English Harvest (1938)

Фильм және анимация

This early Dufaycolor documentary from Humphrey Jennings focuses on an August harvest in Sawston, Cambridgeshire. The old makes way for the new as the trusty old scythe bows down to the horse-drawn binder and plough. Hard work, flat caps and pipes abound as we see the workers downing midday ale for sustenance and taking a break at 5 to sit in the fields for a cup of tea brought to them by their wives. The 'playground of the town' and 'workshop of the country', alias the great British countryside, has never looked better.
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Пікірлер: 857

  • @johnedwards1685
    @johnedwards16853 жыл бұрын

    There’s more to this than a warm harvest. This breathless summer was the last of an old England. A terrible war was only a year away. Two summers later the skies burned over these fields And the glow from the fires in London could be seen fifty miles away. Four summers later and many of the men and boys in these fields were dead, Scattered across battlefields half a world away never to return. Let them have this harvest, A harvest in the sun, before the darkness came.

  • @krischan8526

    @krischan8526

    3 жыл бұрын

    True words. That's all, what I can say.

  • @montyzumazoom1337

    @montyzumazoom1337

    3 жыл бұрын

    And the work was done by hand or with horses, but after the war came mechanisation and that changed the shape of farming and the landscape forever. People working the land didn’t have a “ploughman’s lunch” either, this was an invention. They went to work with a flask of cold tea and some bread and cheese.

  • @pinarellolimoncello

    @pinarellolimoncello

    3 жыл бұрын

    that's chirpie of you to remind us all, got anything uplifting to say..

  • @Davidudka

    @Davidudka

    3 жыл бұрын

    Lovely words John and so true. You are right... "Let them have this harvest".

  • @leonblittle226

    @leonblittle226

    3 жыл бұрын

    And in a year all hell broke loose. Nothing was ever the same again.

  • @mcpug10
    @mcpug1013 жыл бұрын

    I remember this era very clearly, when as a child I was living on a farm in Wales to escape the bombing in Liverpool. Every scene in this film was familiar to me and I recall helping with the horses in some small way. The meals that the farmers and hired help ate at the end of the work day were huge and they earned them. What a wonderful trip down memory lane for me,

  • @kiwiontheinternet5810

    @kiwiontheinternet5810

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thats awesome! My great grandparents were born in the early 30s

  • @barkebaat

    @barkebaat

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@kiwiontheinternet5810 : pffft! that's nothing... my father was born in 1930. His father even before that. I'm surprised you're old enough to know how to write :-)

  • @sauravbasu8805

    @sauravbasu8805

    7 күн бұрын

    What did they eat mostly in their meals at that time ?

  • @UrukEngineer
    @UrukEngineer3 жыл бұрын

    I love it when he says "opening the road for modern machines" and a horse-drawn buggy enters the scene.

  • @piggypiggypig1746

    @piggypiggypig1746

    3 жыл бұрын

    What ever will they think of next.

  • @philipprint9510
    @philipprint95103 жыл бұрын

    Brutal hardwork made men old at 50. I can remember so many village chaps going about their day with a smile on their face and a whistled tune on their lips.

  • @gettinfedup1814
    @gettinfedup18143 жыл бұрын

    i am 73 now . but can remember in 1963 , 4 of us with wooden 2 handed sythes cutting a field of grass for hay it was a long hard day and we got 2 shillings and sixpence each from the farmer.He was a real old timer who would not have machines on his land.

  • @gettinfedup1814

    @gettinfedup1814

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Daniel Thompson i was 16 then working on a farm , not the one where i cut the hay by hand. I was living away from home in village lodgings, with 2 meals a day my rent was £3 10 shillings.my wage was £4.00.

  • @paulbaumer8210

    @paulbaumer8210

    3 жыл бұрын

    Dude. 2s 6d is about £2.00 in today's money. If you worked all day for £2.00 you must have been nuts. No wonder he didn't need machines if he could find people willing to work for 25p an hour.

  • @gettinfedup1814

    @gettinfedup1814

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@paulbaumer8210 in 1963 the average wage in the UK for manual work was£4.00 a week so 2/6 was not great but ok.In 1968 i was into plumbing and got £20.00 a week,that was good money.

  • @blvp2145

    @blvp2145

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@gettinfedup1814 Very good money.

  • @disco3guy

    @disco3guy

    Ай бұрын

    A half crown for a day's work.... 😬

  • @muckshiftingmaestro7598
    @muckshiftingmaestro75983 жыл бұрын

    My grandad did this for a living in Norfolk back in the twenties and thirties, long days of hard graft, when men were proud of their work.

  • @shanemanchester

    @shanemanchester

    3 жыл бұрын

    100% agree. I work in a small, family workshop. No better feeling than being tired/sweaty at home time.

  • @hannecatton2179

    @hannecatton2179

    3 жыл бұрын

    And beholden to the farm owners.

  • @cosmiccoepiece2623

    @cosmiccoepiece2623

    3 жыл бұрын

    Both my grandads and dad too. Dad once said there wasn’t much stealing because everyone had the same,work boots work jacket and a bike.

  • @gustavmeyrink_2.0

    @gustavmeyrink_2.0

    3 жыл бұрын

    And crippled by the age of 50 without a pension or healthcare.

  • @shanemanchester

    @shanemanchester

    3 жыл бұрын

    Crippled? These are the chaps that live into their ‘90’s. My Irish grandparents the same. All four got to their ‘90’s. Worked outdoors all their lives.

  • @BluebirdFrank
    @BluebirdFrank3 жыл бұрын

    Life of such simplicity and purpose not the human cesspit of today’s society 😔

  • @mriggst

    @mriggst

    Ай бұрын

    I only though of the word cesspit a few hours ago while coming out of my slumber and its much worse now in 2024.

  • @lindsayrogers6690
    @lindsayrogers66903 жыл бұрын

    My Grandad did exactly this in Lancashire. He worked some days from 4am until midnight literally making hay whilst the sun shone and it was dry enough to harvest. He could, however, still get a beer at his local pub on his way home. Absolute legend!

  • @ajrwilde14

    @ajrwilde14

    3 жыл бұрын

    so he only had 4 hrs sleep?

  • @lindsayrogers6690

    @lindsayrogers6690

    3 жыл бұрын

    Alice Wilde yep, making hay whilst the sun shone. It was vital that the harvest was brought in at the right time and it could take 3 days. Remarkable people, remarkable times.

  • @howardmckeown7187

    @howardmckeown7187

    Ай бұрын

    @@ajrwilde14 hired labourer's hours were dawn to dusk year round

  • @mohitmaksat
    @mohitmaksat2 жыл бұрын

    I am from India and from a family of farmers and I find a wide cultural connect to this film and thus conclude that farming is not a profession its a religion and all those who practice this religion have common culture irrespective of country caste race or religion its was both a surprise and a relief to see that britishers also worked hard in fields as we did in India still they were unable to connect to the feelings of Indian peageant farmers, again surprises me anyway thanks BFI for this

  • @yuelingchu4361

    @yuelingchu4361

    9 ай бұрын

    I'd like to think the British farmers would have connected to the Indian farmers. As you suggest, farming is a common language.

  • @cameronbennett797
    @cameronbennett7973 жыл бұрын

    This is bloody brilliant. This was my family in Gloucestershire throughout the 17th, 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries. Amazing.

