Anthracite Railroads in the 70s Volume 2

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  • Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
  • This is a preview of Anthracite Railroads in the 70s Volume 2. The full DVD will be available for purchase soon from the website shown at the end of this preview.
    DVD summary below:
    By the 1970’s, the once thriving Anthracite roads were struggling to survive.
    The long decreasing demand for coal, along with a series of other contributing factors, left these roads in spiraling financial decline.
    These railroads managed to keep the freight rolling into the mid 70’s with little resources available, but the die was cast and all the Anthracite roads would eventually be swept into Conrail in 1976.
    In Volume 2 of the Anthracite Railroads in the 70’s series, we’ll look at the ailing operations of the Lehigh Valley Railroad from Bound Brook, New Jersey to Treichlers, Pennsylvania in the final years leading up to Conrail, including the joint Penn Central ore trains and D & H run through trains.

Комментарии • 38

  • @kyleproctor6928
    @kyleproctor6928 4 года назад +2

    I guess back in the 70s they didn't believe in rail maintenance lol. Some of the trains were a rockin lmao

  • @succulentsucc2772
    @succulentsucc2772 6 лет назад +10

    I'm glad to live in the Lehigh valley there is so much history here!

  • @christophers.o622
    @christophers.o622 6 лет назад +3

    7 members of my family worked for the Lehigh Valley railraod out of Coxton Yard near Pittston where my paternal grandparents & late father lived in. My great grandfather Stephen Kearney, 4 grand uncles & 2 second cousins all worked on the Lehigh Valley railroad. I have on my living room coffee table a book on the Lehigh Valley railroad volume 3 and Trackside around Scranton from 1950 to 1976.

  • @tommyhaynes521
    @tommyhaynes521 8 лет назад +5

    Thanks for posting this , really enjoyed it

  • @kyaing9047
    @kyaing9047 8 лет назад +6

    If only you could travel back in time to the 60s and 70s to witness the best days of rail action with all these ALCOs and Geeps and SDs.

  • @drby0788
    @drby0788 8 лет назад +7

    wow...this was 40 years ago...

  • @orangeytrain8878
    @orangeytrain8878 3 года назад +1

    These were better than Conrail

  • @bobgallo2178
    @bobgallo2178 6 лет назад +3

    Great post, thanks for sharing. Am very interested in the Easton/Phillipsburg area. Great place to fish and trainspot
    .

  • @daylightbigboy
    @daylightbigboy 6 лет назад +4

    Were the sounds in all these films recorded when the videos were taken or are they dubbed in? They match very very well!

    • @JPMediaRR
      @JPMediaRR  6 лет назад +5

      The sounds were dubbed from cassette from the locations. Sound film was introduced in 1973, but early sound film had issues and was expensive. It wasn't until the late 70s/early 80s that sound film became somewhat affordable and had many of it's issues corrected

  • @TheRobert2254
    @TheRobert2254 7 лет назад +4

    Now I bet NS and CSX publey travel those railways

  • @troymcmahon488
    @troymcmahon488 2 года назад +1

    I really like the paint schemes on the Lehigh Valley trains.

  • @edlrailfanproductions3984
    @edlrailfanproductions3984 3 года назад +1

    Awesome videos. I live and have family all around the Lehigh valley and its wonderful to see what it used to be. Its kinda sad looking at it now being that the upper lehigh line only sees one local through the night and most of the lines filmed were ripped out long ago.. I have a great grandfather that worked on the CNJ and retired from conrail. My grandfather and his siblings grew up with the bednars in Northampton and catasaqua. Sometimes I wonder if my great grandfather was running one of the trains on these videos. Thanks for uploading these videos and showing the history that once was!

  • @tracynation239
    @tracynation239 5 лет назад +2

    Another Excellent Video. ♡ T.E.N.

  • @AllanLoveJr
    @AllanLoveJr 6 лет назад +4

    Wow. Those RR's were in very bad shape.

