days ,wish I can go back in time and really be part of that history. It's so beautiful to think that we are seeing it on live video.
This brief but excellent travelogue transported me back to early 1950 when with my sister Diana and parents, David Manning and Daphne Muriel disembarked from one of the Lady Boats,Lady Rodney? at Port of Spain docks from Barbados and were met by Uncle Valdemar Hanschell, who worked for Shell then,who had driven up from Point a Pierre to collect my sister and I and took us back down South while my parents presumably set about looking for a place to live. We weeks later moved into the oldest house on Carmody Road, St Augustine. A an amazing buzzing blooming confusion opened up before the eyes of an impressionable seven year old liberated from oppressive monocultural Little England.I've never been the same since.
This is an amazing video capturing old time Trinidad. I was born there in 1953 and left in 1962. I have vague memories, so It great to reignite my memory. Fabulous. Thank you. 😀
Outstanding… I always hoped that visitors to our shores in this time, who, coming from the developed world and had the possibility of Camera equipment , would have kept images… Now, with technology, a peel back of layers is possible… This is so good to see… Gratitude here..
The Good old days. I was born in Toco in 1962, so the man on the donkey and loads on heads I remember too well. Compared to today so very sad. Oh how I miss those days. Thanks for sharing❤
Back when the old people were still with us, and they had a big say. You didn’t hear people saying “we suffering” and “the government wicked”, people took pride in themselves even when they had way less than us today, and they were very civic minded at that.
Lived in Shorelands in 70s, kids went to St. Andrew’s, wonderful school. Charles Solomon of the Solo sweet drink lived two doors down. I remember Lady Young road, Queen’s Park Hotel south end of the Savannah, roundabouts and water nut venders around the Savannah, $1 TT. Steel drum competition from each village before Carnival, trips to Maracas Bay north, pitch lake south, and the best PM, Eric Williams, popular DJ Renny Bishop, TT Radio. Met Eddie Grant in studio one night. It was the best if times, place and people. Who else remembers this?
Wow, look at how rundown the Jama Masjid was. Clearly at some point, a big effort was put into restoring it. Glad the building's looking much more happy these days!
Beautiful video. Are you an Austrian who visited Trinidad and Tobago during that period? Some places are easy to identify some are not. The streets were clean and organised, not much people. Vagrancy existed in those times too. Thanks for sharing.
At minute 5:33 a woman with an ice cream pail on her head. Wow!! Don’t get me wrong, I’m old enough to remember women with baskets on their heads, but an ice cream pail?? Just wow!
Wow this is literally the time we were transitioning from old modern. I’ve never in my lifetime seen women with loads on their heads and I was born in the 70s.
In order to cushion the load on their head, they used what was known as a Kata. It was a piece of cloth or a bunch of bushes rolled together in a spiral form. It was placed between the load and the head.
2:27 recently visited family and this one looked identical to st Anthony church I visited. It looked too new to be from the 50s but would be cool if it is the same building
At 2:34 is Kent House on Long Circular Rd. next to KFC Maraval. At 2:47 I think that is the golf course that would become Fairways, Maraval in the 70's.
Hi. Can I have permission to use a few clips. I have a group project to film a short story from V. S Naipaul's "Miguel Street" for my final project. It would be great to have opening and closing clips of Trinidad during the 1950's to really complete the short film.
