Railroadin' - 1941

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  • Опубликовано: 11 май 2012
  • A documentary on the development of US railroads produced bl ALCO and General Electric. Topics include: Steel manufacturing. Troop trains. Carrying livestock. Specialized rolling stock. Car floats. Coal handling. Classification yards. Maintenance: track and right-of-way. Rotary snowplows. Standard time zones. Passenger travel. Railway Express. Carrying mail. Food products carried by rail.
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Комментарии • 72

  • @WaterburnerActual
    @WaterburnerActual 5 лет назад +4

    Can remember in grade school on days when it was either too cold or it was snowing so much we couldn't go out on the playground, but sent to the Gym after lunch, and we got to watch films like this. A lot of kids would go to sleep but I enjoyed the films, and didn't wanna miss any of it.

  • @sonnydean3187
    @sonnydean3187 7 лет назад +11

    "The nation moves forward in a common purpose." And so it did, by rail. Great video.

    • @kleetus92
      @kleetus92 Год назад

      Well... it used to anyway...

  • @HardLuck93
    @HardLuck93 6 лет назад +11

    Someone please build a time machine. I want so bad to live in that time

  • @steveevans4093
    @steveevans4093 8 лет назад +2

    Love these old videos. Thanks.

  • @richardgordon8110
    @richardgordon8110 6 лет назад +2

    I love the up to the minute musical score.

  • @Charonview
    @Charonview 7 лет назад +1

    Interesting video and thanks for posting!

  • @pantherplatform
    @pantherplatform 6 лет назад +11

    Make Railroading Great Again!

    • @thavvolf9157
      @thavvolf9157 4 года назад

      Panther Platform vote for someone who appreciates our railroads.

    • @25mfd
      @25mfd 3 года назад +1

      @@thavvolf9157 good luck with that... ever since the staggers act politicians don't even have even looking at railroads on their radar... their attitude "it ain't bothering us so we don't bother it"

  • @jimciancio9005
    @jimciancio9005 7 месяцев назад

    Awesome Video! Why I collect the old original Lionel, Marx and American Flyer Trains. They are the closest thing we'll be getting to these grand old days of when railroads were the lifeblood of our nation. We won 2 world wars because of such things.

  • @sothychea252
    @sothychea252 10 лет назад +2

    I love this railroad documentary

  • @michaelross8968
    @michaelross8968 8 лет назад +1

    Great video!

  • @HeSaid007
    @HeSaid007 7 лет назад +7

    ahh the good old days. I remember triple steam engines pulling mile long trains on.the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie RR down the Beaver Valley to the steel mills in smokey Pittsburgh.

  • @1978garfield
    @1978garfield Год назад

    This was a great film.
    I have been watching railroad films for years but had never seen this one.
    Hope you have more films from when GE and Alco were partners.
    Alco made some beautiful diesel locomotives.

  • @tuodekab
    @tuodekab 12 лет назад +4

    this is awesome "throbbing pulse of a lagging nation. these are the city's arteries - the life lines of our nation"

  • @sothychea252
    @sothychea252 10 лет назад +1

    This I know this song! I've been working on the Railroad was composed in this Documentary!

  • @120446219
    @120446219 6 лет назад +3

    check out the guys at 12:08. this was when young men worked their asses off..for the railroad. of course they are long forgotten and gone..like nameless people..very sad. no credits or names are ever given on these PR movies.

  • @swingrfd
    @swingrfd 6 лет назад +5

    No cow ever walked from Texas to Chicago.

  • @120446219
    @120446219 5 лет назад +1

    Check out the stud at 12:08 second one , dam a real young man of the times

  • @zedwms
    @zedwms 6 лет назад +2

    1:15 (paraphrasing) before the city, the area was just "an empty, lifeless waste", but thanks to the railroad, that lifeless wasteland is transformed into a mighty, bustling metropolis. whaaa...

    • @kleetus92
      @kleetus92 Год назад

      Yeah, and look what society has done with it... sad.

  • @poosoo9677
    @poosoo9677 6 лет назад +2

    RUclips stabilization rocks!

  • @TheDieselbutterfly
    @TheDieselbutterfly 3 года назад +1

    They should have listened to the guy with the poster

  • @sothychea252
    @sothychea252 10 лет назад +1

    This is while the railroads plan to rebuilding tracks and designing retro equipment from the early twentieth century.

  • @DavidSanchez-ks4ub
    @DavidSanchez-ks4ub 7 лет назад +5

    This was a really good film with a lot of info and rare footage. But is it possible to remove that auto stabilization feature? It gets very distracting and annoying.

  • @lampuntube
    @lampuntube 7 лет назад +5

    very nice movie, however the digital stabilization is horrible to watch in this.

  • @sandraj.syx-spears5218
    @sandraj.syx-spears5218 8 лет назад +1

    i notice a preponderance of ALCO locomotoves, with GE traction motors, in this film

    • @nfd1960
      @nfd1960 8 лет назад

      +Sandra J. Syx-Spears GE started in the Locomotive business because of Alco, they were located in the same city and across from each other, all Alco Electric components were made by GE, Alco built the engines at their Auburn Engine works at Auburn NY and the Locomotive parts, GE built the Gens and traction motors, controls, and wiring,

    • @Harbormcann
      @Harbormcann 7 лет назад

      Thanks for that info nfd1960! I looked at another GE railroading film on here (You Tube) and I noticed no EMD diesels but, all Alco diesels and now I know why, LOL!

  • @SnowleopardPearl
    @SnowleopardPearl 6 лет назад +3

    oh dear god i feel like im going to be sick.. and i don't get motion sick!!!

