Hello, local here! Thanks for the really sympathetic video to the area. Firstly Etruscan is pronounced Ee-trusk-en 😀. I try to avoid Hanley for reasons obvious, but Piccadilly is usually far more lively on other days with interesting small owned businesses open. The run down factory/bottle kiln by the canal in Longport was the Price and Kensington Tea Pot factory - which unfortunately was left to ruin by previous owners. That bit used to have fly tipping on it but has been cleaned up. The building by where you stood filming that wasn't abandoned though, people use it from what I've heard, including a potter. Just a short walk down the canal would have taken you to a beautiful park with 2 lakes. As for the bottle kiln you went in - it was used as a filming location for Peaky blinders, as was the rest of Middleport pottery. Middleport/Longport suffered a lot due to the pulled "Pathfinder" regeneration project, originally started by Blair's government, but suddenly pulled when Cameron got in - mid project! There is a great community spirit in the area though, locals really trying hard to make things better. Again thank you for the well made video that showed a lot of respect.
I am also a local - I live just across the Longport A500 roundabout in Porthill, and my partner took a course at Middleport so he knows Paul the woodworker. I was hoping he would make it to Westport Lake - I feel really lucky to have it almost on my doorstep.
@sdrawkcabUK ask Josiah Wedgwood, it's all to do with him. There's an area called Etruria (just by Hanley) which was built up around Wedgwood, and he also developed Etruscan ware, in a classical style. Hence the link within the city.
@@rowanberryglass Hi! 😆 Yes, it is lovely - we are so lucky to have it so close by! We live on Melvyn Crescent just off First Avenue, and we can get to it by walking from the back of our house through the woods and under the D road - if we had a dog, we'd be there all the time!
I'm a 19 year-old New Zealander who is a massive Stoke City fan. Earlier this year I travelled to Stoke-on-Trent to watch two home games (Hull, Huddersfield). Was only in the city for the matchdays (I stayed in Manny), but it was so sad to see the city of which the football team I love. All the Stokies were so welcoming - although couldn't believe there was a Kiwi who had actually heard of Stoke/had the desire to actually go up there. Felt at home, loved the place even with it's flaws. I'll be back one day - hopefully to a more revitalised place. City and the people need it. COME ON YOU POTTERS
what a gem you are mate im nearly 61 and a potter cant believe you you folow stoke the city has been in decline for years just hope it get better gud on yay kiwi
Your video brought me to tears 😢 I'm a Stokie born and bred but ive lived in Paris for 5 years. Even in in that short time the city centre has gone really downhill. Its my friend who owns the new book shop and I'm happy to say it's open now and looking beautiful. I'm on the train now to London and then Paris but Stoke will always have a huge place in my heart
I,ve been away from the UK for donkeys years now and ten minutes into this video I started to cry. Thank you for your enthusiastic effort here, Im so glad that there are young people who see the beauty of places behind the ugliness. Well done.
I honestly believe than the decline in our once great towns and cities can be reversed simply by applying free parking! None of this park for two hours and no return for four hours shit, how does that give you time to shop/ eat/ go to the cinema have a meal etc. money grabbing councils rinsing motorists are to blame for a lot of the decline in shoppers.
@@sasquatch2732 I agree it would help, but I remember a time when if you went up Hanley to do some shopping, you went on the bus, far simpler. Public transport, i.e. a light railway like Sheffield metro would be fantastic. But would the city centre support that ... difficult to see.
@@sasquatch2732I think you're seeing the problems in a rather simplistic way. Things have gone far too far now. The tory attempt to turn the uk into a tax haven off the Northern shore of Europe has backfired big time. They are leaving yhe sinking ship. Free parking won't fix the systemic economic issues now.
A few town centres are still thriving though. Like Kingston upon Thames where I sometimes go to. But like other town centres today there are a lot of homeless people there in doorways. But the shops are still busy.
Just found this channel today. You are so respectful of ppl living there and the history. I think other channels are just a piss take. You are creating historical docs here love. Thank you.
As a southerner I lived near and worked with a lot of Stokies, I was surprised how run down some parts were but I have to say Stoke has some of the warmest and funniest people in England. I hope things get better for them.
I visited Soke 24 years ago to install some IT equipment at one of their bus depots. I was surprised at how run down it was back then. As a Londoner, I too was surprised by how friendly the locals were. I asked one local for directions to the bus depot (this was pre-sat nav and smartphones times), and he was so helpful, he opened my car door, jumped in, and proceeded to give me live directions as we drove towards the depot! It also happened to be on the way to his house, which probably had something to do with it. LoL!
@ganjadan7600 - LoL! I know both locations well. Basically, your trip is the equivalent of claiming to be a fully qualified electrician because you wired a plug once!
@ganjadan7600 - "I said the north". Your Grammar is indicative of your confused state of mind! My previous comment drew an analogy with your ludicrous statement about London, based upon a trip to Euston and Wembley! Nothing to do with the North. Anyway good luck with the treatment. I wish you a speedy recovery! LoL!
I was a delivery driver late 60s Hanley being my main delivery . Fresh salmon and venison to Lewis’s, full load of clothes to C&A and shop deliveries to Hanley town centre . I’m sitting here in tears seeing on film what I now see in real life . High cost of rates for shops and markets , high car parking no wander Retail Parks are booming . R.I.P potteries you were great once
I was born and raised in stoke, i'm 46 now and lived here all my life, generations of my family worked at the Spode pottery in the heart of Stoke on Trent. I went to Boothen primary (now demolished) and Trent Valley High, i've walked every square inch of it over the course of my life. I've always been super proud of our potting history, and the characterful Stokie's who's skilled hands made tableware for kings. The beginning of the end was when they transferred production to Asia due to cost, online shopping and an utterly shit council destroyed the rest. The last thing to go is hope, but as you now see from the rise of homeless, drug dependant souls shuffling through our town centres, that too is wearing thin.
I was born in Stoke and grew up in Newcastle-Under-Lyme. In the 1990s as a teenager Hanley was the place to go for shopping and it also had some decent clubs. It's so sad to see what it's like now (I have lived abroad for 20+ years). The decay is devastating. Thank you for making this video and shining a light on the destruction and abandonment that Stoke has suffered. Up the Mighty Potters!
UK is done and over. With majority population intellectually, numerically bankrupt.. this guy keeps talking about 20 million given ....for what?? Building more when all existing buildings are in ruins..bankrupt guys..got to start from the foundation, from cradle.. work guys, no bucks for benefits,free lunch,hand outs..everybody talks about funding for anything without ever understanding that the coffer is empty
I am from Stoke and I grew up in Castle too, and I have lived abroad for over 20 years too but I seriously don't remember Stoke ever being up to much sorry, even 30 years ago it was a dive.
@mimo.1467 As someone who's lived here since birth you must be kidding. Hanley in particular is an absolute state now, Tunstall and Burslem even more so. Oddly elitist comment there, too regarding working class people. EVERY place has working class people, if you didn't have the working classes you'd be stuffed. Tunstall looks more battered than it ev er did, same for anywhere here.
Excellent channel. What Stoke needs is what so many other towns/cities need - a huge drop in business rents and rates, plus a new way of looking to get local people to set up and run businesses from the town. Indoor arenas etc aren't going to get the high st revived.
What's the point if people are not shopping any more the second lockdown finished it off and many people never went back to their old habits. All planned.
The problem with rents and business rates is they would rather have empty buildings with no tenants than getting less money from a business operating there. They should let people have it cheap because making some money is better than nothing. More open businesses means more footfall for OTHER businesses as well! And less crime, less people hanging out in abandoned shop doorways.
Rents reflect market conditions so they drop anyway and rates are an important source of income for the council. And there is no point either dropping if there is no effective demand because incomes are low.
Fantastic video, but it shocks me to the core. I grew up in rural Staffs from early 50's to late 60's, so my memory is of the height of the pottery industry (surprised that the clean air act was as early as 1957). It was where Mum bought eg wool or fabric to make some of our clothes, & ready made undies & dad's clothes etc. 1st reaction "Where are the people & bustling pavements?" "Where is the traffic on once busy roads?" No such thing as shop closures then. I remember walking from Hanley to Longton. Rows of brick terraced houses & in the morning the house wives, scarf over head, cleaning the front door step of smuts (soot from the bottle kilns) then polishing them with a red wax. There were large groups of bottle kilns, fired by coal, billowing smoke everywhere, & as it grew dark in the winter evening, a veritable firework show of sparks from the top of the kilns. There were also many coal mines nearby (cheap fuel also used domestically) There were many different pottery manufacturers. Wedgewood was world famous, & made highly expensive articles which decorated palaces. A special clay, Kaolin, was needed to make porcelain. It is only found in the UK in St Austel Cornwall. Some of the work force travelled 20 miles from the countryside, many women. Our neighbour Mrs. Adams hand painted the designs of pottery ornaments in glaze. It was a labour intensive industry. In those days mugs were rarely used, except some tankards for beer, everyone drank from cups & saucers. The canals were also bustling - bringing in Kaolin, & distributing finished products. I have heard that the gas/ electric kilns were too small to fire the necessary number of products to be viable for mass production, but some survived. The humanitarian disaster from mass unemployment when the only major industry in the area collapsed without any replacement employment, must have been deeply distressing. In those days much of the housing was owned by the employer & rented to employees (tied housing). There was a lot of housing owned by the town council & rented to low income people. Imagine not only losing your job but losing your home at the same time. Yes I can understand the graffiti against capitalism. A very large urban area needed government intervention to encourage investment in providing new employment back in 1957. Instead those who could, moved to other areas of the country for work, breaking up previously close knit communities, only to face complete deindustrialisation within the next 20 years when the coal mines closed. I've lived through the deindustrialisation of the UK & privatisation of our major amenities. I also lived through the tail end of the government measures to restart the economy after WW2. Until I found this site I had no idea of the extent of our ghost cities, caused by deindustrialisation. I hope my few memories help to fill in some gaps for you wandering turnip. I've lived through times you couldn't imagine - some good - some bad, & needed changing.
I can remember as a child going to Stoke and Hanley with my parents, the building were black with soot, and I can remember the bottle kilns, this would be the late 50s, but there was a high end shop in Hanley that sold lovely dinner services and vases, my parents used to shop there.
I think you're cataloguing not only the decline of Stoke, but the high street overall. People have more reason to stay in than go out. We can buy everything online, don't need to interact in real life and it's a crying shame that we are sleepwalking into this awful way of living 😢
This is a terrific video, thanks for doing it. Stoke is genuinely packed with amazing people who have only been able to look on as the city underwent an unmanaged decline. There are however little pockets of beauty, heritage and of course we are the gateway to amazing countryside. It's appreciated that you highlighted (and enjoyed) a few of those wonderful quirks and excellent bits of the place that we still have. Well done fella.
Lovely. See his little face light up when He finds a Chimney. Let alone be inside one Extacy Pure Heaven. and "Magic Paul" A follically challenged "Gandalf" Made us all smile too. thanks Turnip
Stoke was also home to Kerr Stuart & Co, who manufactured railway locomotives from 1888 to 1930. Their exports reached many parts of the UK and overseas. Amazing to think this town used to supply machines around the globe.
Sadly all too common across the UK. I remember the big Petters in Staines that used to design, manufacture, and export diesel engines all over the world. Gone, and replaced by a Sainsbury. Skilled and semi-skilled work replaced by minimum wage (if you're lucky). Of course, it didn't have to be that way, globalization was a conscious decision, the Faustian bargain of neoliberalism gave up British manufacturing and industry in exchange for cheap shit from China. We got the worst of the deal IMHO. Once great British marques are now foreign owned - ARM holdings, DeepMind Technologies, Jaguar, Land Rover, British Steel, British Airways, British Airports Authority, and even the building HMRC operates out of - all foreign owned, just for a taster. There's not a lot left, even hope has now gone...
That’s what Tories do , they don’t give a flying fcuk about the likes of people in Stoke, look what Johnson did with Brexshit,the guys a fcuking idiot yet he convinced a lot of low information people to vote for them and then shafted them, nothing new there…
I spent three of the best years of my life in Stoke as a student. I'm only sorry I didn't appreciate the town(s) as much as I could have. For anybody from Stoke your town has a special place in my heart and I wish all of you the very best! As for you mate, you have completely sold me with this video. You've really got your priorities and interests in the right place and you do a great job presenting this video. Your enthusiasm really rubs off. Keep at it. Please continue to highlight local culture and to promote the people who deserve credit for the worthwhile things they do in life.