First of all, thanks to the person who made this video. In those days, very few people had cameras. I remember my father, who was a salesman at that time, had one of those cars. The rundown part is east dry river and was always like that. From Charlotte Street back to the Laventille hills. A bit of it was featured in the video. I did not see Woodbrook and other parts of POS going west and north except around the savannah, where the areas are not run down. East of Charlotte Street was never a very nice area. Beetham Gardens used to be mostly tin and box shacks and called shanty town. The people's mentality who live there just made it a bigger slum although they got government houses. The plan was to have a proper place for those people to live, but I don't think they know or remember that. Nothing is worst than galvanized fences. They should be banned in Trinidad. Sea Lots, I don't know why the government allowed this place to develop. They are to blame for these squatting areas that became deplorable slums. I saw nice houses in certain areas in Trinidad when I was there and some of the owners took no pride in their front garden walls and fences. What is a tin of paint to keep your walls clean. What is so hard to grow a decent green hedge. I just could not understand that part. I guess It is too much work for some lazy people to upkeep.. People have to be re-educated on how to keep their surroundings looking attractive. I don't know why this is not taught to the population on a large scale. West of Frederick Street and going up to the savannah is not rundown. All the cities in the world have run down areas even New York city. I have gone to some cities in my travels and have seen ten times worst. Manning had a dream for the place and started rebuilding the waterfront. The other government cancelled a lot of the plans to revitalise POS and some wanted South to be the capital, I don't know if the latter was gossip or true.. It may happen but after I am long gone. Thank God I will not be here. The present government is talking about rebuilding certain parts of POS. Lets wait and see. Do you know who owns the old downtown buildings from Frederick Street to the east to Nelson Streets. Maybe they should sell their properties to developers and get the place rebuilt. These people have no intention of rebuilding but plan to keep renters until the buildings fall down. That is how ghettos are created. The building owners maybe lack funds, maybe there is a lack of developers or there are greedy financial mentalities. I don't know. Look how long the Salvatori Building was demolished. Why was a building not rebuilt? Who owns the land? If it is the government, they should have built offices there a long time ago. Not a goid site. Another thing, taxes keep places like Toronto clean and in good shape. Are Trinidadians prepared to pay 1/3 of their monthly salary to the government in taxes and be taxed on everything that they purchase? I guess not. It is just an island. I have never seen a place where people complain and do nothing to improve the situation. That is the problem there.
Judging by the cars this was filmed between 1950 and at least 1956 when the Zephyr Mk1 which I am sure I saw in the film was manufactured until replaced by the Mk2 in the latter year. I saw what looked like a Hillman station wagon/van like our neighbour had but the scene moved too fast. Gas Brain....not much else to amuse yourself in the years before television.
This is so tragic. This looks clean, orderly and nice. Trinidad now has degenerated more than you could imagine thanks to the tribal corruption of the PNM tons tons macoute...
@@judynicholas2680 the remarks are about what political clowns took a beautiful, well-organised setting like that and turned it into downtown Port au Prince, Haiti and you sycophants can't handle it when some one calls you degenerates out. I will say what I want, when I want, without fear of any corrupt profiteer. BTW, firetruck you...
@@judynicholas2680 There is nothing "hateful" about the original poster's comment. Anyone who was born in Trinidad knows the truth of what's really going on. Corruption has taken over and the place is falling apart. You and others can be indenial all you want. However, that will not make the problem go away! Port of Spain looks terrible in 2022, when it should be well maintained and advanced. Most of Port of Spain is run down and lack proper infrastructure in modern times. The problem with many Caribbean people is we choose to sweep problems under the rug instead of tackling the problems to avoid further complications later. Go ask many of your relatives and friends how things are going when they chose to ignore their health, and come let us know.
Just like India in the 1950s. A lady is seen touching the feet of a white man. Indian custom of respecting. However, touching the feet only because he is a white man is rather frustrating.
Small islanders been in Trinidad since the 1700's. Most of the slaves in Trinidad came from Grenada, St Vincent, Martinique, Guadeloupe etc. Also, after slavery many small islanders came in the late 1800's especially Bajans. In the 1900's it continued. It only stopped or slowed down in the last 30 years or so.
@@akil2746 no small islanders lived there prior to the Queen You dunce ...the small islanders came on the boat to sell fruit ...Eric Williams opened the doors to them because he needed more creole on the island to secure his voter base and racial disparity
Im always thankful that visitors captured great videos of trinidad during the 50s and 60s that we can access and marvel at.
Yes, it's really amazing
Hello
TH-cam really is the closest thing to a time machine we will ever have.
Wow! Thank you for this. I'm so amazed by how properly everyone dressed and a sense of pride by the traffic warden 😊
Those are not traffic wardens they are police men
In those days people dressed in clothes, not half naked like some of them do today at carnival time.
and how clean the place is
Every one was slim and trim!!❤😊
A picture is worth a thousand words. It is like a time traveler.
Wow, this is gold to those in the know! A brief glimpse into the past and what was! Thanks for sharing!
