A couple of years ago, a dam breach emptied the artificial reservoir called Wixom Lake, in my home state of Michigan, revealing a very rare Thew Type "O" steam shovel, made in 1901, that had been at the bottom of the lake since the dam was finished (using the steam shovel, of course) in 1925. The Thew has been removed from the mud and is in the process of being restored.
While stationed at RAF Chicksands with the USAF from 68 - 72 I remember going to the pits and going swimming there. I saw the Shovel while it was under water and along with a few friends we swam out to it and dove around it to examine what we could. The water was clear for the most part an it was interesting to see old equipment. We went to a couple of Pubs there and were talking about how much effort it would be to raise and restore the old girl. I do not remember the gentlemen we talked with but some of them had actually worked in the pits and on the shovel before it was abandoned. I am glad to see that she was recovered and restored to a working condition. History should be preserved for future generation to show how things worked and give the youth of ever nation something to be proud of and their heritage.
Abandoned in place, it cost more to disassemble and remove than it was worth at the time. Amazing that the boiler looks safe for a pressure test. Where I live corrosion and rust would have destroyed it in 10 years or less. Wonderful workmanship throughout. Real craftsmen built this behemoth, and real craftsmen rebuilt it. The young men test driving it could easily be the grand, or even great grandchildren of the original builders. Such a great documentary. Thank You for your efforts.
I'm glad this beauty was saved from the Blue Lagoon. Though I live in America, I have always been in love with steam powered shovels, as well as electric and diesel shovels, and railroads and anything railroad related. I have great news that she is operational, as stated in the comments earlier. Once covid restrictions end and the war in Ukraine ends, I would love to go see her in person and watch her operate.
I am an old machinery freak, was a mechanic, this is a superb video thanks, but much of this old machinery, classic or vintage, is the machines that I enjoyed working on in my working life. My friend worked a steam crane unloading coastal container ships, he was one of the lucky ones.
The Presenter was Dick Joice the Executive Producer a real gentleman and a delight to work for as were so many of the Anglia Television staff to work with. The problem of welding old cast of the dimensions involved in that restoration, is being able to control the heating and cooling of the castings, to eliminate stresses that will cause further cracks to appear or separation of the new weld from the parent metal. Bygones was a series of progammes that was huge fun to work upon. At that period they were mostly shot on 16mm and then with the addition of studio inserts transferred to Video Tape which at that period was 2 inch Ampex machines and only just out of physical editing by tape splicing to electronic editing. Wonderful days and some of the old technical crew still survive.
I've just got in after a busy day, made a Brew, sat down, feet up and watching this. Can it get any better? Yes! Brian Glover narrating and I've just seen a Chopper and Flared pants .....Fantastic!!!
As a young child on, the west side of the pond, a favorite children's book was "Mike Mulligan and his "steam shovel"". Mike's shovel had dug a hole for a large building and were unable to get out. The shovel was retired and Mike and boiler became the heating system for the building. Great job.
Yes I remember that book as a child, also the children's book "Are You My Mother" had a steam shovel that was my favorite part of the book even as a small child.
Having a next door neighbor owning a heavy construction company in my childhood got to see and ride in big equipment.Remember that storybook as one of my favorites,even had a toy steam shovel like the ones in video on steel wheels just like a Bucyrus Erie manufactured in Ohio.
@@louisaloi9178 Tonka made a Shovel in the construction vehicles lines. Sadly Tonka doesn't make them today despite the toys commanding collector prices. The large big bulldozer with the rubber tracks was equal to the dump truck for size/scale they still make. Kids could sit on top and drive/ride/operate them. Good times playing with dirt(sandboxes were for babies), sadly a bygone era.......
in my mom's hometown, there is a 90' deep limestone quarry that filled up overnight before WW2, when the pumps died on a weekend. there are steam shovels, dump trucks, and a steam train at the bottom.
in 1979 would they have thought in 2019 we still be talking about and enjoying this piece of beauty. let alone the chap who in 1909 built this thing over 110 years ago. They were just pushing out the project, not expecting to be a piece of history. From the build date, to the restore date each one has had young apprentices cycle through to older journeymen craftsmen. Each one teaching the the ones that would eventually being teaching the ones who actually work on restoring this and now to day maintaining it. Breaking 110 years, a century plus decade or as CX in the roman numerals..... The change and horrors this machine has been through and had occur in the world surrounding in its life is staggering, from being advance technology to a view of antiquity machinery heading onward to ancient history..... May the boiler hold up for another several centuries plus. 1/2 a millenia (500 years)overall sound good? I'm sure the service record much mention if we can the factory paper work that came with it....
We need an 110 year video of it in 2019 For a historic view a 2017 still in operations display/use video ruclips.net/video/paFaA2WKCGY/видео.html with some more information and comments worth checking out on a 2016 video of her at ruclips.net/video/W-YsxnvUPBY/видео.html
This is an absolutely awesome documentary, everything about it is just a joy to watch. It’s great to watch people working together and accomplishing a goal without focusing on any drama etc. that dominates modern programming. Also almost anything that has to do with steam I’m interested in. 12:08 Now that’s a smoking pipe!
