highline and the bronx terminal are imo two of the most fascinating railroad facilities. the interface between rail and urban environment and maritime service is just very cool
The railroad system built by New York Central and its predecessors linking New York City, Buffalo, Cleveland and Chicago are still very important freight and passenger rail lines, even if the New York Central Railroad no longer exists. The railroad line along the west shore of the Hudson river is an important CSX freight rail line and the line along the east shore is well-used by Metro North and Amtrak trains. West of Albany, the former New York Central line continues to be one the nation's most important freight rail lines with a few Amtrak trains using it. In other words, the New York Central may be lost forever, but its successor rail carriers are very much alive.
In my home town, there's an active railway run by CSX, and there's a bridge the tracks go over that say "New York Central" on the side. I don't know how many of those bridges are left, but I can confirm one of them is still there and in use
4:45 Extra facts: Vanderbilt got the nickname Commodore as a kid. He had a boat and ran a small scale ferry service, shuttling passengers and cargo across the river. There were a lot of people doing this and the adults started jokingly calling Vanderbilt The Commodore because of how seriously he took his business and the maintenence of his boat. Compared to them he seemed like a navy man, obsessed with the cleanliness and orderliness of his operation and holding himself to a fast higher standard than most other ferry operators. Even though it was originally a joke, he came to take pride in the nickname and carried with him for the rest of his life. Bonus fact: among the surviving descendents of the Vanderbilt family is Anderson Cooper, whose grandmother was the granddaughter or great granddaughter of Cornelius Vanderbilt II, the original Cornelius Vanderbilt's grandson. That's not really significant in any way, but you know, interesting bit of trivia that I picked up while going down an industrial revolution wikihole.
The New York Central crossed the Niagara River on the Suspension Bridge, the first railroad suspension bridge. This bridge was a few miles north (downstream) of the Falls. The site of this bridge is still used as a rail and road crossing. Passenger trains from Toronto to NYC, among others, cross the river and the international border there.
I live in Rome. Utica still has an old New York Central Railroad Steam Engine on display. The Railroad played a huge role in Upstate New Yorks development. Thank you for this video!
as did the DL&W and the NYO&W. The New York Central Station still stands with the DL&W fright house immediately to the East of it and the NYO&W freight house immediately to the West of it.
I was a Special Agent back in the day for Conrail in Chicago. On one of the NY Central properties is an old railroad building still being used as a yard office. On the building is a plaque which explains that at this location Abraham Lincolns' body laid in State during the funeral tour. 😁
Geezus, I must be the first positive comment here. You're doing a great job, I listen to your videos in the background and watch some of the footage when you're talking about a place I've been. Apparently, it means a lot to some persons to use accurate footage throughout the video, so maybe replace sections where you can't find accurate films, with your face narrating the history. Maybe it would calm those subscribers down?
I also enjoy Ryan's work and understand exactly how much work goes into each episode. I have no problem with his use of illustrative examples, as they're tagged as such. But many episodes are dogged by mispronounced names and words. Regardless, I'll say this so Ryan doesn't have to: Okay, let's see how much better YOUR video on this event is than mine".
Come to the New York Central National Museum in Elkhart, IN *my family’s recycling operation inhabits the former New York Central tool shops just west of downtown. The oldest building was built around 1875, and the craftsmanship still impresses me.
Interesting video. As a born and bred New Yorker though I would have personally liked to know the exact locations of the train depot buildings and for context some modern footage of what stands there now.
I rode the NYC from Toledo to Cleveland and back from 1956 to 1960 when was in college. The old Budd cars were in fashion then and it was always much better than the bus. Ah, memories! Thanks Ryan, you always hit a homerun with your videos.
Albany, NY = ALL-ben-Ee. It's my hometown. And your opening scene is of a train on E. Washington St. in Syracuse, NY (my brother still lives there), not New York City.
Excellent! As a pre teen I had the privilege to ride both Broadway Limited and 20 th Century Limited! Now as an old guy wish they were back! Outstanding history ! Thanks!
Great Job posting this video. I remember all of it as my Father moved to Windsor from Cornwall in search of work. He eventually got a job with the New York Central working out of Detroit. Later taken over by Penn Central and finally just before he retired it changed to Norfolk and southern. I can still recall seeing those Norfolk engines coming through the Detroit/Windsor Rail tunnel before Con rail came into the picture followed by Canadian pacific took over the tunnel and going into the USA.
I lived along the West Shore Line in Bergen County, NJ and the NY Central tracks ran right through the middle of our town. There were 4 sets, the 2 middle tracks were used mostly by freight trains and the 2 outer were for passenger service. During the 1950s & 60s, we rode them many times to Weehawken and then took the ferry into New York City.
Another interesting aspect of the railroad barons is Albany in particular the one bridge across the Hudson. (the original bridge was located where the current Dunn Memrial car bridge is). IIRC it was one of the first anti trust rulings that declared New York Central to be a monopoly and to force it to allow other railroads to cross the river on its bridge. New York Central's response was to share that old bridge but build a brand new bridge for itself just south of Castleton on Husodn, the Alfred H Smith bridge (fairly spectacular and very high off the river). This allowed NYC to avoid Albany to to get Chicago (so no slowdowns caused by the other users of the old bridge) and also it created a very long and gentle climb from the water level route up to the new bridge level. And once on western side, it was level tracks our of Albany while those using old bridge had a climb out of Albany. Albany was also the home of the Delaware and Hudson railroad whose majestic hearquarters are now a SUNY facility near shore. The shore whee there is now a highway were the rail yards for the various railways that came to Albany, and the rail station still stands today a south of Columbian ave on Broadway. (and all that land to the river were tracks at the time). As with PRR selling Penn Station, New York Central sold the albany station and built a new bridge, the Livingston Ave bridge (still statnding today) that is north of the old Albany station. In the past decade, Albany ahs tried to recover the shores of the Hudson by creating a linear park with bike path that allows one to traverse much of Albany along the shore. Prior to that, the land was desolate betwene highway and river. There were a number of railroads from New York to the north, such as the Putnam, the New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad , New York and Harlem line (citrently the line to Wassaic) and possibly more that competed for traffic, many got their trains to ski centres in the north and a few to Montréal in Canada. The New York , new Haven and hartford had the southernmost bridge on the hudson at Poughkeepsie, another grandiose bridge (now "Walkway over the Hudson bike/pedestrian path). It was abandonned in 1974 after a file, leaving Conrail as the southernmost bridge at Castleton on Hudson. So any traffic to/from New York city would need to travel north to near Albany and then back south on other side of river. At mechanicville, there was another tail bridge across the hudson, which is now owned by Pan Am Railway (yes, they bought the trademark from the airline- though lack I checked they were in talsk for merger). Then the final bridge across the hudson is at Fort Edward, the original Delaware and Hudson bridge which was purchased by CP Rail (now CPKC).
the New Haven was not taken into Penn Central till about 3 months later. I think the basis of this video is more inclined to New York City and the New York Central. I don't think the NYNH&H had any Fright operations in New York City it's self other than maybe some trackage rights for Passenger Trains into Grand Central Station and maybe Penn Station??