@@hmq9052 More nightclubs per head of population than any other town at the time, one of the cheapest student union bar(s) in the country, active student union society. Rent was very decently priced. The social sciences department where I was at was rated 4 out of 5 compared to other universities - based on quality of education, professors etc I couldn't have had more fun if I tried! I feel sorry for people who went to a 'decent' university and couldn't afford fun or spent all their time in their room studying.
It's so good to see a young person with so much enthusiasm for history. My dad used to be a bargeman taking pottery to places like Liverpool, Manchester and Birmingham by Barge for Wedgwood in the 1950's/60's. Keep up the good work. I'm now Subscribed to your channel.
I did my PhD in Stoke, at Keele uni but mostly among the people of Stoke and the city's museums. The people I met were so warm and hospitable and so ready to talk about their lives and their strange, rare neighbourhood, its left me with a lifelong affection for Stoke and some of my best ever memories
I did my masters at staffs as an international student and almost died in a racist attack in Chesterton area (used to work a few hours at THE warehouse)(other international students also got attacked regularly) so there is a mix of people from my perspective.
Stokie here. Thanks for uploading this video of my hometown that I left in 2001. My family history is in Stoke on Trent and I grew up there going school from the late 1960s and eventually to college. I loved the place and Hanley was a great city. You probably won't believe that people came to Hanley for day trips on coaches from the West Midlands and Manchester area. The nightlife was superb in the 1980s and there were so many venues that famous acts came to. Mum and Dad saw The Beatles play in Hanley back in the day. The decline started late 1990s and has continued ever since. I was qualified enough to plan Local Agenda 21 where the city could get billions from the EU for projects - but the city planners were just not dynamic or interested. Therefore I left and have been living in the EU the last 22 years. I still like to go home and visit relatives, but I never go into town because it really makes me sad to see what has happened to the once vibrant city I grew up in.
Hi great video. Not only has Stoke lost most of its pottery industry, it was also a!big coal mining area with many mines, we had a steel works long gone, Michelin factory employing 10,000 at its peak. stoke had a tram system and also its own railway system, both long gone.
I’m a local from Longton. Great video, I tend to avoid most of the areas you visited however there are some really nice places close by mainly trentham gardens which underwent a £120 million redevelopment with shops, restaurants, and a garden centre. You’ll also find some really nice houses in the area too. Gladstone pottery museum is a must visit to learn the history of the pottery industry.
I lived in Bolton for 20 years and it was bustling!....your video has shocked me at the amount of boarded up shops !...I now live in the bustling Cheshire town of Warrington. Glad I left Bolton when I did !.... there's NOWT left !
I had a night out in Stoke On Trent on 27-8-23. I went to The Sugar Mill and it was a great event. Stoke has a couple of good clubs and some pubs serving proper English beer. I found people here very friendly and pretty damned cool to be honest. I know this city has more than its fair share of problems, but I like this place a lot and the people I met here were great.
Hanley Town Hall. I honestly feel we are in recession when it comes to architecture. They used to build such lovely buildings that lift your spirit. Now we build brutalism. I would love to go back 100 years.
I just left a comment that says much the same thing. I would go further and say brutalist architecture is designed to lower people’s spirits and destroy communities. All deliberately done.
No brutalism is a completely different style of architecture and isn't really used these days either. I was popular from 1950's-1970's. Some examples of brutalist architecture are the barbican estate, Brunswick centre and Alexandra road estate in London.
I went to university near there in the late 90s, and visited Stoke on weekends. There was an active high street and a central open market. But it was pretty grim, I thought. Compared with today, it was probably better.
You start the video at what was our local Sainsbury’s for many years. It survived the opening of the giant Tesco next door. It had a nice cafe and a great community feel with staff who’d been there for up to 25 years. It was particularly popular with elderly and disabled people as both the car park and store were easy to get round. It suddenly closed I heard, not because it was doing badly, but because Sainsbury’s actually owned rather than leased the site and could make a quick buck after a bad year by flogging it. We still miss it 😢
Thanks for including my photography exhibition, FORTYSEVEN: The Last Bottle Ovens & Kilns of The Potteries. Every Stokie whether they still live in The Potteries or not, is proud to be a Stokie. It’s such a shame how run down it’s all become. During the time photographing the bottle ovens i did notice a glimmer of hope in the industry which will bring reform to the towns. No real thanks to any levelling-up schemes or politicians but to the enthusiasm of the people. The heritage certainly needs looking after and local business needs nurturing for the area to survive. Will you revisit and look for the improvements? I know I will. And if you didn’t try any oatcakes,you totally missed out!!
I was sent by my company, about 20 yrs ago, to pick up a ton of plates, cups, bowls etc from a pottery that was closing down. It was quite depressing really. There were other companies there doing the same as me. We looked like vultures picking at the carcass of a dead wildebeest. ☹️
First of all a big thank you to coming to the town where I was born in 1960, it’s really good to see someone so young taking an interest in the lost past. During the early 1970s Hanley was a once a month treat for me and my sisters and it was amazing with so many diverse and individual shops and absolutely packed with shoppers. Unfortunately we’re living in a rapidly changing world and certainly the last few years have played a big part in accelerating that change, I don’t have an answer and don’t think the politicians do either. Would love to know where the levelling up money is being squandered, probably lining pockets. Thanks again for filming this and really enjoyed watching especially listening to the people you met, wonderful.
I'm from Newcastle-under-Lyme, right next door to Stoke. The area had mines and steel works as well but has been in steady decline my whole life. I'm always a bit taken aback when I visit my old hometown and see more and more stuff boarded up.
I come from near Longton. Enjoyed tis film. It's sad to see how Stoke has deteriorated but you focused on what is good, thank you. If you visit again go to Longton and the Gladstone pottery museum
I wouldn't normally share this but seeing as we're based in stoke and you took such an interest in the city - we've looked at taking on high street units in Hanley many times to open a new shop or two there, the issue is rents in the area - the vast majority of that closed stuff in the city centre is owned by 2 or 3 large multinational companies rather than the council, so they set the rents, and anything left empty is a big old tax write off. Some of those smaller high street units are up for let £3k-5k per month with HUGE rateably values attached, so the owners have no incentive at all to let them out for a reasonable price, the council has no interest in buying them to let them out for reasonable money and no small business in their right mind will take one on for that kinda money in the 12th most deprived area of the uk.
Got to love Paul! They need to capitalise on Stoke’s assets ie its people, like Paul, its history, and the artisan and innovative small businesses. Not build yet another stadium and hotel which will stand empty for most of the time. I’m shocked they’re planning to build more commercial units, there’s hundreds stood empty already??? Madness. Absolutely brilliant video!
It's what happens when you have beureucrats running councils who have never worked a proper job or seen how a business works in their lives. The city needs employment, which means business. To attract that business, you need incentives, like business grants, apprenticeships, scholarships and local industry investment. You are totally right. That centre theyre building is destined to be empty (if it ever gets finished).
I've got a lot of respect for the way you film. Not too long ago some cheap hack (who I won't link) filmed a video round stoke and only sought to focus on the negative, he had a complete disregard for the history and people of the town. Also refusing to stop filming when asked. You my friend have shown the reality of stoke, exactly as it is. It's a town in need of help and community spirit, and more people like yourself! Your interest and willing to talk and learn about the town show that things can get better. Keep up the good work :)
Paul is one of the nicest blokes you could ever wish to meet , when we were kids we grew up in the same street . great to see a true craftsman in his workshop
56 million is ridiculously low to 'level up' a place. To put it in context, in the last 12 months, it was reported today, that the govt has spent 3.97 BILLION £s on the asylum system, paying hotel bills etc. Also, 56 million is equivalent to just 112 London apartments. 56 million to improve a British city.🙄
@@lose8447 UK was a net contributor to the EU ie. we gave more £ than we got back in 'funding'. Amazing how many people fell for that con trick. Would you like to give me £100 and I will give you £80 back and brag to everyone that I have just given you a grant? More like the Eton clowns have chosen not to spend hundreds of millions on towns like Stoke, instead they have decided to spend it on 3 and 4 star hotels for tens of thousands of foreign men, and other things like the PPE enrichment scandal.
@@lose8447sorry but quite incorrect, your backing the wrong horse there. It’s clearly the globalist benefiting multinational corporates (e.g. IKEA, Tesco, Walmart, etc) that have led to the decline of local and national business enterprises. The bloated bureaucracy of the EU never encouraged the latter, only ever protecting the interest of the multinational corporates, driving up ever more unnecessary regulation to squeeze the small industries into submission.
@@lose8447The EU is a globalist entity. Globalism has ruined this country, along with most of the rest of the Western world, including the countries within the EU. Besides, we haven't really left; our globalist politicians won't allow it.
@@lose8447Stoke grew from pottery, steel and coal-mining industry. Since Thatcher decided to de-industrialize Britain, Stoke has been in constant decline. They voted leave more than ANY city in Britain. Covid and Online shopping helped kill the high street, but it was already in decline. To blame it on Brexit is ridiculous
First time viewer of the channel and not only impressed by your unbiased, calm & down to earth narration, but you displayed great respect (such as non filming those under the influence) throughout and highlighted every positive. Well worth the watching and happy to subscribe.
I worked in Crewe teaching at the college for a few years almost 30 years, just up the road from Stoke and it was a dying place even then. Not that Crewe was exactly thriving either. Just found your channel and I am very impressed with your content, presentation and insight. You deserve many more subscribers for work of this quality.
I just returned to Stoke after many years away. It's seriously depressing, but it was always a bit of a dump in my opinion. How is Crewe these days? I should take a trip up there and have a look around.
@@BlueDemon77 I haven't been back to Crewe for30 years. I know a couple of people there still and they say it's a total dump. Of course Nantwich and the surrounding Cheshire countryside are still beautiful. And wealthy.
Tear filled eyes on reading all of the comments of current residents and ex pats of Stoke on Trent, of which l am now one of since moving from Tunstall to Cheshire in 2010. It will always have a place engraved in my heart but equally saddens me due to all the deprivation that now exists in a once thriving massive city. I entered the ceramic industry on leaving school in 1976 when there were 13 tile manufacturing sites under the name of H&R Johnsons within all the ‘six towns’ Now there is only one that employs around 200 people due to automation, when there used to be thousands of workers. People l know worked in the ceramic industry for 40 plus years. It’s all so very sad. I’ve lost all my immediate family who were born & bred in tunstall except my dear mum who was from Ireland. I’ve also lost my town and City which breaks my heart 💔
It may be a tad ‘middle class’ but the Emma Bridgewater factory in Stoke is well worth a visit. Just outside the city, is the Wedgwood factory with the fantastic museum (now an outpost of London’s V&A Museum).
It's a shame! It's not just Stoke it's happening all over UK, this government have broken the people, our community's, culture's, ways, families & values.
If you take away London, the average Brit has about the same wealth as someone from Alabama or Tennessee. UK desperate needs regional state governments, the UK is just too centralised on London, and too much is dumped on Councils.
@@sammccormick9109 I'm not on about any particular party! I'm on about mps/Lords & powers that be 98‰of them!!! Or is your party the best by far. Lol, They've down trodden our people for centuries!
I found you from your Barrow video, but I'm sticking around as a happy subscriber. I think your real plus is you engage with strangers and find out what is going on. Keep it going!
I used to work for bet365 some twenty years ago, and at that time Hanley wasn’t that bad now obviously becomes even worse! Thank you for filming that Sainsbury’s supermarket opposite the Genting Casino where I shopped very often now closing down and abandoned so hearth breaking!! Actually, you don’t to go that far to find the Pottery chimney just go the other side of the abandoned Sainsbury’s supermarket the Tesco Extra down all the way at the end of the car park then go uphill to the Central bus station in the mid-way you should see one. Thank you again for making this film so that I know what Stoke-on-Trent looks like today after I left the city ten years ago!!😊
Hello Georgia how are you. Greetings from Ireland (Dublin) to Stoke, UK. There are derelict areas in lots of cities and most towns. I see it as I drive down the country. I hope things turn around and slowly but surely improve. Stoke has a great history including pottery. I wish you the best of luck and the same for Stoke in the future 👍🙏 Michael
A rather marvelous insight into Stoke-on-Trent now, it has been a city terribly let down. I've always said that it's not easy to find gems like bottle ovens and other hidden historic sites and with a much better signposting and a decent transport system that would be made easier. Levelling up has been a con perpetrated by the Tories, the £56m is shouted by the likes of Gullis et al. and the £30m on transport has vanished into the pockets of who knows who. As you said the money should go to the people you spoke to opening or running local businesses and not purely into the pockets of big developers to level land and build car parks. Stoke deserves better, thank you for visiting.