This is quite fantastic. A tremendous effort. Perhaps call it Bill after the steam shovel in the old children's TV program Mr Squiggle shown here in Australia. I used watch Mr Squiggle as a child over 50 years ago! Have never seen a real steam shovel!
for a person interested in steam engines it was great seeing it first being recovered and then restored to working order i think they made her old driver's day its great to know that this old girl is now fully restored with a roof
its interesting to note that the apprentices are probably now either retired or near retirement age....this video appears to be shot in the 70's....nice video...
tooez90 He mentions at one point that it was built in 1909, and that it was brought back to the same place for restoration 70 years later. So it was filmed in 1979 then (he also mentioned Star Wars, so you know it had to be after 1977.)
1977 by Ruston expert Ray Hooley By 1980 the 306 Steam Digger was steaming again. Hooley gave the machine to the VET in 2008 and it was moved to Threlkeld Quarry and Mining Museum
I just love these old bygone vintage videos (see some from the days of the London, Midland and Scottish railway). As far as I am concerned, the choice of the late, great Brian Glover (actor and professional all-in wrestler) was a brilliant move... what a lovely Yorkshire (Barnsley) accent he had, very similar to Sir Michael Parkinson.
Joe We knew this place as " Arelsey Pits " when we used to go fishing there when I was very young , its only a few miles from Letchworth, I live in Australia now, but still remember " The blue lagoon " well, favourite place for dumping stolen cars.
History brought to life. Fascinating. Old vid, shot before the days of RUclips obviously, but perfectly suited. Well-paced, and well-narrated. IH, thank you for working to preserve the memory of working for a living back when men were men, a hard day's work meant you had something called integrity, and SJW's were non-existent. Well done!!
Seeing this video reminded me that I used to see the old shovel when I was stationed at RAF Chicksands in the USAF. Going there was a favorite place to both fish, swim and party;l We used to swim out to the shovel and diver off the boom. that was back between 68 - 72 time frame. Seeing it brought back a lot of memories and I am glad to see they rescued her from the water. I dove around her and at one time had some pretty good pic I took on a bright day when the waters was clear and while not as good as I prefered they were still pretty good pics. It will be interesting to see if they post a video after they get her restored and running again.
Glad to hear it working now, I remember swimming out to it and diving around it when I was stationed over there. I love the old steam equipment I saw working in England and the numerous events that took place all year long. I tried to make as many as possible . Now just have to wait for the video of her resurrection and rebuilding to see her run again.
Wrong button stray thumb on small screen? Then comes the idiot factor which we have 100 of people that fit into that categories as of December 8 2018 with 465,790 views and over 2.5K+ of likes/Thumbs Up what it was orginal called right. FB has reprogrammed our speech sadly.
Damn this jumped a lot in just 3 weeks after my comment on January 1st 2019 there are 516,792 views 2.9K likes and 20 more idiots that want clickbait short videos that spoon feed rehashed clips for 1290 thumbs down. 51,005 views or 17,001+ per week. I wonder what suddenly drove traffic here and why youtube started featuring/suggesting it as new content to check out....... In maybe 6 months or so someone will list the views and do the math because the analytics on this video must be cool to see..
@@PatrickBaptist I listened very carefully to the presentation and nowhere did the narrator make that alleged statement. He did say that the salvors would not allow non- divers under water? I suppose if one tries hard enough, they will hear what they want-- like politics today.
@Demo Easy there big fella-- no one's trying to get in a pissing contest here. In fact, I didn't particularly enjoy or "like" the presentation that much. There are many more impressive projects involving restoration than this. It was only a proud legacy to the driver that last handled the machine .See comment below.
In addition to being an amazing story, I love the first minute and 20 seconds or so of the video. The music- the images- the title card... it kind of reminds me of the beginning of a '60's B horror movie. I love it. ❤
Back in the '70s, due to bosses repeatedly wanting me to machine cast iron that they had welded, I knew that you cannot weld cast Iron with steel electrodes and expect any strength. Unless they are special cast iron electrodes and the piece is pre-heated and even that is questionable. Neat video and project though, thanks for posting it.
Stainless rod. Welded many castings. Best I ever did was iron track pads, preheated in furnace, laid air arc rod in pin holes, and welded around it with stainless wire. High stress area, and still working.
What a great show. I love the narrator's style; he sounds genuinely involved and excited. And I was really gonna be mad if they didn't give the shovel's last driver a little 'stick time.' But why 'navvy?" (sp?)
Navvy is/was a slang term for a manual labourer typically employed to dig excavations using pick and shovel etc. Such things as roads, tunnel, canals, railway cuttings and building foundations would all have been dug by navvys back in the days before the myriad of mechanical diggers were even thought of. One train of thought is that it is a shortening of the term 'navigational engineer' but I'm not sure that such could be applied to what is generally regarded as a navvy. Hope this is of help.
Hold on one minute! That is my digger. I forgot where I parked it in that lake some years ago. I would like it back NOW! Please box it up and send it back to Detroit. I will provide my post office box soon. I was out getting groceries with it when I misplaced the key fab and I could not hear the steam horn beep so I had to walk home to Detroit with my groceries in hand and MY Navi I thought was impounded......however I see that some clowns must have taken it for a joy ride and put it in Loch Ness.
Ive never seen a steam crane in action, they possibly still in use when i was a wee lad but we have none restored, at least in my home state.I always loved the dinky little tank engines converted into light crane locos myself.
Brilliant bit of original film at the start and end- Health and safety nowhere to be seen! Lovely to hear Brian Glover, what a sad day with his passing. Brilliant actor!