@@onrr1726 The NYNY&H ran some trains to Penn Station (New York). Many of these were through trains to Washington, operated by the Pennsylvania (electrification went as far as New Haven). The basic problem with all three of the big railroads is that they were unable to bring in uniform standards and salaries across their networks. Each little constituent railroad had its own practices and no one had the ability to harmonize them. It didn't matter when the money was rolling in, but when things got tough, the unions became highly resistant.
@@onrr1726 The New Haven had freight operations in the Bronx at Harlem River and Oak Point. The railroad also had freight operations at Bay Ridge, Brooklyn via the New York Connecting Railroad which was a joint venture between the New Haven and Pennsylvania Railroads. All the locations mentioned above are in New York City. Trackage rights for Penn Station started at Harold Interlocking.
The Highline, where the tracks had been elevated, is an incredible park. We've gone 4 or 5 times. It's been planted with native species, there are loads of benches, sculptures, interesting sights. In the summer it's in bloom like a botanical garden.
As an Australian tourist, I walked the High Line in 2009 just after the first section was re-opened as a park. Thank you for this great history, 99% I did not know.
You forgot to Mention the WEST SHORE Railroad which my grandfather worked for after working on the Erie (Barge canal) driving mules on the towpath . My grandfather transitioned to the New York Central System after it acquired the West Shore RR. He was an Engineer and Belonged to the NYC System "Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers " He "Retired" from the Railroad in 1937 !! I have Many photos of him in the Cabs of 'Niagara, Mohawks and Hudson Locomotives which He loved Operating as an Engineer . I also have a photo of him ,with his fireman ,conductor and train crew ,standing next to a West Shore RR Consolidated 2-8-0 locomotive in 1898 . Great Video ! Many thanks for sharing !
Wow.....great history. I loved the West Shore Railroad, especially around Utica, NY. If you ever are able to post some of the photo's of your grandfather's ....I'd be thrilled to see them.
There is always something sad about the removal of railways. We know we need more railways and yet we keep on removing railways and the bridges, then after its gone we realise we actually need this railway...but its too late because its been built on.
while it may have been dangerous, having local freight running straight into small depots or larger industries can be a very beneficial when done correctly especially now days its also important to keep in mind this task is currently performed by trucks, which in 2019 have killed 111 people and injured more than 4,500 people in nyc alone
I live one block from the Harlem line from Grand Central station. The line is was brought all the original development around me. My apartment building was built when the nearby RR station construction was confirmed in 1925. Railroads have been incredibly successful in this country.
Many lines of the NYC still are operational it’s just they are under the management of new companies, fun fact during the breakup of Consolidated rail (Conrail) the two railroads who got 50/50 ownership Norfolk Southern and CSX Transportation marked all their acquired rolling stock assess with either PRR for Norfolk Southern and NYC for CSX denoting the two major railroads that formed the PennCentral.
It wasn't the Pennsylvania Central System, the official title was just Penn Central. Also Penn Central wasn't acquired by Conrail. Penn Central had a massive bankruptcy in 1970 and essentially was in receivership until 1976. At that time a large amount of northeast railroads such as the Erie Lakawana and the Reading were all in terrible shape physically and financially both from competition with trucking and the fallout of the Penn Central bankruptcy. It was looking like railroading in the northeast was on the brink of completely imploding. So as they did with passenger lines to create Amtrak, the government stepped in and essentially nationalized all of them. Conrail was a private company, but was majority federally owned until the Conrail Privatization Act of 1986. In the late 90s Conrail was jointly taken over by Norfolk Southern and CSX.
Interesting, thanks. For what it's worth many years ago I helped a chap build a model railway, the space was very tight so he ended up with a model based on the 'high line' on a shelf around the walls. That worked out well and over time he added an incredible amount of detail to the ground level street scenes, all based on photographs.
Other people have mentioned this, but: it's not "New York's" Central Railroad. It's the New York Central Railroad. In the age of do it yourself publishing, it is important to realize how easily facts can be changed, when they shouldn't be. I would change the title of this video so that the name of the railroad is clearly understood.
In St. Thomas Ontario there is an elevated park on a massive Tressel, west side of town. The old Michigan Central line which was owned by NYC rail. Check that out, its pretty neat.
My grandfather was an engineer on the NYC/PC his whole career in St Thomas.He was very proud of the NYC but when it merged into the PC around 1968 he said it went downhill very quickly. He retired around 1970 when it was still PC.I have a picture of him when he was a young man painting the side of that elevated bridge when it was being built before he became an engineer.
Excellent video, wonderful use of the various maps provided, extremely informative, excellent narration! Please continue this topic with other “Fallen Flags” railroads. 🚂
Opening shot is Syracuse, NY, not New York City. And the elevated shot was probably Chicago. And learn how to pronounce Albany. And in case you weren't aware, most of the former New York Central lines are still very much in use - far from abandoned.
The film up until 0.06 or 0.07 is in Syracuse. That's the Syracuse City Hall on the left, it even says "Syracuse bids you welcome" on the facade. Edward Joy is still in business as an electrical distributor, in a newer building to the east of downtown. Trains used to run up and down Washington Street which was the NYC's main line.
I miss those trains that ran on the CASO in Niagara Falls, Ont. The NYC and PRR, C&O and Conrail ran through there before CP.. I remember a set of four wig-wags protecting double track that ran diagonally through an intersection. Trains would go through the top of Clifton Hill, a main tourist drag that was full of cars on summer days. Great memories of my childhood.
Nitpick: The merged Penn Central survived a few years but could not rationalize their duplicated networks enough and declared bankruptcy. In 1971, the US government removed the passengers burden from freight railroads and created Amtrak. Penn Central continued to oeprated as a freight railroad under some form of trusteeship. Eventually enough freight trailroads were about to go belly up that the federal government nationalized then under Conrail to preserve the ability to move freight to/from ports and major cities. Amtrak inherited much of the NE corridor tracks. Conrail was eventually privatized and sold its assets to CSX and Norfolk Southern (with a few portions onwed by both and kept under the name "Conrail".) The original New York Central tracks just about all went to CSX. The portion between Grand Central and Poughkeepsie are now owned by the MTA./Metro North. CSX owns tracks to Rensselear but Amtrak has a deal to have priority on them and Amtrak pays for signal/track upgrades.
