Mini-Skirted girls, late 1960s.
Standard Underground Train interior, 1967.
The ABC Cinema Elephant and Castle in my youth.
The same cinema, sadly ‘redeveloped’ later.
The marvellous interior of Gants Hill Underground Station, East London.
The Art Deco exterior of Southgate Underground Station, North London.
Ealing Common Underground Station, with a ‘retro’ restored tube train dating from 1938.
Living in the last two houses in the street. East London, 1971.
East India Docks, 1971.
I went through college wearing such dresses and skirts since girls were not allowed pants in class. Of course we also all rode three speed “English” bicycles to and from classes. I leave the scene to your imagination.
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I saw many such scenes at the time, and have fond memories of them. 🙂 Girls at my school also had to wear skirts, though they were supposed to be knee length. The girls followed the fashion trends by turning over the waistband to hike up the hem.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Those are wonderful, Pete. Thanks for sharing them!
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Thanks, Olga. It seems like yesterday to me. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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To quote one of my former social science professors: The shorter skirts get, the better off a country’s economy is. There is a lot of truth in this quote, right? Thanks for sharing the insights to Great Britain in the past. xx Michael
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Well, shorter skirts make me happy at least, Michael. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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Reblogged this on NEW BLOG HERE >> https:/BOOKS.ESLARN-NET.DE.
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Interesting pictures, Pete. The picture of the woman with her children during the Great Depression that you shared a short while ago and said was famous, it popped up in my son’s history text book yesterday. I was helping him study the Great Depression.
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Thanks, Robbie. The lady who took that series of Depression photos was a famous photographer, Dorothea Lange. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dorothea_Lange
This recent blog post from Frank might also interest your son. It is about the causes of the ‘Dustbowl’.
https://toritto.wordpress.com/2022/07/24/the-dust-bowl-2/
Best wishes, Pete.
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Thank you, Pete đź’–
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I was in London in 1967, and ‘discovered’ miniskirts. I immediately cut my skirts! These were delightful photos, Pete. I love art deco.
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Thanks, Jennie. Mini-skirts were one of the joys of my teenage years! 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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Haha!! Best to you, Pete.
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A great walk down Memory Lane well done my friend chuq
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Thanks, chuq. The 1960s in London was one of my best times.
Best wishes, Pete.
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We often look back at fashion and think, how could anyone wear that, but I still think mini-skirts look great on women. Who doesn’t like a nice pair of legs?
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They were so much smarter then, Pete. No tattoos and piercings either.
Best wishes, Pete.
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London is easy fodder for good photography & always will be. I can’t see enough of it
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I completely agree, Gavin.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Ha, must be a train interior from the 60’s there’s no graffiti. I used to go to my local ABC (green street, Upton Park) every Saturday morning the old ABC kids minors club and I always remember my dad taking me on a boat ride around the docks, looking up at those ships from all over the world that must be where I got my fascination for the sea and wanting to travel the world. keep those photos coming Pete and pleased to hear you and Ollie are feeling better
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Thanks, Bobby. I am always on the lookout for new photos of London in my youth.
Cheers, Pete.
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I wasn’t in London but that top picture could have come out of my junior high school yearbook.
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Those fashions swept the world at the time. British designers like Mary Quant became famous.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Twiggy! Mods! Mick Jagger before wrinkles!
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It was a great time to be a teenager, Phil. 🙂
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I love the underground pictures. I think my most exciting outings were early sixties when my parents took us on the steam train from Farnborough up to Waterloo, then on tube trains for sightseeing or London Zoo.
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The tube stations were architectural marvels at the time. Most still are.
Best wishes, Pete.
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(1) Mini-Me loved those mini skirts. (And it wasn’t because they made handy umbrellas.)
(2) That train interior is so soothing to the eye that I would have fallen asleep and missed my stop!
(3) There must be a pygmy elephant in that photo somewhere…
(4) New ABC cinema designed by the Borg Collective.
(5) The Gants Hill Underground Station is so beautiful that I hope no one ever spoiled its aesthetic by showing up for a train.
(6) Some Art Deco clouds would have been a nice touch. Alas!
(7) I restored my retro tube socks. #Needle&Thread
(8) Rumor has it that the Demolition Man was John Spartan. (He had to practice somewhere!)
(9) I’m trying to find the East Anglia Docks. They’re either on the Arabian Sea or the Bay of Bengal. I’m sure of it.
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East India docks, David! They were in East London, and specialised in goods brought from that area.
(The East Indies) 🙂
The redesigned cinema did indeed look ‘Borg-like’.