When I was a nipper in the 70s my next door neighbour used to work at Ruston. They were still there in the late 80s, but I don't know if they are still going today.
@@emdman1959 Read comments above there are 2016 and 2017 videos and as you to day there will be videos upload everyday she is running in font of people. Just finding them all is the hard part.
Great film,nice to see the crownclark telescopic crane first time I've seen a 65ton model .this was very advanced for its day,they later changed their name to cosmos cranes in the late 1970s.
*A steam shovel isn't a crane. A road grader isn't a scraper. Steam shovels were before my time but I did get lots of stick (and foot) time operating a cable backhoe. Also operated a Cat D-8 cable dozer pulling a cable scraper, that combo known as "Cat and a can." Never had the opportunity to operate a cable shovel. For the non-operators, shovels are used for ground level and higher. Backhoes are designed for below ground level although the modern hydraulic backhoes, now called excavators, can dig high above ground.
The restoration team must have been upset when the crane broke down. But I think they'll cherish those precious memories of it working for just a little while
He mentions 1902, and then says a bit later "that was 70 years ago". 1902+70 = 1972. But then he goes on to mention the crane "looking like something out of Star Wars", Star Wars came out in 1977. He leater went on to say that 2 years on restoration have passed. The first surveying photographs of this project were taken in 1976 before recovery. 1976+ 2 = 1978. This film was published approximately 1978 or so, but would have been filmed a couple years earlier, as it takes some time to edit and narrate the video and waiting for the project to be completed so narration can be done, and then splice it all together onto a new reel.
Thanks Joseph, it made the effort worthwhile, more at thiswascumbria.uk/ ps I found the last DVD in the UK after chasing a lead from Anglia and they kindly gave me not for profit permission to put it on RUclips so thanks Anglia TV. Peter
The real treasure was to see British folk get the machine back to a British factory with British know-how and eager apprentices! Wonder if our wonderful government have killed them off? I hope not!
Nor killed them off exactly, just replaced them with non-native Brits who will eventually out-breed the natives until none are left in about 400 years or so.
Despite Ruston (& then Ruston & Hornsby) producing so much machinery that contributed to the Allies winning both World-Wars, the original British owners back then would be spinning in their graves if they knew that the company is now part of the German conglomerate Siemens!!!
the problem of modern science is the fact that the old machines were built stronger and better than anything today, because nothing lasts as long as it did back then
what an absolutely wonderful project, congratulations to all those concerned. I think I saw the narrator was Brian Glover, you couldn't have made a better choice...... I think he might be "The fat Conductor" in disguise. Where does the term "Navey" come from please? What a really meaningful way to set the apprentices to a task, it would have been the best learning curve of their young lives. Well done guys, a video well worth the read
Recognise the Face Shovel or Navvie, there is one at Beamish Historical Open Air Museum. It is an amazing piece of kit. Worth coming to County Durham to see it and so many other gems.
That interesting as my great-grandfather came from Durham but died while working on the construction of the Panama Canal, most likely operating one of the many of Ruston steam-shovel which were shipped over along with their operators to work on the enormous project. There weren't so many other jobs that Brits were doing as the bulk of the work was done by labourers from the Caribbean & Central America, while the engineers, managers, & supervisors were American! After the accident, my great-grandmother & only child, my grandmother, migrated here to Australia!
@@MrWombatty Amazing how far you find your ancestors and contemporaries were prepared to move for a new life. I had family move to USA to farm, plus found a relative called "Shadforth Anderson" who as a Doctor went to Australia and then New Zealand after marrying a Canadian Woman in Canada and work passage as ships surgeon. The best of it is he is supposed to have been wanted for "mutilation" of a body in Australia?. Durham people have always had to be tough and were at the forefront of lots of innovations during the Industrial Revolution, many related to steam and coal in my area. My family sold a piece of land where a steam railway and engines plus gravity steam pulled coal tubs and carriages were made on a line from Hetton to Sunderland Drops opened in 1821 by Wellington. This was prior to Stockton and Darlington and built by Stephenson. You find elements of this area and people all over the world. I came across an engine in a Turkish museum and in Australia, they have a 1903 rail mounted Ruston Bucyrus 65ton Steam Shovel near Victoria, but the Steam Tractor Ruston Bucyrus 125 ton face shovel at Beamish has since a boy always held interest to me. Look it up. My Grandfather born 1901 took me to the open air museum in the 1970`s to see the rebuilt street of houses he used to live in built at Beamish from Hetton Pit. Thanks for the reply and happy New Year from your Durham "cousins".
exactly! No stupid hi vis jackets (they don't need to be seen from the moon), no hard hats, no bureurcratic paper work. They just turned up for work and fecking got on with it.
It is so very interesting to witness the ressurection of this old girl. It is very difficult to weld cast iron and put the weld under stress. It will work on valve bonnets but on wheels and a rotating memeber; success is not assured. I am sure slutions have been, or will be found. I have not witnessed a Steam Shovel working since 1960.
Thanks , it made the effort worthwhile, more at thiswascumbria.uk/ ps I found the last DVD in the UK after chasing a lead from Anglia and they kindly gave me not for profit permission to put it on RUclips so thanks Anglia TV. Peter
@@industrialheritage2158 I agree, knowledge that becomes lost kept alive and practiced by a bunch of enthousiastic volunteers. How awesome is that. :))
@@Romin.777 I so agree with keeping industrial heritage alive and have just added my brick collection at ruclips.net/video/GylukqIpD0w/видео.html enjoy.