  • @richardstuart325

    @richardstuart325

    3 жыл бұрын

    The same for my family in Lancashire. But I do remember seeing my grandparents worn down by decades of grinding drudgery. The reality appeared far from the rural idyll conjured up by this film.

  • @rogertroughton2280
    @rogertroughton22803 жыл бұрын

    Replace the horses with a 1950's tractor and this was how my family harvested oats in Cumbria right up to 1980. Opened out with a scythe, cut with a binder, stacks built and thatched with sieves. No ale, but tea brought out to the field in an enamel jug. Wonderful film.

  • @londonwestman1

    @londonwestman1

    11 ай бұрын

    We were looking to buy a farm around Cumbria in about 1978 - actually bought in Lancashire.. But as we looked around things were mechanised almost everywhere. I've only once seen stacks (?stooks) after harvest in the UK so I think all that was gone by 1980. We bought a little grey Fergie and we were looked on as quaintly old fashioned. The old-style, scissors-cut mower was also pretty much a museum piece by that time. The current thing would be a Massey Ferguson 35 3-cylinder red tractor - and for hay it was all square bails. (Still have the Fergie which, I think will be seventy years old this year.)

  • @PhilipGeorgeHarfleet
    @PhilipGeorgeHarfleet10 жыл бұрын

    Ahh, those long gone days. I was 3 years old when this film was made. One year later many of these farm fields, especially in Lincolnshire, were turned into RAF airfields and thousands ofL Lancaster bombers were housed in these fields. Small fields of corn and other cereal crops no longer exist. Huge acreages have taken over, more like endless prairies where massive combine harvesters roam, doing the work of a hundred or more men. Nothing stays forever, more's the pity. Lovely nostalgic film. Thanks for sharing it with us.

  • @Sennmut

    @Sennmut

    7 жыл бұрын

    A better time.

  • @jacobeksor6088

    @jacobeksor6088

    6 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful story.

  • @daidegan

    @daidegan

    5 жыл бұрын

    ... just like in USA; family farms are almost extant!

  • @andy199121

    @andy199121

    3 жыл бұрын

    And unfortunately all those airfields are now being tarmaced and turned into ‘garden villages’. Apparently they’re brownfield sites that can’t be returned to their former beauty

  • @PhattSpicer

    @PhattSpicer

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@andy199121 Yes it's fascinating really. A lot were returned to agricultural purposes post war. In some cases that took a number of years. One example near me is an old airfield in Fersfield in Norfolk. It briefly became a motor racing circuit post war, until they decided to use Snetterton for that. A lot of the concrete road ways and taxiing ways (I presume) are still there and used to accommodate large machinery these days. In the end these proved useful. Resourceful bunch are farmers. I've always found it interesting looking on google maps. Quite a lot were returned. I'm sure there's all manner of old military buildings buried in the trees.

  • @BatAtBat
    @BatAtBat3 жыл бұрын

    Farmers back then were dressed better than most people today

  • @ygtekin

    @ygtekin

    3 жыл бұрын

    When somebody films my work, I would be dressed like a groom

  • @wilfridwibblesworth2613

    @wilfridwibblesworth2613

    3 жыл бұрын

    Most people in this country will soon be dressed like Darth Vader... BY LAW! We're only halfway there now.

  • @tommothedog

    @tommothedog

    3 жыл бұрын

    I think they put on their best because the cameras were coming!

  • @glpilpi6209

    @glpilpi6209

    3 жыл бұрын

    My grandad worked on the land all his life , he used to wear the same waistcoat style and big cap , he died in the mid 1960s

  • @oltedders

    @oltedders

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@tommothedog This was standard working apparel, especially the vest, since shirts were considered to be underwear and was nearly covered completely once a coat and tie was put on.

  • @johnathanryan2117
    @johnathanryan21173 жыл бұрын

    It would be nice to think that the young lad who gets a gill of ale of the young girl drinking tea may still be alive 82 years on..and that they could see this footage. Well dressed grafters working hard, ' modern ' machines worked by horses, and plenty of fresh air and exercise. To be fair, probably wasn't as idyllic two month later when it was tipping down and the winds got up. Beautiful footage of a time that's gone but sometimes feels like it's just slightly out of reach. 12 months later their lives change forever, looking at some of the men they'd probably been through it twenty years before too.

  • @mikewalrus4763

    @mikewalrus4763

    3 жыл бұрын

    If that be a Gill then remind me to visit you if you ever gets a pub, that be nearer 2 gill

  • @imapaine-diaz4451

    @imapaine-diaz4451

    3 жыл бұрын

    I believe those men would be offended if you called them "Grafters"! I suppose you meant to say "Gaffers"?

  • @mikewalrus4763

    @mikewalrus4763

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@imapaine-diaz4451 More to the point do you understand the difference - it appears not!

  • @georgerenton965

    @georgerenton965

    3 жыл бұрын

    Maybe your confusing grafters with grifters ?

  • @willyspinney1959

    @willyspinney1959

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@imapaine-diaz4451 A grafter is someone who works hard. A gaffer is someone who the boss, particularly of manual workers.

  • @VictoriasRoses
    @VictoriasRoses14 жыл бұрын

    I love this. They sure did dress nicer than we do. Even to do farm work.

  • @paulbaumer8210

    @paulbaumer8210

    3 жыл бұрын

    LMAO! They are wearing their 'Sunday best" for the filming - which would have been an incredibly glamorous event for them. Generally they wore ragged, dirty clothes in the field - or simple smocks.

  • @richardsinger01

    @richardsinger01

    3 жыл бұрын

    Paul Baumer no I don’t think so at all.

  • @paulbaumer8210

    @paulbaumer8210

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@richardsinger01 Oh really? You think they all dressed up posh to go and work in the fields in all weathers? When they could barely afford to put bread on the table? Yeah, right.

  • @georgerenton965

    @georgerenton965

    3 жыл бұрын

    Don’t listen to them RebeccasRoses. Dad was born in 1918. Started working when he was 8, drove horse drawn wagons, then lorries till he was 48, even in the army in WW2. When he went to work ( driving fresh fish from Scotland to the fish markets in England ) he always wore clean bibs n braces ( overalls ) polished boots, hair combed. Neighbour commented that he was a dead ringer for Dean Martin. Dad thought that Dean was talentless and Jerry Lewis carried him, but none the less, workers back in the day didn’t all run around like a lot of scruff. Dad came to Canada in 65, finished out his years as a crane operator with Ontario Hydro. Never missed a days work that I can recall.

  • @paulbaumer8210

    @paulbaumer8210

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@georgerenton965 So how would your dad's 'polished boots' and 'clean bibs and braces' have fared if he was working in a rainy field all day shovelling manure in England in November? You guys make me laugh.... romanticising a time when the standard of living was MUCH lower than today. Those people would swap their lives then for our lives now in a heartbeat. For a start they's add twenty years to their life expectancy.

  • @lyt_w8t
    @lyt_w8t3 жыл бұрын

    Who loves their grand parents?!

  • @jamesburns2312
    @jamesburns23123 жыл бұрын

    I was still working like those farmers in late 80' with my grandparents...I was REALLY lucky to just be involved in the last push of gone by era..it was in Poland💔

  • @canadude2010

    @canadude2010

    3 жыл бұрын

    cool...probably why things are still relatively ok in that part of the world as they at least try to hold to old time ethics and values there....

