The Herald

Time travel: Old photos of one man’s life on streets of Glasgow in the 1970s

Pictures that spent years tucked away in a loft get a new following on Twitter, writes

- Caitlin Hutchison

JUST over one year ago, amateur photograph­er Jos Treen dusted off old negatives taken of 1970s Glasgow that had spent the last 40 years hidden away in his attic.

The mesmerisin­g snapshots, now drenched in nostalgia, came from a period in his life when he was a young man on the dole, wandering the streets of Glasgow, and armed with his camera.

Fast-forward to 2020 and Mr Treen, 66, a man with a lifelong passion for photograph­y, is sharing his almostforg­otten photograph­s with the world for the first time to great acclaim on social media, and finding that Twitter can be a force for good in bringing people together.

“They were stuck away in a loft until late 2019”, he explained, “when I decided to sort of get back into photograph­y again.

“So I searched for them, dragged them out, and tried to remember where they were taken.”

Luckily, the negatives were still in very good condition, which left Mr Treen wondering what he should now do with them – eventually opting to tentativel­y join the Twittersph­ere. “I just thought I’ll put a couple of pictures

out there, and see how it goes. But I had no plan, and zero expectatio­n really, because I had no following on Twitter, and nobody knew my name”, he explained.

But as Mr Treen, now based in Manchester, began to share more and more snaps from his 1978 photojourn­ey through Glasgow, intrigue surroundin­g the photograph­s, and subsequent­ly his Twitter following, grew.

And people remarked that Mr Treen’s approach to Twitter was different from the norm. “I was using it to engage that base around the

photograph­y,” he said. “I wasn’t having a political rant, I wasn’t making comments about this, that or next thing, it was all around the photograph­y and the stories.”

He added: “There were a number of cases where people would come back and say, ‘Oh, I remember walking down that street with my grandad. I used to hold his hand, and we used to go to that bakers, or we used to go to that green grocers’. And after 40 years, I was prone to making mistakes so people would correct me saying, ‘That’s not Sauchiehal­l Street, that’s Renfield Street, you’ve got it wrong.’”

Soon, Mr Treen had more than 4,000 followers on Twitter and was interactin­g with people from across the globe.

John Ward, 57, was all the way on the other side of the Atlantic when he caught a glimpse of his grandparen­ts, Elizabeth and Philip Ward, walking down George Street in Glasgow, thanks to a random retweet that redirected to Mr Treen’s Twitter page.

In an instant, Mr Ward, who now lives in Vancouver, Canada, was transporte­d back to Glasgow, his childhood memories, and found himself pondering the likely objective of his grandparen­ts’ outing that day, as well as the lives they led more generally.

“I thought at the time my gran’s jacket looked familiar and then when I zoomed in, that was when I realised it was them,” he explained. “I have no idea where they are going although for both of them to have been out together it must have been relatively important.

“It was quite surreal to see them in the photo. You never expect to see someone you know in a random photo, never mind family members who never really ventured out together in the first place.”

He then decided to let Mr Treen know that he had snapped his grandparen­ts, and furnished him with details that would add some colour to the black-and-white shots and help with the labelling process.

Mr Ward’s gran was a sewing machinist and worked in the Glasgow Cross area, and his grandpa was a utility company lighting inspector at the time, after working in a carpet factory and serving in the Royal Navy during the Second World War.

The pair lived on Longstone Road in Cranhill, and Philip sadly died a few years after the photo was taken in July 1980. Elizabeth lived until she was 92, passing away in September 2010.

He added: “Jos’s photos are fantastic as are the old Glasgow photos of a number of people on Twitter – there is nothing better than looking through old nostalgic photograph­s.”

Mr Treen, who was delighted to have helped Mr Ward get that connection and picture, added: “You may have to hunt for it, but Twitter can be a force for good.”

You may have to hunt for it, but Twitter can be a force for good

 ??  ?? The Job Centre in Maryhill Road where Jos Treen used to sign on every two weeks in 1978
The Job Centre in Maryhill Road where Jos Treen used to sign on every two weeks in 1978
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 ??  ?? A west end street scene in the late 1970s
A west end street scene in the late 1970s
 ??  ?? Ships at the Queen’s Dock on the Clyde
Ships at the Queen’s Dock on the Clyde

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