Lagos Scenes | 1967

Scenes of Lagos, once the capital city of Nigeria captured in the early part of 1967.
From the sky and on the ground.
People, Buildings, Monuments, Streets.
Old Lagos; Victoria Island; Lagos Lagoon.
Independence House; Lagos Race Course, Holy Cross Catholic Cathedral; Marine Parade; Idumota Market.
Source of Footage: Reuters News Archive.
Music: "Aiyele" b/w "Alantere" performed by Orlando Owoh & His Omimah Band (1967).

Пікірлер: 147

  • @Oseiwe
    @Oseiwe4 жыл бұрын

    It's difficult for me to join issues in comments on this video. I'm approaching 50, but i struggle to hold back tears when i watch the video, listen to the music. Black man is a tragedy in the human experience. Anyone wondered why this video was made? The people who have better depth were aware of the possibility that those places could become different in the thick uncertainty that clouded the future of Nigeria at the time. The question that has worried me for decades is: why? Man, why? Can't you see the futility of the human experience? Instead of us to join hands in worldwide human solidarity in this existence called life that we know nothing about, we're here bringing one another down, making our brief time here occupied with misery and sorrow. Look at the children; look at the school girls; they're just like Nigerians today, going about their lives. Just as they were, we are now and we will then turn old and die off and another set would be roaming about just like those ones. I recognise places I've been to in the video. These places were filmed in 1967, i didn't even exist. The whole world was going on and i wasn't there! And then i come and i now say because of one thing or another, i must get this thing or that thing must happen or the world would end. Man, your ego is sick. All humans had this problem, but they didn't know any better. With all the lessons learned in the human experience, black man still refuses to learn, insisting he must go through all the painful processes of experiencing the same and then arrive at same conclusion. I'm rambling, but i feel pain

  • @Timelessnarratives123

    @Timelessnarratives123

    3 жыл бұрын

    Well said sir

  • @tomatopaste1936

    @tomatopaste1936

    3 жыл бұрын

    God bless you sir

  • @justinebube8573

    @justinebube8573

    3 жыл бұрын

    You've poured out your heart and I can feel your pain........ This is one of the greatest write up I've ever come across...... Well said my dear....... If only we humans can go into self reflection, that's only when we can relate to this.....

  • @joyandpeacefullaughter5307

    @joyandpeacefullaughter5307

    3 жыл бұрын

    I think about this too sometimes and there seems to be no clear solution in sight. How can there be when we are our own worst enemies? 😔

  • @reuben853

    @reuben853

    3 жыл бұрын

    Well said sir, God bless you.

  • @planetolusola
    @planetolusola4 жыл бұрын

    This is when Lagos was truly LAGOS. No danfos, molues, and bolekajas. Life was simply, a walk along the marina was blissful. Thanks for sharing Makinde.

  • @nketiahkofi260
    @nketiahkofi2602 жыл бұрын

    I AM A GHANAIAN I QUIET REMEMBER THERE WERE HARD WORKING NIGERIANS IN GHANA THOSE LOVELY DAYS AND TODAY,THAT LIFE HAS DISAPPEARED FROM US.THIS VIDEO SHOWS YOU THE TIME THE NIRA WAS ABOUT TO LEAD THE WORLD. AGAIN, IT ALSO SHOWS YOU THE TIME OF TOGETHERNESS AND THE HAND THAT GIVES TO THE POOR .THOSE DAYS CAN NOT BE SEEN ANY MORE.

  • @efemzyekun900

    @efemzyekun900

    7 ай бұрын

    In 1967, when this video was supposedly made, Nigeria was embroiled in a bloody civil war. Despite this episode of chaos, one can tell that her people, especially the Yoeubas, are progressive, peace loving and accommodating. About 18 months later, she welcomed back into her fold, the same people that fought to break away from them and gave them back their abandoned properties. The same two tribes today, can hardly tolerate each other. God is indeed patient.