Hello
OMG Trinidad was so beautiful and the people were so properly dressed, the greenery so outstanding. Love this video🇹🇹❣️❣️❣️
I was not born when these filming was done but I do love history ,my dad used to tell about how Trinidad was in the 40s and 50s ,and here I am seeing my country history and how it was in those days ,wish I can go back in time and really be part of that history. It's so beautiful to think that we are seeing it on live video.
Recognized so many of these places.. amazing how many things changed while so many others stayed the same...
Fantastic 😊👍
Hello
like one vagrant
The video need to name the places for those that do not know
Our beautiful nation of T&T 🇹🇹 has lost it's innocent 😔 But I'm also very grateful for this gem of video👍
This brief but excellent travelogue transported me back to early 1950 when with my sister Diana and parents, David Manning and Daphne Muriel disembarked from one of the Lady Boats,Lady Rodney? at Port of Spain docks from Barbados and were met by Uncle Valdemar Hanschell, who worked for Shell then,who had driven up from Point a Pierre to collect my sister and I and took us back down South while my parents presumably set about looking for a place to live. We weeks later moved into the oldest house on Carmody Road, St Augustine. A an amazing buzzing blooming confusion opened up before the eyes of an impressionable seven year old liberated from oppressive monocultural Little England.I've never been the same since.
This is an amazing video capturing old time Trinidad. I was born there in 1953 and left in 1962. I have vague memories, so It great to reignite my memory. Fabulous. Thank you. 😀
These videos are so important for us as a people to see where we were and where we are today
...nowhere
Outstanding…
I always hoped that visitors to our shores in this time, who, coming from the developed world and had the possibility of Camera equipment , would have kept images…
Now, with technology, a peel back of layers is possible…
This is so good to see…
Gratitude here..
Thank you 😊. That's fantastic! Our pleasure!!
Hello
Wow this is so fantastic , Trinidad in the years when my nane and nana was young people ,great 👍 video
A blast from the past...I was there in 1960... Many Thanks.
Wonderful! My mom was a young lady then and I was not born as yet.
That's amazing, thank you so much!
Likewise 👍🏽
Hello
Excellent. Thank you so much for posting this. God bless you.
Our pleasure! Thank you!
Thank you for this gem of a history video. And what stands out is how modestly everyone is dressed.
Thank you for this... love the way people are so well dressed and the vintage scenery...
Thank you for sharing this video!
Our pleasure!
Truly truly amazing, I'm always excited about the old time days, thanks for sharing.
The Good old days. I was born in Toco in 1962, so the man on the donkey and loads on heads I remember too well. Compared to today so very sad. Oh how I miss those days. Thanks for sharing❤
This is very highly appreciated .
Thanks a whole lot.
Peace and quiet town then. Beautiful 😍
Back when the old people were still with us, and they had a big say.
You didn’t hear people saying “we suffering” and “the government wicked”, people took pride in themselves even when they had way less than us today, and they were very civic minded at that.
Amazing!!! Thanks a million❤❤
Peaceful Days. THANKS. ❤❤
Thank you for the memories of how it used to be.Blessings
Wonderful...thanks for sharing.
A moment in time...different generation back then...a different way of life...
It grives me to see how nice T&T was
It's still nice God is good
@@semoneg2826Yeah it’s still a beautiful place. Not as peaceful as back in the day but it’s still incredibly nice 😊
Thanks for sharing this...
A glimpse of the past
Felt like seeing a completely different place yet still seems so familiar to me
Thank you for sharing your splendid video . Much appreciated
Everyone so well dressed... love my country Trinidad and Tobago 🇹🇹 ❤️
enjoyed it thankks lik d music
wow just wow now i know what it was like when my grandparents were born...👍😮
It looks so much more civilized than it does now
Love D video. I was born in 1953.Great.
Thank you for sharing this amazing video love it .
Lived there in 70s, awesome memories, raising kids, private schools required, was peaceful and safe. Was. Good people always.
Lived in Shorelands in 70s, kids went to St. Andrew’s, wonderful school. Charles Solomon of the Solo sweet drink lived two doors down. I remember Lady Young road, Queen’s Park Hotel south end of the Savannah, roundabouts and water nut venders around the Savannah, $1 TT. Steel drum competition from each village before Carnival, trips to Maracas Bay north, pitch lake south, and the best PM, Eric Williams, popular DJ Renny Bishop, TT Radio. Met Eddie Grant in studio one night. It was the best if times, place and people. Who else remembers this?