Funny I happened upon your comment, I corrected someone on another channel recently about this very topic. I appreciate your more detailed answer. I knew alot of the details at one time, but over time they have escaped me.
Great video! Now do one on the raising of all the RR rights-of-way within the City of Chicago from the late 19th century. There must be tons of historic photos on that floating around.
Thank you! the Pennsylvania Railroad was always in better financial shape the the NYC. From the time of its foundation to the merger with the NYC and NYNH&H, it never missed a dividend. The Pennsy's biggest problem was it took its eye off the ball and neglected transport in favour of real estate.
because it isnt anything to do with the nyc is it, its just a modern locomotive painted in a paint scheme by ns. it never worked for the nyc or had anything to do with it...
can you do the lost rail in the twin cities. apparently minneapolis used to have an elevated rail line going to the depot off of Washington Avenue. the old trolley lines are an option also
There is a small section of the NYC still in use in my home town of Plainwell, MI. It is now a spur leading to Otsego, MI. This was part of the NYC line from Kalamazoo, MI to Grand Rapids, MI.
The New York Central was actually showing a profit at the time of the merger, albeit a marginal one. Its CEO, Alfred Perlman, whose austerity and modernization measures combined with consolidation of freight yards and streamlining methods of day-to-day operations forestalled bankruptcy by 15 years, was vehemently opposed to the merger, and rightly so. He saw the Pennsylvania RR for what it was; a ticking time bomb which had been mismanaged and mishandled since the end of WWII.
The former New York Central Robert Young rail yard west of Elkhart, In. remains in active use as the second largest rail yard in the Norfolk-Southern system. The yard has 72 classification tracks and handles around 100 trains each day.
What confuses me is that the Grand Central Depot had a seperate sign for the New York and Harlem Railroad, when it had already amalgamated with the New York Central by the time the depot opened.
Springfield Ohio the old train station is a giant pedestrian walking area/flea market and public library. Anyone remember the "ghost busters" headquarters?
This is Tragic. I grew up across the river from Albany and live now in Schenectady. The huge subsidy for the interstate highway system was the US government taking taxes from the railroad and giving them to road transport. New York had several smaller cross state highways, including route 20 and route 5. I-90 was hugely subsidized and the new roads cut open the cities, dividing them, making them more difficult to walk, and destroying the urban character. The municipal airports Also took tax money and subsidized air travel. They're likely would have been a market both for expanded truck travel as well as air travel after World War II, but it would have grown more organically and would have kept trains as a viable option as well. I do think this should be a lesson for people who want government intervention on behalf of green energy or green transportation, we had energy efficient rail transportation that was destroyed by overregulation and over taxation.
ALSO FUN FACT: The National Archives digital archives have partial (as in partially digitized) track plans for the New York Central Railroad - including (in terms of what can currently be viewed that is within the NYC metro area) the line between Grand Central Terminal and Mott Haven, Mott Haven and I think up to Catham, Mott Haven up the Hudson Div, the 30th Street Branch from Spuyten Duyvil to 30th Street (PRE HIGH LINE), even the Putnam Division! And that's JUST the stuff within the NYC metro area, they have track plans covering so many other parts of their operations, including up and through Buffalo, NY, and Pennsylvania!
It’s surprisingly muddled these days in public documentation, but the unambiguous final fate of the NYCRR is that it is now a subsidiary of CSX, which chooses not to use separate branding for it. All former NYCRR trackage, all active former NYCRR services, and all rights to any active NYCRR trademarks are owned and operated by CSX. Likewise with Norfolk Southern and the Pennsy. When NS and CSX split up the PCTC, NS took the Pennsy lines and CSX took the NYCRR lines. The rivalry still lives.
I’m just curious. The trains weren’t flying down the streets at 80mph. So, it was probably the usual impatience of people, perhaps, not paying attention and crossing in mass, some trying to beat the train. Or, perhaps, trying to pass between the cars figuring it was slow enough to be doable. Otherwise, I just imagine that many people just standing there like sitting ducks as a train approaches. You see pedestrian behavior in the city regarding crossing against the light with trucks and buses.
One of the reasons the Penn Central merger failed was that both railroads had recently computerized using their preferred systems. The two systems were not compatible and huge mistakes were made, including the famous "lost train" that traveled from Chicago to New York taking four weeks to do so. There were also mistakes made in accounting and payroll, with billing so totally messed up that even after bankruptcy, bills were still being dealt with three years later. Unfortunately Norfolk Southern tore out two of the four tracks that made up the New York to Buffalo route and as a result Amtrak trains have long delays waiting for freight trains to clear their path.
I had read somewhere that another big nail in the coffin of NYCRR was the taxation of right aways. All of a sudden the government wanted property tax on all the ground that the railroad occupied. The roads were already in decline and this just hastened the process. I always felt that the interstate highway system killed the freight business and the airlines killed the passenger business. Just as the modern technology of railroads displaced wagon trains, trucks, and planes took over the rails. One needs to wonder what marvel of technology comes next?
Bullet Trains. The sad part is that all those right of ways are gone and will have to be reestablished. Trains going 200-300 MPH can get from NYC to Boston or DC in 60-90 min if the track is designed and engineered correctly. Freight trains are already hurting the trucking business.
"As it turned out, merging two destitute companies did not magically create a profitable corporation." K-Mart and Sears, are you listening? Oh, that's right, you didn't...
My great grandfather came diwn from Ontario in the late 20s and became an engineer on the nyc. Leaving behind my grandfather still a baby. My grandfather came down at age 13 to work on the tug boats in the late 30s and then became an engineer on the Delaware and hudson. Another historical rail way side by side the nyc. Conrail - consolidated rail was the government take over of the (1960s) forced by government merger of the Pennsylvania and nyc railroad. Conrail was created in 1976, my father joined as an engineer immediately as a fire man status with his navy reserves experience and volunteer fire man status. I was born 2 years later. My uncle, his little brother joined Conrail soon after in early 80s. My father had switched to amtrack in 1981. The other part of the government take over of our nations rail way. The freight portion of the Penn central became conrail, the passenger part became amtrack. But.... The great Delaware and Hudson rail road was allowed to remain in operation under private ownership for almost 20 years. The shops in Colonie ny were the last remaining operational yards until the late 80s and were demolished in the 90s. Where my grandfather worked out of while raising his 6 children. My father passed away a few blocks from there in 2007 at 56 years old. I ❤️ my heritage and keep it going though model trains. My uncle steven who was the oldest of the bunch had a lionel collection, that i saw in 2001 after my first son was born on 9-11 and named after my uncle who worked on conrail, but he passed away from cancer very young, in his 30s in 93, One of them was a custom d&h rs-3 diesel locomotive with the same # as the one my grandfather operated, and another was a nyc steam loco with the same number aswell. Along with trains from his own childhood he got on Christmas and birthdays, those being from the 40s... i believe hes still alive and i pray those trains make it into the family's hands.