  • @naijanistan
    @naijanistan5 жыл бұрын

    The MUSIC in this video is out of this world. Awesome sound indeed. This was 52 years ago and not much have changed. Leadership in other nations would have turned all these areas into Paradise by now with the resources that the nation is blessed with. But oh well, the looting leaders were and are still busy looting while the nation continues to regress.

  • @dawnbroker5156
    @dawnbroker51565 жыл бұрын

    I saw the video of Wole Soyinka being released in 1969 and Bishop Anyogu during the prelude to the biafran war. Your channel is rich in historical treasures.

  • @1anre
    @1anre5 жыл бұрын

    Highlife music bringing peace and calm to one’s mind.

  • @NTNews.64

    @NTNews.64

    9 ай бұрын

    I swear 😁

  • @joyandpeacefullaughter5307
    @joyandpeacefullaughter53073 жыл бұрын

    2:32 did anyone see how the cars all stayed in line even as there was space to overtake? 😔

  • @aframaco9491

    @aframaco9491

    9 ай бұрын

    Stands to reason, fewer people and even fewer cars on Lagos roads!! We are now talking of Lagos as a mega city. That wasn't the case in 1967. 👊🏾🇳🇬👊🏾🇳🇬!

  • @emekaofordile8835
    @emekaofordile88355 жыл бұрын

    Lovely nostalgic music. Sad 2 see we still depend on same infrastructure as was in 1967 without any improvements of note. Ur channel is very informative & I always look forward 2 ur uploads.

  • @jessedee8635
    @jessedee86355 жыл бұрын

    I got overwhelmed with nostalgia watching this video😭😭

  • @youssefcamara3916
    @youssefcamara39165 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, merci beaucoup mon ami. Low population density, green space everywhere. I don’t know what went wrong 50 years later.

  • @johnsmit3112
    @johnsmit31125 жыл бұрын

    Those students in school uniform will be grandparents by now

  • @bilalishaq9477

    @bilalishaq9477

    5 жыл бұрын

    That's if they are not late. Life

  • @jonesanku2357

    @jonesanku2357

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yes

  • @jonesanku2357

    @jonesanku2357

    3 жыл бұрын

    The kids are happy they are being filmed

  • @TeflonDon451

    @TeflonDon451

    3 жыл бұрын

    Sad for them to see how this country went downhill.

  • @pastorcharlesblessing5197

    @pastorcharlesblessing5197

    Жыл бұрын

    Some may even be dead by now.

  • @TayoAinaFilms
    @TayoAinaFilms2 жыл бұрын

    Just came across your youtube page and this struck a chord with me "My contention is that no underlying philosophical approach to re-configuring the African mindset has been promoted by any African intellectual movement which would have the effect of changing the way people think and the way in which they can build the sort of identity and institutions which will unshackle the continent from the bondage of the past as well as the present." Promoting this new mindset is one of my missions! Is it possible to have a conversation with you about Nigeria on my channel? Will really appreciate your consideration!

  • @adeyinkamakinde6164

    @adeyinkamakinde6164

    2 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely. My email is adeyinkamakinde@aol.com

  • @nongovmedia

    @nongovmedia

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hey Tayo! This is a topic I am passionate about. Will be glad to share my thoughts if you let me

  • @willieledbetter5494

    @willieledbetter5494

    2 жыл бұрын

    I believe Pan-Africanism went some considerable way towards that, but was during the same period of its flowering being overcome by the weeds of postcolonial vindictiveness from Western governments with vested interests in the continent's future. The meddling ended many opportunities for what you describe, and continues to this day, stifling its resurgence and progress.

  • @Phriffo

    @Phriffo

    9 ай бұрын

    True, the victim mentality of Africans is the problem. Who were we before colonization?

  • @bernardjay379
    @bernardjay3795 жыл бұрын

    Serene and organised unlike the mayhem of today. Great highlife music as well.

