Hoosac Tunnel - Rare Footage - Electrics at the Tunnel (Motors, Locomotives, Engines)

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  • Опубликовано: 2 авг 2024
  • Here is a nice find. Electric engines being used at the East and West portals of the Hoosac Tunnel! Starting in 1911 and running until 1946, the Hoosac Tunnel utilized electric engines to haul trains through in an attempt to dampen the amount of smoke produced by steam locomotives.
    Footage courtesy of the North Adams Historical Society.
    www.northadamshistory.org/inde...
    For more information on the tunnel, please view our full documentary,
    • Hoosac Tunnel Document...
    Thank you!
    #hooosac
    #tunnel
    #norfolksouthern
    #panam
    #electrics

Комментарии • 49

  • @cats0182
    @cats0182 6 лет назад +12

    Crewman on the electric at 0:11 waving to the camera. Priceless.

  • @Utubin
    @Utubin 2 года назад +3

    I love these locomotive real classics.
    Thank you to folks who filmed preserved and now uploaded for us to enjoy in modern era.
    I love it.
    Thanks so much.

    • @Imrfilms
      @Imrfilms  2 года назад

      Thank you! I'm glad you found this footage and enjoyed it!

  • @labrd41
    @labrd41 Год назад +1

    Great old film and with sound too.

  • @ShizSmitty
    @ShizSmitty 10 лет назад +11

    I never knew there was elecrtrics used through the Hossac. Thanks for posting!

    • @tomp8871
      @tomp8871 Год назад

      passengers could breathe lol

  • @tomp8871
    @tomp8871 Год назад +3

    Truly amazing what they all did back in the day.

  • @JamesSmith-fi8lj
    @JamesSmith-fi8lj 8 лет назад +6

    Excellent video...Thanks for posting...Oh, to be able to go back to those glorious days of the Boston and Maine, if only for a week or two!!!

  • @Aleiria13
    @Aleiria13 3 года назад +2

    👍🏽🥰This was back when it was still twin-track’s running through the tunnel, can You imagine sitting next to a window as You rolled-through back then??🥺
    Those wall’s would be pretty darn CLOSE!

  • @GP9railfan
    @GP9railfan 12 лет назад +2

    Wow! Great footage! Thanks for posting this.

  • @peterbenson3776
    @peterbenson3776 Год назад +1

    Fascinating

  • @BERXJoe
    @BERXJoe 8 лет назад +7

    Absolutely incredible! Thank you for sharing this footage! The next time I visit Hoosac Tunnel it will be fascinating to be standing there and think of this video-that first steam engine was huge! And @1:47-those electrics could really move along. Having seen this, I have an even greater appreciation for the tunnel and that particular period of time in railroad history. I have the DVD of the Hoosac Tunnel documentary you made and the laminated Hoosac Tunnel fact sheet (I met you at the Big E train show). Even after watching it a hundred times, I never get tired of it. To anyone who hasn't seen the video-its a must. It's one thing to grab a camera and state facts you can read online-but IMR put in a lot of time and hard work-and it shows. IMR created something really special that I find extremely valuable. If only IMR could have produced all the lame history videos I had to watch in high school, I might have actually stayed awake.

    • @Imrfilms
      @Imrfilms  8 лет назад +2

      +Joe Thank you! I'm glad you liked it!

    • @lucinda1857
      @lucinda1857 6 лет назад

      Joe don't go there.

    • @cbalducc
      @cbalducc 2 года назад

      The camera was probably under ranked, making the action look faster.

    • @Utubin
      @Utubin 2 года назад +1

      You are 100% correct.
      Great comment!!!!

  • @eletourneau9424
    @eletourneau9424 3 года назад +2

    The electric engines were powered by 25 cycle current from the old Deerfield No. 5 station. A few miles up river from the tunnel. That station had 25 cycle and 60 cycle rotors on the same shaft. there were three horizontal hydro units. Originally the station was owned and built by the rail road and the power company and went into operation in 1913. -- In the 1965 blackout it was the first station to come back on line and powered up North Adams and Bennington, until the larger steam plants needed to power up their auxiliaries so they could start generating. -- The station was lost to history when Bear Swamp was built.

    • @Imrfilms
      @Imrfilms  3 года назад

      Thanks for all the great info!

  • @ispepski
    @ispepski 11 лет назад +1

    Very cool. Thanks for posting!

  • @Imrfilms
    @Imrfilms  10 лет назад +1

    You're very welcome! Thanks for watching and the comment.

  • @billrobbins5874
    @billrobbins5874 2 года назад +1

    Awesome footage. Much appreciated. 👍

  • @elizabethhjenkins6172
    @elizabethhjenkins6172 4 года назад +1

    Fantastic . Thanks.