18:30: Once again, Ryan, you forgot to do any research. Penn-Central declared bankruptcy in 1971. By 1976, they had been a single company for 7 years, and had been in receivership for 5. Several other regional railroads also went bankrupt in 1972 and later (Erie-Lackawanna, Lehigh Valley, etc.), and Conrail was formed to consolidate what was left from ALL these bankruptcies into a single railroad, which was kept running through subsidies.
@@matthewhernandez8342 No, not exactly. Conrail still exists and has some operations, but is a joint venture between to private railroads instead of being own by the US Gov. NJTransit, MetroNorth, LIRR, Amtrak, SEPTA, MARC, and MBTA took over the commuter and passenger services that Conrail inherited. This was largely transferred over by the early 80's as it was the least profitable part of Conrail's assets. Once Conrail started to turn a profit, the decided to sell off most of the assets to a private rail company. This led to a fight and compromise between CSX and Norfolk Southern which split the assets and established the current Conrail Shared Operations.
I agree, this is when a person is shallow in research. I was a shareholder in Consolidated Rail Corporation, now I am a long time owner of Norfolk Southern and it has made me wealthy. Shut down the rails for one day, and NYC would be paralyzed, and that does not count the subways or light rail lines.
@@matthewhernandez8342 The commuter passenger services from NYC became NJ Transit, Metro North and the New Haven RR. Amtrak took over the longer passenger services to Boston, Philadelphia, Washington DC. Conrail was the freight side.
Lorries took a lot of the freight duties away from railroads. However, it is, doubtful railroads will ever go away for freight. It is too efficient to move large amounts of freight by rail for it to be replaced anytime foreseeable in the future.
there is a solid legacy from the US RR era, US rail freight costs are the lowest cost in the world. and there is some worry if train passenger rates increase it will increase freight costs because the two systems will compete for track time. a big problem is trains cant handle steep grades and due to weight its really expensive to build train overpasses.
The opening picture is not Manhattan... It is the NYC running down Washington Street in front of city hall in Syracuse, NY... About 60 trains a day ran along Washington St. in the 1920's &'30's...
Realize that before about 1918 the only mode of land transport alternative to the railroads was the horse and wagon, this was limited in tonnage and speed. It also had a large pollution factor, thousands of men were employed in NYC to fight the 'solid' waste problem. The big problem in the PennCentral merger was the inclusion of the money losing New Haven into that mix and the refusal of the two main companies to really seriously merge their operations. A number of railroads also that the problem of commuter rail services into the cities that was a major money loser and intercity passenger operation that also is a big loser, just look at the great history of Amtrak, fifty years of losing money despite generous infusions of government cash. Other factors include the real estate taxes that railroads paid on their right of way and structures, for many communities they were the largest component of the revenue base for this tax.
Interesting/informative/entertaining. Excellent still- motion photography/maps enabling viewers to better understand what the orator is describing. viewing this presentation from the safety zone of my computer room. Along the " Space Coast " 🚀 of Florida🐊🐊. Wishing viewers a safe/healthy/prosperous ( 2024) 🌈🎉😉 .
I live near the NYC Beech Creek line in central PA. PRR and NYC paralleled each other in central PA coal region. NYC and PRR had combo lines and had trackage rights on each others lines as well. My hometown in NY was on the Elmira Branch, and was serviced by Erie, LV & DLW with NYC trackage rights to nearby Horseheads NY. NYC was better off merging with another rr, PRR looked good on PAPER. PRR lead the PC to fail since DAY ONE.
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highline and the bronx terminal are imo two of the most fascinating railroad facilities. the interface between rail and urban environment and maritime service is just very cool
Look up the "lowline" underground trolly park for a NYC secret
@@godlugner5327really
Much of the west side High Line has been turned into a great urban park over the past 15 years or so. Remarkable turnaround in the neighborhoods.
The railroad system built by New York Central and its predecessors linking New York City, Buffalo, Cleveland and Chicago are still very important freight and passenger rail lines, even if the New York Central Railroad no longer exists. The railroad line along the west shore of the Hudson river is an important CSX freight rail line and the line along the east shore is well-used by Metro North and Amtrak trains. West of Albany, the former New York Central line continues to be one the nation's most important freight rail lines with a few Amtrak trains using it. In other words, the New York Central may be lost forever, but its successor rail carriers are very much alive.
They barely run buddy
I think you meant "... and the line along the east shore ...".
@@harveywachtel1091Thank you for pointing that out. I made the correction for the east shore.
Csx is garbage
In my home town, there's an active railway run by CSX, and there's a bridge the tracks go over that say "New York Central" on the side. I don't know how many of those bridges are left, but I can confirm one of them is still there and in use
@@reggierattler7253 I’ve seen one in eastern New York on what we call the Mass Pike that says Conrail
4:45 Extra facts: Vanderbilt got the nickname Commodore as a kid. He had a boat and ran a small scale ferry service, shuttling passengers and cargo across the river. There were a lot of people doing this and the adults started jokingly calling Vanderbilt The Commodore because of how seriously he took his business and the maintenence of his boat. Compared to them he seemed like a navy man, obsessed with the cleanliness and orderliness of his operation and holding himself to a fast higher standard than most other ferry operators. Even though it was originally a joke, he came to take pride in the nickname and carried with him for the rest of his life.
Bonus fact: among the surviving descendents of the Vanderbilt family is Anderson Cooper, whose grandmother was the granddaughter or great granddaughter of Cornelius Vanderbilt II, the original Cornelius Vanderbilt's grandson. That's not really significant in any way, but you know, interesting bit of trivia that I picked up while going down an industrial revolution wikihole.
Gloria Vanderbilt famous fashion designer is Anderson Cooper's mother.
As a senior in high school my class took the New York Central Railroad From Ohio to NYC. It was fabulous! Loved your segment 9:29 .
The New York Central crossed the Niagara River on the Suspension Bridge, the first railroad suspension bridge. This bridge was a few miles north (downstream) of the Falls. The site of this bridge is still used as a rail and road crossing. Passenger trains from Toronto to NYC, among others, cross the river and the international border there.
