Just spotted an old carnforth driver on the turntable while turning 70023!!!!! Harry Bush was at Carnforth when I joined the railway back in December 1970!!!! happy days!!!
@Jack Warner well humans have always been stupid, thats why we have a lot of the safety precautions we have now, along with machines being unpredictable. This is literally survivor bias, yes you survived doing dangerous stuff but what about all those who didn't?
You couldn't beat a good shed bash when you were young back then. Proper educational entertainment and you were in thrall of the sheer power of what you were witnessing.
Amazing filming. My late dad ( ex 17B and 15A boiler 'tuber' ) took me there in the early 70s when it first opened as a working museum. Great to see how things looked when it was still a proper working steam depot.
These scenes bring back happy memories of visits I made to engine terminals here in the USA when steam locomotives were still in regular service. Like the 3 boys in this video, I would climb into the cabs of dead engines and would spend many happy hours pretending to be the fireman and the engineer (driver) of all types of engines--yard, freight and passenger. I was 13, 14 and (barely) 15 years old. On a few occasions, I was invited to climb into the cab of a live engine that was still in service. Pure heaven, for the kid I was at the time.
Great to see such high quality film. Wonderful stuff. I was there several times, plus trainspotting at nearby Hest Bank. I remember the ominous line of withdrawn, dead engines on the outermost siding at the shed...visible in the background of many of these scenes. I have a scan on flickr (under 'Cliff Bancroft') of my spotting notebook at Carnforth shed around Christmas 1967 which shows 46441 (6441) on shed here in its LMS livery, headed for preservation, so presumably that dates at least some of these scenes. Thanks for uploading this, Peter, and I look forward to any others from you
I fondly remember those mucky black steam engines.I was 8 years old in 1968 when they finally all went. It seems like a dream now. It's nice to look back with films like this.
Absolutely brilliant 😄 I just missed out on steam as I was 11 in 68 but saw lots of condemned steam locomotives rusting away at sheds around the north west 😟 Stevie.
Brilliant stuff many people myself included travelled extensively to watch the demise of steam in the North west in my case thanks to BR staff privilege ticket my favourites included Rose Grove, Carnforth, Patricroft, 1 visit to Longsight which lasted barely a few minutes before being kicked out. Holbeck Leeds even disguised in our parents old uniform jackets climbing through hole in the . Sometimes getting away with it. these films have brought back the memories of the dieying days of main line steam. many thanks for posting
Really, really enjoyed that. Brought back so many memories of my trainspotting days as a wee lad. I did have to mute the sound though as that music was way too distracting!
Wish I could've been there, only sheds I've 'bunked' have been Didcot, York, Barrow Hill and what's left of Swindon. At least, those are the sheds I've properly visited...due to connections I managed to cab a whole load of HSTs, 44871 and Flying Scotsman at Plymouth Laira, whilst she was operating shuttles between there and Par. Was amazing
The film quality is superb. Sad to see the decline right there on your film. So different from the restored trains today. Different times of course. Thank you for posting. I am now subscribing. Cheers Don.
The 3 small boys reminded me of Sundays when we sneaked round Wellingborough 15Acabbing all the Crosti's and 9f's.The odd namer appeared now and then Jubilee's were sometimes rare visitors.
The Wellingborough crews hated the Crosti engines. Eventually converted to normal draughting and moved to the North West. Patricroft had a few, but the crews preferred the Stanier 2-8-0s.
Great atmospheric vid here. Sad to see 70021 in that state -I remember her in her glory days on the Midland expresses to Manchester Central going through Chorlton.
Beautiful photography. Shame to see "Venus" (70023) in such run down condition. I recall seeing her at Paddington when she was a Cardiff Canton engine sparkling in the sunshine. The golden years.
Reminds me of going to the Leeds steam Holbeck Neville hill copper hill and Kevin all the in the sheds not afraid missing and steaming didn't worry us ask kids used to climb the walls to get into Holbeck shed and cross the main lines to get into Neville hill we caught the train from Shipley to Leeds city station then walked to the Central station then off to visit all the sheds what's a happy time of life
@@johnward374 went to farnly shed a long narrow shed.use to walk thru a housing estat red brick dack to back cobbled streets.use to be a cornershop were we use to buy a ice lolly.dontno the other shed you mentioned.i never new the erear of the back to back houses were.i can picture it now.