I hope they can fix the problems and get her working again. What a bummer, after all that work and expense, but they can't just give up now. I think that will figure something out.
austinwagoncompany No it's not...It's a poor example because; Old stuff is just that; old stuff... These men wasted countless hours, money and effort for a failure...The lesson of; waste your time to do something that will fail is a poor lesson. That's not to say we shouldn't appreciate old things that have been well kept...But, Don't go to the bottom of the ocean to rescue an old penny...
godbluffvdgg just because they had a setback doesn't mean they failed. I believe they continued to work on it and want to see a follow up. Whether their efforts are worth it is relative; I mean, there are alot of rotten people out there that society would rather do away with but Jesus was crucified for them too because even what is worthless to most people still held value to a loving God. Who are we to judge the value of anything? To persevere despite setbacks to achieve a desired result is an excellent example for young people today who seemingly give up when things get difficult.
enterBJ40 Too many people have been murdered in his name...I don't see that as a good one...Nobody has been killed over the myth of Santa Clause...That is a good myth...
That attitude of which you speak is much of what made me join a Rail Heritage volunteer group. Instead of sitting and crying about what was being lost, we got on and did stuff. And it was great fun too!
You're aware that labour productivity today is much higher, and most of the complaining is done by the babyboom generation, right? Things are better now than ever before.
It certainly is, it was restored (again) after falling into disrepair (again) and is currently under the care of the Vintage Excavator Trust at Threlkeld. There are later clips on here, featuring it (it now has a cab), see further down the comments for the links.
A couple of years ago, a dam breach emptied the artificial reservoir called Wixom Lake, in my home state of Michigan, revealing a very rare Thew Type "O" steam shovel, made in 1901, that had been at the bottom of the lake since the dam was finished (using the steam shovel, of course) in 1925. The Thew has been removed from the mud and is in the process of being restored.
While stationed at RAF Chicksands with the USAF from 68 - 72 I
remember going to the pits and going swimming there. I saw
the Shovel while it was under water and along with a few
friends we swam out to it and dove around it to examine what
we could. The water was clear for the most part an it was
interesting to see old equipment. We went to a couple of Pubs
there and were talking about how much effort it would be to
raise and restore the old girl. I do not remember the gentlemen
we talked with but some of them had actually worked in the pits
and on the shovel before it was abandoned. I am glad to see
that she was recovered and restored to a working condition.
History should be preserved for future generation to show how
things worked and give the youth of ever nation something
to be proud of and their heritage.
Abandoned in place, it cost more to disassemble and remove than it was worth at the time. Amazing that the boiler looks safe for a pressure test. Where I live corrosion and rust would have destroyed it in 10 years or less. Wonderful workmanship throughout. Real craftsmen built this behemoth, and real craftsmen rebuilt it. The young men test driving it could easily be the grand, or even great grandchildren of the original builders. Such a great documentary. Thank You for your efforts.
I'm glad this beauty was saved from the Blue Lagoon. Though I live in America, I have always been in love with steam powered shovels, as well as electric and diesel shovels, and railroads and anything railroad related. I have great news that she is operational, as stated in the comments earlier. Once covid restrictions end and the war in Ukraine ends, I would love to go see her in person and watch her operate.
I am an old machinery freak, was a mechanic, this is a superb video thanks, but much of this old machinery, classic or vintage, is the machines that I enjoyed working on in my working life. My friend worked a steam crane unloading coastal container ships, he was one of the lucky ones.
I loved Steam Shovels when I was a kid. We all loved big machinery doing big jobs. This video is a treat!
A true grandchild of the Industrial Revolution! Well done!
The Presenter was Dick Joice the Executive Producer a real gentleman and a delight to work for as were so many of the Anglia Television staff to work with. The problem of welding old cast of the dimensions involved in that restoration, is being able to control the heating and cooling of the castings, to eliminate stresses that will cause further cracks to appear or separation of the new weld from the parent metal. Bygones was a series of progammes that was huge fun to work upon. At that period they were mostly shot on 16mm and then with the addition of studio inserts transferred to Video Tape which at that period was 2 inch Ampex machines and only just out of physical editing by tape splicing to electronic editing. Wonderful days and some of the old technical crew still survive.
Just came across this excellent old documentary. What a good commentary! Concise, informative and colloquial; just what it needed to be.
I've just got in after a busy day, made a Brew, sat down, feet up and watching this. Can it get any better? Yes! Brian Glover narrating and I've just seen a Chopper and Flared pants .....Fantastic!!!
As a young child on, the west side of the pond, a favorite children's book was "Mike Mulligan and his "steam shovel"". Mike's shovel had dug a hole for a large building and were unable to get out. The shovel was retired and Mike and boiler became the heating system for the building. Great job.
Yes I remember that book as a child, also the children's book "Are You My Mother" had a steam shovel that was my favorite part of the book even as a small child.
Having a next door neighbor owning a heavy construction company in my childhood got to see and ride in big equipment.Remember that storybook as one of my favorites,even had a toy steam shovel like the ones in video on steel wheels just like a Bucyrus Erie manufactured in Ohio.
Me too, Jeb. One of my favorite books of my childhood!