  • @MsVanorak

    @MsVanorak

    3 жыл бұрын

    My Dad had his tea on the field in the harvest until he retired in 2005. It was exciting taking a picnic for us all when I was a child in the 1960's. We didn't have an expectation about going out for days and being entertained because when you have livestock you don't go far from home for very long. I was looking at some photos of us recently and the summers were as good as I thought I remembered them - we were all tanned and freckled.

  • @crowhillian58

    @crowhillian58

    3 жыл бұрын

    @I'LL BE BACK ! Or more likely a melodrama!

  • @MsVanorak

    @MsVanorak

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@crowhillian58 no - sunshine was good for you in those days - vitamin C from sunshine rather than out of a bottle with MSG and aspartame.

  • @mickymantle3233
    @mickymantle32336 жыл бұрын

    I'd like to get into this film...an never come back.

  • @p.istaker8862

    @p.istaker8862

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@rogerspeed4413 And don't forget the landowner, who in some cases as good as owned you and the home you live in. The sixteen hour days. The lack of free health care and no pension.

  • @iamthestig1

    @iamthestig1

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@rogerspeed4413 No double glazing, either. You'd freeze outside AND inside. Screw that.

  • @moimaloy8870

    @moimaloy8870

    4 жыл бұрын

    World war was started two years after this film was made!

  • @bobbbxxx

    @bobbbxxx

    4 жыл бұрын

    You wouldn't if you had to work for a living. Fifteen minutes of that backbreaking work of hand scything wheat, let alone a 14 hour work day would have you begging to be transported back to 2019.

  • @portcullis5622

    @portcullis5622

    3 жыл бұрын

    I know what you mean as the countryside was relatively unspoilt back then, but it looks like bloody hard work. The other problem on the horizon was that a certain, short-arsed Austrian man with insecurities and anger management issues might have necessitated a one way trip to Europe a year or two later!

  • @ichabodon
    @ichabodon3 жыл бұрын

    I think someone in the BFI is fondly reminiscing about those wonderful days now sadly long gone when we were ‘Great Britain’. And look at us now

  • @jimwest7107

    @jimwest7107

    3 жыл бұрын

    Think we are still Great. If you don't think so you can leave.

  • @donlogan83

    @donlogan83

    3 жыл бұрын

    If you offered that farmer the life we have today, he would take it in a heartbeat. Life was hard then, seriously hard. Try to look beyond a snapshot of a sunny summer’s day in idyllic countryside.

  • @andrewmillyard3162

    @andrewmillyard3162

    3 жыл бұрын

    Back when factory workers had no health and safety. Homosexuality was illegal and woman had little opportunity outside of being a house wife. It really was better back then.

  • @maureenleigh4724

    @maureenleigh4724

    3 жыл бұрын

    I disagree@@jimwest7107 We are not still great at all. And why should he leave, it is his choice isn't it ?

  • @patrickcolclough2423

    @patrickcolclough2423

    3 жыл бұрын

    Easy to see it that way, but my uncles was a Doeset shepherd. As a nipper I went with him sometimes. He'd be out all day, rain, snow, frost whatever. We'd maybe walk 10 -12 miles checking his flocks. At Christmas he'd be staying in a hut on the lambing field. Nothing in it but sacks and feed but he'd sleep there. Nowadays they nip up on a quad bike and back in an hour.

  • @seanhazlewood634
    @seanhazlewood6343 жыл бұрын

    My Grandfathers Family lives and his Brothers worked with the family on a tenant farm in South Yorkshire in the 1930s following years of being a family of miners I have a lovely memory of my dad telling me about those hard but happy times before and during the War My Uncle Len was the Ploughman and gained many trophies in competitions and we have photo of him with 2 Silver greys Ploughing one of the large fields what a lovely picture he was the Ploughman, And I have. Picture of my Grandads other brother Willis Feeding the livestock with Pony traps in the back ground he was the herdsman of the family whilst my Grandads other brothers worked down the Mines as these were essential jobs however my Grandad did survive the War as the only serving solider anyway thankyou for showing this beautiful inicent period of farming life long forgotten Regards Sean

  • @MsVanorak

    @MsVanorak

    3 жыл бұрын

    My Great Grandad used to plough competitively and I have a picture of him with a pair of dapple greys. Rosettes and place cards pinned to the beams in the stable. I can't think when the last time was that I saw a grey shire horse. It's all Clydesdales at the moment. I hate fashion when it extends to animals.

  • @ashbytimuk
    @ashbytimuk8 жыл бұрын

    For all those who want to get dewy eyed about "The good old days" let me tell you that my Mum's family were farmers and growers before (and after) World War II and being in agriculture then was very far from an idyllic life. So much cheap food was imported into the UK from abroad that prices for home grown produce were low and thus family incomes were as well. The revolution in farming practices that, by necessity, the war provoked were nothing short of revolutionary. Far more mechanisation and new techniques together with the bringing into cultivation of marginal land resulted in a doubling of output so that by the end of the war UK farmers were producing two thirds of the food necessary to feed the nation as against only one third before it. And we benefit from the legacy of that today. UK agriculture is amongst the most efficient and productive in the world. Some may mourn the passing of horses and hand scythes but my forebears most certainly did not.

  • @BradBrassman

    @BradBrassman

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yes, but its all what my mum used to call, "Lark rise to Rose Tinted Candleford." They were certainly simpler times but as George Ewart Evans states, in his Horse in the Furrow, "The set-up on some of the farms during these years as related by the old horsemen, was anything but idyllic; and the description they gave of the rivalry, back-biting and sometimes open malice that existed, even among the men themselves, should be taken into account when there is any impulse to depict the countryside under the old order as a haven of peace and contentment (p.258).

  • @nullvoid564

    @nullvoid564

    4 жыл бұрын

    i think its mostly the breakdown of the family and how people are much more isolated and cant put a name a single person on their street etc

  • @willdatsun

    @willdatsun

    Ай бұрын

    however modern farming went too far, depleted soil, too many pesticides, fungecides, herbicides, modern (non organic) food lacks nutrients and has chemical residues, the soil doesn't drain properly , (unhealthy soil.. no worms etc) and very low employment due to giant machinery

  • @alanstarkie2001
    @alanstarkie20013 жыл бұрын

    Life could be hard back in those days but when it was good, it was very good...

  • @adrianlarkins7259
    @adrianlarkins72599 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful. Not a tractor in sight. Just lovable horses. And no horrible modern buildings in the background. I bet that home brew tasted like nectar.

  • @bachandefi

    @bachandefi

    6 жыл бұрын

    Idyllic it might well be but I'm afraid there would be a lot of hungry people it the UK if we went back to horse power and the old fashioned buildings. I remember when I was a young un, my father would have loads of help for harvest as men were very happy to earn extra money in the evenings to load and unload the bales of hay and sheaves of corn. A few years later when I left school, it was getting more and more difficult to find the casual labour and eventually we had to get fully mechanised. I tell my youngsters all about those days with my mother bringing supper out to the fields after she and my father had been turning the hay all day and baling, and the barrel of cider in the barn for the men to help themselves. Wonderful days but everything has had to move on.

  • @bachandefi

    @bachandefi

    5 жыл бұрын

    Exactly. Society has gone soft and many expect to be kept by the working man.

  • @iamthestig1

    @iamthestig1

    4 жыл бұрын

    Bloody tractors. Half the stuff these farmers use could be towed on a Ranger, an L200 or an F150.

