Congrats are in order to all the volunteers in bringing back a railroad that everyone thought was gone for good. You guys and gals keep up the amazing work!
Thanks for that great footage. No narration, just pure joy of sound of heyday. When we almost stall while filming from head end, i almost stand and detrain from my couch to cut on weight. Minus geotextile, we where back in 1923 with scale speed and track imperfections !! Just wonder how was the roadbed before work begin ? Armstrong turntable or turntable for strong arms ? May be the latter....
@@danielfantino1714 The roadbed had not seen a train since 1933, rails were removed by 1937, and was used as a logging road occasionally until the bridge over Trout Brook was impassible by the 1960s. Major sections were washed out and it was completely overgrown and reforested by the time we started restoring the route in 2017.
@@WWFRailway thanks for your fast answer. Luckily roadbed stayed untouched. You did fantastic job with your crew. Be proud. You were lucky that covid came first. So many organisations suffered from years of shut down and fresh cash. Steam operations are hard. In narrow gauge world even worst. We all have to thanks the original Edaville. Without him (forgot its name for its cranberries farm) nothing would have survived. And Lowe´s doesn´t sell much Mason Bogie. A bit smaller and you fall in live steamer world. Wrapping the bridge was to protect it from éléments i suppose. Sort of cheaper covered bridge. Impressive work you did. Hope for the best.
@@danielfantino1714 We did the final work to open the extension during the height of the pandemic (and set us back one year.) The bridge IS a "covered bridge" - but a now-rare design as only the sides are covered, rather than also protecting the bridge deck with a roof. This is called a "boxed pony" covered bridge and is one of only 5 the survive in the United States. That is why it was rescued by the National Society for the Preservation of Covered Bridges when it was burned in its original location on a Boston and Maine RR branch in Gorham, NH, then ultimately reconstructed for use on the WW&F. And Edaville was named after its founder, Ellis D. Atwood, and his initials EDA - EDAville. The turntable at Trout Brook was at Edaville, having come originally from the Bridgton & Saco River RR.
Wow, talk about an armstrong turntable. Needs the big handles like most manual tables have and a larger center bearing would help too. Looks like a great place and thanks for the video.
Nice to see the equipment representing other Maine 2-footers as well - B&SR, SR&RL, and WW&F predecessor W&Q. Wonder if they any cars lettered for the Monson RR? Pretty neat that the original right-of-way was still undeveloped and could be reopened.
Unfortunately no Monson railcars were preserved. Despite that two locomotives from MRR were saved and #4 is currently stored/on display at WWF Alna. #3 is operational and currently stored at Edaville Railroad.
Seldom do you see a "covered bridge without the roof" around much anymore. One such road structure still exists (albeit, it is now closed and bypassed) is the Russell Hill Road bridge, seemingly, it's quite well preserved as well, spanning the Blood Brook west of Wilton, NH and, is clearly visible being next to NH Route 101. Checking it out from underneath one February, back when the brook was low and ice covered I noted that the truss structure, covered with only its sides, was a Town Lattice design.
South Coast Rail Videos has become my favorite rail video producer. I was really excited to see that you were doing a WW&F video. You did not disappoint. Thank you. With all the videos that you've shot in SE Ma and RI, what are the chances of shooting the Seaview? Having never seen them, it would be awesome to catch them in action. Again, thank you for another great video.
Hi, I actually have a couple Seaview videos up already if you scroll back to last year and 2017. I do plan to make another soon when their new customer opens up. Thank you!
Love that there’s parts of Edaville still out there! Edaville was our childhood here in SE Mass. When they closed and parts went north we didn’t understand that they weee really just going home. Glad to see it all living on!
The track came from various sources. The rail was salvaged a while back from I believe Louisiana or another state. The ties are actually wood highway guard rail posts. As for the forum, I do not know. I assume the museum would have that for other projects.
@@happyhome41 The entire line is now 3.5. The part this video shows is 3/4 of a mile. They probably still need to update the website since the line extension is brand new.
@@SouthCoastRailVideos i don´t agree. May be i´m wrong but i doubt these generally poor railroads, that finally failed and shut down, with "short" distances had superb trackwork. I´m pretty sure that you´re prototypical. Everything was done by hand and shovels. Their track was probably far more bumpy. And being not standard gauge, hard to borrow one from neighbor railroad or contractor.
Congrats are in order to all the volunteers in bringing back a railroad that everyone thought was gone for good. You guys and gals keep up the amazing work!
Thanks for watching!
Excellent coverage. Thanks for being a part of our celebration!
Thank you for putting the event together for all to enjoy! I’ve already been a few times but I’ll definitely be coming back more often!
Thanks for that great footage. No narration, just pure joy of sound of heyday. When we almost stall while filming from head end, i almost stand and detrain from my couch to cut on weight. Minus geotextile, we where back in 1923 with scale speed and track imperfections !!
Just wonder how was the roadbed before work begin ?
Armstrong turntable or turntable for strong arms ? May be the latter....
@@danielfantino1714 The roadbed had not seen a train since 1933, rails were removed by 1937, and was used as a logging road occasionally until the bridge over Trout Brook was impassible by the 1960s. Major sections were washed out and it was completely overgrown and reforested by the time we started restoring the route in 2017.
@@WWFRailway thanks for your fast answer. Luckily roadbed stayed untouched. You did fantastic job with your crew. Be proud. You were lucky that covid came first. So many organisations suffered from years of shut down and fresh cash. Steam operations are hard. In narrow gauge world even worst. We all have to thanks the original Edaville. Without him (forgot its name for its cranberries farm) nothing would have survived. And Lowe´s doesn´t sell much Mason Bogie. A bit smaller and you fall in live steamer world. Wrapping the bridge was to protect it from éléments i suppose. Sort of cheaper covered bridge.