  • @ChibuzorDrSleek
    @ChibuzorDrSleek5 жыл бұрын

    As a historian I’m simply marveled, our kids need be taught history visually and theories too

  • @ADE-of-LAGOS

    @ADE-of-LAGOS

    4 жыл бұрын

    Surprisingly history has been expunged from school curriculum.

  • @kemmieokon
    @kemmieokon5 жыл бұрын

    I must confess... I love your channel!

  • @ekitiyoungprogressivesna3244
    @ekitiyoungprogressivesna32445 жыл бұрын

    First time hearing that song by Orlando Owoh. Thanks for sharing

  • @mohammedusman8490
    @mohammedusman84908 ай бұрын

    There is this nostalgia I can't shake off

  • @ikennaenwelum7798
    @ikennaenwelum77983 жыл бұрын

    The amount of people walking barefoot was quite astounding

  • @damilolaosanyintuyi303
    @damilolaosanyintuyi3035 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for your video archives. This really show case we really had the potential to be Great but somewhere along we lost it. I guess like the saying "easy to destroy than to rebuild" God we need your miracle in my country Nigeria so we can be what you envisioned us to be IJN....Amen

  • @jessedee8635

    @jessedee8635

    5 жыл бұрын

    The bane of our nation Nigeria is the perennial inteferance of the military in governance. Each military government took us 10 years backward in all ramifications until the country eventually LOSTS it's glory. Too SAD

  • @jaybee4577

    @jaybee4577

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jessedee8635 LIES! Nigeria actually did better under military rule.

  • @akojiekeyi9854

    @akojiekeyi9854

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@jessedee8635The civilian governments have been worse than the military ones in Nigeria; they are the ones that orchestrate and outrageously exploit our economic, earthly and regional fault lines and are more docile in curtailing criminality.

  • @IGutube1
    @IGutube12 жыл бұрын

    An Educator, infotainment master, well done sir!

  • @mosesdreylegend4981
    @mosesdreylegend4981 Жыл бұрын

    I'm emotional right now 😥😢

  • @loveone3676
    @loveone36765 жыл бұрын

    Nice one. thanks for this

  • @redbimmer6
    @redbimmer64 жыл бұрын

    So incredibly beautiful.

  • @masarrachy5854

    @masarrachy5854

    10 ай бұрын

    And peaceful

  • @willieledbetter5494
    @willieledbetter54942 жыл бұрын

    This was lovely to watch. Very pleasant.

  • @joyomole-ohonsi6082
    @joyomole-ohonsi60823 жыл бұрын

    I just recently turned 17 and all these buildings I'm seeing are the still the same buildings I'm seeing today. So this is just saying Nigeria isn't moving forward or what? Because why are the infrastructures being used in the 60's!!! Being still used in 2021!!! No modifications or anything! Oh wow

  • @memesfamilyguyandtvshows

    @memesfamilyguyandtvshows

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's called culture most buildings in Lagos has a history and bring them down would be destroying those stories they tell

  • @SimonDelucca

    @SimonDelucca

    2 ай бұрын

    @@memesfamilyguyandtvshows This young now-19-year-old is brilliantly correct. For example, compare the buildings of Singapore in 1967 . . . with that of 2024

  • @kenmarcus6183
    @kenmarcus618320 күн бұрын

    Good one for the archive.

  • @rgbphotomediaprod.2384
    @rgbphotomediaprod.23845 жыл бұрын

    Sooooooooo lovely!

  • @akinwaleolusayo8907
    @akinwaleolusayo8907Ай бұрын

    Very lovely to see ❤

  • @taiwoadebunmi2818
    @taiwoadebunmi28183 ай бұрын

    I noticed the water is very close to the Marina Church back then, that means there was lots of sand filling to push the water back & to create wider roads & bridges, wow.