@@louisaloi9178 Tonka made a Shovel in the construction vehicles lines. Sadly Tonka doesn't make them today despite the toys commanding collector prices. The large big bulldozer with the rubber tracks was equal to the dump truck for size/scale they still make. Kids could sit on top and drive/ride/operate them. Good times playing with dirt(sandboxes were for babies), sadly a bygone era.......
Jeb Sails still have that book
in my mom's hometown, there is a 90' deep limestone quarry that filled up overnight before WW2, when the pumps died on a weekend. there are steam shovels, dump trucks, and a steam train at the bottom.
What town?!
@@TarmanTheChampion If true what a project! Which I am interested in doing. I have the means to make this happen if anyone wants to contact me?
Its not independence ohio is it lol
@@johnnymichaelangelo9264 huntington, indiana. a lot of the indiana limestone you see in building facades from the prewar era came from that quarry.
@@theenginemanfromthepast.I'd be your apprentice
Hats off to all who restored old digger 10 plus I restored a 1910 Buffalo steam roller so I know what you great people did enjoy your fruits of labor
The steam shovel has been fully restored (again) since this film and its now in fully operating condition, with a roof, as of 2017.
MrWolfSnack Is there a modern link to modern pictures of the steam shovel
@@leslierhodes5467 Here you go: ruclips.net/video/W-YsxnvUPBY/видео.html
Where is this beast now???
in 1979 would they have thought in 2019 we still be talking about and enjoying this piece of beauty. let alone the chap who in 1909 built this thing over 110 years ago. They were just pushing out the project, not expecting to be a piece of history. From the build date, to the restore date each one has had young apprentices cycle through to older journeymen craftsmen. Each one teaching the the ones that would eventually being teaching the ones who actually work on restoring this and now to day maintaining it. Breaking 110 years, a century plus decade or as CX in the roman numerals.....
The change and horrors this machine has been through and had occur in the world surrounding in its life is staggering, from being advance technology to a view of antiquity machinery heading onward to ancient history.....
May the boiler hold up for another several centuries plus. 1/2 a millenia (500 years)overall sound good? I'm sure the service record much mention if we can the factory paper work that came with it....
We need an 110 year video of it in 2019 For a historic view a 2017 still in operations display/use video ruclips.net/video/paFaA2WKCGY/видео.html with some more information and comments worth checking out on a 2016 video of her at ruclips.net/video/W-YsxnvUPBY/видео.html
This is an absolutely awesome documentary, everything about it is just a joy to watch. It’s great to watch people working together and accomplishing a goal without focusing on any drama etc. that dominates modern programming. Also almost anything that has to do with steam I’m interested in.
12:08 Now that’s a smoking pipe!
The reuniting of a man with his machine is priceless.
This is quite fantastic. A tremendous effort. Perhaps call it Bill after the steam shovel in the old children's TV program Mr Squiggle shown here in Australia. I used watch Mr Squiggle as a child over 50 years ago! Have never seen a real steam shovel!
for a person interested in steam engines it was great seeing it first being recovered and then restored to working order i think they made her old driver's day its great to know that this old girl is now fully restored with a roof
its interesting to note that the apprentices are probably now either retired or near retirement age....this video appears to be shot in the 70's....nice video...
Welds can be repaired waiting for more money to arrive
tooez90 He mentions at one point that it was built in 1909, and that it was brought back to the same place for restoration 70 years later. So it was filmed in 1979 then (he also mentioned Star Wars, so you know it had to be after 1977.)
...
??
1977 by Ruston expert Ray Hooley
By 1980 the 306 Steam Digger was steaming again.
Hooley gave the machine to the VET in 2008 and it was moved to Threlkeld Quarry and Mining Museum
God bless George Albin. The smile on his face was worth the watch.
Albon
I fell in love with these beauties when I was a child; after reading 'Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel'.
I just love these old bygone vintage videos (see some from the days of the London, Midland and Scottish railway).
As far as I am concerned, the choice of the late, great Brian Glover (actor and professional all-in wrestler) was a brilliant move... what a lovely Yorkshire (Barnsley) accent he had, very similar to Sir Michael Parkinson.
Joe
We knew this place as " Arelsey Pits " when we used to go fishing there when I was very young
, its only a few miles from Letchworth, I live in Australia now, but still remember " The blue lagoon " well, favourite place for dumping stolen cars.
History brought to life. Fascinating. Old vid, shot before the days of RUclips obviously, but perfectly suited. Well-paced, and well-narrated. IH, thank you for working to preserve the memory of working for a living back when men were men, a hard day's work meant you had something called integrity, and SJW's were non-existent. Well done!!
Fantastic video. This restoration would be in the 10's of millions to accomplish today!
No it wouldn’t
Seeing this video reminded me that I used to see the old shovel when I was stationed at RAF Chicksands in the USAF.
Going there was a favorite place to both fish, swim and party;l We used to swim out to the shovel and diver off the
boom. that was back between 68 - 72 time frame. Seeing it brought back a lot of memories and I am glad to see
they rescued her from the water. I dove around her and at one time had some pretty good pic I took on a bright day
when the waters was clear and while not as good as I prefered they were still pretty good pics. It will be interesting
to see if they post a video after they get her restored and running again.
Glad to hear it working now, I remember swimming out to it and diving around it when I was stationed
over there. I love the old steam equipment I saw working in England and the numerous events that
took place all year long. I tried to make as many as possible . Now just have to wait for the video
of her resurrection and rebuilding to see her run again.