Yeah, there's something in the sincerity and enthusiasm you brought to this that really hit me and made me feel quite emotional. I stayed the night in a Hanley hotel a couple of weeks ago (I was in town for a job interview) and I was definitely shocked by what I saw. But also, my partner is going to be doing a Masters in Ceramics at the university there, and to see you connect with the industrial pottery past just made me think yes, this is still the right place for that. Great video.
Very interesting tour of Stoke. The Etruscans were and ancient civilization from Italy with wonderful arts and crafts. If you know the famous Wedgewood pottery (the blue pots with white relief decoration), it copied the Etruscan designs. Stoke City was a founding club of the first football league and is the 2nd oldest club in the world. Sir Stanley Matthews was England's greatest footballer who played for Stoke in the old 1st Division until he was in his 50s.
I lived in stoke when I went to uni there in the late 2000s, it was a already falling to bits then, crazy to see how much worse it’s gotten since then. The fact the town hall itself is up for sale is mind boggling, I went to some cool concerts there back in the day. It’s a pretty iconic building.
I was living in Stoke from 1984 to 87 as a student at North Staffs Poly. It was a great place. The Art Museum is one of the best. There were nightclubs a plenty, including " The Place" famous for its Northern Soul. Its very sad to see it like this. The people were wonderful, funny and warm, it bustled with life. I see some of the names like Spode are back, after realising that people dont want fine English china made in sodding china! There is so much history, Mitchell and the Spitfire to name one. Unfortunately during my time old two Jags started the process of Urban renewal, compulsory purchases of row upon row of old terraces, which to this day are still standing empty. These were humble but pristine houses inhabited by old dears who scrubbed their doorsteps and sold their unwanted items to a rag and bone man. They basically ripped the heart out of the place. The generation that made it a great place have gone, but its encouraging that there are budding, and successful businesses springing up.
Hi there I was in Stoke same time as you with lots of mates at the excellent NSP. I was an apprentice at Michelin living at the YMCA in Hanley. Remember "the Place" with great affection! Good times. Sad what's happened isn't it?
:grins: I was the shift before you - '81 to '84 :) Back when the Leek Road campus was still nearly new and the courses were amongst the best in the country. The town back then was a bit run down in certain areas but, as you say, the people were great and it was perfectly safe to walk about at any time of the day or night.
The Place was the first ever club I went to - happy memories of wandering up and down its staircases and in and out of various club rooms! At Cauldon 79-80 doing A levels...
Found you by accident but I really enjoyed this video. It was very interesting. It's such a shame to see some of the old industrial towns being left to just rot.
I went to Stoke a few years back to pick up the suits for a mates wedding, place is a dump...it's not all "online shopping" that is to blame...some of the areas of Stoke look like they started going to pot long before online shopping, look at the state of some of the buildings, it takes decades for some of that damage to occur. One of the things that struck me about Stoke is just how hard it is to navigate if you're not from the area. It's a complicated town. I ended up having to walk across a large chunk of it to get where I was going as well because at the time, it was insanely hard to park anywhere. What I think, is the beginning of the end for places like Stoke, was the retail chains moving in and pushing the independent businesses out, in the meantime business rates have been pushed up (because the chains can afford to spread the cost)...then online shopping came around and crushed the chains...when the units became available again, the business rates were so high that it made a lot of business basically impossible...add to this the fact that out of town retail parks have popped up everywhere and "progressive" towns aggressively chasing away motorists and you have a recipe for this sort of thing. That Etruscan Square development is an absolute joke...millions of pounds and a couple of years later and there is nothing to show for it. There aren't even planning notices on the fences...so they haven't even entered the planning phase...Stoke got scammed. What they should have done with the millions from the levelling up fund, is freeze business rates for a period of time, subsidise rents and subside the repair of existing buildings...put the money in the hands of the locals, not developers. If it is put in the hands of locals, they will hire other locals to repair things, build things, work in shops etc...all these people have to shop somewhere and spend their money. If the money doesn't reach the local people, it doesn't enter the local economy and therefore cannot make a difference.
It was never a particularly glamourous city with street after street of cheap terraced housing for the pottery workers, but its decline happened as the pottery industry petered out. With that gone, online shopping was the nail in the coffin.
I agree but as you say don't put it in the hands of councils, muppets the lot of them ,wasted millions all councils should be made to answer to where all this money has gone 🤔 Not to be written off and kept quite. Put it in the hands of the people that do care about their birth place and the lovley warm people that dispite what these councils morons have done remain warm friendly caring people love you all my fellow stokies. 😘 Xxxxxxxxxxxx Ppps don't let them destroy you as they have our hometown.
I worked for a British company of Stafford, based at India and have been to that part of country very often.... first time visited Stoke on Trent in 1997...and later many times..I am deeply shocked and pained to see the condition today.....I always carried that beautiful image of beautiful river, orchards and bustling town.... since I have retired I wanted to visit this area shortly. Deeply pained....may happy days return soon 😢
I'm in Australia now and Indian people I meet can't understand when I say we're poor. Obviously we have different levels of deprivation, but some people think we all live in cottages and drink tea with scones lol. Most people couldn't even bake a scone now.
Hello, I'm American, I just spent a couple of hours power watching some of your videos, I really enjoyed them and although I'm American I could relate to many of the stories you were on about. My Mum was born in London at the start of WW11, my wife is Scottish and my kids with British passports. When I was living in South Ruislip in the mid 80's we were paying less than a pound a pint at my local, the Black Bull, almost double that in London. I've notice the death of several things you've talked about, the High Street, The Pubs. In my Wife's hometown in Scotland the woolen mill shut down but the town is managing well, a little further North where we have family an American Airforce Base shut down and the jobs on the oil rigs slowed, the High Street is dead and the real estate is suffering.
My pal tells me Franky's Bar closed about 6 years ago. It was a small place, full of bookshelves and huge pics of Charlie Chaplin on the walls.. a very popular pub at one time apparently.. How times change.. Thanks for another truly fascinating video, David.. 👏👍
Found this fascinating. I am a Stokie who hasn't lived there since 1993. Do call over when possible but it's clear that tragically the city centre (Hanley) is dying. Out of town you should check out the 'Festival Park' retail park built on site of National Garden Festival from 1986, formerly Shelton Bar steelworks, back when Stoke had an industry!! Festival Park taking most of the trade now it seems. Also get to Trentham Gardens a few miles out, another big - more artisan - retail site with great history around the Trentham estate. There's also the Gladstone Pottery Museum (where you'll still find the bottle kiln ovens), the Wedgewood Museum in Barlaston (few miles out) and the Hanley (Potteries) Museum with great local history. There is great local history - but it's not in the city centre. Peak District also a short 30 min drive out. Lots more besides. The Council ought to be promoting Stoke's fantastic cultural heritage far more! Anyways thanks for posting. Liked an subbed! P.s. On a separate note - in an 'online' retail world, what you see in Stoke will be replicated everywhere. High street shops simply cannot earn enough to cover the enormous rent/rates/energy bills/insurance etc... To quote the late, great Freddie Mercury: "Is this the world we created?"
I used to work for bet365 some twenty years ago and lived there for ten years. Since the decline of Pottery, as far as I’m aware Stoke-on-Trent has been repositioned as the national contact centres for UK businesses like online gambling and Telecom companies. Another industry is warehouses many online shopping companies which stores goods and products temporarily and then delivers to customers as soon as it is sold!! So that means the City of Stoke-on-Trent like many other UK🇬🇧 cities have shifted from manufacturing to servicing sector these days!!
Hanley used to be a place I was genuinely excited to visit as both a kid and young adult. It had good shops, cinema, bars and nightclubs. Now, it is somewhere to avoid which is a real shame. The sad part is that I am not that old, I am 39. The rise of internet shopping really crippled this town as a place to visit. I hear before my time the nightlife in particular was even better
Hey mate, I've been watching your series from Brazil. This makes my blood boil, the govt never cared about the North. I honestly miss the pride we Brits used to have. It just seems like a lot of wasted potential. Also, its nice to see the compassion you have for the addicts, we're in an age where most people thinks it's okay to film the vulnerable for clickbait.
So much respect for you for not filming the people doing drugs. Always makes me feel so uncomfortable when people upload footage of people who are completely out of it and clearly have not consented to being filmed. Fair play to you 👏🏻
Totally agree with you Megan. Some people film everything with no compassion.. 🤦🏻♀️ David shows great respect for people's privacy. He won't even film in flats if there's someone living there.. 👍
@@bobjames6622so true, some people just like to gloss over everything and would rather believe lies coz it makes them feel better and bad things don’t happen to them
@@TayWoode Nobody is believing "lies" here.. David described the situation perfectly, without unnecessary filming. There's plenty of vids out there showing the harsh reality of substance abuse if that's what you want to see. This isn't one of those channels.. Respect!
Fantastic video, bittersweet for me as stoke was my childhood home. I left in the late 90s age 19, then at 26 left England for Ireland. I'm totally shocked by the state of Hanley town I remember my school friends dad working in weston signs, now like many other places boarded up. As a child a trip to Hanley would of been a big day out and if I was lucky I would see a bride and groom stepping down the steps at Hanley town hall getting showered in confetti, followed by an afternoon in webberleys book shop, so big you could get lost in it, deciding which artist's paint you were going to buy. The people of stoke are it's biggest asset, so warm, hardworking and always trying to get the community back together. They deserve so much better. 56 million for that joke of a square, where's the money gone!!! Let down again no one in government cares about the people of stoke. A protest at the so called square, building site, is needed, demand to know what the hell is going on, it's tax payers money after all! Stoke on trent has so much potential, but they need help.
Great video, I grew up in Bournemouth and Poole, now in Sydney Australia 🇦🇺 I did not recognise Bournemouth except gardens beach front and chines. Again drug problems. Love how sensitive you are and your excitement finding beauty in the chimneys, they are wonderful
Thanks for the video. My gggg grandfather Samuel Ellis was born in Flintshire, Wales in 1788. He was a collier (probably a miner) and moved to Hanley, along with his son and their family, sometime between 1851 and 1861, and remained there until he died. A family of colliers. It's kinda cool the connections between these mining regions/towns. I wonder how many miners from Wales ended up settling there. Can't imagine how tough the working conditions must have been back then but I'll bet the place had a real community spirit with the coal mining playing such an important part in the development of the pottery industry.
My family walked from Wales also at that time. Many settled in Stoke as it was first place with pits they hit. The Welsh surnames are still common in the area, Methodism was also strong because of it.
Pronounced Eh-trus-can. A civilization based on mainland Italy. 900BC to 27BC. It lasted longer than it looks like Stoke will. This film makes me very depressed for the country and all of us trying to live in it.
I’m an American, but I love Britain. It absolutely breaks my heart to see Britain in the state that it is today. 💔 You are strong though, and you can overcome this like you’ve overcome everything else
When I was a young man some thirty years ago the entire area, all the towns making up Stoke thrived ... it was the place to go to shop, good clubs, good pubs and good people. As you say pottery was at the heart of it all. There were numerous famous pottery companies scattered around Stoke in the five towns ... and here's the clue to finding them. Seeing as the clay was mostly brought in via barge, follow the canal(s). Nearly everybody worked in the pottery industry or in the shops and hotel trades. The big deal nowadays is that politically speaking Stoke-on-Trent is run by 44 council members in various districts, both Labour and Conservative mainly .... and I'm guessing the "Levelling Up" project will drag its feet because of beurocracy and indecision, and yes ... falling out and disagreement over funding allocation no doubt. There was never a drugs problem in those days, merely a few drunken brawls after Stoke lost a football match, and crime was no different than anywhere else in UK. I have to admit your well made video shocked me a little seeing it, as now I live in East of England and have not been over to Staffs. for quite a few years. But pottery used to be exported all over the world in those days, and clearly that trend has died now apart from the odd small concern. I have actually walked round inside the Wedgewood factory in its prime and seen the artists painting fine China by hand, and they were individually renowned world-wide for their talents. Such a shame it's all gone. Great but sad video ... well done.
"There were numerous famous pottery companies scattered around Stoke in the five towns ..." One small point, there are six towns, as the OP says in the video. Arnold Bennet fictionalised the Potteries in his novels, e.g. "Anna of the Five Towns", omitting Fenton. He gave them slightly different, mostly, names. Don't worry too much, it's a common mistake.
One of your best videos. Your enthusiasm for history and your love of chimneys is contagious. We lived in Staffordshire from 2004-2006 and visited Stoke often. It had great shopping then. Sad to see so much boarded up. I was particularly upset seeing Hanley Town Hall for sale. Who is going to buy a big old building there? (You need to go and visit Ironbridge - lots of industrial history in that valley.)