  • @gerald1495
    @gerald14952 жыл бұрын

    looks so clean

  • @aniekanthomas979
    @aniekanthomas9795 жыл бұрын

    1. Too many comedians in the film today (i mean the smiling children...) 2.Speaking of the children, many of them would probably be grandparents by now...Nothing is permanent... 3.Lagos looked a lot 'quieter' back then...

  • @jessedee8635

    @jessedee8635

    5 жыл бұрын

    Very quiet and peaceful. You can literally count the number of cars and people on the streets. Can't believe is the same cms i see today

  • @bowser3017
    @bowser3017 Жыл бұрын

    a time when the population of Nigeria was less than that of the UK. Incredible

  • @j.c.n9718
    @j.c.n97182 жыл бұрын

    Majestic.

  • @adeyinkamakinde6164
    @adeyinkamakinde61645 жыл бұрын

    @ O Paul. The problems of African development goes further than "fear of Biafrans", "Fulanization" etc. Cities like Accra and Nairobi, which are growing at tremendous rates, and which face water shortages and problems related to urban sanitation, are not being hindered because they lack "Biafrans" or are subject to "Fulanization". Onitsha, a city full of "Biafrans", recently garnered the unenviable reputation as the city with the world's worst air pollution. Facts on the ground suggest poor "maintenance culture", "poor planning", poor governance", "corruption" and other ills are at the root of these problems. And while I understand those crucial problems which have bedevilled Africa because of the arbitrary lumping together of disparate groups of peoples, it is unhelpful to ethnicize these developmental issues by asserting that one ethnic group is intrinsically full of exceptional qualities and would serve as the panacea to any and all problems of human development. History and contemporary analysis suggests otherwise. The challenge lies in the intellectual and political leadership working towards fundamentally changing the mindset and the psyche of the people. My contention is that no underlying philosophical approach to re-configuring the African mindset has been promoted by any African intellectual movement which would have the effect of changing the way people think and the way in which they can build the sort of identity and institutions which will unshackle the continent from the bondage of the past as well as the present.

  • @1anre

    @1anre

    5 жыл бұрын

    Adeyinka Makinde what can be done to propagate this PAN African , nonselfish and forward thinking mindset we Africans so crucially lack?

  • @adeyinkamakinde6164

    @adeyinkamakinde6164

    5 жыл бұрын

    ​@@1anre: That would take a lifetime of writing, but to distil in a few sentences, I would emphasise the need for a greater degree of self-examination starting in the area of metaphysics, for the first commandment in human social development is 'Man Know Thy Self'. I will be writing more about this in the future and will also soon upload a dialogue I recently had with a Nigerian thinker on the challenge of transforming post-colonial African societies into modern progressive entities. It lies in re-configuring the African mindset.

  • @opaul7500

    @opaul7500

    5 жыл бұрын

    @Adeyinka Makinde for the avoidance of doubt, here's what I wrote: *.........but fear of Biafrans and the need to contain them as Sokoto extends to the Atlantic shoreline is still holding things up until Lagos turns into a decrepit slum State........* ------------ Me. If required, I'm more than glad to clarify it's meaning and defend my rationale through a dialogue process which is what I imagine you'd want your site to reflect. You write very commendably lucidly, but are undermined in delivery by presumptuousness and an unfounded reactiveness. Your response seems to impute motive or intent, without seeking clarification. It is better to ask first, deliberate in thought, and then put down your opinion. Presumptuousness creates the impression of veiled censorship and a thin-skin, yet this is your site.

  • @adeyinkamakinde6164

    @adeyinkamakinde6164

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@opaul7500: (Or are you the son of Chief Eleyinmi? - "but are undermined in delivery by presumptuousness and an unfounded reactiveness." ) This will not be the first time you have written a portion of relatively substantial text on a thread on this channel and when challenged have said you can supply more "clarification", "elaboration" or "justification". The terms of my initial response are based on an inexorable logic and still stand. Lagos faces essentially the same problems as other cities such as Accra and Nairobi. Note that I have created a thread in the "Community Section" entitled "How can Lagos, which faces problems related to overcrowding, infrastructural degeneration regain the charm and aesthetic beauty of its past?" Feel free to contribute. By the way no "veiled censorship". As I had to mention in a thread which is attracting mainly Ghanaian commentators, abusive or threatening language is a no-no. And I do enable comments that express criticism and even cynicism. So the ruminations about "veiled censorship" (weeding out the ill-mannered and the cantankerous) or "thin-skin" (an alertness to the perils of accommodating Internet trolls) are rather unfounded.