Never knew shed. But we did visit farnly shed a long narrowshed we used to walk to a housing estate made of red brick back-to-back with cobbled streets they used to be a shop on the corner where we used to buy an ice lolly. I have and had no idea what that housing estate called. I can still picture it now I never knew about the other shed I don't know where it was ok thanks
PI Staker ! Bunch of candy asses running around these days can't even have sex without hardhat , hi visibility vest , safety shoes , goggles , safety harness , seat belt , it's beyond pathetic.
Lovely upload ,and i love steam ,but in reality ,just look at it ,wretched conditions ,the wretched state of the loco's ,yes due to no maintainance ,but my uncle worked as a driver at Holbeck ,he said the best thing that ever happened was not getting up at stupid oclock to prep your engine,you climbed in to a 45 did a few checks ,fired it up ,let pressure build up and off you went in less than 30 min's
Apart from the loco,s it all looked topsee Turvey and a bit maintenance and a lick of paint hasn’t been on the menu for some time. Very good images though all the same . Regards
Looks like it was filmed on high quality 35mm equipment, but no sound, like the film studios used and sound recorded separately, ..and then the two formates spliced together...
Has anyone worked out the shear economics of loss the railways went thru. 65-68 when they scrapped 10 and 12 yr old locomotives with only 200,000 miles on the clock so they could buy diesels at two to four times the price of a steam locomotive and they seem to only have very short lives before they too are scrapped. It must have cost the taxpayer many millions of pounds for this hasty eradication of steam, Made more sense to at least get your monies worth out of the modern engine and run them into the late 70, s at least. Just a observation from an economic view
I think the speedy eradication of steam in the 1960's was more of British Rail's concern with public image. Mankind was about to land on the moon, Concorde was about to launch, yet there were still machines on the rails that were antiquated and archaic. Despite some of the locomotives being relatively new, steam was still old hat. Of course the locomotives should have had their money's worth, but would the rapid growth of technology and knowledge have appreciated steam hauled trains in the 1990's... something tells me not.
@@1258-Eckhart Most of the replacement diesels didn't because of the haphazard way the British Railways Board acquired them. Mass production without proper testing. A lot of classes of diesels were ordered for work that was rapidly disappearing. Class 15's spring to mind. Though some of those found further use in industry. And yet some of the early classes such as 20's, 37's and 08's are still soldiering on 60 years after they were built.
@@captaindbheadcase1303 That does not in any way negate my point: Steam engines were (/are!) incredibly maintenace-intensive and even your correct (and infamous) example of the Claytons (the Metrovick was another total dud) resulted 1:1 in a huge reduction of overheads. Also please come clean on your accusations (negative --> positive): The only truly professional BR region was the Western, which did engineering research on leading but PROVEN technology and went, with high level engineering representation, to the Verkehrsausstellung here in Munich in 1953 to review the most modern technology. This was the highspeed automotive diesel with the very lightweight transmission, a format which is successful to this day here in Germany. Commercially, you need to balance trackwear against tractive effort. Until the mid-1980's and the advent of power-electronics, this was only achievable via the GWR path: you can always make an engine heavier, but if it's too heavy to start with, you're screwed. The best BRB-inspired effort at the time were the Baby Deltics in 1959 (highspeed diesel, but overweight transmission), which never achieved their target axle load. So the BRB went down the LMS route with a development of the 10.000 prototypes (in one direction the Peaks, in another the EE classes): Marine diesels with bombastically heavy transmissions. This was a triumph of politics over engineering sense. It probably cost BR (and therefore the taypayer) many millions over the years in track maintenance. This is what happens when politics runs the railways and you still have it in the UK to this day.
Theres a difference between nationalisation and the decline of steam locomotives. Steam locomotives on every single railway, private or state-owned, looked like this when the steam era came to an end because they were no longer useful. They were being replaced by much more efficient, cheaper and low maintenance means, E.G: Diesels and Electrics.
Just spotted an old carnforth driver on the turntable while turning 70023!!!!! Harry Bush was at Carnforth when I joined the railway back in December 1970!!!! happy days!!!