I live in Rome. Utica still has an old New York Central Railroad Steam Engine on display. The Railroad played a huge role in Upstate New Yorks development. Thank you for this video!
as did the DL&W and the NYO&W. The New York Central Station still stands with the DL&W fright house immediately to the East of it and the NYO&W freight house immediately to the West of it.
There's also Mohawk 3001 still around in Elkhart
I was a Special Agent back in the day for Conrail in Chicago. On one of the NY Central properties is an old railroad building still being used as a yard office. On the building is a plaque which explains that at this location Abraham Lincolns' body laid in State during the funeral tour. 😁
Thanks for the info! I've seen pictures of his procession and my Great-Grandfather Patrick was a member of the NY 69th regiment .
Geezus, I must be the first positive comment here. You're doing a great job, I listen to your videos in the background and watch some of the footage when you're talking about a place I've been. Apparently, it means a lot to some persons to use accurate footage throughout the video, so maybe replace sections where you can't find accurate films, with your face narrating the history. Maybe it would calm those subscribers down?
You seem more upset than most
I also enjoy Ryan's work and understand exactly how much work goes into each episode. I have no problem with his use of illustrative examples, as they're tagged as such. But many episodes are dogged by mispronounced names and words.
Regardless, I'll say this so Ryan doesn't have to: Okay, let's see how much better YOUR video on this event is than mine".
Railfans are ruthless when it comes to accuracy. I wouldn’t take it personally.
Yeah, the Geezus part makes you more upset and over dramatic than all of the other comments.
I don’t like your comment either. lol
Come to the New York Central National Museum in Elkhart, IN
*my family’s recycling operation inhabits the former New York Central tool shops just west of downtown. The oldest building was built around 1875, and the craftsmanship still impresses me.
The Central also ran the first “Fast Mail”. A train consisting of four Railway Post Office cars in 1875.
Interesting video. As a born and bred New Yorker though I would have personally liked to know the exact locations of the train depot buildings and for context some modern footage of what stands there now.
I am from Louisville and the big four bridge is now a walk way over the Ohio River. But I still remember when rails ran over this bridge.
I rode the NYC from Toledo to Cleveland and back from 1956 to 1960 when was in college. The old Budd cars were in fashion then and it was always much better than the bus. Ah, memories! Thanks Ryan, you always hit a homerun with your videos.
Fantastic! Thanks for sharing.
Albany, NY = ALL-ben-Ee. It's my hometown. And your opening scene is of a train on E. Washington St. in Syracuse, NY (my brother still lives there), not New York City.
No one cares
Excellent! As a pre teen I had the privilege to ride both Broadway Limited and 20 th Century Limited! Now as an old guy wish they were back! Outstanding history ! Thanks!
Very cool!
Great Job posting this video. I remember all of it as my Father moved to Windsor from Cornwall in search of work. He eventually got a job with the New York Central working out of Detroit. Later taken over by Penn Central and finally just before he retired it changed to Norfolk and southern. I can still recall seeing those Norfolk engines coming through the Detroit/Windsor Rail tunnel before Con rail came into the picture followed by Canadian pacific took over the tunnel and going into the USA.
Glad you enjoyed it
I lived along the West Shore Line in Bergen County, NJ and the NY Central tracks ran right through the middle of our town. There were 4 sets, the 2 middle tracks were used mostly by freight trains and the 2 outer were for passenger service. During the 1950s & 60s, we rode them many times to Weehawken and then took the ferry into New York City.
Another interesting aspect of the railroad barons is Albany in particular the one bridge across the Hudson. (the original bridge was located where the current Dunn Memrial car bridge is). IIRC it was one of the first anti trust rulings that declared New York Central to be a monopoly and to force it to allow other railroads to cross the river on its bridge. New York Central's response was to share that old bridge but build a brand new bridge for itself just south of Castleton on Husodn, the Alfred H Smith bridge (fairly spectacular and very high off the river). This allowed NYC to avoid Albany to to get Chicago (so no slowdowns caused by the other users of the old bridge) and also it created a very long and gentle climb from the water level route up to the new bridge level. And once on western side, it was level tracks our of Albany while those using old bridge had a climb out of Albany.
Albany was also the home of the Delaware and Hudson railroad whose majestic hearquarters are now a SUNY facility near shore. The shore whee there is now a highway were the rail yards for the various railways that came to Albany, and the rail station still stands today a south of Columbian ave on Broadway. (and all that land to the river were tracks at the time).
As with PRR selling Penn Station, New York Central sold the albany station and built a new bridge, the Livingston Ave bridge (still statnding today) that is north of the old Albany station. In the past decade, Albany ahs tried to recover the shores of the Hudson by creating a linear park with bike path that allows one to traverse much of Albany along the shore. Prior to that, the land was desolate betwene highway and river.
There were a number of railroads from New York to the north, such as the Putnam, the New York New Haven and Hartford Railroad , New York and Harlem line (citrently the line to Wassaic) and possibly more that competed for traffic, many got their trains to ski centres in the north and a few to Montréal in Canada.
The New York , new Haven and hartford had the southernmost bridge on the hudson at Poughkeepsie, another grandiose bridge (now "Walkway over the Hudson bike/pedestrian path). It was abandonned in 1974 after a file, leaving Conrail as the southernmost bridge at Castleton on Hudson. So any traffic to/from New York city would need to travel north to near Albany and then back south on other side of river.
At mechanicville, there was another tail bridge across the hudson, which is now owned by Pan Am Railway (yes, they bought the trademark from the airline- though lack I checked they were in talsk for merger). Then the final bridge across the hudson is at Fort Edward, the original Delaware and Hudson bridge which was purchased by CP Rail (now CPKC).
Thanks for posting. The Penn Central merger also included the New Haven, which was in worse shape than PRR and NYC.
the New Haven was not taken into Penn Central till about 3 months later. I think the basis of this video is more inclined to New York City and the New York Central. I don't think the NYNH&H had any Fright operations in New York City it's self other than maybe some trackage rights for Passenger Trains into Grand Central Station and maybe Penn Station??
@@onrr1726 The NYNY&H ran some trains to Penn Station (New York). Many of these were through trains to Washington, operated by the Pennsylvania (electrification went as far as New Haven). The basic problem with all three of the big railroads is that they were unable to bring in uniform standards and salaries across their networks. Each little constituent railroad had its own practices and no one had the ability to harmonize them. It didn't matter when the money was rolling in, but when things got tough, the unions became highly resistant.