Impressive work you did. Hope for the best.
@@danielfantino1714 We did the final work to open the extension during the height of the pandemic (and set us back one year.) The bridge IS a "covered bridge" - but a now-rare design as only the sides are covered, rather than also protecting the bridge deck with a roof. This is called a "boxed pony" covered bridge and is one of only 5 the survive in the United States. That is why it was rescued by the National Society for the Preservation of Covered Bridges when it was burned in its original location on a Boston and Maine RR branch in Gorham, NH, then ultimately reconstructed for use on the WW&F.
And Edaville was named after its founder, Ellis D. Atwood, and his initials EDA - EDAville. The turntable at Trout Brook was at Edaville, having come originally from the Bridgton & Saco River RR.
SOMEDAY... I HOPE TO SEE THE TRACKS EXTEND SOUTH,218, PAST THE STATION ,BEHIND MY HOUSE AGAIN!!
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Love those trains🚂 man great job filming.💯😎👍🏼
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Thank You for this fine video. Very nice!
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At 19:12 now that's the beautiful sound that can't be outdone except maybe the Eureka up the grade of Silverton & Durango.
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Great video, thanks for sharing!! Love seeing Jay put 7 to work. 🔥
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Great video thanks
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Wow, talk about an armstrong turntable. Needs the big handles like most manual tables have and a larger center bearing would help too. Looks like a great place and thanks for the video.
Thanks for watching!
Nice to see the equipment representing other Maine 2-footers as well - B&SR, SR&RL, and WW&F predecessor W&Q. Wonder if they any cars lettered for the Monson RR? Pretty neat that the original right-of-way was still undeveloped and could be reopened.
Unfortunately no Monson railcars were preserved. Despite that two locomotives from MRR were saved and #4 is currently stored/on display at WWF Alna. #3 is operational and currently stored at Edaville Railroad.
@@SouthCoastRailVideos with lenght of 6 miles, that something survived is phenomenal !!
WOW✨ Beautiful ✨🚂🚃🚃💐🌹🌹✨♥️♥️✨💯👍✨💌✨
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Awesome footage 👏
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Congrats and great news!
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Scenery reminds me of Puffing Billy, here in the Dandenong ranges of Victims, Australia
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How many miles do these locos go before they need to take on water
Awesome to see this ✌️
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Wooop! Wooop!
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Sir.
Feeling is similarly to a Beautifull train journey through on narrow gauge railway 👍👍❤️❤️ I am from.. India 🇮🇳
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What was the wooden structure the train went through?
It is a covered wood truss bridge
@@SouthCoastRailVideos Ok Thanks. Not used to seeing bridges of this sort without a roof.
Seldom do you see a "covered bridge without the roof" around much anymore. One such road structure still exists (albeit, it is now closed and bypassed) is the Russell Hill Road bridge, seemingly, it's quite well preserved as well, spanning the Blood Brook west of Wilton, NH and, is clearly visible being next to NH Route 101.
Checking it out from underneath one February, back when the brook was low and ice covered I noted that the truss structure, covered with only its sides, was a Town Lattice design.
@@williamh.jarvis6795 Thanks.
@@williamh.jarvis6795 There are only six "boxed pony" covered bridges left in North America.
South Coast Rail Videos has become my favorite rail video producer. I was really excited to see that you were doing a WW&F video. You did not disappoint. Thank you. With all the videos that you've shot in SE Ma and RI, what are the chances of shooting the Seaview? Having never seen them, it would be awesome to catch them in action. Again, thank you for another great video.
Hi, I actually have a couple Seaview videos up already if you scroll back to last year and 2017. I do plan to make another soon when their new customer opens up. Thank you!
Did #9 run in Carver Ma.?
Excellent video.Did that turntable come from Edaville in Carver ma.?
Yes, it was originally the B&SR table that later went to Edaville
Love that there’s parts of Edaville still out there! Edaville was our childhood here in SE Mass. When they closed and parts went north we didn’t understand that they weee really just going home. Glad to see it all living on!
Good train 🎁🎁🎁🎁🎁🎁👍👍👍🧑💼new best friend
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😯Track gauge 2 ft (610 mm)
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In the end, Narrow Gauge Railways/Railroads are Cool. Wether they be in the US, the UK, or in Australia, they are all very cool.
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Well done. Where did the track come from, and where did the forum go?
The track came from various sources. The rail was salvaged a while back from I believe Louisiana or another state. The ties are actually wood highway guard rail posts. As for the forum, I do not know. I assume the museum would have that for other projects.
Hard to tell from the map -- one mile of track ?
About 3/4 miles
Read on their website “2.6 miles”. Don’t know what all they’re counting
@@happyhome41 The entire line is now 3.5. The part this video shows is 3/4 of a mile. They probably still need to update the website since the line extension is brand new.
Nice. Thank you.
@@SouthCoastRailVideos Yep. Now fixed. 🙂
Is that narrow gauge
2 ft gauge
Trout brook
Elisha springs
Fluid mechanic laboratory
Ground floor
laboratory
Poo thandalum
Poo thandalum
Elisha springs
Good vid. but it drove me a little crazy that the brake wheel handle was on upside down. 🤓🙄
Thanks for watching!
Good video, but that track work is atrocious
Why is that?
@@SouthCoastRailVideos i don´t agree. May be i´m wrong but i doubt these generally poor railroads, that finally failed and shut down, with "short" distances had superb trackwork. I´m pretty sure that you´re prototypical.
Everything was done by hand and shovels. Their track was probably far more bumpy. And being not standard gauge, hard to borrow one from neighbor railroad or contractor.