  • @ZAV1944
    @ZAV1944 8 лет назад +5

    cab forward locomotives would have been a possible solution for the smoke, at least on freight trains.

  • @cats0182
    @cats0182 6 лет назад +2

    Interesting off-center headlights on the motors.

  • @davidfenton607
    @davidfenton607 4 года назад +2

    gramps worked for the RR and lived just down the road , he was killed in the tunnel as a track walker in 1940 being crushed by a train passing thru , wonder if he is any of these ?

    • @Aleiria13
      @Aleiria13 3 года назад +1

      Probably a good thing I don’t live close-bye, because I might be killed in the tunnel as a trespassing track-walker.

  • @bruno68berretta53
    @bruno68berretta53 3 года назад +1

    👏👏👏

  • @SpeakerPolice
    @SpeakerPolice 9 лет назад +4

    I guess they added the sound later, onto the silent film?

    • @Rebel9668
      @Rebel9668 7 лет назад +2

      Whoever did it did a fair job, but the sound of the steam locomotives, even idling being pulled is missing as well as wheel flange squeal and other sounds one would associate with a moving train.

  • @Colraine
    @Colraine 11 лет назад +3

    Still, they are called general Electric Electric LOCOMOTIVES even if you like it or not. Even if symantics would dictate otherwise. take it up with GE.

  • @WhyAyeMann
    @WhyAyeMann 2 года назад +1

    those tunnel motors look suspicously like New Haven EF-1s

    • @Imrfilms
      @Imrfilms  2 года назад

      I think they probably are! I know that Charles Mellen (President of the New Haven line at that time) is the one who brought electrification to the tunnel!

    • @WhyAyeMann
      @WhyAyeMann 2 года назад +1

      @@Imrfilms Doesn't surprise me!

  • @Colraine
    @Colraine 11 лет назад +2

    If you want to be specific... Box Cab Electric Locomotives... Is that precise enough for you!

  • @bljennison
    @bljennison 11 лет назад +4

    As the captions state, these are "motors," not engines. As railway historians, we of all people should not be careless in our use of terminology.

  • @admiralbenbow5083
    @admiralbenbow5083 Год назад

    0.44 Looks like it was `bring your pet to work` day.

  • @Colraine
    @Colraine 11 лет назад +3

    Loco" can also mean in palce of, or in lieu of. To place something". my favorite is "Motive" is to "cause". So, that being said my Latin scholar it means to "cause motion" i like spanish Spanish which means "CRAZY MOTION".

    • @ThomasWLalor
      @ThomasWLalor 5 лет назад +1

      We know from context what means "loco"

  • @fordson51
    @fordson51 5 лет назад +1

    I still wonder why railroads just did not go full electric rather than waste the time with stopping to couple the electrics on at stations.

    • @Imrfilms
      @Imrfilms  5 лет назад +2

      I'm not sure, but would guess that it all came/comes down to how much it would cost to install catenary wires/poles etc. and maintain it all.

    • @ArtStoneUS
      @ArtStoneUS Год назад

      The United States has a lot of oil and coal. Adding in the extra step of generating electricity reduces the efficiency of the energy contained in the fossil fuels. In places like the Pennsylvania Railroad Northeast corridor, they had access to hydroelectric power. Most of the country does not.

  • @ArtStoneUS
    @ArtStoneUS 2 года назад +1

    When a steam locomotive isn't pulling the train, isn't it still putting out carbon monoxide?

    • @Imrfilms
      @Imrfilms  2 года назад

      Yes, definitely to a degree. A big reason they did this was also to cut back on the thickness of the smoke inside the tunnel. The locos were still "burning", just not as severely as they were without the electrics.
      Thanks for the comment!

  • @richardp.nathhorst9317
    @richardp.nathhorst9317 8 лет назад +1

    So these electric "motors" were made by Westinghouse Baldwin and not General Electric even with General Electric's large corporate presence in Massachusetts. There is a photo of one of them wrecked on another site.
    It is a shame that the B&M did no consider electrification on the whole Fitchburg line. I wonder if the calculations were done on the economics of electrification? I also wonder how the level of air pollution present in the tunnel even today is tolerated.

  • @bradbrazil6628
    @bradbrazil6628 6 лет назад

    Where do depressed trains run? THROUGH PROZAC TUNNEL!! Yuk,yuk, yuk!!

    • @ThomasWLalor
      @ThomasWLalor 5 лет назад +1

      The term "Mexican" refers to a pistol. The term "Brazilian" refers to a hairless cunt.

    • @Utubin
      @Utubin 2 года назад

      That's a good one Curly. yuk yuk yuk.

    • @interstellarphred
      @interstellarphred 2 года назад

      If we could get Ex-Milwaukee Road GE bipolars, we could have Ozzy Osbourne do the narrative.