I loved those days. I was born in the 1950s.
Sweet sweet T&T how I love my country 🇹🇹
Wow, look at how rundown the Jama Masjid was. Clearly at some point, a big effort was put into restoring it. Glad the building's looking much more happy these days!
This is amazing!
Beautiful video. Are you an Austrian who visited Trinidad and Tobago during that period? Some places are easy to identify some are not. The streets were clean and organised, not much people. Vagrancy existed in those times too. Thanks for sharing.
Absolutely awesome 💯🙏💕
Beautiful ❤️
Outstanding!
Thank you!!
Amazing 🇹🇹♥️🇹🇹
Thank you 😊👍
Thank you
Life has changed so much
Hate that the roads are better in this then the ones that we have now.
Nice very nice ❤
Sweet sweet T&T is all I'm hearing as I watch this!
Oh...how it used to be!!!!
At minute 5:33 a woman with an ice cream pail on her head. Wow!!
Don’t get me wrong, I’m old enough to remember women with baskets on their heads, but an ice cream pail?? Just wow!
Do you knew who filmed it by chance? Great video 😊
Wow this is literally the time we were transitioning from old modern. I’ve never in my lifetime seen women with loads on their heads and I was born in the 70s.
Hello
In order to cushion the load on their head, they used what was known as a Kata. It was a piece of cloth or a bunch of bushes rolled together in a spiral form. It was placed between the load and the head.
It looks like everyone was happy in the past.
What a treasure!
The old time days.
2:27 recently visited family and this one looked identical to st Anthony church I visited. It looked too new to be from the 50s but would be cool if it is the same building
Love the music
Wonderful video, the only thing though, they should have name the different places. Some could be indentify, but others cant..
Every man Jack wore his shirt tucked in his pants.
What I would give to go back.......🤔😔
memories
Well done.
At 2:34 is Kent House on Long Circular Rd. next to KFC Maraval. At 2:47 I think that is the golf course that would become Fairways, Maraval in the 70's.
Amazing! Thanks a lot!
Allan Tam. I recognise that name. I was in Trinidad in 1966 visiting from England.
Hi. Can I have permission to use a few clips. I have a group project to film a short story from V. S Naipaul's "Miguel Street" for my final project. It would be great to have opening and closing clips of Trinidad during the 1950's to really complete the short film.
Thank you! Please contact us via info@visualhistory.tv
Hello
Look at the beauty of Trinidad compared to now. Port of Spain so rundown, I don't know why it's still the capital.
First of all, thanks to the person who made this video. In those days, very few people had cameras. I remember my father, who was a salesman at that time, had one of those cars. The rundown part is east dry river and was always like that. From Charlotte Street back to the Laventille hills. A bit of it was featured in the video. I did not see Woodbrook and other parts of POS going west and north except around the savannah, where the areas are not run down. East of Charlotte Street was never a very nice area. Beetham Gardens used to be mostly tin and box shacks and called shanty town. The people's mentality who live there just made it a bigger slum although they got government houses. The plan was to have a proper place for those people to live, but I don't think they know or remember that. Nothing is worst than galvanized fences. They should be banned in Trinidad. Sea Lots, I don't know why the government allowed this place to develop. They are to blame for these squatting areas that became deplorable slums. I saw nice houses in certain areas in Trinidad when I was there and some of the owners took no pride in their front garden walls and fences. What is a tin of paint to keep your walls clean. What is so hard to grow a decent green hedge. I just could not understand that part. I guess It is too much work for some lazy people to upkeep.. People have to be re-educated on how to keep their surroundings looking attractive. I don't know why this is not taught to the population on a large scale. West of Frederick Street and going up to the savannah is not rundown. All the cities in the world have run down areas even New York city. I have gone to some cities in my travels and have seen ten times worst. Manning had a dream for the place and started rebuilding the waterfront. The other government cancelled a lot of the plans to revitalise POS and some wanted South to be the capital, I don't know if the latter was gossip or true.. It may happen but after I am long gone. Thank God I will not be here. The present government is talking about rebuilding certain parts of POS. Lets wait and see. Do you know who owns the old downtown buildings from Frederick Street to the east to Nelson Streets. Maybe they should sell their properties to developers and get the place rebuilt. These people have no intention of rebuilding but plan to keep renters until the buildings fall down. That is how ghettos are created. The building owners maybe lack funds, maybe there is a lack of developers or there are greedy financial mentalities. I don't know. Look how long the Salvatori Building was demolished. Why was a building not rebuilt? Who owns the land? If it is the government, they should have built offices there a long time ago. Not a goid site. Another thing, taxes keep places like Toronto clean and in good shape. Are Trinidadians prepared to pay 1/3 of their monthly salary to the government in taxes and be taxed on everything that they purchase? I guess not. It is just an island. I have never seen a place where people complain and do nothing to improve the situation. That is the problem there.