  • @opaul7500

    @opaul7500

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@adeyinkamakinde6164 you stated: *".....this will not be the first time you have written....and when challenged have said you can supply more information....."* _______A. Makinde So?.... what's your point? In another thread about deposed Ghanaian leader Ignatius Achaempong I did state to a fellow contributor that I could defend the rationale for my opinion because that contributor felt my that my analysis on Achaempong's fate was invalidated by my mere use of the word "Fulanization", and I could. I've stood by my analysis and could contextualize my use of the term "Fulanization" but have not gotten a response from that member desiring it. Similarly, another contributor questioned my opinion on the basis of my not being Ghanaian but without providing their own cogent analysis and similarly I let them know that I needed their own analysis rather than questioning my authority to opine. I'm not rude or obnoxious in my posts, but here you admit being a troll in following my comments thread to thread responding to my contextual analysis as though to one string of thought. What a pity.

  • @ChuchuJS
    @ChuchuJS11 ай бұрын

    My dad told me when he came to Lagos in the early 70’s you didn’t have to worry about security, was so peaceful. But we didn’t have a futuristic leaders . If they had planned out Lagos in 50 years with a larger population they would have invested in more structures and better road networks.

  • @TheLynx8888

    @TheLynx8888

    8 ай бұрын

    I grew up in lagos then, blame the military for Lagos' lack of planning for population growth. It was always going to continue as the leading city in Nigeria despite Abuja.

  • @fashakinbanke3671
    @fashakinbanke36713 жыл бұрын

    oh wow......

  • @kmoses2814
    @kmoses28142 жыл бұрын

    The funniest thing is: no further development since then.

  • @abubakarsanni5422
    @abubakarsanni5422 Жыл бұрын

    Once upon a time, Nigeria

  • @lagoscityview
    @lagoscityview4 жыл бұрын

    Not even a single thumbs down. Wow

  • @Jerrydoller
    @Jerrydoller Жыл бұрын

    Lagos is like this 1967 so why Tinubu is saying him made Lagos na wa o

  • @charleskweh4250
    @charleskweh42505 жыл бұрын

    It looks better and even cleaner than Lagos today.. 75 percent of Lagos today is a complete shit hole risky dirty and undeveloped city. I promise myself never to return to that city cause it's a complete mess especially the traffic..

  • @jaybee4577

    @jaybee4577

    2 жыл бұрын

    You really do have a problem. Nigeria has her own problems just like every other country. Badmouthing of Lagos won’t change Nigeria but contributions by various tribes/ethnicity will make Nigeria better.

  • @tmajec

    @tmajec

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jaybee4577 it’s not badmouthing, it’s an observable fact. Nigeria won’t be better if you keep saying it would be better. Little do you know that some people alive in this footage were saying the same thing. It’s 50 years later and it’s worse. That country needs to cease to end and everyone return to their hometowns

  • @thegoodlife6739
    @thegoodlife67392 жыл бұрын

    that kid who ran away from the camera at 4:29 😂😅😭😂

  • @randoms2826

    @randoms2826

    2 жыл бұрын

    He’s a grand father now 😂

  • @bofloa
    @bofloaАй бұрын

    I was born this year

  • @ttbalog
    @ttbalog4 жыл бұрын

    Fantastic! Please can you report this with the original audio?

  • @adeyinkamakinde6164

    @adeyinkamakinde6164

    4 жыл бұрын

    There was no original audio. It was soundless.