  • @nottmjas

    @nottmjas

    Жыл бұрын

    That sure looks like an electricity pylon hovering above the trees on the right of the sceen at the 5:00 mark

  • @tomburnett4812
    @tomburnett481217 күн бұрын

    Reminds me of my grandad. Happy childhood memories in simpler times

  • @paperchain1232
    @paperchain12326 жыл бұрын

    I could cry- my stepfather was 13 when this film was made and has farmed in Cambs all his life. What a lovely scene💝

  • @terrytibbs1040
    @terrytibbs10407 жыл бұрын

    that's the life, hard work fresh air and good food, theirs not much that a hard days work doesn't cure.

  • @treforjoned6149

    @treforjoned6149

    3 жыл бұрын

    classic fights stand up can’t you spell correctly

  • @mrrolandlawrence

    @mrrolandlawrence

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yip just work till you drop. No need to worry about retirement. The day you stop earning because of old age or a work accident is the end.

  • @zanyzoo6767

    @zanyzoo6767

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@treforjoned6149 how enhanced you liiife must be by pionting out other peoples failings. Theres a few speeling mistakkkes in this comeents, knock yourslef out correcting them.

  • @Knappa22

    @Knappa22

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Roland Lawrence. Surely the idea on a family farm as depicted is that your children take over the farm and look after you in your old age.

  • @ifmusicbethefoodofloveegc986

    @ifmusicbethefoodofloveegc986

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Knappa22 Unfortunately it didn't often happen. Farming doesn't provide a good income & children realise they can earn far more for far less hours, so their parents are left to carry on virtually till they die. A farmer from my parents generation died, aged 83, without ever retiring. I imagine those who now complain about the raising of retirement age would be outraged.

  • @jpeel2066
    @jpeel2066 Жыл бұрын

    Can't believe that in a mere 20 years it was all so different. Great video. All the best 🇬🇧.

  • @Electricfox

    @Electricfox

    10 ай бұрын

    In a mere two they would have to rapidly industrialize the farming sector to cope with the loss of many working men to the armed forces, coupled with the threat to imported food supplies from the Kriegsmarine.

  • @marklorne6790
    @marklorne67903 ай бұрын

    Beautiful film. Like listening to both my grandfathers' stories of their youth.

  • @misiekvuychik3768
    @misiekvuychik37683 жыл бұрын

    Hard work. I remember 30 years ago we in Poland been doing exactly same work in my grandfather farm. Not so far ago! No combine machine. Now with combine harvest takes day or two.

  • @Agui007
    @Agui00725 күн бұрын

    I have great respect for these times.

  • @mreckes9967
    @mreckes996718 күн бұрын

    I've stooked grain behind a horse drawn binder in Scotland back in the 60's when we went to the uk to catchup with all the family, great memories.

  • @francesvansiclen3245
    @francesvansiclen32456 жыл бұрын

    when life had meaning and reason !

  • @lil_sixxo

    @lil_sixxo

    4 жыл бұрын

    Frances Van Siclen fr

  • @michaelwalton9528

    @michaelwalton9528

    4 жыл бұрын

    cheer up you miserable twat

  • @xXChamplooXx

    @xXChamplooXx

    4 жыл бұрын

    dang dude.

  • @davids8449

    @davids8449

    4 жыл бұрын

    The replies here sound brain dead anyone who likes 2019 full of illegitimate children mass partners, mixed partners people fighting over a toy in a shop mass stabbings people going on endless holidays and then depressed on return home endless traffic jams building work carried out without any thought. The list goes on, and on TAKE ME BACK IN TIME PLEASE.

  • @ikkelimburg3552

    @ikkelimburg3552

    4 жыл бұрын

    David S It’s very simple. Just move to some backward thirth country, lease a piece of land and go struggle 24/7, 365 days a year for just enough food and money for the lease and your little shack. But that’s not ‘en vogue’ so people just keep on whining about the old days and do absolutely nothing to make adjustments to the present life/work/hobbies/volunteerwork.

  • @craigdavidson2278
    @craigdavidson22783 жыл бұрын

    Look at all those hard working Africans and middle Eastern contributing to British history.....

  • @reubencutts7361

    @reubencutts7361

    3 жыл бұрын

    What have you done to contribute to British history then Craig?

  • @mozdickson

    @mozdickson

    3 жыл бұрын

    wow racism and anti-semitism in one thread...really!

  • @craigdavidson2278

    @craigdavidson2278

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@reubencutts7361 I can trace my family back to 1745 (if you were lucky enough to know your father and veg British then you'd understand the significance of the date) my ancestors were at the Battle of talavera (napoleonic wars), Khartoum, 1st world war, grandads brother died thomas davidson died in 1938 Spanish civil war fighting fascism, grandad was on HMS cosack first Russian convoys and my dad served in Cyprus. Even new family members killed at King David hotel by terrorist's. Your move

  • @InglebertHumptyDump

    @InglebertHumptyDump

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@mozdickson Racism and Anti-semitism don't exist. Just made up words for made up problems. If you don't like the way you're being treated either stop being a POS or go back to your own home.

  • @reubencutts7361

    @reubencutts7361

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@InglebertHumptyDump You cant just dismiss racism idiot. It is a very real problem and if you kept up with the news recently, you would see that. So please explain to me how racism isnt real.

  • @openfold
    @openfold15 жыл бұрын

    I've waited years to see this again....this might just be Jennings' finest film....and he made many great ones. How our grandparents lived....backbreaking hard work, and ageing too, though.

  • @sandragreenwood4180
    @sandragreenwood41806 жыл бұрын

    When people really did work wonderful.

  • @ushoys

    @ushoys

    4 жыл бұрын

    sandra greenwood Billions of people in this world still really do work.

  • @alanblissett9834

    @alanblissett9834

    3 жыл бұрын

    sandra greenwood poor sods didn’t know what was just 1 year away

  • @paulbaumer8210

    @paulbaumer8210

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Johnny RoadTrain Why would anyone be happy toiling in a field all day for tuppence?

  • @paulbaumer8210

    @paulbaumer8210

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Johnny RoadTrain What wonderful and fulfilling lives they led! You're wrong about the newspaper, though. Newspapers had more than one use in those days.

  • @Makeyourselfbig

    @Makeyourselfbig

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@paulbaumer8210 Grinding labour in all weathers for long boring hours, lousy money and warm beer on land you didn't even own. And your kids can waste their lives carrying it on after you die. Fantastic. What could be better besides just about anything.

  • @granskare
    @granskare15 жыл бұрын

    I can recall bailing hay and straw and that wonderful bits of straw getting beneath my shirt and more :) the good old days are better for thinking of than experiencing :)

  • @MorgoUK
    @MorgoUK3 жыл бұрын

    To think - there were ‘Stookers’ in the fields of England when this film was made yet two years later there were Stukas in the skies over Southern England.

  • @denishoulan1491

    @denishoulan1491

    3 жыл бұрын

    And thankfully. The stukas in the sky were being shot down.

  • @HadzabadZa

    @HadzabadZa

    2 жыл бұрын

    And now you have durka-durkas arriving all over it

  • @drpeterc12
    @drpeterc12Ай бұрын

    Magnificent record. The thirties saw the decline of the horse and the tractor introduction, but the process was gradual.

  • @chanctonbury63
    @chanctonbury6310 жыл бұрын

    Only 75 years ago and look at the "machinery"!!