The quality of this footage is really unbelievable. Great stuff!
Great archive and good to see the pre health and safety days when kids could roam the shed! I remember it well.
@Jack Warner well humans have always been stupid, thats why we have a lot of the safety precautions we have now, along with machines being unpredictable. This is literally survivor bias, yes you survived doing dangerous stuff but what about all those who didn't?
@@ItzDecster When I was a child I was fully aware of the dangers around me which I took very seriously, just like crossing the main road.
Yes, humans, even the little ones, were more advanced, intelligent and responsible it those days.
Superb capture of wonderful nostalgic memories. Priceless.
The choice of music is interesting because Dvorak was known to be a keen admirer of our steam locos. Congratulations on this great footage!
The REAL thing..!!! Best archive filming I have ever seen, just like it were yesterday..!!!
You couldn't beat a good shed bash when you were young back then. Proper educational entertainment and you were in thrall of the sheer power of what you were witnessing.
Amazing filming. My late dad ( ex 17B and 15A boiler 'tuber' ) took me there in the early 70s when it first opened as a working museum. Great to see how things looked when it was still a proper working steam depot.
This is some brilliant film footage, perfectly encapsulates those dark final days of steam. Thanks for sharing this.
These scenes bring back happy memories of visits I made to engine terminals here in the USA when steam locomotives were still in regular service. Like the 3 boys in this video, I would climb into the cabs of dead engines and would spend many happy hours pretending to be the fireman and the engineer (driver) of all types of engines--yard, freight and passenger. I was 13, 14 and (barely) 15 years old. On a few occasions, I was invited to climb into the cab of a live engine that was still in service. Pure heaven, for the kid I was at the time.
Perfect musical accompaniment. Brilliant filming, thanks for sharing.
Excellent , so many memories of walking around carnforth ! Many thanks
A gem of a video with super old shed scenes. Very enjoyable.
Good film. I am pleased by joy and happiness on faces of those kids in cabin.
Great to see such high quality film. Wonderful stuff. I was there several times, plus trainspotting at nearby Hest Bank. I remember the ominous line of withdrawn, dead engines on the outermost siding at the shed...visible in the background of many of these scenes. I have a scan on flickr (under 'Cliff Bancroft') of my spotting notebook at Carnforth shed around Christmas 1967 which shows 46441 (6441) on shed here in its LMS livery, headed for preservation, so presumably that dates at least some of these scenes.
Thanks for uploading this, Peter, and I look forward to any others from you
I fondly remember those mucky black steam engines.I was 8 years old in 1968 when they finally all went. It seems like a dream now. It's nice to look back with films like this.
A very busy depot compared to nowadays, very clear video.
Absolutely brilliant 😄 I just missed out on steam as I was 11 in 68 but saw lots of condemned steam locomotives rusting away at sheds around the north west 😟 Stevie.
Awful to see Venus in such poor condition. Excellent footage, thanks.
Good musical selection and co-ordination with the video; well done :-)
Great archive footage, thanks for sharing and I look forward to watching some more from the archives
Brilliant stuff many people myself included travelled extensively to watch the demise of steam in the North west in my case thanks to BR staff privilege ticket my favourites included Rose Grove, Carnforth, Patricroft, 1 visit to Longsight which lasted barely a few minutes before being kicked out. Holbeck Leeds even disguised in our parents old uniform jackets climbing through hole in the . Sometimes getting away with it. these films have brought back the memories of the dieying days of main line steam. many thanks for posting
Really, really enjoyed that. Brought back so many memories of my trainspotting days as a wee lad. I did have to mute the sound though as that music was way too distracting!
Those three lads will be in their 60's now. Tempus Fugit !
Wish I could've been there, only sheds I've 'bunked' have been Didcot, York, Barrow Hill and what's left of Swindon. At least, those are the sheds I've properly visited...due to connections I managed to cab a whole load of HSTs, 44871 and Flying Scotsman at Plymouth Laira, whilst she was operating shuttles between there and Par. Was amazing
Fabulous film so atmospheric those children were so happy no worries about what health and safety would say today. Take me back please.
Superb film, superb memories.