1 are the best days
My mother wasn't even born yet and wish you all could here me say it
Wow
Love it wasn't born yet though but love history
it would have been nice to show the place names, for better understanding
thanks to this video i time travel 😂
...the music...
3:25 : Santa Cruz RC church and Presbytery.
Those were real police, not like we have now
I live minutes from POS and work in it.
That's great 😊👍
@@visualhistoryaustria Ain't always the case before i got a half decent job.
You posted on Bissessar's facebook page - post more!
@@visualhistoryaustriasaw your replay by chance after 3 years?
In practical sense makes life easier.
This place looks like modern day Cuba with all the old Cars.
Judging by the cars this was filmed between 1950 and at least 1956 when the Zephyr Mk1 which I am sure I saw in the film was manufactured until replaced by the Mk2 in the latter year. I saw what looked like a Hillman station wagon/van like our neighbour had but the scene moved too fast. Gas Brain....not much else to amuse yourself in the years before television.
Look my family I short pants 🇹🇹🌹💯🦋🥰
We was 1st. World ...till now😓
People would have been more fit, see the amount of bicycles
Try putting an officer in them shorts now😂
Was hoping to see a coal pot 😂
the year I was borne.
Someone really did tell me that Donkey Carriages were common..
Most folks were poor and segregated by social class. However, there was little violence.
We are still segregated by class today
Old time music would be most appropriate for this video... vintage calypso!!!
This is so tragic. This looks clean, orderly and nice. Trinidad now has degenerated more than you could imagine thanks to the tribal corruption of the PNM tons tons macoute...
Keep your hateful remarks to yourself 👎
@@judynicholas2680 the remarks are about what political clowns took a beautiful, well-organised setting like that and turned it into downtown Port au Prince, Haiti and you sycophants can't handle it when some one calls you degenerates out. I will say what I want, when I want, without fear of any corrupt profiteer. BTW, firetruck you...
@@judynicholas2680 There is nothing "hateful" about the original poster's comment. Anyone who was born in Trinidad knows the truth of what's really going on. Corruption has taken over and the place is falling apart. You and others can be indenial all you want. However, that will not make the problem go away! Port of Spain looks terrible in 2022, when it should be well maintained and advanced. Most of Port of Spain is run down and lack proper infrastructure in modern times. The problem with many Caribbean people is we choose to sweep problems under the rug instead of tackling the problems to avoid further complications later. Go ask many of your relatives and friends how things are going when they chose to ignore their health, and come let us know.
@@judynicholas2680 facts
If you are going to insult the police you should get your spelling right
The days of police in short pants and putty!
Just like India in the 1950s. A lady is seen touching the feet of a white man. Indian custom of respecting. However, touching the feet only because he is a white man is rather frustrating.
omg wow people use to dress properly back then.
...Ah yes...the small islanders that came on the boat to sell their goods👍...and stayed🤔...destroyed it😮💨...now the country is no longer mine🤨
Small islanders been in Trinidad since the 1700's. Most of the slaves in Trinidad came from Grenada, St Vincent, Martinique, Guadeloupe etc. Also, after slavery many small islanders came in the late 1800's especially Bajans. In the 1900's it continued. It only stopped or slowed down in the last 30 years or so.
@@akil2746 no small islanders lived there prior to the Queen You dunce
...the small islanders came on the boat to sell fruit
...Eric Williams opened the doors to them because he needed more creole on the island to secure his voter base and racial disparity
Maybe the colony should have remained in the colonies...
Under colonial rule we looked safer undeveloped and poor
Now that island is a crime filled.dump. come back and do a reshoot of the same areas.