B2
B1


106 year old film clip

San Francisco Motoring in 1906
on a Cable Car

Robert Wort

You think there are too many Idiots now? Take a look at this!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=NINOxRxze9k

This  film was "lost" for many years.  It was the first 35mm  film ever that has come to light.  It was taken by camera mounted on the front  of a cable car as it`s traveling down the street. You feel as if your really there, standing at the front looking down the street, amazing piece of historic
film. 
The number of automobiles is staggering for 1906. Absolutely  amazing! The clock tower at the end of   Market Street  at the  Embarcadero wharf is still there.   ... How many "street cleaning" people were employed to pick upafter the horses? Talk about going  green!

This  film, originally thought to be from 1905 until David Kiehn with the Niles Essanay Silent Film Museum figured out exactly when it was shot. From New York trade papers  announcing the film showing to the wet streets from recent heavy rainfall & shadows indicating time of year &  actual weather and conditions on historical record, even when the cars were registered (he even knows who owned them and when the plates were issued!).. It was filmed only four days before the Great California  Earthquake of April 18th 1906 and shipped by train to NY for processing.  Amazing, but true!

No wonder there had to be laws created to regulate driving habits. This is insane. Good thing they couldn't go very fast.

This is a fascinating movie. A camera on the front of a street car 104 years ago.  I watched it a couple of times.  Look at the hats the ladies were wearing and the long dresses.  Some of the cars had the steering wheels on the right side,  I wonder when they standardized on the left?  Sure was still a lot of horse drawn vehicles in use.  Mass transit looked like the way to get around.  Looks like everybody had the right of way.

Perhaps the oldest "home movie" that you will ever see! Great  historical film!
(Actually, I have even earlier movie footage dating from the 1880s of cable trams in Melbourne and the laying of the original cables in Bourke Street - Rob)