Your content is fantastic and so interesting, even though the subject matter is sad at times. I stay in Perth, Scotland and tbe town centre is also being affected badly. Its okay if you want a mobile phone, your nails done, a haircut or a coffee but thats about it. Perth had a thriving town centre but now so many places boarded up. Everything else had been pushed out to the retail parks on the outskirts of town.
Excellent video; love your enthusiasm and respect for people and places. Obviously (re)development takes time, but I feel pouring money into new flats and unneeded retail space is only going to level up the property developers. Building on the pride and knowledge of people like Paul would have been a surer way to develop an authentic heritage destination that people would visit for its history rather than a generic shopping plaza. All of those brown brick buildings and kilns along the canals are beautiful locations for appropriate development (museums, small shops, cafes, accommodation, narrow boat tours, etc)
I think new development is more profitable. So all this levelling up money will end up in the pockets of developers. I don't think there is much interest in what the people of the town really need or preserving the amazing history of the area. They never seem to ask the people what they want.
Great video and shows the decline of Stoke as a whole. You're right the 6 towns does pull funding in opposite directions. The Middleport museum looks great I'll have to visit. As for the Council promotion its repeated rhetoric us Stokies are used to. Big promises little action apart from car parks for an abandoned town centre.
Fantastic video. Those chimneys should be celebrated and protected. Great words in the last ten minutes of the video regarding the guy Paul and the woman with the book store.
Both of my parents were born in Stoke but moved away after both being the first in the family to go to university, moved down to London where I was born. Both sides of my family lived there for generations going back into the 16th century at least. I visited my grandparennts every year in the school holidays. I have such mixed feelings about the place. The best thing my parents did was move away after university but I loved the close knit family atmosphere back then however it isn't a place with much hope anymore. The countryside around it is so beautiful but inner city decay after the decline of the industry there has gutted the towns and the big shopping centres and later online shopping destroyed the city centre shopping. I haven't visited it since the last of my grandparents died but I wish something could be done to bring it back to at least what my parents and grandparents remembered in the 50s to 70s. So sad.
I still live here, the people are wonderful, down to earth generous humans. I have to travel to London once a week with work and I can not wait to pass under the Euston tunnel to get out of the place, give me SOT over London any day of the week. Stoke has been left to rot by successive governments, we never recovered from Thatcher because we weren't given the opportunity to. We are not on our own in this. Vast strides of the country (mostly in the North) are like this, following the closing of Britain's industry. These places just need actual help and a leg up, not just throw away platitudes like "levelling up". But please don't petty us minions still living in the city, there is plenty of life left in us. We are still raising our families, still achieving great things, still enjoying our lives in reasonably priced house. We even manage to live even though we don't have a Waitrose! Up the Potters!
I went to university in Stoke back in 2012-2015. Even back then it was a run down with plenty of closed shops, but I'm really shocked just how much worse it is now. The main "strip" for a night out used to be down Trinity Street, any while nothing amazing, was quite nice to have a single street to go down as student to visit all the bars and clubs. Looking at it now around 80% of it is now boarded up. I can't help but feel it's economic decline makes it feel almost like a post soviet city in the late 90's.
I love the UK 🇬🇧 even though I don’t live there. I’m from the USA 🇺🇸 and, we definitely have this happening in so many areas of my country. I don’t know 🤷🏼♀️ the complete answer to the problem but, seeing this especially in my favorite country-England - makes me so sad 😢
I m from Germany and we had such problems during the 90s. After the reunification the formerly eastern parts had unemployment rates of 20-30%. - At the same time in the Rhein Ruhr area every day an old traditional company closed. Steal and coal industry was shot down. At the same time production moved to China. It took some 20 years to overcome the process of industrial change. Nowadays much is better. New companies and tecnologies are there. I saw some videos about Appalachia and the Rust Belt in the US. Reminds me of England and 90s or early 2000s Germany. I think Germany had to do political and economic reforms earlier due to reunification. Those cuts in social welfare and the introduction of debt limit for the households were and are hard but beneficial in the long run. Guess France will see that too in the future. For the US and UK I was interested in the issue of redistribution of money from public households oder states to regions that are suffering. In Germany there is the Länderfinanzausgleich, that means the strongest regions have to donate money to the poorer parts since it is in the constitution that the state has to guarantee equal minimumstandards in the whole country. How is that in UK? For the U.S. I estimate there is no such fond.
If you had come to Longton, we have the Gladstone pottery museum. Its a 15 minute walk for us. There is also historical short street just up from the museum in the back streets of Normacot and there are some nice little hidden gems like a bottle oven that we only found a couple of yrs back. It would have been surrounded by a factory in our youth. I worked in a pottery factory there when i left school in the office's but i got to go all around the depts of the factory. Then a few yrs later i learned to do lythogaphing, guilding and flower making. So interesting it was.😊
The best video yet that I've seen, Brilliant. So sad to see the closed shops in Hanley but that ceramic mill at the end was brilliant as was the lady opening the book shop. While ever you've got people who care about their home town it has a chance to regenerate. I come from Bradford and there is some great regeneration happening here too some of it directly because of the local population saying no to closure and demolition and saying we can use the Odeon building instead of demolishing it. You've got to love the human spirit.
I remember going into an old, empty pottery kiln when working with my grandad and uncle on a worksite. I was about 15 at the time and it had a weird mix of wonder and eeriness, largely because of the physical dimensions and the long history it exudes. With all these sights now being inaccessible as shown in the video, I can appreciate that experience a lot more.
Thank you for being so sympathetic towards the city. The drug problem here is horrendous and I am surprised you weren’t photo bombed to be fair. I have been here 14 years and have seen it decline rapidly. I doubt Etruscan Square will ever get finished as the city council are on the verge of bankruptcy. There is however, some amazingly beautiful architecture, a lot of it left to decay, but some truly is phenomenal. There are definitely better places to live, but, there are by far worse places!
He was filming using a Pocket 2 I think, spotted it in a window reflection. We have one, can record 4K/60 but it's very small, three axis gimbal stabilisation and very very discrete 🤫
Thank you for producing this film, I think that it is an honest but respectful view of the City that has been my home for nearly 55 years. It's interesting to see familiar sights through another persons eyes and to accept that you see the City as it is today when I spend most of my time remembering how it once was. Successive governments have let down this once great place along with many others like it and they should be ashamed of what now remains of our industrial heritage. I have no idea what has happened to the levelling up money but only as of a few days ago it was announced that the arena will not be built at Etruscan Square so I fear the worse for the future. Good luck with your film making and thank you for highlighting such an important subject.
Watching again ❤it's so so sad it was not just the potteries, we were known for steel ,brick works many. Makes me sad the people are the best. Warm and welcoming. We had the best clubs and the famous jollies cabaret club all top acts. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Im from Stoke and iv always been so proud of my potteries roots. But seeing this is absolutely heartbreaking. Some of the areas you walked along used to be bustling in the 90s. Hanley was full of families happily shopping safely, at Christmas time the late night shopping was such a nice atmosphere. Middleport pottery or Gladstone are always good ports of call to revisit the history of Stoke and to see how thriving it once was. Even though its sad to see Stoke like this I am and will always be proud of being from Stoke, the people are good, decent people- salt of the earth and always welcoming. Thanks so much for this video and treating this city with respect.
@@jmshrrsnJohnathan Gullis is Stoke North, not Stoke Central where Hanley is located. I know you probably won't like to hear this but in actuality Johnathon (who is my MP), has actually helped me out with issues I had in regard to some NHS services help issues whereby tagging him in to an ongoing issue I was having, he managed to get the issue sorted. Unlike previously, Ruth Smeeth did not seem remotely interested in helping at the time. I'm not saying this to be "politically divisive" or what have you, it's just an addendum to say while I may not agree with him on a political level regarding some issues, he has been approachable and willing to help out on a more specific personal level if you are having specific issues. This is just from personal experience.
In remembrance of Sheila and Barry. Barry made the molds for pottery in Stoke and went abroad to do so. He finished unemployed with a skill no one wanted anymore. My friends lived in Stoke. Barry a true craftsman whos art died. Sheila was a teacher and watched the opportunities die year by year for the children she taught. I could cry.
I was raised in Stoke on Trent before my folks emigrated to the USA . To find a true history of Stoke On Trent you should have gone to Longton and visited "the Gladstone Pottery Museum " an excellent place to visit !!!
I was born in Leek, 6 miles from Stoke on Trent, now living in Australia. Hanley was a top shopping destination in the 1950's ! I recall as a kid in the 1955's being driven around Stoke [The Potteries] by my Dad and passing thousands of bottle kilns, no longer in use. massive paddocks of them, surrounded by tall grasses. There was once 1,000's of Potteries in Stoke, and 100's of Silk, then 100's of cotton mills in Leek. Your podcasts demonstrate that all industries growth, reach a peak, go into decline and eventually die, and with them the once thriving communities that surrounded them. IMO when Britain decided to forsake industry and manufacturing for insurance and finance, then wealth shrunk to London, and the Midlands and the North were headed for collapse.
I've lived in Stoke-on-Trent for 20 years and I've only visited Hanley once in 10 years (for jury service which was obligatory) it's a total dump. It doesn't surprise me to see that fenced off area with no activity as the council are notorious for wasting money on pointless crap. Nevertheless I have a decent job and live in a lovely area and have met lots of wonderful people here. Your video shows how a city with such amazing history has declined to the level it has .😊
Hello, local here! Thanks for the really sympathetic video to the area. Firstly Etruscan is pronounced Ee-trusk-en 😀. I try to avoid Hanley for reasons obvious, but Piccadilly is usually far more lively on other days with interesting small owned businesses open. The run down factory/bottle kiln by the canal in Longport was the Price and Kensington Tea Pot factory - which unfortunately was left to ruin by previous owners. That bit used to have fly tipping on it but has been cleaned up. The building by where you stood filming that wasn't abandoned though, people use it from what I've heard, including a potter. Just a short walk down the canal would have taken you to a beautiful park with 2 lakes. As for the bottle kiln you went in - it was used as a filming location for Peaky blinders, as was the rest of Middleport pottery.
Middleport/Longport suffered a lot due to the pulled "Pathfinder" regeneration project, originally started by Blair's government, but suddenly pulled when Cameron got in - mid project! There is a great community spirit in the area though, locals really trying hard to make things better. Again thank you for the well made video that showed a lot of respect.
I am also a local - I live just across the Longport A500 roundabout in Porthill, and my partner took a course at Middleport so he knows Paul the woodworker. I was hoping he would make it to Westport Lake - I feel really lucky to have it almost on my doorstep.
@sdrawkcabUK Etruscan pottery. early classical, highly in vogue
@@iamjoestafford also in Porthill. Hello neighbour 😂. Westport Lake is SO beautiful isn't it? A little oasis.
@sdrawkcabUK ask Josiah Wedgwood, it's all to do with him. There's an area called Etruria (just by Hanley) which was built up around Wedgwood, and he also developed Etruscan ware, in a classical style. Hence the link within the city.
@@rowanberryglass Hi! 😆 Yes, it is lovely - we are so lucky to have it so close by! We live on Melvyn Crescent just off First Avenue, and we can get to it by walking from the back of our house through the woods and under the D road - if we had a dog, we'd be there all the time!
I'm a 19 year-old New Zealander who is a massive Stoke City fan. Earlier this year I travelled to Stoke-on-Trent to watch two home games (Hull, Huddersfield). Was only in the city for the matchdays (I stayed in Manny), but it was so sad to see the city of which the football team I love. All the Stokies were so welcoming - although couldn't believe there was a Kiwi who had actually heard of Stoke/had the desire to actually go up there. Felt at home, loved the place even with it's flaws. I'll be back one day - hopefully to a more revitalised place. City and the people need it.
COME ON YOU POTTERS
what a gem you are mate im nearly 61 and a potter cant believe you you folow stoke the city has been in decline for years just hope it get better gud on yay kiwi
❤fix bayonets
I’m a kiwi and love football, but you could’ve picked a better team and not those bums stoke
Interested where in NZ you live?
Thanks Guy
Absolute trier. A lot of hope 4 us. The best place Iz B-arts
Nice to see a young lad interested in his past and culture. Enjoyed it very much and subscribed.
Appreciate that thanks 👍👍
Most of Britain is a dump these days. The decline is heartbreaking.
Aye its a P1ss pit m8.
All done deliberately.
@@jasonwhite7677 Conspiracy theory alert.............
@@paulhargreaves1497 it’s not a conspiracy when your own eyes can see the truth. Why could they build beautiful things in the past but not today?