@@onrr1726 The New Haven had freight operations in the Bronx at Harlem River and Oak Point. The railroad also had freight operations at Bay Ridge, Brooklyn via the New York Connecting Railroad which was a joint venture between the New Haven and Pennsylvania Railroads. All the locations mentioned above are in New York City. Trackage rights for Penn Station started at Harold Interlocking.
Very first photo was actually Syracuse New York. In the background you see a business called Edward Joy. Still in business today.
The Highline, where the tracks had been elevated, is an incredible park. We've gone 4 or 5 times. It's been planted with native species, there are loads of benches, sculptures, interesting sights. In the summer it's in bloom like a botanical garden.
As an Australian tourist, I walked the High Line in 2009 just after the first section was re-opened as a park. Thank you for this great history, 99% I did not know.
Thank you for all the hard work you do to bring us these history stories. ❤😊🎉
Thanks for listening!
You forgot to Mention the WEST SHORE Railroad which my grandfather worked for after
working on the Erie (Barge canal) driving mules on the towpath . My grandfather transitioned to the New York Central System after it acquired the West Shore RR. He was an Engineer and Belonged to the NYC System "Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers "
He "Retired" from the Railroad in 1937 !! I have Many photos of him in the Cabs of 'Niagara, Mohawks and Hudson Locomotives which He loved Operating as an Engineer . I also have a photo of him ,with his fireman ,conductor and train crew ,standing next to a West Shore RR Consolidated 2-8-0 locomotive in 1898 .
Great Video ! Many thanks for sharing !
Wow.....great history. I loved the West Shore Railroad, especially around Utica, NY. If you ever are able to post some of the photo's of your grandfather's ....I'd be thrilled to see them.
There is always something sad about the removal of railways. We know we need more railways and yet we keep on removing railways and the bridges, then after its gone we realise we actually need this railway...but its too late because its been built on.
while it may have been dangerous, having local freight running straight into small depots or larger industries can be a very beneficial when done correctly especially now days
its also important to keep in mind this task is currently performed by trucks, which in 2019 have killed 111 people and injured more than 4,500 people in nyc alone
I live one block from the Harlem line from Grand Central station. The line is was brought all the original development around me. My apartment building was built when the nearby RR station construction was confirmed in 1925. Railroads have been incredibly successful in this country.
Many lines of the NYC still are operational it’s just they are under the management of new companies, fun fact during the breakup of Consolidated rail (Conrail) the two railroads who got 50/50 ownership Norfolk Southern and CSX Transportation marked all their acquired rolling stock assess with either PRR for Norfolk Southern and NYC for CSX denoting the two major railroads that formed the PennCentral.
num one.. i once worked as an electrican in an old where house with tracks became the dea building on 10th ave
Notice that the stiffest tree is most easily cracked, while the bamboo or willow survives by bending with the wind.
As a native New Yorker, I always enjoy your videos. Keep it up.
Awesome! Thank you!
It wasn't the Pennsylvania Central System, the official title was just Penn Central. Also Penn Central wasn't acquired by Conrail. Penn Central had a massive bankruptcy in 1970 and essentially was in receivership until 1976. At that time a large amount of northeast railroads such as the Erie Lakawana and the Reading were all in terrible shape physically and financially both from competition with trucking and the fallout of the Penn Central bankruptcy. It was looking like railroading in the northeast was on the brink of completely imploding. So as they did with passenger lines to create Amtrak, the government stepped in and essentially nationalized all of them. Conrail was a private company, but was majority federally owned until the Conrail Privatization Act of 1986. In the late 90s Conrail was jointly taken over by Norfolk Southern and CSX.
Interesting, thanks. For what it's worth many years ago I helped a chap build a model railway, the space was very tight so he ended up with a model based on the 'high line' on a shelf around the walls. That worked out well and over time he added an incredible amount of detail to the ground level street scenes, all based on photographs.
Other people have mentioned this, but: it's not "New York's" Central Railroad. It's the New York Central Railroad. In the age of do it yourself publishing, it is important to realize how easily facts can be changed, when they shouldn't be. I would change the title of this video so that the name of the railroad is clearly understood.
In St. Thomas Ontario there is an elevated park on a massive Tressel, west side of town. The old Michigan Central line which was owned by NYC rail. Check that out, its pretty neat.
My grandfather was an engineer on the NYC/PC his whole career in St Thomas.He was very proud of the NYC but when it merged into the PC around 1968 he said it went downhill very quickly. He retired around 1970 when it was still PC.I have a picture of him when he was a young man painting the side of that elevated bridge when it was being built before he became an engineer.
Gotta love anything Vintage Steam.....
Ryan, thanks for your time, work and posting.....
Thanks for watching!
You do a good job of choosing interesting subject matter.@@ITSHISTORY
The important thing is this: to be able at any moment to sacrifice what we are for what we could become.
Great video! I love hearing about the now extinct major railroad companies. Keep 'em coming, please! ❤
Penn Central quite literally exploded and Somehow Conrail managed to survive
That very first photo is Syracuse, NY, not New York, NY. The building on the left still stands today.
Excellent video, wonderful use of the various maps provided, extremely informative, excellent narration!
Please continue this topic with other “Fallen Flags” railroads. 🚂
Opening shot is Syracuse, NY, not New York City. And the elevated shot was probably Chicago. And learn how to pronounce Albany. And in case you weren't aware, most of the former New York Central lines are still very much in use - far from abandoned.
The film up until 0.06 or 0.07 is in Syracuse. That's the Syracuse City Hall on the left, it even says "Syracuse bids you welcome" on the facade. Edward Joy is still in business as an electrical distributor, in a newer building to the east of downtown. Trains used to run up and down Washington Street which was the NYC's main line.
You can complain because roses have thorns, or you can rejoice because thorns have roses.
I miss those trains that ran on the CASO in Niagara Falls, Ont. The NYC and PRR, C&O and Conrail ran through there before CP.. I remember a set of four wig-wags protecting double track that ran diagonally through an intersection. Trains would go through the top of Clifton Hill, a main tourist drag that was full of cars on summer days. Great memories of my childhood.
ALL BAN KNEE.
Or, if you are actually from the city, as my wife and mother-in-law are, AWW BAN KNEE is permitted.
Nitpick: The merged Penn Central survived a few years but could not rationalize their duplicated networks enough and declared bankruptcy. In 1971, the US government removed the passengers burden from freight railroads and created Amtrak. Penn Central continued to oeprated as a freight railroad under some form of trusteeship. Eventually enough freight trailroads were about to go belly up that the federal government nationalized then under Conrail to preserve the ability to move freight to/from ports and major cities. Amtrak inherited much of the NE corridor tracks.