It's beyond me how anyone could dislike this, what could be wrong with their minds?
Wrong button stray thumb on small screen? Then comes the idiot factor which we have 100 of people that fit into that categories as of December 8 2018 with 465,790 views and over 2.5K+ of likes/Thumbs Up what it was orginal called right. FB has reprogrammed our speech sadly.
Damn this jumped a lot in just 3 weeks after my comment on January 1st 2019 there are 516,792 views 2.9K likes and 20 more idiots that want clickbait short videos that spoon feed rehashed clips for 1290 thumbs down. 51,005 views or 17,001+ per week. I wonder what suddenly drove traffic here and why youtube started featuring/suggesting it as new content to check out....... In maybe 6 months or so someone will list the views and do the math because the analytics on this video must be cool to see..
@@PatrickBaptist I listened very carefully to the presentation and nowhere did the narrator make that alleged statement. He did say that the salvors would not allow non- divers under water? I suppose if one tries hard enough, they will hear what they want-- like politics today.
@Demo Easy there big fella-- no one's trying to get in a pissing contest here. In fact, I didn't particularly enjoy or "like" the presentation that much. There are many more impressive projects involving restoration than this. It was only a proud legacy to the driver that last handled the machine .See comment below.
@@PatrickBaptist you been drinking soy or daddies milk
makes me wish I could have been there to be part of the team that's restoring this wonderful machine
An exceptional documentary on a piece of history. I loved it, the narration was great.
In addition to being an amazing story, I love the first minute and 20 seconds or so of the video. The music- the images- the title card... it kind of reminds me of the beginning of a '60's B horror movie. I love it. ❤
That Raleigh chopper bicycle at 9:16 is a real collectors item now!
Back in the '70s, due to bosses repeatedly wanting me to machine cast iron that they had welded, I knew that you cannot weld cast Iron with steel electrodes and expect any strength. Unless they are special cast iron electrodes and the piece is pre-heated and even that is questionable. Neat video and project though, thanks for posting it.
I dont believe you rustybycycle, i would be highly unsafe with a 5" crack in the main frame with could be clearly seen on this old (Umatic?) footage.
***** There is a BIG difference between working as designed or simply moving.
***** first vid, then believe, Anyway it not THIS shovel. This one is fubar after all.
***** show me
Stainless rod. Welded many castings. Best I ever did was iron track pads, preheated in furnace, laid air arc rod in pin holes, and welded around it with stainless wire. High stress area, and still working.
I have been in contact with Ray Hooley last week, hope he is not dead as he is getting me details of a Ruston diesel engine
What a great show. I love the narrator's style; he sounds genuinely involved and excited. And I was really gonna be mad if they didn't give the shovel's last driver a little 'stick time.'
But why 'navvy?" (sp?)
Navvy is/was a slang term for a manual labourer typically employed to dig excavations using pick and shovel etc. Such things as roads, tunnel, canals, railway cuttings and building foundations would all have been dug by navvys back in the days before the myriad of mechanical diggers were even thought of. One train of thought is that it is a shortening of the term 'navigational engineer' but I'm not sure that such could be applied to what is generally regarded as a navvy. Hope this is of help.
Hold on one minute! That is my digger. I forgot where I parked it in that lake some years ago. I would like it back NOW! Please box it up and send it back to Detroit. I will provide my post office box soon. I was out getting groceries with it when I misplaced the key fab and I could not hear the steam horn beep so I had to walk home to Detroit with my groceries in hand and MY Navi I thought was impounded......however I see that some clowns must have taken it for a joy ride and put it in Loch Ness.
13:00. “No damage was done to any of the men, or MORE IMPORTANTLY the old Navvy”. Sure, lots of extra men around, but only one navvy, LOL
Ive never seen a steam crane in action, they possibly still in use when i was a wee lad but we have none restored, at least in my home state.I always loved the dinky little tank engines converted into light crane locos myself.
Brilliant bit of original film at the start and end- Health and safety nowhere to be seen! Lovely to hear Brian Glover, what a sad day with his passing. Brilliant actor!
Thank You for the update , very glad to know they were able to restore the old machine !
Dick Joyce was a good presenter and was the front man for farming Diary for many years in the 60's
When I was a nipper in the 70s my next door neighbour used to work at Ruston. They were still there in the late 80s, but I don't know if they are still going today.
I got here from an article in "Classic Plant" magazine. The old girl is up and working for exhibitions in 2015
+504mitchm Do you know if there are anymore videos of this grand piece of machinery ?
@@emdman1959 Read comments above there are 2016 and 2017 videos and as you to day there will be videos upload everyday she is running in font of people. Just finding them all is the hard part.
Great film,nice to see the crownclark telescopic crane first time I've seen a 65ton model .this was very advanced for its day,they later changed their name to cosmos cranes in the late 1970s.
*A steam shovel isn't a crane. A road grader isn't a scraper. Steam shovels were before my time but I did get lots of stick (and foot) time operating a cable backhoe. Also operated a Cat D-8 cable dozer pulling a cable scraper, that combo known as "Cat and a can." Never had the opportunity to operate a cable shovel. For the non-operators, shovels are used for ground level and higher. Backhoes are designed for below ground level although the modern hydraulic backhoes, now called excavators, can dig high above ground.