  • @alangknowles

    @alangknowles

    3 жыл бұрын

    There were horse-drawn combine harvesters around then. But not widely used in UK.

  • @thomaswilliamfirby180

    @thomaswilliamfirby180

    3 жыл бұрын

    That machinery could well be stored in a barn somewhere still intact and in working order . Would like to see how well this modern junk would fair after 75 years

  • @davidkepley4396

    @davidkepley4396

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@alangknowles Horse drawn equipment largely disappeared in the US beginning in the 1920s due to large acreage farms in the vast western wheat belt regions that spurred the development of mechanized farming. Tractors were more economical to pull plows and "Combine" reapers than horses without the bother and the continuous expense associated with draft animals. Self propelled Combines such as the International Harvester 123 SP were very much on the scene in the late 1940s. Some farms in the wetter regions continued to rely on older methods as a way to minimize damp weather and possible spoilage until the grain was dry enough for separation.

  • @garethifan1034

    @garethifan1034

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@davidkepley4396 Very interesting to know how quickly American farming developed. In those days..America ruled the world in most things and we got to know about it a few years later.

  • @chrisfryer3118

    @chrisfryer3118

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Johnny RoadTrain The last time a cereal farmer made decent money was 1977, in the UK. According to my mate Billy, a tenant farmer. Increased production just means a lower price at market. When it were horses doing the job, typically an 1/8th of crop was oats, for the horses. Still, I never see 2 tractors make another one.

  • @jeffatkins6890
    @jeffatkins6890 Жыл бұрын

    Fabulous entertainment took me back to 1956 , I’d have been 6 years old and it was exactly like my grandparents are alive today

  • @jimmyskyblue6057
    @jimmyskyblue60573 жыл бұрын

    My Grandma was bought up on a farm and she still lives on one today and she’s 96, she would love this video. I don’t think she’s got KZread though lol

  • @robertpowell7672
    @robertpowell76723 жыл бұрын

    I remember the tail end of this era. The men were poor. A pint at the local for the unmarried ones. No cars, and they were all thin - predictably. It is a romantic image here, reality was different.

  • @richardstuart325

    @richardstuart325

    3 жыл бұрын

    Grinding relentless work. My grandparents lived it.

  • @MrPeachblossom

    @MrPeachblossom

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@richardstuart325 same here both parents and grandparents farmed,,hard work true.all lived well into there 80.s never a day in hospital or illness,never complained about there lives either..just the way it was back then

  • @andyrbush

    @andyrbush

    3 жыл бұрын

    It was a wonderful life even though it was hard. Not thin, just not fat and idle. People helped each other then.

  • @dobsondwd

    @dobsondwd

    3 жыл бұрын

    that maybe true but i suppose people resonate with it just compared to the madness we have now and it was at least still england

  • @andyrbush

    @andyrbush

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@dobsondwd In those days wives did not need to work other than help on the farm. Poor is when you can't afford to live, but people managed perfectly well.

  • @chanctonbury63
    @chanctonbury6313 жыл бұрын

    Imagine the first cut with your scythe, knowing you only had another 100 acres to do!

  • @rickremco6275

    @rickremco6275

    3 жыл бұрын

    I think the film said he was only clearing the way for the 'machine'

  • @rogertroughton2280

    @rogertroughton2280

    3 жыл бұрын

    Just cut a bit round the outside of the field with a scythe - enough to make room for the binder to go round without flattening and wasting any corn.

  • @t3br00k35
    @t3br00k354 жыл бұрын

    God bless the people of Britain

  • @TellyWatcher1997
    @TellyWatcher19973 жыл бұрын

    My father worked the land, as a 12 year old child, in Norfolk. He cycled twenty, or so, miles from Norwich to plough a ten acre field with an old sway-backed horse. He was paid 6d (six old pence or about two and half new pence/five US cents) for his long day's work. He was, like many young men, reasonably pleased when, in 1939, the escape route out of abject poverty presented itself (the Great Depression hit Europe as it did the USA). He went away to sea to fight in WW2 by means of his Royal Naval service. Life was hard in the 1930's if you were a peasant and only improved in the post-war period with the welfare state, universal healthcare and compulsory education for children. These were not halcyon days, as shown in this film, scything was back-breaking work and being out in the sun all day was a life-shortening existence. Just as many, if not more, dangerous chemicals were used on the land and horses didn't have the best time most of the time. I look at these films through the lens of one who knows how tough it was for my father's generation. If you happened to be a landowner then life was a bit better and if you owned the land and leased it to others it was better still. Great film though. Only a year after that, women were working the land as the men were away on the front lines (unless in reserved occupations) - yet the women of our land army probably still had to organise their own tea.......

  • @Saurabh.up81

    @Saurabh.up81

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for saying this. There was no 'golden past', especially for the working class, the poor and the marginalized.

  • @bovellois

    @bovellois

    3 жыл бұрын

    Indeed, hired hands slept in barns and above the horse manger on cold nights. Until social laws were passed in 1936, when employers had to provide decent living quarters. Some workers missed sleeping in the warm barn, only because they didn't know anything else and they had been convinced that it was their place. Some landlords didn't like the new social laws, for obvious reasons.

  • @Oakleaf700
    @Oakleaf70011 жыл бұрын

    Chances are a lot of the older chaps in this film would have fought in WW1- it looks so romantic, and in a way it was-country villages are full of commuters now, and our fields are so mechanised, a 100 acre farm easily cared for by one person.

  • @780special
    @780special12 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful and evocative . Thank you. Charming but also back-breaking work and long hours for low pay for the average farm worker.

  • @YllaStar95970

    @YllaStar95970

    4 жыл бұрын

    But look where they lived, a large farmhouse, and surrounding land, an abundance of seasonal food, both arable, and non, children growing up without high levels of polution, and families seated together.... You can keep your minimum pay.....I'll take a maximum life, instead.

  • @simonworman7898

    @simonworman7898

    Жыл бұрын

    Aged 12 in 1963 I tied behind an old fellow opening a field for ground driven MH binder pulled by a1957 IH B250. The field was small by today's standards probably 3.5 acres and the crop was oats, I think the variety was Maldwyn which was the same Christian name as the fellow on the sythe,I I think I his younger days when a whole field would have been cut with a gang of sythe's cradles would have been fitted to each. Gathering and arm full to make a sheaf then pulling a handful wrapping it around ,twisting it,then tucking it under to form the tie. They were then stood up against the hedge to be out of the way of the tractor that probably would come the following day with binder. Thistles were the bain of yet unhardened hands, tying those opening sheaves!. That old chap's youngest daughter is now 91!. That was probably the last year a binder was used on the farm.The grain was not thrashed and rolled as all the working horses had gone some years before. It was fed in the sheaf whole to dairy cattle in winter. For a few years after the oat crop was cut with a fingerbar mower windrowed once then baled with a small conventional baler,there must have been more grain loss with that method,but the straw value is very high compared to other grain crops,it was still at that time fed whole to the most valuable cattle in winter. Sadly only the odd heritage oat harvest take place in Wales these days ,Green grain crops are cut small and made into silage in some parts,but at least young hands not yet truly work hardened get torn up by thistles!

  • @jazko
    @jazko3 жыл бұрын

    Back when people were much more connected, than now.