The film quality is superb. Sad to see the decline right there on your film. So different from the restored trains today. Different times of course. Thank you for posting. I am now subscribing. Cheers Don.
Thank You - the more the merrier!
Excellent film ,thanks for sharing
Wonderful footage!
Some of the locos here were about 12 years old - look shot at through lack of maintenance. It was very noticeable after 1963.
And a good clean
i guess Im pretty off topic but does anybody know of a good website to stream newly released movies online ?
@Jalen Warren I would suggest FlixZone. You can find it by googling =)
@Skyler Salvatore yea, been watching on FlixZone for years myself :)
@Skyler Salvatore thanks, I signed up and it seems like they got a lot of movies there =) Appreciate it !
Beautiful.
Brilliant.
The 3 small boys reminded me of Sundays when we sneaked round Wellingborough 15Acabbing all the Crosti's and 9f's.The odd namer appeared now and then Jubilee's were sometimes rare visitors.
The Wellingborough crews hated the Crosti engines. Eventually converted to normal draughting and moved to the North West. Patricroft had a few, but the crews preferred the Stanier 2-8-0s.
3;33 Brilliant to see the Towers in working order.
Wonderful
Great video. I was there about same time.
Fantastic as they are and such a treasured memory for me, steam engines were an anachronism even by the 1930s if not earlier.
Lovely !
Great atmospheric vid here. Sad to see 70021 in that state -I remember her in her glory days on the Midland expresses to Manchester Central going through Chorlton.
Often The Palatine, wasn't it, which I used to see off from the platform at Central at about 2 p.m. if my memory has not gone altogether by now.
I worked there till Nov 65
Beautiful photography. Shame to see "Venus" (70023) in such run down condition. I recall seeing her at Paddington when she was a Cardiff Canton engine sparkling in the sunshine. The golden years.
@3:29 those lads in the cab of brittania 70021, brilliant! do they reconise themselves today.
Beautiful what can I say
Kids climbing into the cab! H&S would never stand for that today.
@airscrew1 A Protection Racket!
Useing the vacuum brakes to motor the turntable was a good idea
Reminds me of going to the Leeds steam Holbeck Neville hill copper hill and Kevin all the in the sheds not afraid missing and steaming didn't worry us ask kids used to climb the walls to get into Holbeck shed and cross the main lines to get into Neville hill we caught the train from Shipley to Leeds city station then walked to the Central station then off to visit all the sheds what's a happy time of life
You missed Farnley shed closed November 1966 and Stourton closed summer 1968, both Leeds sheds.
@@johnward374 went to farnly shed a long narrow shed.use to walk thru a housing estat red brick dack to back cobbled streets.use to be a cornershop were we use to buy a ice lolly.dontno the other shed you mentioned.i never new the erear of the back to back houses were.i can picture it now.
Never knew shed. But we did visit farnly shed a long narrowshed we used to walk to a housing estate made of red brick back-to-back with cobbled streets they used to be a shop on the corner where we used to buy an ice lolly. I have and had no idea what that housing estate called. I can still picture it now I never knew about the other shed I don't know where it was ok thanks
What a sad end to steam, engines with more leaks than a Welch allotment !
And not a single crappy hi-vis garment to be seen.
PI Staker ! Bunch of candy asses running around these days can't even have sex without hardhat , hi visibility vest , safety shoes , goggles , safety harness , seat belt , it's beyond pathetic.
@@thomaslusk7621 Don't forget the Risk Assessment forms.
@@p.istaker8862 and the method statement and the hot works permit!.
Lovely upload ,and i love steam ,but in reality ,just look at it ,wretched conditions ,the wretched state of the loco's ,yes due to no maintainance ,but my uncle worked as a driver at Holbeck ,he said the best thing that ever happened was not getting up at stupid oclock to prep your engine,you climbed in to a 45 did a few checks ,fired it up ,let pressure build up and off you went in less than 30 min's
I transferred to Holbeck in 1968, but when a fireman at another depot worked the last steam engine from Holbeck shed 1967. Did I know you uncle?
Apart from the loco,s it all looked topsee Turvey and a bit maintenance and a lick of paint hasn’t been on the menu for some time. Very good images though all the same . Regards
Looks like it was filmed on high quality 35mm equipment, but no sound, like the film studios used and sound recorded separately, ..and then the two formates spliced together...