The restoration team must have been upset when the crane broke down. But I think they'll cherish those precious memories of it working for just a little while
Bell bottom blue jeans worn by the salvage team. that dates it!
approx 1975 i guess.
That 'modern' crane 'looking like something out of Star Wars' puts it at 1977. By 1980 the flairs or bell-bottoms had all gone.
Philip Jones Girls looked great in bell bottoms. You can still buy them if you know where to look.
And a crane operator wearing a tie.
He mentions 1902, and then says a bit later "that was 70 years ago". 1902+70 = 1972. But then he goes on to mention the crane "looking like something out of Star Wars", Star Wars came out in 1977. He leater went on to say that 2 years on restoration have passed. The first surveying photographs of this project were taken in 1976 before recovery. 1976+ 2 = 1978. This film was published approximately 1978 or so, but would have been filmed a couple years earlier, as it takes some time to edit and narrate the video and waiting for the project to be completed so narration can be done, and then splice it all together onto a new reel.
This is an Incredible video this man got to operate the shovel again I love history like this it's really uplifting
I could watch films like this all day long and more.
Thanks Joseph, it made the effort worthwhile, more at thiswascumbria.uk/ ps I found the last DVD in the UK after chasing a lead from Anglia and they kindly gave me not for profit permission to put it on RUclips so thanks Anglia TV. Peter
Awesome video of awesome machine, and people.
What happened to this marvelous piece of history? Did they fix her up and cast new roller's.
Back when a crane operator showed up for work with a suit an tie on underneath the coveralls
The real treasure was to see British folk get the machine back to a British factory with British know-how and eager apprentices! Wonder if our wonderful government have killed them off? I hope not!
@stephen john gray The health and safety people have killed a lot of initiatives especially on the rally fields,they are just a bunch of idiots!!!!!
@@lesleygent5914 idiot.
Nor killed them off exactly, just replaced them with non-native Brits who will eventually out-breed the natives until none are left in about 400 years or so.
@@TPQ1980 No in 50 years time you will be riding camels:-))))))))))))))))
Despite Ruston (& then Ruston & Hornsby) producing so much machinery that contributed to the Allies winning both World-Wars, the original British owners back then would be spinning in their graves if they knew that the company is now part of the German conglomerate Siemens!!!
The new crane "straight out of Star Wars" just pulls up to the bank and lifts out what used to be a huge crane back in the day. lol
Loved every minute of it,our past coming to our future. Awesome to see something older than myself brought back to life. Just to kool.
So good to hear Brian Glover's voice again. Gone but not forgottent.
the problem of modern science is the fact that the old machines were built stronger and better than anything today, because nothing lasts as long as it did back then
Brian Glover narrating, a steam shovel - Diamond T, Aveling plus Scammel Crusader - dose not get better than that...........
Heck, the video is 50 years old now!!!
Wonderful old film and superb restoration, so well done guys!
9:16 A chopper bike! That would fetch a few bob these days...PS Loving the flares..😉
Nice to hear Brian glover's voice again.
what an absolutely wonderful project, congratulations to all those concerned. I think I saw the narrator was Brian Glover, you couldn't have made a better choice...... I think he might be "The fat Conductor" in disguise. Where does the term "Navey" come from please? What a really meaningful way to set the apprentices to a task, it would have been the best learning curve of their young lives. Well done guys, a video well worth the read
A time when machines were operated by men of steel. R.I.P. Mr. Hooley.
great piece of history, not the shovel but the flared jeans and the chap on the Raleigh chopper!
Truely amazing, I thoroughly enjoyed watching this, what an achievement.
amazing Its really great to see old machines being brought back and restored god bless
Ol' Fred Dibnah would be smiling up in heaven....
Recognise the Face Shovel or Navvie, there is one at Beamish Historical Open Air Museum. It is an amazing piece of kit. Worth coming to County Durham to see it and so many other gems.
That interesting as my great-grandfather came from Durham but died while working on the construction of the Panama Canal, most likely operating one of the many of Ruston steam-shovel which were shipped over along with their operators to work on the enormous project.
There weren't so many other jobs that Brits were doing as the bulk of the work was done by labourers from the Caribbean & Central America, while the engineers, managers, & supervisors were American!
After the accident, my great-grandmother & only child, my grandmother, migrated here to Australia!
@@MrWombatty Amazing how far you find your ancestors and contemporaries were prepared to move for a new life. I had family move to USA to farm, plus found a relative called "Shadforth Anderson" who as a Doctor went to Australia and then New Zealand after marrying a Canadian Woman in Canada and work passage as ships surgeon. The best of it is he is supposed to have been wanted for "mutilation" of a body in Australia?.
Durham people have always had to be tough and were at the forefront of lots of innovations during the Industrial Revolution, many related to steam and coal in my area. My family sold a piece of land where a steam railway and engines plus gravity steam pulled coal tubs and carriages were made on a line from Hetton to Sunderland Drops opened in 1821 by Wellington. This was prior to Stockton and Darlington and built by Stephenson. You find elements of this area and people all over the world. I came across an engine in a Turkish museum and in Australia, they have a 1903 rail mounted Ruston Bucyrus 65ton Steam Shovel near Victoria, but the Steam Tractor Ruston Bucyrus 125 ton face shovel at Beamish has since a boy always held interest to me. Look it up. My Grandfather born 1901 took me to the open air museum in the 1970`s to see the rebuilt street of houses he used to live in built at Beamish from Hetton Pit. Thanks for the reply and happy New Year from your Durham "cousins".