  • @paulbaumer8210

    @paulbaumer8210

    3 жыл бұрын

    That's a function of slums. You get to 'connect' with your extended family, friends and neighbours when you all live in the same cellar, and 50 people have to use the same outside toilet.

  • @paulbaumer8210

    @paulbaumer8210

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Streetwise Tal You're having a laugh. 1930s England was a third world country compared with today by any indicator you care to choose: i.e. child mortality, life expectancy, average wage, social safety nets and education level. Pretending otherwise is just throwing your toys out of the pram because you have some kind of erroneous and bigoted point to make. Learn some history.

  • @uPenguin

    @uPenguin

    3 жыл бұрын

    You think so? I would say people are definitely far more connected today.

  • @calbotinho

    @calbotinho

    3 жыл бұрын

    friendly reminder WW2 occurred the year after this video

  • @wallyjumblatt

    @wallyjumblatt

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@uPenguin I think the original poster may have meant more connected with the land. Few are these days in Britain. A mountain biker, say, can talk about enjoying the countryside, yet he will ride down a country road in total ignorance of the crops in the field and the names of flowers, trees and birds. It takes effort to do so, but few bother. There are too many distractions.

  • @johnhemming913
    @johnhemming9133 жыл бұрын

    I find it hard to comprehend that this was life only 20 years before I was born. How far we have come in such a short time & how much we stand to lose if we are not ultra careful with what we have left.

  • @MsVanorak

    @MsVanorak

    3 жыл бұрын

    its all going to get tarmacked over by HS2 sooner or later.

  • @diegestive4167
    @diegestive41674 жыл бұрын

    When England was England 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿 😢

  • @SarahJones-wy5us

    @SarahJones-wy5us

    4 жыл бұрын

    Die Gestive, HALLELUJAH !!

  • @Juneaugold123

    @Juneaugold123

    3 жыл бұрын

    yes, bloody empire builders, invading those countries and then expecting them to help us in the 2nd world war...and then to expect to live here, I mean, what a cheek!

  • @diegestive4167

    @diegestive4167

    3 жыл бұрын

    Juneau Gold exactly!!! Glad you agree 😂😂😂

  • @hetrodoxlysonov-wh9oo

    @hetrodoxlysonov-wh9oo

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Juneaugold123 Everyone was empire building, the Ottoman being the cruellest, '2nd world war' you see the middle word 'world' everyone was fighting for their own survival, if they were helping 'us' who were us helping.

  • @Juneaugold123

    @Juneaugold123

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@hetrodoxlysonov-wh9oo missing the point completely you moron.

  • @freebornjohn2687
    @freebornjohn268710 ай бұрын

    This could be my parents and grandad, just before my dad went to war and was away for 5 years. They had two labourers who helped at the weekend, who were coal miners during the week and wanted something to do at the weekend. I remember them first thing on a Saturday sticking the water hose in their mouths and drinking like a horse to help with their hangovers and then proceed to light up a smoke. People on farms were brought up on never ending hard work and for the ones that keep dairy cows it started and ended with milking their herd by hand.

  • @doeharris5363
    @doeharris53634 жыл бұрын

    This is when people weren't afraid of hard work. Fantastic film lots more if possible. 😊😊🐱🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧🇬🇧

  • @JonnyInfinite
    @JonnyInfinite10 жыл бұрын

    A hard but glorious life

  • @paulbaumer8210

    @paulbaumer8210

    3 жыл бұрын

    Huh? What was 'glorious' about it. A narrow life of hard toil with no reward except an early death (most died before 50). They were not much better off than medieval serfs.

  • @gazza2933

    @gazza2933

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@paulbaumer8210 No. You are talking about 'medieval serfdom' where people died before the age of 30. The only people that died before 50 here, were the people that died in the war that followed a year later. Hardwork never hurt anyone!!

  • @paulbaumer8210

    @paulbaumer8210

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@gazza2933 The AVERAGE life expectancy was around 56 in the 1930s. If you take the middle classes out of the equation it was much lower. The diet was meagre and poor, and vitamin deficiencies were common in children. They were small compared to us - particularly working class men (again, you need to take the middle classes out of the equation). And saying that hard work never hurt anyone is BS. Why would anyone want to work like a slave for just enough coppers to keep body and soul together? What's the point of a life of drudgery with little reward and an early death? "Hard work never hurt anyone"! Tell it the men who laid the Burma Railway. Lol. The 1930s were a terrible decade for the UK. Worse, even, than the 1920s. The war actually improved life for many working class people.

  • @thetessellater9163
    @thetessellater91633 жыл бұрын

    Truly sustainable way of life, which got shot down, along with so many aircraftmen, in the war! Not a whiff of diesel or air pollution, just skill, knowledge, experience and sweat. Not much chance of obesity either, with good wholesome unprocessed food. Modern life is a complete disaster in comparison - what a crazy world we have created for ourselves - all in the name of so-called progress. It will come again.

  • @paulbaumer8210

    @paulbaumer8210

    3 жыл бұрын

    There wasn't much chance of obesity in concentration camps, etiher. It is a simple function of not having enough to eat. So much for 'good wholesome unprocessed food', eh? Strange that they died so young with all that 'goodness' in their lives...

  • @JamieBoy-ij2ri
    @JamieBoy-ij2ri6 жыл бұрын

    "Today one can still hear the beautiful rhythm of its swing" unfortunately that "today" was nearly 80 years ago and farming has changed so much since.

  • @nigelmitchell351
    @nigelmitchell3513 жыл бұрын

    When people understood real values.

  • @zogworth

    @zogworth

    3 жыл бұрын

    Lots of people still do. Unfortunately many others seem to be forgetting the lessons learnt very shortly after this was filmed.

  • @nigelmitchell351

    @nigelmitchell351

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@zogworth Quite agree !

  • @mjribes

    @mjribes

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yup, they would be shocked and appalled by BFI's pro-sexual depravity logo

  • @nigelmitchell351

    @nigelmitchell351

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@mjribes Sorry I don't get it, please explain ?

  • @mjribes

    @mjribes

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@nigelmitchell351 They've changed their logo back to normal now. They have the sexual confusion flag in their logo for a while.

  • @jeffrawe6486
    @jeffrawe64863 жыл бұрын

    Not one of the workers overweight, wearing waistcoats and hats... going home to a loving family. Please can we put the clock back and live that life.

  • @paulbaumer8210

    @paulbaumer8210

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yeah. Put the clock back to when the children had rickets, and life expectancy for a man - after a life of toil for a few coppers - was 48. No thanks.

  • @Climpus

    @Climpus

    3 жыл бұрын

    '..loving family...'? Anymore so than now?

  • @gustavmeyrink_2.0

    @gustavmeyrink_2.0

    3 жыл бұрын

    Loving family? When divorce was almost impossible, domestic violence and rape within a marriage were not recognized crimes? Yeah, the rose-tinted glasses of uncritical nostalgia are great, aren't they?

  • @Climpus

    @Climpus

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@gustavmeyrink_2.0 Yes indeed

  • @paulbaumer8210

    @paulbaumer8210

    3 жыл бұрын

    @I'LL BE BACK ! 48 in 1900 in the UK. Three score and ten was the Bible. We were healthier in Biblical times than Victorian times.