Conrail was eventually privatized and sold its assets to CSX and Norfolk Southern (with a few portions onwed by both and kept under the name "Conrail".)
The original New York Central tracks just about all went to CSX. The portion between Grand Central and Poughkeepsie are now owned by the MTA./Metro North. CSX owns tracks to Rensselear but Amtrak has a deal to have priority on them and Amtrak pays for signal/track upgrades.
Funny I happened upon your comment, I corrected someone on another channel recently about this very topic. I appreciate your more detailed answer. I knew alot of the details at one time, but over time they have escaped me.
Great video! Now do one on the raising of all the RR rights-of-way within the City of Chicago from the late 19th century. There must be tons of historic photos on that floating around.
If you ever get the opportunity to tour the Vanderbilt mansion, it’s absolutely what you would expect it to be. Massive and gold EVERYWHERE
Thank you! the Pennsylvania Railroad was always in better financial shape the the NYC. From the time of its foundation to the merger with the NYC and NYNH&H, it never missed a dividend. The Pennsy's biggest problem was it took its eye off the ball and neglected transport in favour of real estate.
. . . And after the merger (and maybe even before), they were cooking the books to make themselves look better to investors/banks than they were.
Norfolk Southern has a heritage unit out there that is the New York Central. I’m surprised that engine didn’t make it into this.
Every time I’ve used that engine the toilet was always full from the journey
@@zachfila Oh yeah, how long you work for the company. Pretty cool to hear from a conductor/ engineer.
because it isnt anything to do with the nyc is it, its just a modern locomotive painted in a paint scheme by ns. it never worked for the nyc or had anything to do with it...
There is a new York central semi trailer abandoned, still in Clifton hill, MO
There was actually a musical piece titled Slaughter on Tenth Avenue created because of how deadly the street running West Side Line.
can you do the lost rail in the twin cities. apparently minneapolis used to have an elevated rail line going to the depot off of Washington Avenue. the old trolley lines are an option also
There is a small section of the NYC still in use in my home town of Plainwell, MI. It is now a spur leading to Otsego, MI. This was part of the NYC line from Kalamazoo, MI to Grand Rapids, MI.
The New York Central was actually showing a profit at the time of the merger, albeit a marginal one. Its CEO, Alfred Perlman, whose austerity and modernization measures combined with consolidation of freight yards and streamlining methods of day-to-day operations forestalled bankruptcy by 15 years, was vehemently opposed to the merger, and rightly so. He saw the Pennsylvania RR for what it was; a ticking time bomb which had been mismanaged and mishandled since the end of WWII.
The former New York Central Robert Young rail yard west of Elkhart, In. remains in active use as the second largest rail yard in the Norfolk-Southern system. The yard has 72 classification tracks and handles around 100 trains each day.
What confuses me is that the Grand Central Depot had a seperate sign for the New York and Harlem Railroad, when it had already amalgamated with the New York Central by the time the depot opened.
Springfield Ohio the old train station is a giant pedestrian walking area/flea market and public library. Anyone remember the "ghost busters" headquarters?
This is Tragic. I grew up across the river from Albany and live now in Schenectady. The huge subsidy for the interstate highway system was the US government taking taxes from the railroad and giving them to road transport. New York had several smaller cross state highways, including route 20 and route 5. I-90 was hugely subsidized and the new roads cut open the cities, dividing them, making them more difficult to walk, and destroying the urban character.
The municipal airports Also took tax money and subsidized air travel.
They're likely would have been a market both for expanded truck travel as well as air travel after World War II, but it would have grown more organically and would have kept trains as a viable option as well.
I do think this should be a lesson for people who want government intervention on behalf of green energy or green transportation, we had energy efficient rail transportation that was destroyed by overregulation and over taxation.
ALSO FUN FACT: The National Archives digital archives have partial (as in partially digitized) track plans for the New York Central Railroad - including (in terms of what can currently be viewed that is within the NYC metro area) the line between Grand Central Terminal and Mott Haven, Mott Haven and I think up to Catham, Mott Haven up the Hudson Div, the 30th Street Branch from Spuyten Duyvil to 30th Street (PRE HIGH LINE), even the Putnam Division! And that's JUST the stuff within the NYC metro area, they have track plans covering so many other parts of their operations, including up and through Buffalo, NY, and Pennsylvania!
It just shows that constant improvement in technology produces constant change in our environment, thats the only thing thats is guaranteed.
Every manager should be able to recite at least ten nursery rhymes backward.
Thanks for making this type of content ❤️💯 honestly keep it up Mr Socash
More to come!
Today in Europe only some Tram (Streetcar) lines are build directly on the streets but only in tight space areas & histzoric destricts ...
It’s surprisingly muddled these days in public documentation, but the unambiguous final fate of the NYCRR is that it is now a subsidiary of CSX, which chooses not to use separate branding for it. All former NYCRR trackage, all active former NYCRR services, and all rights to any active NYCRR trademarks are owned and operated by CSX. Likewise with Norfolk Southern and the Pennsy. When NS and CSX split up the PCTC, NS took the Pennsy lines and CSX took the NYCRR lines. The rivalry still lives.
I’m just curious. The trains weren’t flying down the streets at 80mph. So, it was probably the usual impatience of people, perhaps, not paying attention and crossing in mass, some trying to beat the train. Or, perhaps, trying to pass between the cars figuring it was slow enough to be doable.
Otherwise, I just imagine that many people just standing there like sitting ducks as a train approaches. You see pedestrian behavior in the city regarding crossing against the light with trucks and buses.
Although much has been abandoned the vast majority of the New York Central System's route mileage is still in use.
Gone but for now not forgotten.
One of the reasons the Penn Central merger failed was that both railroads had recently computerized using their preferred systems. The two systems were not compatible and huge mistakes were made, including the famous "lost train" that traveled from Chicago to New York taking four weeks to do so. There were also mistakes made in accounting and payroll, with billing so totally messed up that even after bankruptcy, bills were still being dealt with three years later. Unfortunately Norfolk Southern tore out two of the four tracks that made up the New York to Buffalo route and as a result Amtrak trains have long delays waiting for freight trains to clear their path.
I had read somewhere that another big nail in the coffin of NYCRR was the taxation of right aways. All of a sudden the government wanted property tax on all the ground that the railroad occupied. The roads were already in decline and this just hastened the process.
I always felt that the interstate highway system killed the freight business and the airlines killed the passenger business. Just as the modern technology of railroads displaced wagon trains, trucks, and planes took over the rails. One needs to wonder what marvel of technology comes next?