  • @nonovyerbusiness9517
    @nonovyerbusiness9517 6 лет назад +4

    Trains art the noble and mysterious creations of thy corporate lords and masters! Prostrate thyselves at the grade crossings of the mighty train! For if thou shalt not yield, then thy car or truck shall be transformed into dust and thy blood will be drained! Without trains, thy nation would look like Arizona from sea to sea and boils may appear on thy flesh ! Tax not, the holy railroads, for they spendeth their own treasure to build mighty empires! No man hath a higher calling than to service the tireless machines of the benevolent and merciful railroad! So sayeth the Conductor.

  • @sothychea252
    @sothychea252 10 лет назад +1

    It's colourful what they ever made in the United States of America.

  • @rapman5363
    @rapman5363 Год назад

    I don’t think I’d feel too comfortable with a straight razor against my neck in a 1940’s train. One pull of slack or ill timed bump and it’s all over.

  • @D.WittYard
    @D.WittYard 8 лет назад +17

    Great video, but can you remove the RUclips stabilization?

    • @mikecowen6507
      @mikecowen6507 7 лет назад +2

      CentralFan1976 A year later, and it's still enabled. It's terrible how it makes the image jump.

    • @poosoo9677
      @poosoo9677 6 лет назад

      Have you seen the new video"1941: The Year of One Zillion Major Earthquakes"? I thought it was presented by RUclips stabilization.

    • @12tuber1234
      @12tuber1234 6 лет назад

      Our senses can reconcile camera movement but not budget image stabilisation, what a mess.

    • @pantherplatform
      @pantherplatform 6 лет назад

      CentralFan1976 please

  • @Hunkiralyfi
    @Hunkiralyfi 6 лет назад +17

    This WAS America.

  • @760jjsole8
    @760jjsole8 6 лет назад +1

    This is cool. Reminds me of a Disneyland documentary...

  • @charlessagler20
    @charlessagler20 6 лет назад +1

    My late dad was born in 1941 approx. two months before Pearl Harbor...

  • @susanthomson-lafosse6884
    @susanthomson-lafosse6884 5 лет назад +1

    Who invented time zones? Me thinks there’s a bias here.

  • @anonov1
    @anonov1 8 лет назад +3

    25:53...Mail sorters, open carry. When did that stop?

    • @swingrfd
      @swingrfd 6 лет назад +2

      When the RPO ceased operations in 1977.

    • @stevenjohnson7086
      @stevenjohnson7086 2 года назад

      @@swingrfd 1968, not 1977

    • @swingrfd
      @swingrfd 2 года назад

      @@stevenjohnson7086 Last RPO ran 06/30/1977

    • @stevenjohnson7086
      @stevenjohnson7086 2 года назад

      @@swingrfd OK, I’ll buy that for a minute, but Amtrak was formed in 1971 and the post office awarded the first class mail contract to the airlines in 1968. So what you’re saying is between 1968 1977 there was still RPO service. I don’t know everything. Could you provide some more information as to where this was occurring and how widespread it was? This is the first I’ve heard of RPO service beyond 1968.

    • @swingrfd
      @swingrfd 2 года назад

      @@stevenjohnson7086 Between NYC and DC

  • @pauljw7697
    @pauljw7697 7 лет назад +2

    The postal worker at 25:52, and 3 seconds later, a different postal worker at 25:55, appear to have a revolver strapped to their waist belt? Can anyone explain this? Train robberies were a thing of the past when this was produced. Why the handguns?

    • @b3j8
      @b3j8 7 лет назад +5

      Paul, your statement that train robberies were a thing of the past is not true. Many items were, and still are today, stolen off of trains, often while stopped in yards. Rail Post Office employees were required to carry because they handled Federally-protected regular mail, including many high-dollar packages. No other rail-employees, except for railroad cops, could carry a firearm.

    • @goghfitness738
      @goghfitness738 6 лет назад

      b3j8 that is not true almost all COULD carry but they didn't

    • @tommytruth7595
      @tommytruth7595 5 лет назад

      Were they RR employees or employees of the Post Office?

  • @MrWhite-pn7ui
    @MrWhite-pn7ui 7 лет назад +1

    Getting shit done.

  • @Mike-tg7dj
    @Mike-tg7dj 8 лет назад +1

    What about the post master at frame 25:56? I'm guessing that carrying .38 special went bye bye a long time ago! Can you imagine postal workers carrying weapon today? scary.

    • @johnblair8146
      @johnblair8146 8 лет назад +1

      +Vincent Dow it only took a few years to pass the NFA after the threat posed by the advent of fully automatic weapons became apparent. Today that wouldn't happen.

    • @jamesshanks2614
      @jamesshanks2614 8 лет назад +7

      In the days of railroad post office cars all railroad post office employees were issued smith & Wesson model 66 revolvers 38 special 5 shot
      With a 2 inch barrel. They were issued to protect the mail.

  • @felixthecleaner8843
    @felixthecleaner8843 6 лет назад +3

    07:47 hobo!

    • @tommytruth7595
      @tommytruth7595 6 лет назад +2

      It could be a brake person, believe it or not they used to ride on top of the trains back then. I know, stupid. But they did it.

    • @seanmartin5581
      @seanmartin5581 6 лет назад +1

      That was probably a brakeman

  • @froggleggers1805
    @froggleggers1805 6 лет назад +4

    Calling nature, the plains, barren, lifeless waste, LOL.

  • @tommytruth7595
    @tommytruth7595 6 лет назад +1

    "The Old Cisholm Trail from Texas to Chicago and the steers walking all the way." 100% wrong.

    • @andyharman3022
      @andyharman3022 4 года назад

      But the steers walked to Abiliene, Kansas, then were put on trains to Chicago, where they were carved into tasty steaks!

  • @richardgordon8110
    @richardgordon8110 6 лет назад +3

    And the Rail Roads were directly responsible for the decimation of our native peoples.