    • @JPMediaRR
      @JPMediaRR  6 лет назад +2

      Yes they were. The reason Conrail was formed

  • @dsmith9964
    @dsmith9964 6 лет назад +2

    Wow! So many fallen flags!

  • @jeffreymcfadden9403
    @jeffreymcfadden9403 7 лет назад +3

    @ 3:13 LV RS11 7644. in aug 1979 i made my 1 and only trip to bethleham,pa.
    in the roundhose was 7644, at this late date this alco is rare, still running. (blue, but in very good shape)
    talked to a employee there and he said the people were hiding it there. they wanted to keep it as long as possible.
    when the big wheels came by, they took 7644 and buried it in the yard so they wouldnt see it!
    also, the C of Pa was still down east of town, but the tracks had trees growing in it.

  • @RYMAN1321
    @RYMAN1321 5 лет назад +2

    I heard the railroad at 1:48 was abandoned since 1976. Is that true?
    But wow, I haven’t seen many clips of that bridge in service.

    • @RailFireProductions
      @RailFireProductions 8 месяцев назад +2

      If by the Lehigh Valley Railroad, then yes, it was absorbed into Conrail in 1976. The bridge is also sitting abandoned in the present day. However, there was is a second bridge parallel to it which was owned by the Central Railroad of New Jersey. Norfolk Southern currently operates trains on their “Lehigh Line” between Allentown, PA and Manville, NJ. Dozens of trains a day cross the Delaware River over the old CNJ bridge. So even though the LV Railroad and their bridge no longer operate, freight service over that part of the river very much does exist. You can even see trains crossing the bridge on the eastern side on the Phillipsburg Union (PU) Tower live camera feed.

    • @RYMAN1321
      @RYMAN1321 8 месяцев назад

      @@RailFireProductions Interesting
      Since my original comment I looked into it a little more and found that the LVRR bridge actually went fully out of service in 1989? Did I read that correctly?
      I also found that the Greens Bridge apparently went defunct the same year? But I read that one carried the Raritan Railroad.

    • @839Unipicker
      @839Unipicker 3 месяца назад +1

      @@RYMAN1321 Conrail moved from the LV bridge to the CNJ bridge in 1989. That is correct. Greens Bridge is the stone viaduct which belonged to the CNJ and after NJT stopped running commuter trains to Phillipsburg in 1983 it was no longer used, as Conrail was using the LV girder bridge next to it, as NS still does today.

  • @athikr1
    @athikr1 20 дней назад

    As a kid these long coal trains ran behind my house. You could hear them getting closer, and by the end of the train I would be asleep.
    Over the top White Noise

  • @rolpfeiffermuller935
    @rolpfeiffermuller935 5 лет назад +2

    Thanks airing the Outstanding vid.Bliss

  • @Duececoupe
    @Duececoupe 7 лет назад +1

    Another must have video! 👍👌👏😍

  • @jsteiger2228
    @jsteiger2228 8 лет назад +2

    Beautiful transfer from 8mm. Was color correction done?

    • @JPMediaRR
      @JPMediaRR  8 лет назад +1

      +jsteiger2228 Film transfers will always need some correction due to the difference in latitude between film and video. Mostly exposure, but color correction as well. We employ primary correction during capture using a histogram and then secondary correction in post using script and scene by scene correction settings. All parts of production are done in house, from concept to finished product. Nothing is farmed out

  • @Bolivar2012able
    @Bolivar2012able 3 года назад

    Just have to look at the trains rocking to show the state of the Railway Company Finances.

  • @edwu8253
    @edwu8253 6 лет назад +1

    Great video👍

  • @jackyclaiborne2142
    @jackyclaiborne2142 5 лет назад +2

    I love freight trains because they mean less truck traffic on our highways!

  • @cubbstero9407
    @cubbstero9407 3 года назад

    NS was the one Lehigh Valley went to

  • @bobsallyduncan9687
    @bobsallyduncan9687 4 года назад

    8

  • @donnebes9421
    @donnebes9421 2 года назад +1

    The narrator is awesome! What a knowledgeable guy. Thanks for all these videos, I’ve really enjoyed them.