  • @ttbalog

    @ttbalog

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@adeyinkamakinde6164 I see, thank you. I wish I could hear the kind of dialogues therein. Also, I could not but notice the smoothness of all the roads in the video. Life was good then.

  • @lameyoshey
    @lameyoshey Жыл бұрын

    The music 😢

  • @akinokusami3623
    @akinokusami3623 Жыл бұрын

    Damn! We sooo missed an opportunity here. Can you imagine what we'd be if we had maintained the same level of organisation, civility , and no corruption? We'd be literally the closest to Wakanda. Oil hadn't even been discovered at this stage!

  • @emekaofordile8835
    @emekaofordile88355 жыл бұрын

    Pls what's d title of this song? Couldn't find it via shazam

  • @adeyinkamakinde6164

    @adeyinkamakinde6164

    5 жыл бұрын

    As the description box indicates it is two songs. The first is "Aiyele" and the second "Alantere". Both were performed by Orlando Owoh & His Omimah Band in 1967.

  • @BelloMohammed-ki2yf
    @BelloMohammed-ki2yf4 ай бұрын

    What's the title of this sweet song pls, and where can we download it? Please

  • @adeyinkamakinde6164

    @adeyinkamakinde6164

    4 ай бұрын

    Read the description box.

  • @BelloMohammed-ki2yf

    @BelloMohammed-ki2yf

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@adeyinkamakinde6164alright thanks 👍

  • @obinnaigboeli6686
    @obinnaigboeli66863 жыл бұрын

    Good old days

  • @opaul7500
    @opaul75005 жыл бұрын

    City looked less bustling and more orderly. Nigeria's South alone has 853 kilometers of shoreline. Lagos alone has 50 kilometers, and not all of it developed. This means that there are 17 Lagos's able to be built along the Atlantic coastline complete with multiple international seaports, multiple international airports, multiple bus transportation hubs, Federal, State, and Municipal road networks, pre-planned and zoned cities etc, all capable of being built and fully functional almost overnight to take the slack from Lagos, and enable some planning and zoning, deconstruction, demolition and renovation to implement and introduce modernization, green areas and land management best-practices. Doing the above would launch Nigeria through the stratosphere as a world stage international destination with limitless potential, but fear of Biafrans and the need to contain them as Sokoto extends to the Atlantic shoreline is still holding things up until Lagos turns into a decrepit slum State.

  • @adeyinkamakinde6164

    @adeyinkamakinde6164

    5 жыл бұрын

    @ O Paul. The problems of African development goes further than "fear of Biafrans", "Fulanization" etc. Cities like Accra and Nairobi, which are growing at tremendous rates, and which face water shortages and problems related to urban sanitation, are not being hindered because they lack "Biafrans" or are subject to "Fulanization". Onitsha, a city full of "Biafrans", recently garnered the unenviable reputation as the city with the world's worst air pollution. Facts on the ground suggest poor "maintenance culture", "poor planning", poor governance", "corruption" and other ills are at the root of these problems. And while I understand those crucial problems which have bedevilled Africa because of the arbitrary lumping together of disparate groups of peoples, it is unhelpful to ethnicize these developmental issues by asserting that one ethnic group is intrinsically full of exceptional qualities and would serve as the panacea to any and all problems of human development. History and contemporary analysis suggests otherwise.

  • @opaul7500

    @opaul7500

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@adeyinkamakinde6164 for the avoidance of doubt, here's what I wrote: *.........but fear of Biafrans and the need to contain them as Sokoto extends to the Atlantic shoreline is still holding things up until Lagos turns into a decrepit slum State........* ------------ Me. If required, I'm more than glad to clarify it's meaning and defend my rationale through a dialogue process which is what I imagine you'd want your site to reflect. You write very commendably lucidly, but are undermined in delivery by presumptuousness and an unfounded reactiveness. Your response seems to impute motive or intent, without seeking clarification. It is better to ask first, deliberate in thought, and then put down your opinion. Presumptuousness creates the impression of veiled censorship and a thin-skin, yet this is your site.