Following in America's footsteps as usual
Your video brought me to tears 😢 I'm a Stokie born and bred but ive lived in Paris for 5 years. Even in in that short time the city centre has gone really downhill. Its my friend who owns the new book shop and I'm happy to say it's open now and looking beautiful. I'm on the train now to London and then Paris but Stoke will always have a huge place in my heart
I,ve been away from the UK for donkeys years now and ten minutes into this video I started to cry. Thank you for your enthusiastic effort here, Im so glad that there are young people who see the beauty of places behind the ugliness. Well done.
I honestly believe than the decline in our once great towns and cities can be reversed simply by applying free parking! None of this park for two hours and no return for four hours shit, how does that give you time to shop/ eat/ go to the cinema have a meal etc. money grabbing councils rinsing motorists are to blame for a lot of the decline in shoppers.
@@sasquatch2732 I agree it would help, but I remember a time when if you went up Hanley to do some shopping, you went on the bus, far simpler. Public transport, i.e. a light railway like Sheffield metro would be fantastic. But would the city centre support that ... difficult to see.
@@sasquatch2732I think you're seeing the problems in a rather simplistic way. Things have gone far too far now. The tory attempt to turn the uk into a tax haven off the Northern shore of Europe has backfired big time. They are leaving yhe sinking ship. Free parking won't fix the systemic economic issues now.
A few town centres are still thriving though. Like Kingston upon Thames where I sometimes go to. But like other town centres today there are a lot of homeless people there in doorways. But the shops are still busy.
@@sasquatch2732 only one part of it
Just found this channel today. You are so respectful of ppl living there and the history. I think other channels are just a piss take. You are creating historical docs here love. Thank you.
I appreciate the nice comment thank you 😀
As a southerner I lived near and worked with a lot of Stokies, I was surprised how run down some parts were but I have to say Stoke has some of the warmest and funniest people in England. I hope things get better for them.
I visited Soke 24 years ago to install some IT equipment at one of their bus depots. I was surprised at how run down it was back then. As a Londoner, I too was surprised by how friendly the locals were. I asked one local for directions to the bus depot (this was pre-sat nav and smartphones times), and he was so helpful, he opened my car door, jumped in, and proceeded to give me live directions as we drove towards the depot! It also happened to be on the way to his house, which probably had something to do with it. LoL!
Thankyou ❤
@ganjadan7600 - LoL! You clearly visited the wrong part of London!
@ganjadan7600 - LoL! I know both locations well. Basically, your trip is the equivalent of claiming to be a fully qualified electrician because you wired a plug once!
@ganjadan7600 - "I said the north". Your Grammar is indicative of your confused state of mind! My previous comment drew an analogy with your ludicrous statement about London, based upon a trip to Euston and Wembley! Nothing to do with the North. Anyway good luck with the treatment. I wish you a speedy recovery! LoL!
I was a delivery driver late 60s Hanley being my main delivery . Fresh salmon and venison to Lewis’s, full load of clothes to C&A and shop deliveries to Hanley town centre . I’m sitting here in tears seeing on film what I now see in real life . High cost of rates for shops and markets , high car parking no wander Retail Parks are booming . R.I.P potteries you were great once
What a thoughtful and respectful video of the city my family have called home for generations. Such a shame to see its continued demise.
I was born and raised in stoke, i'm 46 now and lived here all my life, generations of my family worked at the Spode pottery in the heart of Stoke on Trent. I went to Boothen primary (now demolished) and Trent Valley High, i've walked every square inch of it over the course of my life.
I've always been super proud of our potting history, and the characterful Stokie's who's skilled hands made tableware for kings. The beginning of the end was when they transferred production to Asia due to cost, online shopping and an utterly shit council destroyed the rest. The last thing to go is hope, but as you now see from the rise of homeless, drug dependant souls shuffling through our town centres, that too is wearing thin.
Well said
I was born in Stoke and grew up in Newcastle-Under-Lyme. In the 1990s as a teenager Hanley was the place to go for shopping and it also had some decent clubs. It's so sad to see what it's like now (I have lived abroad for 20+ years). The decay is devastating. Thank you for making this video and shining a light on the destruction and abandonment that Stoke has suffered. Up the Mighty Potters!
UK is done and over. With majority population intellectually, numerically bankrupt.. this guy keeps talking about 20 million given ....for what?? Building more when all existing buildings are in ruins..bankrupt guys..got to start from the foundation, from cradle.. work guys, no bucks for benefits,free lunch,hand outs..everybody talks about funding for anything without ever understanding that the coffer is empty
I know I don’t go Hanley at all. Total dump
I am from Stoke and I grew up in Castle too, and I have lived abroad for over 20 years too but I seriously don't remember Stoke ever being up to much sorry, even 30 years ago it was a dive.
@mimo.1467
As someone who's lived here since birth you must be kidding. Hanley in particular is an absolute state now, Tunstall and Burslem even more so.
Oddly elitist comment there, too regarding working class people. EVERY place has working class people, if you didn't have the working classes you'd be stuffed.
Tunstall looks more battered than it ev er did, same for anywhere here.
@@christrickett3291
You genuinely didn't live here if you think that.
Excellent channel. What Stoke needs is what so many other towns/cities need - a huge drop in business rents and rates, plus a new way of looking to get local people to set up and run businesses from the town. Indoor arenas etc aren't going to get the high st revived.
It's done by design to make the rich even richer, not to even mention the corruption
What's the point if people are not shopping any more the second lockdown finished it off and many people never went back to their old habits. All planned.
The problem with rents and business rates is they would rather have empty buildings with no tenants than getting less money from a business operating there. They should let people have it cheap because making some money is better than nothing. More open businesses means more footfall for OTHER businesses as well! And less crime, less people hanging out in abandoned shop doorways.
Rents reflect market conditions so they drop anyway and rates are an important source of income for the council. And there is no point either dropping if there is no effective demand because incomes are low.
@@britishstatistics The post wasn't about big business, was it
Fantastic video, but it shocks me to the core.
I grew up in rural Staffs from early 50's to late 60's, so my memory is of the height of the pottery industry (surprised that the clean air act was as early as 1957). It was where Mum bought eg wool or fabric to make some of our clothes, & ready made undies & dad's clothes etc. 1st reaction "Where are the people & bustling pavements?" "Where is the traffic on once busy roads?" No such thing as shop closures then.
I remember walking from Hanley to Longton. Rows of brick terraced houses & in the morning the house wives, scarf over head, cleaning the front door step of smuts (soot from the bottle kilns) then polishing them with a red wax. There were large groups of bottle kilns, fired by coal, billowing smoke everywhere, & as it grew dark in the winter evening, a veritable firework show of sparks from the top of the kilns. There were also many coal mines nearby (cheap fuel also used domestically)
There were many different pottery manufacturers. Wedgewood was world famous, & made highly expensive articles which decorated palaces. A special clay, Kaolin, was needed to make porcelain. It is only found in the UK in St Austel Cornwall.
Some of the work force travelled 20 miles from the countryside, many women. Our neighbour Mrs. Adams hand painted the designs of pottery ornaments in glaze. It was a labour intensive industry.
In those days mugs were rarely used, except some tankards for beer, everyone drank from cups & saucers.
The canals were also bustling - bringing in Kaolin, & distributing finished products.
I have heard that the gas/ electric kilns were too small to fire the necessary number of products to be viable for mass production, but some survived.
The humanitarian disaster from mass unemployment when the only major industry in the area collapsed without any replacement employment, must have been deeply distressing.
In those days much of the housing was owned by the employer & rented to employees (tied housing). There was a lot of housing owned by the town council & rented to low income people.
Imagine not only losing your job but losing your home at the same time.
Yes I can understand the graffiti against capitalism. A very large urban area needed government intervention to encourage investment in providing new employment back in 1957. Instead those who could, moved to other areas of the country for work, breaking up previously close knit communities, only to face complete deindustrialisation within the next 20 years when the coal mines closed.
I've lived through the deindustrialisation of the UK & privatisation of our major amenities. I also lived through the tail end of the government measures to restart the economy after WW2.
Until I found this site I had no idea of the extent of our ghost cities, caused by deindustrialisation.
I hope my few memories help to fill in some gaps for you wandering turnip. I've lived through times you couldn't imagine - some good - some bad, & needed changing.
I can remember as a child going to Stoke and Hanley with my parents, the building were black with soot, and I can remember the bottle kilns, this would be the late 50s, but there was a high end shop in Hanley that sold lovely dinner services and vases, my parents used to shop there.
What an interesting comment, thanks for the insight into times long gone.
Brilliant recollections in your piece Judith, thanks. 😁😁😁
I think you're cataloguing not only the decline of Stoke, but the high street overall. People have more reason to stay in than go out. We can buy everything online, don't need to interact in real life and it's a crying shame that we are sleepwalking into this awful way of living 😢
Should have been a graffiti protest about socialism.. thats where the evil lies.
This is a terrific video, thanks for doing it. Stoke is genuinely packed with amazing people who have only been able to look on as the city underwent an unmanaged decline. There are however little pockets of beauty, heritage and of course we are the gateway to amazing countryside. It's appreciated that you highlighted (and enjoyed) a few of those wonderful quirks and excellent bits of the place that we still have. Well done fella.
Lovely. See his little face light up when He finds a Chimney. Let alone be inside one Extacy Pure Heaven. and "Magic Paul" A follically challenged "Gandalf" Made us all smile too. thanks Turnip
Stoke was also home to Kerr Stuart & Co, who manufactured railway locomotives from 1888 to 1930. Their exports reached many parts of the UK and overseas. Amazing to think this town used to supply machines around the globe.
I like reading things like that.. must make the older generation very sad. Im not young but theres so much I don’t know
Thank you for making such a interesting video about Stoke. A good place to visit when in the potteries is the Gladstone pottery museum in Longton.
Adapt or die
Sadly all too common across the UK. I remember the big Petters in Staines that used to design, manufacture, and export diesel engines all over the world. Gone, and replaced by a Sainsbury. Skilled and semi-skilled work replaced by minimum wage (if you're lucky). Of course, it didn't have to be that way, globalization was a conscious decision, the Faustian bargain of neoliberalism gave up British manufacturing and industry in exchange for cheap shit from China. We got the worst of the deal IMHO. Once great British marques are now foreign owned - ARM holdings, DeepMind Technologies, Jaguar, Land Rover, British Steel, British Airways, British Airports Authority, and even the building HMRC operates out of - all foreign owned, just for a taster. There's not a lot left, even hope has now gone...
That’s what Tories do , they don’t give a flying fcuk about the likes of people in Stoke, look what Johnson did with Brexshit,the guys a fcuking idiot yet he convinced a lot of low information people to vote for them and then shafted them, nothing new there…
I spent three of the best years of my life in Stoke as a student. I'm only sorry I didn't appreciate the town(s) as much as I could have. For anybody from Stoke your town has a special place in my heart and I wish all of you the very best!
As for you mate, you have completely sold me with this video. You've really got your priorities and interests in the right place and you do a great job presenting this video. Your enthusiasm really rubs off. Keep at it. Please continue to highlight local culture and to promote the people who deserve credit for the worthwhile things they do in life.
Well said !
Imagine how much fun you'd have had at a decent university
@@hmq9052 More nightclubs per head of population than any other town at the time, one of the cheapest student union bar(s) in the country, active student union society. Rent was very decently priced. The social sciences department where I was at was rated 4 out of 5 compared to other universities - based on quality of education, professors etc
I couldn't have had more fun if I tried! I feel sorry for people who went to a 'decent' university and couldn't afford fun or spent all their time in their room studying.
@@bganonimouse2754 You don't know you're born
It's so good to see a young person with so much enthusiasm for history. My dad used to be a bargeman taking pottery to places like Liverpool, Manchester and Birmingham by Barge for Wedgwood in the 1950's/60's. Keep up the good work. I'm now Subscribed to your channel.
Your posts should be immediate knowledge to all politicians. Thank you x
I did my PhD in Stoke, at Keele uni but mostly among the people of Stoke and the city's museums. The people I met were so warm and hospitable and so ready to talk about their lives and their strange, rare neighbourhood, its left me with a lifelong affection for Stoke and some of my best ever memories
I did my masters at staffs as an international student and almost died in a racist attack in Chesterton area (used to work a few hours at THE warehouse)(other international students also got attacked regularly) so there is a mix of people from my perspective.
Hmm some of them are warm and kind .
