UNEARTHED photos reveal working-class life in East London in the 70s - before gastropubs, cafes and hipster kids transformed Hackney forever.
In the decades after the war, the area was a raw landscape of bombed out houses, kids playing in streets and buzzing factories teeming with skilled workers.
It was a far cry from gentrified, advanced areas such as Shoreditch, Hackney, Whitechapel and Dalston - now more famed for cutting-edge technology, industry and trendy pubs and clubs.
The images, taken by local Hackney boy Neil Martinson, take the viewer through workshops, street markets and council homes to capture a time that has nearly been lost forever.
Neil worked as a freelance photographer and taught photography and presents the stunning photos in his latest collection, 'Hackney Archive: Work and Life 1971-1985'.
His work has taken him around the world - from the Soviet Union to modern day Berlin and Brighton to New York - documenting the gradual changes to the world's most striking locations.
Vivian Usherwood introduces the new book, saying: "Why is Hackney called ‘Hackney’? Why could it not be ‘Dirty’?
"Its name stinks of steam and smoke. How much longer do I have to live in this place? Everybody wants to leave and try to forget about Hackney.
"But I can’t. It’s groaning inside me. And that is why everybody smokes. To forget about it. Everybody wants to leave and go to the country."