Bullet Trains. The sad part is that all those right of ways are gone and will have to be reestablished. Trains going 200-300 MPH can get from NYC to Boston or DC in 60-90 min if the track is designed and engineered correctly. Freight trains are already hurting the trucking business.
Teleportation
The freight house was protected by "guards, dogs, response teams", and "EVEN FIREARMS"?!?!!! OH MY GOSH!!!!
Thankyou for an excellentpiece ohistory story telling.brilliant .loved it!!!!!!!!😊
Our pleasure!
Still an issue today here in south florida... people think "They Can Make It" and continue to jump in front of the rail...
I love railroad history!❤ And I ove your channel!
Glad you enjoy it!
"As it turned out, merging two destitute companies did not magically create a profitable corporation." K-Mart and Sears, are you listening? Oh, that's right, you didn't...
He found the end of the rainbow and was surprised at what he found there.
My great grandfather came diwn from Ontario in the late 20s and became an engineer on the nyc. Leaving behind my grandfather still a baby. My grandfather came down at age 13 to work on the tug boats in the late 30s and then became an engineer on the Delaware and hudson. Another historical rail way side by side the nyc. Conrail - consolidated rail was the government take over of the (1960s) forced by government merger of the Pennsylvania and nyc railroad. Conrail was created in 1976, my father joined as an engineer immediately as a fire man status with his navy reserves experience and volunteer fire man status. I was born 2 years later. My uncle, his little brother joined Conrail soon after in early 80s. My father had switched to amtrack in 1981. The other part of the government take over of our nations rail way. The freight portion of the Penn central became conrail, the passenger part became amtrack. But....
The great Delaware and Hudson rail road was allowed to remain in operation under private ownership for almost 20 years. The shops in Colonie ny were the last remaining operational yards until the late 80s and were demolished in the 90s. Where my grandfather worked out of while raising his 6 children. My father passed away a few blocks from there in 2007 at 56 years old. I ❤️ my heritage and keep it going though model trains. My uncle steven who was the oldest of the bunch had a lionel collection, that i saw in 2001 after my first son was born on 9-11 and named after my uncle who worked on conrail, but he passed away from cancer very young, in his 30s in 93,
One of them was a custom d&h rs-3 diesel locomotive with the same # as the one my grandfather operated, and another was a nyc steam loco with the same number aswell. Along with trains from his own childhood he got on Christmas and birthdays, those being from the 40s... i believe hes still alive and i pray those trains make it into the family's hands.
18:30: Once again, Ryan, you forgot to do any research. Penn-Central declared bankruptcy in 1971. By 1976, they had been a single company for 7 years, and had been in receivership for 5. Several other regional railroads also went bankrupt in 1972 and later (Erie-Lackawanna, Lehigh Valley, etc.), and Conrail was formed to consolidate what was left from ALL these bankruptcies into a single railroad, which was kept running through subsidies.
Conrail became NJ Transit and Metro North right?
@@matthewhernandez8342 No, not exactly. Conrail still exists and has some operations, but is a joint venture between to private railroads instead of being own by the US Gov. NJTransit, MetroNorth, LIRR, Amtrak, SEPTA, MARC, and MBTA took over the commuter and passenger services that Conrail inherited. This was largely transferred over by the early 80's as it was the least profitable part of Conrail's assets. Once Conrail started to turn a profit, the decided to sell off most of the assets to a private rail company. This led to a fight and compromise between CSX and Norfolk Southern which split the assets and established the current Conrail Shared Operations.
I agree, this is when a person is shallow in research. I was a shareholder in Consolidated Rail Corporation, now I am a long time owner of Norfolk Southern and it has made me wealthy. Shut down the rails for one day, and NYC would be paralyzed, and that does not count the subways or light rail lines.
@@matthewhernandez8342 no it got bought by both Norfolk Southern and CSX
@@matthewhernandez8342 The commuter passenger services from NYC became NJ Transit, Metro North and the New Haven RR. Amtrak took over the longer passenger services to Boston, Philadelphia, Washington DC. Conrail was the freight side.
Very informative. I enjoyed it!
Excellent work
Lorries took a lot of the freight duties away from railroads. However, it is, doubtful railroads will ever go away for freight. It is too efficient to move large amounts of freight by rail for it to be replaced anytime foreseeable in the future.
Imagine the combination of trains running on street-level and smartphone usage...
Great presentation.
there is a solid legacy from the US RR era, US rail freight costs are the lowest cost in the world. and there is some worry if train passenger rates increase it will increase freight costs because the two systems will compete for track time. a big problem is trains cant handle steep grades and due to weight its really expensive to build train overpasses.
The opening picture is not Manhattan... It is the NYC running down Washington Street in front of city hall in Syracuse, NY... About 60 trains a day ran along Washington St. in the 1920's &'30's...
I believe the last freight train on the high-line was a train full of frozen turkeys to a warehouse in 1983..
Amtrak came along and was like yippieeee
Realize that before about 1918 the only mode of land transport alternative to the railroads was the horse and wagon, this was limited in tonnage and speed. It also had a large pollution factor, thousands of men were employed in NYC to fight the 'solid' waste problem. The big problem in the PennCentral merger was the inclusion of the money losing New Haven into that mix and the refusal of the two main companies to really seriously merge their operations. A number of railroads also that the problem of commuter rail services into the cities that was a major money loser and intercity passenger operation that also is a big loser, just look at the great history of Amtrak, fifty years of losing money despite generous infusions of government cash. Other factors include the real estate taxes that railroads paid on their right of way and structures, for many communities they were the largest component of the revenue base for this tax.
Hi, new watcher from the UK
PennCentral was a shotgun wedding at best...lol.
Thanks for sharing railroad history
I remember the movie "Hellow Dolly". The tugboat Streisand is on for one of the sounds, has the newer NYC logo on its stack. OOPS 😏
Great video!
Interesting/informative/entertaining. Excellent still- motion photography/maps enabling viewers to better understand what the orator is describing. viewing this presentation from the safety zone of my computer room. Along the " Space Coast " 🚀 of Florida🐊🐊. Wishing viewers a safe/healthy/prosperous ( 2024) 🌈🎉😉 .
I live near the NYC Beech Creek line in central PA. PRR and NYC paralleled each other in central PA coal region. NYC and PRR had combo lines and had trackage rights on each others lines as well. My hometown in NY was on the Elmira Branch, and was serviced by Erie, LV & DLW with NYC trackage rights to nearby Horseheads NY.
NYC was better off merging with another rr, PRR looked good on PAPER. PRR lead the PC to fail since DAY ONE.
It took the scenic water level route, as seen in North By Northwest. Had to go north around mountains before going south to New York.