Stokie here. Thanks for uploading this video of my hometown that I left in 2001. My family history is in Stoke on Trent and I grew up there going school from the late 1960s and eventually to college. I loved the place and Hanley was a great city. You probably won't believe that people came to Hanley for day trips on coaches from the West Midlands and Manchester area. The nightlife was superb in the 1980s and there were so many venues that famous acts came to. Mum and Dad saw The Beatles play in Hanley back in the day. The decline started late 1990s and has continued ever since. I was qualified enough to plan Local Agenda 21 where the city could get billions from the EU for projects - but the city planners were just not dynamic or interested. Therefore I left and have been living in the EU the last 22 years. I still like to go home and visit relatives, but I never go into town because it really makes me sad to see what has happened to the once vibrant city I grew up in.
Hi great video.
Not only has Stoke lost most of its pottery industry, it was also a!big coal mining area with many mines, we had a steel works long gone, Michelin factory employing 10,000 at its peak. stoke had a tram system and also its own railway system, both long gone.
I’m a local from Longton. Great video, I tend to avoid most of the areas you visited however there are some really nice places close by mainly trentham gardens which underwent a £120 million redevelopment with shops, restaurants, and a garden centre. You’ll also find some really nice houses in the area too. Gladstone pottery museum is a must visit to learn the history of the pottery industry.
I lived in Bolton for 20 years and it was bustling!....your video has shocked me at the amount of boarded up shops !...I now live in the bustling Cheshire town of Warrington. Glad I left Bolton when I did !.... there's NOWT left !
I had a night out in Stoke On Trent on 27-8-23. I went to The Sugar Mill and it was a great event. Stoke has a couple of good clubs and some pubs serving proper English beer. I found people here very friendly and pretty damned cool to be honest. I know this city has more than its fair share of problems, but I like this place a lot and the people I met here were great.
Hanley Town Hall.
I honestly feel we are in recession when it comes to architecture. They used to build such lovely buildings that lift your spirit. Now we build brutalism. I would love to go back 100 years.
Thats communism for you
I just left a comment that says much the same thing. I would go further and say brutalist architecture is designed to lower people’s spirits and destroy communities. All deliberately done.
No brutalism is a completely different style of architecture and isn't really used these days either. I was popular from 1950's-1970's. Some examples of brutalist architecture are the barbican estate, Brunswick centre and Alexandra road estate in London.
As bad as this is you would not want to go back to 1923 and live through the next 20 years
@@gomperhooblet it would be a paradise compared to today.
I lived in Stoke in the early 90s, the place was already sliding into decline with the loss of collieries, steelworks and potteries. So sad.
Where did you move to❓
The potteries were so good all gone
Collieries, Steel works and potteries that made no profit at all research why !
I went to university near there in the late 90s, and visited Stoke on weekends. There was an active high street and a central open market. But it was pretty grim, I thought. Compared with today, it was probably better.
@@photoman3579 The Steelworks was very profitable, it just was too small for British Steel's plans to concentrate production on to large sites.
You start the video at what was our local Sainsbury’s for many years. It survived the opening of the giant Tesco next door. It had a nice cafe and a great community feel with staff who’d been there for up to 25 years. It was particularly popular with elderly and disabled people as both the car park and store were easy to get round. It suddenly closed I heard, not because it was doing badly, but because Sainsbury’s actually owned rather than leased the site and could make a quick buck after a bad year by flogging it. We still miss it 😢
Thanks for including my photography exhibition, FORTYSEVEN: The Last Bottle Ovens & Kilns of The Potteries. Every Stokie whether they still live in The Potteries or not, is proud to be a Stokie. It’s such a shame how run down it’s all become. During the time photographing the bottle ovens i did notice a glimmer of hope in the industry which will bring reform to the towns. No real thanks to any levelling-up schemes or politicians but to the enthusiasm of the people. The heritage certainly needs looking after and local business needs nurturing for the area to survive. Will you revisit and look for the improvements? I know I will.
And if you didn’t try any oatcakes,you totally missed out!!
Oh no way! So cool that you have ended up watching this I can’t believe it. I loved it in there 👏👏👏
I was sent by my company, about 20 yrs ago, to pick up a ton of plates, cups, bowls etc from a pottery that was closing down. It was quite depressing really. There were other companies there doing the same as me. We looked like vultures picking at the carcass of a dead wildebeest. ☹️
First of all a big thank you to coming to the town where I was born in 1960, it’s really good to see someone so young taking an interest in the lost past. During the early 1970s Hanley was a once a month treat for me and my sisters and it was amazing with so many diverse and individual shops and absolutely packed with shoppers. Unfortunately we’re living in a rapidly changing world and certainly the last few years have played a big part in accelerating that change, I don’t have an answer and don’t think the politicians do either. Would love to know where the levelling up money is being squandered, probably lining pockets. Thanks again for filming this and really enjoyed watching especially listening to the people you met, wonderful.
Yes - we hear about funding but decisions about how it’s to be spent often seem misguided and sometimes quite bonkers. Depressing!
I'm from Newcastle-under-Lyme, right next door to Stoke. The area had mines and steel works as well but has been in steady decline my whole life. I'm always a bit taken aback when I visit my old hometown and see more and more stuff boarded up.
I come from near Longton. Enjoyed tis film. It's sad to see how Stoke has deteriorated but you focused on what is good, thank you. If you visit again go to Longton and the Gladstone pottery museum
I wouldn't normally share this but seeing as we're based in stoke and you took such an interest in the city - we've looked at taking on high street units in Hanley many times to open a new shop or two there, the issue is rents in the area - the vast majority of that closed stuff in the city centre is owned by 2 or 3 large multinational companies rather than the council, so they set the rents, and anything left empty is a big old tax write off. Some of those smaller high street units are up for let £3k-5k per month with HUGE rateably values attached, so the owners have no incentive at all to let them out for a reasonable price, the council has no interest in buying them to let them out for reasonable money and no small business in their right mind will take one on for that kinda money in the 12th most deprived area of the uk.
Got to love Paul! They need to capitalise on Stoke’s assets ie its people, like Paul, its history, and the artisan and innovative small businesses. Not build yet another stadium and hotel which will stand empty for most of the time. I’m shocked they’re planning to build more commercial units, there’s hundreds stood empty already??? Madness. Absolutely brilliant video!
I know it’s bonkers isn’t it. I was really glad to bump into Paul as it added a nice balance to my trip there
It's what happens when you have beureucrats running councils who have never worked a proper job or seen how a business works in their lives. The city needs employment, which means business. To attract that business, you need incentives, like business grants, apprenticeships, scholarships and local industry investment. You are totally right. That centre theyre building is destined to be empty (if it ever gets finished).
I've got a lot of respect for the way you film. Not too long ago some cheap hack (who I won't link) filmed a video round stoke and only sought to focus on the negative, he had a complete disregard for the history and people of the town. Also refusing to stop filming when asked. You my friend have shown the reality of stoke, exactly as it is. It's a town in need of help and community spirit, and more people like yourself! Your interest and willing to talk and learn about the town show that things can get better. Keep up the good work :)
Paul is one of the nicest blokes you could ever wish to meet , when we were kids we grew up in the same street . great to see a true craftsman in his workshop
56 million is ridiculously low to 'level up' a place. To put it in context, in the last 12 months, it was reported today, that the govt has spent 3.97 BILLION £s on the asylum system, paying hotel bills etc. Also, 56 million is equivalent to just 112 London apartments. 56 million to improve a British city.🙄
Completely avoidable situation if it were not for those Eton clowns forcing us out of the EU
@@lose8447 UK was a net contributor to the EU ie. we gave more £ than we got back in 'funding'. Amazing how many people fell for that con trick. Would you like to give me £100 and I will give you £80 back and brag to everyone that I have just given you a grant? More like the Eton clowns have chosen not to spend hundreds of millions on towns like Stoke, instead they have decided to spend it on 3 and 4 star hotels for tens of thousands of foreign men, and other things like the PPE enrichment scandal.
@@lose8447sorry but quite incorrect, your backing the wrong horse there. It’s clearly the globalist benefiting multinational corporates (e.g. IKEA, Tesco, Walmart, etc) that have led to the decline of local and national business enterprises. The bloated bureaucracy of the EU never encouraged the latter, only ever protecting the interest of the multinational corporates, driving up ever more unnecessary regulation to squeeze the small industries into submission.
@@lose8447The EU is a globalist entity. Globalism has ruined this country, along with most of the rest of the Western world, including the countries within the EU. Besides, we haven't really left; our globalist politicians won't allow it.
@@lose8447Stoke grew from pottery, steel and coal-mining industry. Since Thatcher decided to de-industrialize Britain, Stoke has been in constant decline. They voted leave more than ANY city in Britain. Covid and Online shopping helped kill the high street, but it was already in decline. To blame it on Brexit is ridiculous
First time viewer of the channel and not only impressed by your unbiased, calm & down to earth narration, but you displayed great respect (such as non filming those under the influence) throughout and highlighted every positive. Well worth the watching and happy to subscribe.
Hey cheers for watching 😃
I worked in Crewe teaching at the college for a few years almost 30 years, just up the road from Stoke and it was a dying place even then. Not that Crewe was exactly thriving either. Just found your channel and I am very impressed with your content, presentation and insight. You deserve many more subscribers for work of this quality.
I just returned to Stoke after many years away. It's seriously depressing, but it was always a bit of a dump in my opinion. How is Crewe these days? I should take a trip up there and have a look around.
@@BlueDemon77 I haven't been back to Crewe for30 years. I know a couple of people there still and they say it's a total dump. Of course Nantwich and the surrounding Cheshire countryside are still beautiful. And wealthy.
Tear filled eyes on reading all of the comments of current residents and ex pats of Stoke on Trent, of which l am now one of since moving from Tunstall to Cheshire in 2010. It will always have a place engraved in my heart but equally saddens me due to all the deprivation that now exists in a once thriving massive city. I entered the ceramic industry on leaving school in 1976 when there were 13 tile manufacturing sites under the name of H&R Johnsons within all the ‘six towns’ Now there is only one that employs around 200 people due to automation, when there used to be thousands of workers. People l know worked in the ceramic industry for 40 plus years. It’s all so very sad. I’ve lost all my immediate family who were born & bred in tunstall except my dear mum who was from Ireland. I’ve also lost my town and City which breaks my heart 💔
It may be a tad ‘middle class’ but the Emma Bridgewater factory in Stoke is well worth a visit. Just outside the city, is the Wedgwood factory with the fantastic museum (now an outpost of London’s V&A Museum).
Don’t apologise for being ‘middle class’. Be glad to be.
Be glad about classism. . .
It's a shame! It's not just Stoke it's happening all over UK, this government have broken the people, our community's, culture's, ways, families & values.
Adapt or die
This has been happening for decades in the case of Stoke. Blaming this Governeng is a cop out. Labour were no use as well.
Its about looking at the people with money and the movement of the people with money.
If you take away London, the average Brit has about the same wealth as someone from Alabama or Tennessee.
UK desperate needs regional state governments, the UK is just too centralised on London, and too much is dumped on Councils.
@@sammccormick9109 I'm not on about any particular party! I'm on about mps/Lords & powers that be 98‰of them!!! Or is your party the best by far. Lol, They've down trodden our people for centuries!
I found you from your Barrow video, but I'm sticking around as a happy subscriber. I think your real plus is you engage with strangers and find out what is going on. Keep it going!
I used to work for bet365 some twenty years ago, and at that time Hanley wasn’t that bad now obviously becomes even worse! Thank you for filming that Sainsbury’s supermarket opposite the Genting Casino where I shopped very often now closing down and abandoned so hearth breaking!!
Actually, you don’t to go that far to find the Pottery chimney just go the other side of the abandoned Sainsbury’s supermarket the Tesco Extra down all the way at the end of the car park then go uphill to the Central bus station in the mid-way you should see one.
Thank you again for making this film so that I know what Stoke-on-Trent looks like today after I left the city ten years ago!!😊
Im from stoke and this is hearthbreaking to see, amazing genuine peolle from here, sad to see the city in ruin
Hello Georgia how are you. Greetings from Ireland (Dublin) to Stoke, UK. There are derelict areas in lots of cities and most towns. I see it as I drive down the country. I hope things turn around and slowly but surely improve. Stoke has a great history including pottery. I wish you the best of luck and the same for Stoke in the future 👍🙏 Michael
A rather marvelous insight into Stoke-on-Trent now, it has been a city terribly let down. I've always said that it's not easy to find gems like bottle ovens and other hidden historic sites and with a much better signposting and a decent transport system that would be made easier. Levelling up has been a con perpetrated by the Tories, the £56m is shouted by the likes of Gullis et al. and the £30m on transport has vanished into the pockets of who knows who. As you said the money should go to the people you spoke to opening or running local businesses and not purely into the pockets of big developers to level land and build car parks. Stoke deserves better, thank you for visiting.