Does anyone know if the problems discovered were ever fixed and machine brought back to full running status?
Absolutly Fantastic Restauration, Guys I love You👍💕
It was a good story with a sad ending. I can still sit proud in a museum.
Aye, but it is a working museum with the steam shovel operating on special open days thanks to skilled and dedicated volunteers. Peter
Why am I watching this I have to be at work in 5 hours and I'm still awake
great narrator
THANK YOU FOR DETAIL VIDEO AS GREAT WATCHING MADE LONG AND SEE COME BACK WORK LIFE ALL TIME WAS IN WATER
Well done guy's !!
Cast iron is hard to weld. Today you can glue it and make it as strong as it ever was.
Just look what you could achieve before Health & Safety stopped everything.
exactly! No stupid hi vis jackets (they don't need to be seen from the moon), no hard hats, no bureurcratic paper work. They just turned up for work and fecking got on with it.
So 5 years later was she repaired were she cracked? and do you have an up date video? Great video.
It is so very interesting to witness the ressurection of this old girl. It is very difficult to weld cast iron and put the weld under stress. It will work on valve bonnets but on wheels and a rotating memeber; success is not assured. I am sure slutions have been, or will be found. I have not witnessed a Steam Shovel working since 1960.
I realy enjoy seeing those old divingsuits in action (as well as the salvaging).
Wow, absolutely brilliant, nice to click on the link and see it now too.
Thanks , it made the effort worthwhile, more at thiswascumbria.uk/ ps I found the last DVD in the UK after chasing a lead from Anglia and they kindly gave me not for profit permission to put it on RUclips so thanks Anglia TV. Peter
Brilliant Footage and Project, Thanks Guys, Dam good job
I wouldnt be awfully fond of steam power but theres something special about this machine
This -could- should be a book.
The biggest one in the world is in south-east Kansas. "Big Brutus".
Do they have a youtube on it. I worked with various steam equip.ent for 5 plus years
An interesting short. I must say, I was immediately struck with the idea of "Donkegin" from "The Quest"
They don't make 'm like this anymore..
50 years in the water and the drivemech running like this, unbelieveable. :))
And amazing that the volunteers can work out the old skills and teamwork to make it work - go and see it when the demo days are on eventually.
@@industrialheritage2158 I agree, knowledge that becomes lost kept alive and practiced by a bunch of enthousiastic volunteers. How awesome is that. :))
@@Romin.777 I so agree with keeping industrial heritage alive and have just added my brick collection at ruclips.net/video/GylukqIpD0w/видео.html enjoy.
Reminded me of a children's book we had as a kid (mom still has it ) called Digger Dan..lol (from the 60's..)
I hope they can fix the problems and get her working again. What a bummer, after all that work and expense, but they can't just give up now. I think that will figure something out.
очень интересное видео! спасибо Вам за проделаную работу, что дали этому экскаватору - продедушке вторую жизнь.
A good example for the young.....where there is will there is a way. I'd like to see a follow-up to this.
austinwagoncompany No it's not...It's a poor example because; Old stuff is just that; old stuff... These men wasted countless hours, money and effort for a failure...The lesson of; waste your time to do something that will fail is a poor lesson. That's not to say we shouldn't appreciate old things that have been well kept...But, Don't go to the bottom of the ocean to rescue an old penny...
godbluffvdgg just because they had a setback doesn't mean they failed. I believe they continued to work on it and want to see a follow up. Whether their efforts are worth it is relative; I mean, there are alot of rotten people out there that society would rather do away with but Jesus was crucified for them too because even what is worthless to most people still held value to a loving God. Who are we to judge the value of anything? To persevere despite setbacks to achieve a desired result is an excellent example for young people today who seemingly give up when things get difficult.
austinwagoncompany You lost me at jesus...For god's sake (ironically) Jesus is a myth...
+godbluffvdgg may be is a myth...but a good one .
enterBJ40 Too many people have been murdered in his name...I don't see that as a good one...Nobody has been killed over the myth of Santa Clause...That is a good myth...
OMG!! Those flare pants, remember wearing those as a kid!!
Recovering technology that is not ours but of previous magnificent non-stupid civilization...
Love the flared jeans remember them well.But to the point a great job and well worth it
A blast from the past... that was a good job for the apprentices though.
That towing truck looks like it's also steam powered 😂
The Narrator sounds like Brian Johnson from AC/DC
These were the days when Some WORK GOT DONE, Instead of the dysfunctional CANT DO attitude of today
That attitude of which you speak is much of what made me join a Rail Heritage volunteer group. Instead of sitting and crying about what was being lost, we got on and did stuff. And it was great fun too!
Its not can do its to much red tape
You're aware that labour productivity today is much higher, and most of the complaining is done by the babyboom generation, right?
Things are better now than ever before.
DAMN KIDS GET OFF ME LAWN
Oh shut up.. Same old shit one generation has been saying about the last forever. You're no fucking snowflake
I wonder where the old diamond T is now
Does anyone know if this steam shovel is still around?
It certainly is, it was restored (again) after falling into disrepair (again) and is currently under the care of the Vintage Excavator Trust at Threlkeld. There are later clips on here, featuring it (it now has a cab), see further down the comments for the links.