  • @adeyinkamakinde6164

    @adeyinkamakinde6164

    5 жыл бұрын

    ​@@opaul7500: (Or are you the son of Chief Eleyinmi? - "but are undermined in delivery by presumptuousness and an unfounded reactiveness." ) This will not be the first time you have written a portion of relatively substantial text on a thread on this channel and when challenged have said you can supply more "clarification", "elaboration" or "justification". The terms of my initial response are based on an inexorable logic and still stand. Lagos faces essentially the same problems as other cities such as Accra and Nairobi. Note that I have created a thread in the "Community Section" entitled "How can Lagos, which faces problems related to overcrowding, infrastructural degeneration regain the charm and aesthetic beauty of its past?" Feel free to contribute. By the way no "veiled censorship". As I had to mention in a thread which is attracting mainly Ghanaian commentators, abusive or threatening language is a no-no. And I do enable comments that express criticism and even cynicism. So the ruminations about "veiled censorship" (weeding out the ill-mannered and the cantankerous) or "thin-skin" (an alertness to the perils of accommodating Internet trolls) are rather unfounded.

  • @opaul7500

    @opaul7500

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@adeyinkamakinde6164 you stated: *".....this will not be the first time you have written....and when challenged have said you can supply more information....."* _______A. Makinde So?.... what's your point? In another thread about deposed Ghanaian leader Ignatius Achaempong I did state to a fellow contributor that I could defend the rationale for my opinion because that contributor felt my that my analysis on Achaempong's fate was invalidated by my mere use of the word "Fulanization", and I could. I've stood by my analysis and could contextualize my use of the term "Fulanization" but have not gotten a response from that member desiring it. Similarly, another contributor questioned my opinion on the basis of my not being Ghanaian but without providing their own cogent analysis and similarly I let them know that I needed their own analysis rather than questioning my authority to opine. I'm not rude or obnoxious in my posts, but here you admit being a troll in following my comments thread to thread responding to my contextual analysis as though to one string of thought. What a pity.

  • @schillaci5050
    @schillaci50504 жыл бұрын

    Strangely enough life was better then

  • @olamilekanadam8310
    @olamilekanadam83105 жыл бұрын

    Wow when Lagos was real

  • @obinnaigboeli6686
    @obinnaigboeli66863 жыл бұрын

    God bless Nigeria

  • @edward_ketiak88
    @edward_ketiak882 жыл бұрын

    Why was the traffic the other way round?

  • @femijinadu6755

    @femijinadu6755

    2 жыл бұрын

    You didn’t know that vehicles in Naija used to be right-hand drives until April 2nd, 1972, when Nigeria ditched the British styled right-hand drive to the left-hand drive common among the French, German, & Americans e.t.c…

  • @neduupdates5746
    @neduupdates5746Ай бұрын

    I don't know the month in 1967 this video was taken. That year wasn't a happy one for the Easterners. Some of them have died and many were preparing to die.

  • @mremre5292
    @mremre52925 жыл бұрын

    Please can someone help with the music on this video. The name of the musician please.

  • @adeyinkamakinde6164

    @adeyinkamakinde6164

    5 жыл бұрын

    @hazaido special : the description box provides the relevant information.

  • @toluakinbohun4809

    @toluakinbohun4809

    5 жыл бұрын

    Dr Orlando Owoh, aye le is the title

  • @toluakinbohun4809

    @toluakinbohun4809

    5 жыл бұрын

    Orlando in the 60's

  • @nasirben4112
    @nasirben4112 Жыл бұрын

    Africans countries were great at these days . And were very clean

  • @cosmos6107
    @cosmos61073 жыл бұрын

    Chaos reigns today.