Yeah, there's something in the sincerity and enthusiasm you brought to this that really hit me and made me feel quite emotional. I stayed the night in a Hanley hotel a couple of weeks ago (I was in town for a job interview) and I was definitely shocked by what I saw. But also, my partner is going to be doing a Masters in Ceramics at the university there, and to see you connect with the industrial pottery past just made me think yes, this is still the right place for that. Great video.
Very interesting tour of Stoke.
The Etruscans were and ancient civilization from Italy with wonderful arts and crafts. If you know the famous Wedgewood pottery (the blue pots with white relief decoration), it copied the Etruscan designs.
Stoke City was a founding club of the first football league and is the 2nd oldest club in the world.
Sir Stanley Matthews was England's greatest footballer who played for Stoke in the old 1st Division until he was in his 50s.
That was interesting thank you
Good history lesson thank you ..
I lived in stoke when I went to uni there in the late 2000s, it was a already falling to bits then, crazy to see how much worse it’s gotten since then. The fact the town hall itself is up for sale is mind boggling, I went to some cool concerts there back in the day. It’s a pretty iconic building.
Some of the towns and countryside around Staffordshire are absolutely beautiful.
I was living in Stoke from 1984 to 87 as a student at North Staffs Poly. It was a great place. The Art Museum is one of the best. There were nightclubs a plenty, including " The Place" famous for its Northern Soul. Its very sad to see it like this. The people were wonderful, funny and warm, it bustled with life. I see some of the names like Spode are back, after realising that people dont want fine English china made in sodding china! There is so much history, Mitchell and the Spitfire to name one. Unfortunately during my time old two Jags started the process of Urban renewal, compulsory purchases of row upon row of old terraces, which to this day are still standing empty. These were humble but pristine houses inhabited by old dears who scrubbed their doorsteps and sold their unwanted items to a rag and bone man. They basically ripped the heart out of the place. The generation that made it a great place have gone, but its encouraging that there are budding, and successful businesses springing up.
Hi there I was in Stoke same time as you with lots of mates at the excellent NSP. I was an apprentice at Michelin living at the YMCA in Hanley. Remember "the Place" with great affection! Good times. Sad what's happened isn't it?
:grins: I was the shift before you - '81 to '84 :) Back when the Leek Road campus was still nearly new and the courses were amongst the best in the country. The town back then was a bit run down in certain areas but, as you say, the people were great and it was perfectly safe to walk about at any time of the day or night.
The Place was the first ever club I went to - happy memories of wandering up and down its staircases and in and out of various club rooms! At Cauldon 79-80 doing A levels...
Found you by accident but I really enjoyed this video. It was very interesting. It's such a shame to see some of the old industrial towns being left to just rot.
I went to Stoke a few years back to pick up the suits for a mates wedding, place is a dump...it's not all "online shopping" that is to blame...some of the areas of Stoke look like they started going to pot long before online shopping, look at the state of some of the buildings, it takes decades for some of that damage to occur.
One of the things that struck me about Stoke is just how hard it is to navigate if you're not from the area. It's a complicated town. I ended up having to walk across a large chunk of it to get where I was going as well because at the time, it was insanely hard to park anywhere. What I think, is the beginning of the end for places like Stoke, was the retail chains moving in and pushing the independent businesses out, in the meantime business rates have been pushed up (because the chains can afford to spread the cost)...then online shopping came around and crushed the chains...when the units became available again, the business rates were so high that it made a lot of business basically impossible...add to this the fact that out of town retail parks have popped up everywhere and "progressive" towns aggressively chasing away motorists and you have a recipe for this sort of thing.
That Etruscan Square development is an absolute joke...millions of pounds and a couple of years later and there is nothing to show for it. There aren't even planning notices on the fences...so they haven't even entered the planning phase...Stoke got scammed.
What they should have done with the millions from the levelling up fund, is freeze business rates for a period of time, subsidise rents and subside the repair of existing buildings...put the money in the hands of the locals, not developers.
If it is put in the hands of locals, they will hire other locals to repair things, build things, work in shops etc...all these people have to shop somewhere and spend their money. If the money doesn't reach the local people, it doesn't enter the local economy and therefore cannot make a difference.
Excellent informative comment, thank you.
Greedy councils and business rates are the death of many high streets.
It was never a particularly glamourous city with street after street of cheap terraced housing for the pottery workers, but its decline happened as the pottery industry petered out. With that gone, online shopping was the nail in the coffin.
I agree but as you say don't put it in the hands of councils, muppets the lot of them ,wasted millions all councils should be made to answer to where all this money has gone 🤔
Not to be written off and kept quite.
Put it in the hands of the people that do care about their birth place and the lovley warm people that dispite what these councils morons have done remain warm friendly caring people love you all my fellow stokies. 😘
Xxxxxxxxxxxx
Ppps don't let them destroy you as they have our hometown.
I worked for a British company of Stafford, based at India and have been to that part of country very often.... first time visited Stoke on Trent in 1997...and later many times..I am deeply shocked and pained to see the condition today.....I always carried that beautiful image of beautiful river, orchards and bustling town.... since I have retired I wanted to visit this area shortly. Deeply pained....may happy days return soon 😢
I'm in Australia now and Indian people I meet can't understand when I say we're poor. Obviously we have different levels of deprivation, but some people think we all live in cottages and drink tea with scones lol. Most people couldn't even bake a scone now.
Hello, I'm American, I just spent a couple of hours power watching some of your videos, I really enjoyed them and although I'm American I could relate to many of the stories you were on about. My Mum was born in London at the start of WW11, my wife is Scottish and my kids with British passports. When I was living in South Ruislip in the mid 80's we were paying less than a pound a pint at my local, the Black Bull, almost double that in London. I've notice the death of several things you've talked about, the High Street, The Pubs. In my Wife's hometown in Scotland the woolen mill shut down but the town is managing well, a little further North where we have family an American Airforce Base shut down and the jobs on the oil rigs slowed, the High Street is dead and the real estate is suffering.
It's not just happening in Britain though, it's happening all over the western world.
My pal tells me Franky's Bar closed about 6 years ago. It was a small place, full of bookshelves and huge pics of Charlie Chaplin on the walls.. a very popular pub at one time apparently.. How times change..
Thanks for another truly fascinating video, David.. 👏👍
Thank you 🙏 we people like you, that can give us some history on these old businesses and towns 🐨🐨🦘
Found this fascinating. I am a Stokie who hasn't lived there since 1993. Do call over when possible but it's clear that tragically the city centre (Hanley) is dying. Out of town you should check out the 'Festival Park' retail park built on site of National Garden Festival from 1986, formerly Shelton Bar steelworks, back when Stoke had an industry!! Festival Park taking most of the trade now it seems. Also get to Trentham Gardens a few miles out, another big - more artisan - retail site with great history around the Trentham estate. There's also the Gladstone Pottery Museum (where you'll still find the bottle kiln ovens), the Wedgewood Museum in Barlaston (few miles out) and the Hanley (Potteries) Museum with great local history. There is great local history - but it's not in the city centre. Peak District also a short 30 min drive out. Lots more besides. The Council ought to be promoting Stoke's fantastic cultural heritage far more! Anyways thanks for posting. Liked an subbed!
P.s. On a separate note - in an 'online' retail world, what you see in Stoke will be replicated everywhere. High street shops simply cannot earn enough to cover the enormous rent/rates/energy bills/insurance etc... To quote the late, great Freddie Mercury: "Is this the world we created?"
I used to work for bet365 some twenty years ago and lived there for ten years. Since the decline of Pottery, as far as I’m aware Stoke-on-Trent has been repositioned as the national contact centres for UK businesses like online gambling and Telecom companies. Another industry is warehouses many online shopping companies which stores goods and products temporarily and then delivers to customers as soon as it is sold!!
So that means the City of Stoke-on-Trent like many other UK🇬🇧 cities have shifted from manufacturing to servicing sector these days!!
Hanley used to be a place I was genuinely excited to visit as both a kid and young adult. It had good shops, cinema, bars and nightclubs. Now, it is somewhere to avoid which is a real shame. The sad part is that I am not that old, I am 39. The rise of internet shopping really crippled this town as a place to visit. I hear before my time the nightlife in particular was even better
The multiple out of town retail parks across the city finished off Hanley more than online shopping.
Same here mate .
Kudos to you for not filming the people on drugs.
Well done lad excellent video people can't even put litter in bins anymore that makes a massive difference on how a place looks
Thank you 😃
Hey mate, I've been watching your series from Brazil. This makes my blood boil, the govt never cared about the North.
I honestly miss the pride we Brits used to have. It just seems like a lot of wasted potential.
Also, its nice to see the compassion you have for the addicts, we're in an age where most people thinks it's okay to film the vulnerable for clickbait.
I don’t think they cared about the Cockneys either, they re placed them.
Can't believe you went straight past a record shop without even a mention!
Me too 😂
So much respect for you for not filming the people doing drugs. Always makes me feel so uncomfortable when people upload footage of people who are completely out of it and clearly have not consented to being filmed. Fair play to you 👏🏻
But that is the truth of the matter. So why be afraid to show the truth? The truth is ALWAYS better than an illusion, even if the truth is terrible.
Totally agree with you Megan. Some people film everything with no compassion.. 🤦🏻♀️ David shows great respect for people's privacy. He won't even film in flats if there's someone living there.. 👍
However if they were drunk you’d have no problem with them being exposed and not consented to being filmed?
@@bobjames6622so true, some people just like to gloss over everything and would rather believe lies coz it makes them feel better and bad things don’t happen to them
@@TayWoode Nobody is believing "lies" here.. David described the situation perfectly, without unnecessary filming. There's plenty of vids out there showing the harsh reality of substance abuse if that's what you want to see. This isn't one of those channels.. Respect!
Fantastic video, bittersweet for me as stoke was my childhood home. I left in the late 90s age 19, then at 26 left England for Ireland. I'm totally shocked by the state of Hanley town I remember my school friends dad working in weston signs, now like many other places boarded up. As a child a trip to Hanley would of been a big day out and if I was lucky I would see a bride and groom stepping down the steps at Hanley town hall getting showered in confetti, followed by an afternoon in webberleys book shop, so big you could get lost in it, deciding which artist's paint you were going to buy. The people of stoke are it's biggest asset, so warm, hardworking and always trying to get the community back together. They deserve so much better. 56 million for that joke of a square, where's the money gone!!! Let down again no one in government cares about the people of stoke.
A protest at the so called square, building site, is needed, demand to know what the hell is going on, it's tax payers money after all!
Stoke on trent has so much potential, but they need help.
Good vid. Honest take on one of our city’s. Good vibe.
Great video, I grew up in Bournemouth and Poole, now in Sydney Australia 🇦🇺 I did not recognise Bournemouth except gardens beach front and chines. Again drug problems. Love how sensitive you are and your excitement finding beauty in the chimneys, they are wonderful
Thanks for the video. My gggg grandfather Samuel Ellis was born in Flintshire, Wales in 1788. He was a collier (probably a miner) and moved to Hanley, along with his son and their family, sometime between 1851 and 1861, and remained there until he died. A family of colliers. It's kinda cool the connections between these mining regions/towns. I wonder how many miners from Wales ended up settling there.
Can't imagine how tough the working conditions must have been back then but I'll bet the place had a real community spirit with the coal mining playing such an important part in the development of the pottery industry.
My family walked from Wales also at that time. Many settled in Stoke as it was first place with pits they hit. The Welsh surnames are still common in the area, Methodism was also strong because of it.
Pronounced Eh-trus-can.
A civilization based on mainland Italy. 900BC to 27BC. It lasted longer than it looks like Stoke will. This film makes me very depressed for the country and all of us trying to live in it.
I’m an American, but I love Britain. It absolutely breaks my heart to see Britain in the state that it is today. 💔
You are strong though, and you can overcome this like you’ve overcome everything else
When I was a young man some thirty years ago the entire area, all the towns making up Stoke thrived ... it was the place to go to shop, good clubs, good pubs and good people. As you say pottery was at the heart of it all. There were numerous famous pottery companies scattered around Stoke in the five towns ... and here's the clue to finding them. Seeing as the clay was mostly brought in via barge, follow the canal(s). Nearly everybody worked in the pottery industry or in the shops and hotel trades. The big deal nowadays is that politically speaking Stoke-on-Trent is run by 44 council members in various districts, both Labour and Conservative mainly .... and I'm guessing the "Levelling Up" project will drag its feet because of beurocracy and indecision, and yes ... falling out and disagreement over funding allocation no doubt. There was never a drugs problem in those days, merely a few drunken brawls after Stoke lost a football match, and crime was no different than anywhere else in UK. I have to admit your well made video shocked me a little seeing it, as now I live in East of England and have not been over to Staffs. for quite a few years. But pottery used to be exported all over the world in those days, and clearly that trend has died now apart from the odd small concern. I have actually walked round inside the Wedgewood factory in its prime and seen the artists painting fine China by hand, and they were individually renowned world-wide for their talents. Such a shame it's all gone. Great but sad video ... well done.