  • @rgsnr8702
    @rgsnr87023 жыл бұрын

    what is England without its plough and horse a history of the land of farms as the seasons take their course the past is our heritage and will always be not all change is good as a changing future we see less is our resolve to face a challenge when strength is needed when history gives us lessons that needs to be heeded the next generation is becoming labour free but where is the effort that made the job a reward in itself to me

  • @TheSuperHarrygeorge
    @TheSuperHarrygeorge3 ай бұрын

    Heartbreaking and painful to watch a lost England.

  • @Puglia506
    @Puglia506Ай бұрын

    Beautiful England!

  • @jimdaniels7472
    @jimdaniels74723 жыл бұрын

    The film starts by scything oats, which swiftly transform to wheat.

  • @philjamieson5572
    @philjamieson55723 жыл бұрын

    I loved this film. Thanks for putting this on here.

  • @user-zm8ov6hc7s
    @user-zm8ov6hc7sАй бұрын

    Always sad to think no one in the film is with us. Very much a lovely time capsule.

  • @jonka1
    @jonka13 жыл бұрын

    Perhaps Bethoven is a little dramatic as a background to this gentle study of rural life. Vaughan Williams might have fitted better.

  • @justanutherguy2338

    @justanutherguy2338

    3 жыл бұрын

    Mmm, maybe, I thought the same initially, but it is the Pastoral symphony, so it's quite bucolic. "The Lark Ascending" would be a bit too slow perhaps? It's also 1938 and I imagine things German might not have been received so openly a year later.

  • @postscript67

    @postscript67

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@justanutherguy2338 You imagine wrong. Have a look at Humphrey Jennings' later film "Diary for Timothy" which shows one of Dame Myra Hess's wartime concerts in the National Gallery and the narrator makes the very point that the music is German.

  • @dangerman8625
    @dangerman86253 жыл бұрын

    The pace of work, leisurely, its good to see people sitting down together.

  • @fasx56
    @fasx564 жыл бұрын

    working with loose hay was one of the many difficult jobs that were required on the farm before the hay balers were introduced. Usually done in the hotter summer weather and if one was prone to get hay fever from dust and pollen it was even much more miserable,

  • @222ponys
    @222ponys3 жыл бұрын

    Remember my Mother bringing tea like that to my dad in the harvest field like that.

  • @Etheldreda-
    @Etheldreda-3 жыл бұрын

    God, we’ve lost so much .

  • @smhdpt12

    @smhdpt12

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ya, working to the bone 14 hours a day for .75 cents.

  • @jamesdettmann94

    @jamesdettmann94

    3 жыл бұрын

    Oh come off it, this was 1938. Life in Britain was absolutely awful then

  • @whalewatchersa
    @whalewatchersa3 жыл бұрын

    5:23 low angled shots reminiscent of Leni Riefenstahl. And music by Beethoven too. But the houses are made of flint, so it really is the fens / East Anglia.

  • @MsVanorak

    @MsVanorak

    3 жыл бұрын

    Where are the Suffolk Punch horses then is what I want to know?

  • @miltonwelch4177
    @miltonwelch41773 жыл бұрын

    Hard workers like this bring a thoughts about financier who is in "futures market" and how we lost common sense.

  • @willyspinney1959
    @willyspinney19593 жыл бұрын

    People were far fitter in these day. I come from the west of Scotland and in the early 1930's there was a shepherd working on a farm near my village who used to leave at about half past two on a Sunday morning and walk 24 miles to visit his girlfriend. He arrived about 8 o'clock and she would have breakfast ready for them to eat together, and then he would leave between 5 and 6 o'clock in the afternoon and be back at his farm before midnight. They got married and many years later when he was asked about his long distance courtship, he said you do these things when you are young, but if he still had the legs he would walk 50 miles to get away from her.

  • @caragray7010
    @caragray70103 жыл бұрын

    This look like a wonderful time to be working the land but as as today there is much money about, but just yesterday my wife Brough out the tea and sandwiches to the silage fields can beat a 10 min break having your lunch lying on the field. A great video of men and a time sadly long gone.

  • @tiger5551
    @tiger55513 жыл бұрын

    Wow we have come come so far, that Feild could be finished in about 3-4 hours today what took them weeks to do , I have great respect for those guys who did that for years

  • @elliotsmith6442
    @elliotsmith64423 жыл бұрын

    Harvest, I love this, my Grandfather had hard work ho remember today

  • @phubblewubbphubblewubb
    @phubblewubbphubblewubb Жыл бұрын

    I remember using a scythe to clear the footpaths as a volunteer in the 80's, it was handed down to me by an old boy in the village, I used to spend many happy hours swathing down the weeds and grasses whilst my patient Cob munched the cow parsley. We also burned the stubble, we watched the wind direction and away it went. Fields were left fallow and sheep cleared the rubbish the cattle and horses declined. Muck was spread in November and not ploughed in until March. So much has changed so fast and not for the better.

  • @brianperry
    @brianperry3 жыл бұрын

    Little did they know the world would soon be plunged into Armageddon. I can remember much of what I'm watching, even for the late forties/ fifties...Idilic days for country children in what seemed like endless summers..happy memories from childhood.

  • @ginojaco
    @ginojacoАй бұрын

    Something many miss is that nowadays, although there has been mechanisation, many UK farms are essentially a one-man-affair, it's still a lot of hard work. I farm only livestock, and am about to start lambing as I write this, it is a good life, but it is still hard.

  • @chrismccartney8668
    @chrismccartney8668 Жыл бұрын

    Hard to believe was in living memory of my mother born in 1926, my great grandfather had heavy horses with a carting and coal yard business connected to the River Lee/Stortford Navigation and in two years it would be War Again with Germany hardly believable to us born after 1950, My grandfather fought at Gallipoli Palestine Iraq in Ww1 and Firewatching/ARP Ww2 what did he dream of, An NHS Clean Water Innoculations and better standard of life and health education for US his Granchildren And Queen Elizabeth IInd was of that wonderful generation that dared to dream of it being better. God Bless her and that Generation for Dreaming and making it come true...

  • @delavalmilker
    @delavalmilker2 жыл бұрын

    As a farmer myself (in Nebraska) I find these movies fascinating. And I feel a sort of kinship with the guys in this film. I'm somewhat surprised that in 1938 that British agriculture still wasn't mechanized nearly as much as here in the U.S. At this time, combine harvesters were already prevalent in my area. Horses had largely vanished. The scything and pitching of shocks by hand must have been exhausting work.

  • @erichamilton5932

    @erichamilton5932

    Жыл бұрын

    Took time before English agriculture become mechanized.

  • @yuelingchu4361

    @yuelingchu4361

    9 ай бұрын

    Yes widespread American mechanisation happened earlier.

  • @BloodOfYeshuaMessiah
    @BloodOfYeshuaMessiah3 жыл бұрын

    *A time when no one considered themselves a "victim"...they worked hard, enjoyed life and got on with it !*

  • @Makeyourselfbig

    @Makeyourselfbig

    3 жыл бұрын

    What life? I'll bet most of those people never enjoyed a holiday in their entire lives. They were just working all the time in all weathers, the sun wasn't always shining, and for little reward. Born poor and died poor. Up in the early hours. Worked till it was too dark to see. This is just an idealised view of farming life. Now it's all done by machines and only a fraction of the population work on farms.

  • @Dabhach1

    @Dabhach1

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Makeyourselfbig You're not wrong. Nostalgia isn't about what was, it's about what you'd like to be.