Best wishes, Pete.
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I remember those old fashioned motion picture palaces too, Pete …with ushers carrying flashlights assisting ticket holders to find their seats, the smell of popcorn wafting through the theater, great fanciful draperies, balconies, blue night lights in sconces on the darkened walls, the magical silver screen where adventure lived in flickering images and tinny sound …Those were the days, weren’t they?
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Exactly as you describe, John. But no popcorn in England back then. Just ice cream, and candy.
Best wishes, Pete.
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I love the picture of the mini skirts. My friends and I had similar outfits at the time. So cute.
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My father was manager of a plastics factory and the only interesting thing he brought back was a small piece of plastic fabric in fluorescent orange, I just about managed to make a mini skirt out of it. It was pretty unique!
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I am sure you looked good in in, Janet.
Best wishes, Pete.
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They were so smart then. It is so different today, sadly.
Best wishes, Pete.
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The interior of an underground train doesn’t seem to have changed much over the years!
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I think the basic layout remained the same, and I suspect that some of those 1967 carriages are probably still being used. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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Terrific slices of the past Pete…sadly our majestic single screen theaters are mostly turned into mega-boxes with tiny screens and sticky floors…
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Same deal here, John. Some old cinema buildings were ‘saved’ by being turned into Cinema Clubs. They offer a different feel, with restaurant-style seating, and decent food and alcoholic drink sold without all the ice cream, hot dogs, and popcorn. Sadly, there is not one anywhere near where I live.
Best wishes, Pete.
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We have a few of those as well Pete…slowly reopening after the extended shutdown…still, we have two single screens left which were made national registry sites so they can’t be demolished…they are used mostly for big premiere screenings, but going to one near the UCLA college campus in Westwood is fun – they showed one in the film “once Upon A Time In Hollywood”
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Thanks for the link-back, Ned.
Best wishes, Pete.
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I remember riding around on an underground train that looked like that. Usually the Bakerloo Line. The underground was so easy to understand by comparison to others. Mini skirts…yes! But those dresses are nice to look at, unlike the tatters and bizarre outfits people wear today.
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I have to say I think young women looked so much nicer then. Now so many of them all seem to wear tight leggings and vests, so they can show off their tattoos and fake tan.
Best wishes, Pete.
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I remember my cousin had one of those white crochet dresses… I was never brave enough to wear one! I also remember the condemned terraced houses along what is now the motorway leading to the Blackwall Tunnel. I used to play in the old empty houses with a group of friends until the bulldozers arrived.
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Playing on demolition sites and in abandoned houses was great fun when I was young. Probably very dangerous, but we didn’t care. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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No, we didn’t care either. I remember we found an old piano in one of the rooms, and in another house had to step over missing stairs to get to the upstairs landing. Good thing my mother didn’t know where I was!
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The “redeveloped” cinema is a travesty. It looks like a warehouse.
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They built a huge shopping mall next to it, and it was redeveloped into a two-screen cinema. I still went there occasionally, but lamented the loss of the former ‘grandeur’ inside.
Best wishes, Pete.
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Those old cinemas were really something back in their heyday.
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They used to take my breath away, Liz. They seemed like palaces to me as a child.
Best wishes, Pete.
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“Berlin took my breath away!” (Song Maverick)
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Thank you for sharing your great pictures. I hope you are feeling better.
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Ollie and I are both on the mend thanks, Molly. Hence me being happy to be blogging again. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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Oh, great images, Pete! That 1938 tube train, those 1971 houses and the East India docks….
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The tube train was on a ‘Heritage Run’ around 1970, Sue. Amazng to see large sailing ships still in the docks in the 1970s. 🙂
Best ishes, Pete.
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Yes, I thought the ships were out of place! Great bit of “ history in our time”
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Thanks for sharing. warmest regards, Theo
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I love finding these, and have to stop myself publishing some every day. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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More great photos, Pete. I was interested to note the reg number of the 1100 outside the last 2 houses: it’s not far away from the reg of my first vehicle, a Ford Thames van [can’t remember the year: it was pretty ancient when I bought it in 1972 or 3], which was YJJ 913. Funny how you remember them, isn’t it? I love the variation in the Underground architecture: have you ever watched the Secrets of the London Underground series on the Yesterday channel? Cheers, Jon.
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Yes, I watch that TV programme every week, Jon. I watched last night’s episode about the North End Station ‘that never was’. 🙂
My first car in 1969 was a 1963 Vauxhall Viva. The registration number was 344DBK.
Best wishes, Pete.
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