"There were numerous famous pottery companies scattered around Stoke in the five towns ..."
One small point, there are six towns, as the OP says in the video. Arnold Bennet fictionalised the Potteries in his novels, e.g. "Anna of the Five Towns", omitting Fenton. He gave them slightly different, mostly, names.
Don't worry too much, it's a common mistake.
One of your best videos. Your enthusiasm for history and your love of chimneys is contagious. We lived in Staffordshire from 2004-2006 and visited Stoke often. It had great shopping then. Sad to see so much boarded up. I was particularly upset seeing Hanley Town Hall for sale. Who is going to buy a big old building there? (You need to go and visit Ironbridge - lots of industrial history in that valley.)
Thanks Ali 😀 I’ll add it to my list of stuff to check out 👍
Great video.. very enthusiastic, personable style. This reflects just how I'd go about exploring a city I don't know much about, so enjoyable to watch
Hey thanks for watching 😀
Your content is fantastic and so interesting, even though the subject matter is sad at times. I stay in Perth, Scotland and tbe town centre is also being affected badly. Its okay if you want a mobile phone, your nails done, a haircut or a coffee but thats about it. Perth had a thriving town centre but now so many places boarded up. Everything else had been pushed out to the retail parks on the outskirts of town.
Same here in suffolk. Same all over in terms of shops except london
That was a fantastic film THANK YOU
You missed the Potteries museum and art gallery in Hanley, really good museum, and my dad is on the front of the building😁 enjoyed your video.
Excellent video; love your enthusiasm and respect for people and places. Obviously (re)development takes time, but I feel pouring money into new flats and unneeded retail space is only going to level up the property developers. Building on the pride and knowledge of people like Paul would have been a surer way to develop an authentic heritage destination that people would visit for its history rather than a generic shopping plaza. All of those brown brick buildings and kilns along the canals are beautiful locations for appropriate development (museums, small shops, cafes, accommodation, narrow boat tours, etc)
I think new development is more profitable. So all this levelling up money will end up in the pockets of developers. I don't think there is much interest in what the people of the town really need or preserving the amazing history of the area. They never seem to ask the people what they want.
Hear hear.
Great video and shows the decline of Stoke as a whole. You're right the 6 towns does pull funding in opposite directions. The Middleport museum looks great I'll have to visit. As for the Council promotion its repeated rhetoric us Stokies are used to. Big promises little action apart from car parks for an abandoned town centre.
I lived in stoke for 2 years when I was younger in the 90s. I remember it was busy and vibrant in the high streets.
Fantastic video. Those chimneys should be celebrated and protected. Great words in the last ten minutes of the video regarding the guy Paul and the woman with the book store.
Both of my parents were born in Stoke but moved away after both being the first in the family to go to university, moved down to London where I was born. Both sides of my family lived there for generations going back into the 16th century at least. I visited my grandparennts every year in the school holidays. I have such mixed feelings about the place. The best thing my parents did was move away after university but I loved the close knit family atmosphere back then however it isn't a place with much hope anymore. The countryside around it is so beautiful but inner city decay after the decline of the industry there has gutted the towns and the big shopping centres and later online shopping destroyed the city centre shopping. I haven't visited it since the last of my grandparents died but I wish something could be done to bring it back to at least what my parents and grandparents remembered in the 50s to 70s. So sad.
Same - many fond memories of visiting grandparents and the locals knowing who you were and knew your uncles and aunts better than you did.
I still live here, the people are wonderful, down to earth generous humans. I have to travel to London once a week with work and I can not wait to pass under the Euston tunnel to get out of the place, give me SOT over London any day of the week.
Stoke has been left to rot by successive governments, we never recovered from Thatcher because we weren't given the opportunity to. We are not on our own in this. Vast strides of the country (mostly in the North) are like this, following the closing of Britain's industry. These places just need actual help and a leg up, not just throw away platitudes like "levelling up". But please don't petty us minions still living in the city, there is plenty of life left in us. We are still raising our families, still achieving great things, still enjoying our lives in reasonably priced house. We even manage to live even though we don't have a Waitrose! Up the Potters!
And then drug use increases and alcoholism, there's sod all for young people, a death trap town
I went to university in Stoke back in 2012-2015. Even back then it was a run down with plenty of closed shops, but I'm really shocked just how much worse it is now.
The main "strip" for a night out used to be down Trinity Street, any while nothing amazing, was quite nice to have a single street to go down as student to visit all the bars and clubs. Looking at it now around 80% of it is now boarded up. I can't help but feel it's economic decline makes it feel almost like a post soviet city in the late 90's.
I love the UK 🇬🇧 even though I don’t live there. I’m from the USA 🇺🇸 and, we definitely have this happening in so many areas of my country. I don’t know 🤷🏼♀️ the complete answer to the problem but, seeing this especially in my favorite country-England - makes me so sad 😢
I m from Germany and we had such problems during the 90s. After the reunification the formerly eastern parts had unemployment rates of 20-30%. - At the same time in the Rhein Ruhr area every day an old traditional company closed. Steal and coal industry was shot down.
At the same time production moved to China.
It took some 20 years to overcome the process of industrial change. Nowadays much is better. New companies and tecnologies are there.
I saw some videos about Appalachia and the Rust Belt in the US.
Reminds me of England and 90s or early 2000s Germany.
I think Germany had to do political and economic reforms earlier due to reunification.
Those cuts in social welfare and the introduction of debt limit for the households were and are hard but beneficial in the long run.
Guess France will see that too in the future.
For the US and UK I was interested in the issue of redistribution of money from public households oder states to regions that are suffering.
In Germany there is the Länderfinanzausgleich, that means the strongest regions have to donate money to the poorer parts since it is in the constitution that the state has to guarantee equal minimumstandards in the whole country.
How is that in UK? For the U.S. I estimate there is no such fond.
So you're against benefits offered to poor. Then the next few sentences you flip it to positive when bailing out poor areas...
If you had come to Longton, we have the Gladstone pottery museum. Its a 15 minute walk for us. There is also historical short street just up from the museum in the back streets of Normacot and there are some nice little hidden gems like a bottle oven that we only found a couple of yrs back. It would have been surrounded by a factory in our youth. I worked in a pottery factory there when i left school in the office's but i got to go all around the depts of the factory. Then a few yrs later i learned to do lythogaphing, guilding and flower making. So interesting it was.😊
Loads of good places in Stoke on Trent :)
The best video yet that I've seen, Brilliant. So sad to see the closed shops in Hanley but that ceramic mill at the end was brilliant as was the lady opening the book shop. While ever you've got people who care about their home town it has a chance to regenerate. I come from Bradford and there is some great regeneration happening here too some of it directly because of the local population saying no to closure and demolition and saying we can use the Odeon building instead of demolishing it. You've got to love the human spirit.
I remember going into an old, empty pottery kiln when working with my grandad and uncle on a worksite. I was about 15 at the time and it had a weird mix of wonder and eeriness, largely because of the physical dimensions and the long history it exudes.
With all these sights now being inaccessible as shown in the video, I can appreciate that experience a lot more.
Thank you for being so sympathetic towards the city. The drug problem here is horrendous and I am surprised you weren’t photo bombed to be fair. I have been here 14 years and have seen it decline rapidly. I doubt Etruscan Square will ever get finished as the city council are on the verge of bankruptcy. There is however, some amazingly beautiful architecture, a lot of it left to decay, but some truly is phenomenal. There are definitely better places to live, but, there are by far worse places!
how do you spend £53million quid? Honestly... leftist councils need to be gone. They're an infestation. Same happened in Birmingham.
He was filming using a Pocket 2 I think, spotted it in a window reflection. We have one, can record 4K/60 but it's very small, three axis gimbal stabilisation and very very discrete 🤫
No work, no hope, no future. In come the drugs and it’s the end.
Thank you for producing this film, I think that it is an honest but respectful view of the City that has been my home for nearly 55 years. It's interesting to see familiar sights through another persons eyes and to accept that you see the City as it is today when I spend most of my time remembering how it once was.
Successive governments have let down this once great place along with many others like it and they should be ashamed of what now remains of our industrial heritage.
I have no idea what has happened to the levelling up money but only as of a few days ago it was announced that the arena will not be built at Etruscan Square so I fear the worse for the future.
Good luck with your film making and thank you for highlighting such an important subject.
Hey thanks for this. Always good to hear from locals. I appreciate you watching and taking the time to comment 😀👍
Watching again ❤it's so so sad it was not just the potteries, we were known for steel ,brick works many.
Makes me sad the people are the best.
Warm and welcoming.
We had the best clubs and the famous jollies cabaret club all top acts.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Im from Stoke and iv always been so proud of my potteries roots. But seeing this is absolutely heartbreaking. Some of the areas you walked along used to be bustling in the 90s. Hanley was full of families happily shopping safely, at Christmas time the late night shopping was such a nice atmosphere. Middleport pottery or Gladstone are always good ports of call to revisit the history of Stoke and to see how thriving it once was. Even though its sad to see Stoke like this I am and will always be proud of being from Stoke, the people are good, decent people- salt of the earth and always welcoming. Thanks so much for this video and treating this city with respect.
Hey good to hear from people who are from Stoke! I appreciate you watching 👍👍
Also good hear about how it once was
How on earth did they end up voting for someone a Tory like Jonathan Gullis? That’s the bit I don’t get.
@@jmshrrsnJohnathan Gullis is Stoke North, not Stoke Central where Hanley is located.
I know you probably won't like to hear this but in actuality Johnathon (who is my MP), has actually helped me out with issues I had in regard to some NHS services help issues whereby tagging him in to an ongoing issue I was having, he managed to get the issue sorted.
Unlike previously, Ruth Smeeth did not seem remotely interested in helping at the time. I'm not saying this to be "politically divisive" or what have you, it's just an addendum to say while I may not agree with him on a political level regarding some issues, he has been approachable and willing to help out on a more specific personal level if you are having specific issues. This is just from personal experience.
In remembrance of Sheila and Barry. Barry made the molds for pottery in Stoke and went abroad to do so. He finished unemployed with a skill no one wanted anymore. My friends lived in Stoke. Barry a true craftsman whos art died. Sheila was a teacher and watched the opportunities die year by year for the children she taught. I could cry.
I was raised in Stoke on Trent before my folks emigrated to the USA . To find a true history of Stoke On Trent you should have gone to Longton and visited "the Gladstone Pottery Museum " an excellent place to visit !!!
Where do you live now?
Mate, that was really interesting, really cool. Love your channel, thanks for making. Legend!
I was born in Leek, 6 miles from Stoke on Trent, now living in Australia. Hanley was a top shopping destination in the 1950's ! I recall as a kid in the 1955's being driven around Stoke [The Potteries] by my Dad and passing thousands of bottle kilns, no longer in use. massive paddocks of them, surrounded by tall grasses. There was once 1,000's of Potteries in Stoke, and 100's of Silk, then 100's of cotton mills in Leek. Your podcasts demonstrate that all industries growth, reach a peak, go into decline and eventually die, and with them the once thriving communities that surrounded them. IMO when Britain decided to forsake industry and manufacturing for insurance and finance, then wealth shrunk to London, and the Midlands and the North were headed for collapse.
I've lived in Stoke-on-Trent for 20 years and I've only visited Hanley once in 10 years (for jury service which was obligatory) it's a total dump. It doesn't surprise me to see that fenced off area with no activity as the council are notorious for wasting money on pointless crap. Nevertheless I have a decent job and live in a lovely area and have met lots of wonderful people here. Your video shows how a city with such amazing history has declined to the level it has .😊
Stoke was a mining town too, and we had a huge British Steel works as well
Really enjoyed that. It is sad to see the decline of these once great towns. Always nice to see a bit of cultural heritage. Keep up the good work.
Burton Resident here, Never visited Stoke but from what I've heard it isn't the best place to be in and this video shed some more light on it, thanks!
Is Burton a nice place.
@@israeladesanya4596 50/50
Its so cool to see you getting excited about that kiln 🙂. Industrial history is awesome!