  • @PhillyBlack
    @PhillyBlack2 жыл бұрын

    Marina looking as clean as wall street, smh what happened 50 years after

  • @gerald1495

    @gerald1495

    2 жыл бұрын

    population explosion without infrastructure construction

  • @tmajec

    @tmajec

    Жыл бұрын

    Waiting on Jesus and God to change what we can do for ourselves is what happened

  • @LRG246
    @LRG2463 жыл бұрын

    extra nostalgia by private moridele

  • @TheBrokerTopGee
    @TheBrokerTopGee Жыл бұрын

    Where's Tinubu

  • @skyblueokr
    @skyblueokr2 ай бұрын

    The market looks the same it’s a shame. I mean the dressing the way people look and walk. There is it difference. It’s sad. Nigeria should have been greater than it is today

  • @realdiplomat7504
    @realdiplomat75045 жыл бұрын

    Perhaps just 10 percent of today's population but the same road network infrastructure is still in place till date. That is why it ranks as one of the worst City to live in the World today. People commute 7-10 hours every day for a distance of about 30-45 kilometers

  • @abdurrahmansanuth3366

    @abdurrahmansanuth3366

    4 жыл бұрын

    Third mainland bridge?

  • @ikzp1881

    @ikzp1881

    4 жыл бұрын

    Its a pity lagos till date no railway/underground system. I lived in city Chengdu China in 2007 to 2008. I see how fast their metro/ railway was so fast.

  • @jaybee4577

    @jaybee4577

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ikzp1881 WTF China is totally different from Nigeria. They have a system of governance and culture that totally different from Nigeria. China is also more homogeneous than Nigeria.

  • @reuben853
    @reuben853 Жыл бұрын

    And now it's Tinubu's Lagos???🤷‍♂️🤷‍♂️

  • @emersonjtv5553
    @emersonjtv55533 жыл бұрын

    Primitivy is higher now than then

  • @nwankwonwachukwu5277
    @nwankwonwachukwu52774 жыл бұрын

    4:28 DAT child would be around his 60s

  • @realemmycool7767
    @realemmycool7767Ай бұрын

    Now is not the Nigerian we know again 😢

  • @jonesanku2357
    @jonesanku23573 жыл бұрын

    What was the population then

  • @memesfamilyguyandtvshows

    @memesfamilyguyandtvshows

    2 жыл бұрын

    Wasn't up to a million I guess

  • @lawuyilalude4584
    @lawuyilalude45843 ай бұрын

    How true is this?

  • @juliekeku6087
    @juliekeku6087 Жыл бұрын

    3:40 the look on that woman's face though 😂😂

  • @jamesfadayomigooglemailc-ki6cf
    @jamesfadayomigooglemailc-ki6cf2 жыл бұрын

    Easy life long time a go.

  • @adamubala1463
    @adamubala14632 жыл бұрын

    So all the children in this video are older than me💔😂😂😂

  • @hillcrestprofessionalservi3502
    @hillcrestprofessionalservi35022 жыл бұрын

    The chaos was always there..As the population grew, the level of chaos grew with it

  • @adeniyimarcus5475
    @adeniyimarcus54752 жыл бұрын

    those kids now are grandpa oo

  • @nace766
    @nace7663 жыл бұрын

    Lagos island 1:56-2:46

  • @simplyizustic6122
    @simplyizustic612210 ай бұрын

    Back then Lagos looked like most cities in today's developed countries. A shame it was left behind

  • @Raymond08
    @Raymond08 Жыл бұрын

    Was the footage recorded by a white man? The incessant staring at the cameraman makes it a bit awkward, lol.

  • @Narrative_hoook
    @Narrative_hoookАй бұрын

    Same period Biafra was in perils 😢 sad

  • @Africantourism
    @Africantourism2 жыл бұрын

    Truely govt has ruin the future of this country

  • @omoharry2173
    @omoharry2173Ай бұрын

    Tinubu built Lagos .. make Una see Lagos B4 Tinubu came with his Agberos