  • @imperialus1

    @imperialus1

    3 жыл бұрын

    Fun fact! Two years before this, 20,000 assorted anti-fascists got into a big ol' knock down drag out fight with the Met after the police were trying to protect a march for the British Union of Fascists. Take off the nostalgia goggles.

  • @Makeyourselfbig

    @Makeyourselfbig

    3 жыл бұрын

    @Eve Oakley Accepted their lot. Knew their place. Knew their place like happy little drones. Yes sir, no sir three bags full sir! No ambition at all. Over educated? I'll bet I couldn't accuse you of that.

  • @brosefmcman8264

    @brosefmcman8264

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Makeyourselfbig never worked a day in his life. He is a good government mule. Talk about a drone 🙄

  • @samspringer7726
    @samspringer77263 жыл бұрын

    What an amazing video. Back in the days when people worked hard and had pride in their jobs. I think a few of today`s youth should watch this. There`s no computers here just hard graft.

  • @ajrwilde14

    @ajrwilde14

    3 жыл бұрын

    it's not 'today's youth' who designed the useless theory-based education system, nor them who destroyed rural jobs with machiney, nor them who prefer to pay Portugese migrant workers for less than a British person needs to live on

  • @partheniaparthenia
    @partheniaparthenia15 жыл бұрын

    beautifully narrated, beautiful visual and they still do it this way in some NC areas.

  • @jacobeksor6088
    @jacobeksor60886 жыл бұрын

    Nice video I’m so enjoy watching old film . I’m Montagnards indigenous we are farmer but differently tools we used.

  • @marsultra7032
    @marsultra70323 жыл бұрын

    What a fantastic piece of film

  • @hannecatton2179
    @hannecatton21793 жыл бұрын

    Somewhat of a ´rose_tinted view´ of life on the land. Generally it was a life of back- breaking work all year round with a real risk of injury and disease . Second only to mining in terms of injury and death. Today the risk has been greatly reduced but wages are still relatively low.

  • @richardstuart325

    @richardstuart325

    3 жыл бұрын

    Indeed. My grandparents lived this life and I remember seeing them ground down by decades of relentless drudgery.

  • @lindseytaylor-guthartz1236

    @lindseytaylor-guthartz1236

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yup and no NHS, no antibiotics, no prospects if you were bright and your parents were poor, and few options for women beyond being wives and mothers. Yes there were good things about it but don't let's pretend we'd all enjoy it.

  • @janesmith9024
    @janesmith90243 жыл бұрын

    Lovely although the first UK mechanical tractors took off during 1914-18 war so by 1938 there would not be very many still using horses I suspect. This is a very romantic image. In 1930 my grandfather fell in an accident at work (falling from the ship he was working on) leaving his widow of just 18 months and my mother a baby. This picture is in the spirit of who we always like to see the countryside at its best similar to Thomas Hardy writing about rural Dorset in the 1890s, the French Noble Savage myths and indeed around this time 1938 what was going on in Germany in terms of romanticism about traditional country life of kinder, kuche and kirche. However it is how we are made - to think there was an idllylic rural past so let us keep believing it and preserve the country side.

  • @mike04535

    @mike04535

    3 жыл бұрын

    In 19 45/46 we were allowed off school for two weeks to work on local farms potato picking. The potatoes were turned over by a horse drawn plough and spinner. We would work alongside the land girls and when we filled our buckets we emptied them into a large horse drawn cart. It was back breaking work but we were well paid considering we were children. We also fed and watered the horses during the mid day break. Heavy horses were used on farms for some years after the war.

  • @teamidris

    @teamidris

    3 жыл бұрын

    That is a huge field, so it looks a lot like they dragged out some old gear to make a nostalgic film. That was an electric pylon in the background. Shed had a corrugated steel roof and I beams. Nice film though.

  • @skaboosh
    @skaboosh15 жыл бұрын

    Some things are better now and some things are worse now.... these are great films

  • @johnwakefield2083
    @johnwakefield20833 жыл бұрын

    Not sure it was actually filmed in Sawston, Dufay were film manufactureres and were purchased by Spicers of Sawston in 1926. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dufaycolor Dufay colour film was one of the early attempts at colour film preceding Kodak & Eastman. So it may have been (wrongly) assumed that the film was shot in Sawston when it was only manufactured there.

  • @davidcollingwood1262
    @davidcollingwood12623 ай бұрын

    Absolutely brilliant.

  • @lesleyscott938
    @lesleyscott9383 ай бұрын

    My mums childhood ❤

  • @mikeross4
    @mikeross43 жыл бұрын

    I can remember my father cutting a swathe round a field of oats so that the binder could come in and harvest the crop. This was in the early 50s in North East Scotland on our small rented farm and the binder was drawn by a tractor. His scythe was a simple one without the metal attachment and he was a master at using it. I could neve4 get the hang of it! A happy childhood!

  • @kapildevroy256
    @kapildevroy2565 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful. Very nice

  • @anoshya
    @anoshya3 жыл бұрын

    Little,obesity,anxiety or depression due to hard physical work..they must have slept so well..

  • @lindseytaylor-guthartz1236

    @lindseytaylor-guthartz1236

    3 жыл бұрын

    No NHS, no money to pay for treatment for cancer, injuries suffered in the fields (no health and safety regs and a LOT of work accidents), sometimes not enough food, no chance for most of doing anything different even if they were bright, and very few possibilities for working class women. Yes, there were some positive aspects, but let's not pretend it was a fairy tale.

  • @paulmason2375
    @paulmason23753 жыл бұрын

    What a wonderful film.

  • @pawelsawicki7003
    @pawelsawicki700310 ай бұрын

    Yes! Truthfully

  • @terryoneilp1421
    @terryoneilp142111 жыл бұрын

    I really enjoyed this film.Notice how slim everyone was,i bet obese people were not as common as they are now.Hard work for sure but far healthy than today's lifestyle.

  • @davidmead731

    @davidmead731

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yes but the endless lifting lifting of very heavy sacks - grain, feed, fertiliser did for many knees and backs. Being out in all weathers, ploughing or whatever, cold and wet. I wouldnt rush back. The best bit was everyone working together and the laughing and joking that went on.

  • @robertsmith-qb2ke
    @robertsmith-qb2ke11 жыл бұрын

    What a remarkable film! Seems such a different world even though there's plenty of folk older than it still around. Unusual to see a Jennings film in colour and a shame it's nowhere near so well known as FIRES WERE STARTED, DIARY FOR TIMOTHY, etc. Robert Smith

  • @albertuskundratis1
    @albertuskundratis110 жыл бұрын

    Reminds me of an old Painting I did of a school chum: The PASTORAL DAVID ALEXANDER WEISS! (The same Beethoven's Pastoral Symphony inspired both as background)

  • @timcolledge3732
    @timcolledge37324 жыл бұрын

    Brilliant film!!

  • @12dougreed
    @12dougreedАй бұрын

    I drove a binder like that, on a fordson tractor paraffin engine. I would stop every so often to be sick as the exhaust system went under the seat and leaking. £2 per week in school summer holidays. I was eleven at the time 😁 I hated planting spuds also picking them up after a potato digger had gone through. My family grew about 2 hundred acres of spuds Also Brussel sprouts. You could always tell when the sprout pickers were active. Lots of flash cars parked next to the field. They got paid per net ( small sack ) terrible work in the frosty weather Mostly done with bare Hands .

  • @chrishultgren777

    @chrishultgren777

    Ай бұрын

    the alternative was starving

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