Filmed on 16mm Kodachrome. No sound recording facility on his Bolex camera. Think 35mm was used in feature films etc and earlier film making.
My birth year 1966 ❤😊
Anyone identify the music used?
Has this film been digitally restored? Great quality
It's been digitised from original 16mm film but with very little restoration.
wow - - did not know that - - the ENGINE provides AIR to operate turntable
Nope. It provides vacuum in the UK. ;-) But only in major depots. A lot of medium and small depots still had to hand crank.
If'n MY momma had seen me out like that - - she would have SPIT on her hand and wiped my HAIR down
Are you sure that's Carnforth - as I didn't see Trevor Howard once?
Why the insulting advert ??
Sorry, what was the advert? Not sure I am able to help you.
Everything was so grey and dirty by then that until the kids came into the picture I thought I was watching monochrome.
I work on that shed
ice music, too
"nice" - sufferin from FAT-FANGER syndrome
Has anyone worked out the shear economics of loss the railways went thru. 65-68 when they scrapped 10 and 12 yr old locomotives with only 200,000 miles on the clock so they could buy diesels at two to four times the price of a steam locomotive and they seem to only have very short lives before they too are scrapped. It must have cost the taxpayer many millions of pounds for this hasty eradication of steam, Made more sense to at least get your monies worth out of the modern engine and run them into the late 70, s at least. Just a observation from an economic view
I think the speedy eradication of steam in the 1960's was more of British Rail's concern with public image. Mankind was about to land on the moon, Concorde was about to launch, yet there were still machines on the rails that were antiquated and archaic. Despite some of the locomotives being relatively new, steam was still old hat. Of course the locomotives should have had their money's worth, but would the rapid growth of technology and knowledge have appreciated steam hauled trains in the 1990's... something tells me not.
@@fp7026 Also steam engines were hugely expensive to maintain - the replacement diesel probably paid for itself in savings in very few years.
@@1258-Eckhart Most of the replacement diesels didn't because of the haphazard way the British Railways Board acquired them. Mass production without proper testing. A lot of classes of diesels were ordered for work that was rapidly disappearing. Class 15's spring to mind. Though some of those found further use in industry. And yet some of the early classes such as 20's, 37's and 08's are still soldiering on 60 years after they were built.
@@captaindbheadcase1303 That does not in any way negate my point: Steam engines were (/are!) incredibly maintenace-intensive and even your correct (and infamous) example of the Claytons (the Metrovick was another total dud) resulted 1:1 in a huge reduction of overheads. Also please come clean on your accusations (negative --> positive): The only truly professional BR region was the Western, which did engineering research on leading but PROVEN technology and went, with high level engineering representation, to the Verkehrsausstellung here in Munich in 1953 to review the most modern technology. This was the highspeed automotive diesel with the very lightweight transmission, a format which is successful to this day here in Germany. Commercially, you need to balance trackwear against tractive effort. Until the mid-1980's and the advent of power-electronics, this was only achievable via the GWR path: you can always make an engine heavier, but if it's too heavy to start with, you're screwed. The best BRB-inspired effort at the time were the Baby Deltics in 1959 (highspeed diesel, but overweight transmission), which never achieved their target axle load. So the BRB went down the LMS route with a development of the 10.000 prototypes (in one direction the Peaks, in another the EE classes): Marine diesels with bombastically heavy transmissions. This was a triumph of politics over engineering sense. It probably cost BR (and therefore the taypayer) many millions over the years in track maintenance. This is what happens when politics runs the railways and you still have it in the UK to this day.
With Leander 45690
The music is somewhat.. overblown. Might have been better to find something more congruent with the wistful, vanished charm of trainspotting youth.
Criminal vandalism
...and this is what Jeremy Corbyn would like us to return to!!
Theres a difference between nationalisation and the decline of steam locomotives. Steam locomotives on every single railway, private or state-owned, looked like this when the steam era came to an end because they were no longer useful. They were being replaced by much more efficient, cheaper and low maintenance means, E.G: Diesels and Electrics.
No problem, count me in.