Western Pacific's Fight Against the Odds | America's Underdog Railroad | History in the Dark

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 5 июл 2024
  • Western Pacific was a Class I railroad founded in 1903, but you wouldn't know that by looking at them. Compared to others, WP was rather small, but they never let that stop them from moving forward with their unique Feather River Route. Despite constant setbacks and resistance from competitors stopping their success, they soldiered on well passed the point many other lines had failed completely. Their story only ended when one of their rivals, Union Pacific, saw the potential of WP's territory and purchased them outright.
    0:00 - Intro
    1:02 - The Backstory
    6:14 - The Never Ending Battle
    12:32 - Success in a Foundering Industry
    15:34 - Ending and Legacy
    "The Western Pacific Railroad (reporting mark WP) was a Class I railroad in the United States. It was formed in 1903 as an attempt to break the near-monopoly the Southern Pacific Railroad had on rail service into northern California. WP's Feather River Route directly competed with SP's portion of the Overland Route for rail traffic between Salt Lake City/Ogden, Utah, and Oakland, California, for nearly 80 years. The Western Pacific was one of the original operators of the California Zephyr passenger line."
    🚂 Further reading 🚂
    www.american-rails.com/wester...
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western...
    🟢Join this channel to get access to perks:
    / @historyinthedark
    🟢Patreon - / darknessthecurse
    🟣Discord - / discord
    🔵Facebook - / history-in-the-dark-10...
    🟢Donations - streamlabs.com/edgerabbit/tip
    🔴Reddit - / historyinthedark
    🔴Tiktok - / historyinthedark
    🟣Instagram - / historyinthedark
    🔵Twitter - / darkthecurse
    🟣Merch - / @historyinthedark
    🟣Twitch - / edgerabbit
    Other channels:
    🟢Prehistory in the Dark: / @prehistoryinthedark
    🟣Gaming and Fanfic Readings: / @darknessthecurse
    🟣History Stuff: / @historyinthedark
    👔Merch: streamlabs.com/edgerabbit/merch
    ---
    I WRITE BOOKS! YOU CAN FIND THEM HERE:
    📚Abyss: www.amazon.com/Abyss-Books-Pr...
    📚Pryde: www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08...
    📚Abyss on Audible: www.amazon.com/hz/audible/mlp...
    #history #truestory #documentary

Комментарии • 92

  • @sirrliv
    @sirrliv Год назад +65

    I'm really glad you're continuing this series. For too long it's felt like American railroad history effectively peters out after WWII with the popular narrative of "and then cars and airlines meant the decline of the railroads, something something something Amtrak, maybe Conrail, and here we are today." Only High Iron Productions has dipped into this era, and that was only with the history of BNSF. Please do keep showing how these fallen flags fell.

    • @smallcat848
      @smallcat848 Год назад

      i f your intrested in post WW2 US r ailways AmtrackGuy365 is p retty good tho

  • @MorpheusMF
    @MorpheusMF Год назад +25

    Wester Pacific was bought out by Union Pacific, which also bought Southern Pacific.
    Such a Irony, both Competitors now under one Big Railroad.

    • @yeoldeseawitch
      @yeoldeseawitch Год назад +5

      a great big rollin railroad to be specific

    • @jamescooley5744
      @jamescooley5744 Год назад +2

      @@yeoldeseawitch In 1960 Santa Fe attempted to take control of WP through buying its stock (SF,WP, and GN operated a train between LA and the PNW using the Beiber line that competed with the SP-UP route to the PNW). SP attempted to thwart SFe's intentions by buying WP stock and acquiring WP. The fight for control went to the ICC, which by the mid 60s decided that neither line could buy WP-thus WP remained independent.

  • @kennethhanks6712
    @kennethhanks6712 Год назад +22

    WP didn't have snow or grades but floods and washouts were substantial problems.

  • @Sacto1654
    @Sacto1654 10 месяцев назад +5

    A huge reason why Union Pacific bought Western Pacific was the fact the Feather River Canyon line has a surprisingly low gradient of circa 1%. That mean UP didn't need to run long strings of locomotives to go uphill eastbound like what Southern Pacific had to do over Donner Summit; in fact, UP aggressively upgraded all the tunnels on the Feather River Route to accommodate doublestack container traffic by the middle 1990's.

    • @mikehawk2003
      @mikehawk2003 8 месяцев назад

      Not a big reason. SP purposely diverted traffic away from UP onto the Cotton Rock/Sunset Route during the late 70's which seriously affected the traffic levels on the Overland Route. UP had long desired a direct connection to the Port of Oakland. If they could've gotten the SP route into Oakland, they absolutely would've preferred it for how fast it was in comparison.

  • @harrisonallen651
    @harrisonallen651 Год назад +18

    Alfred would’ve been quite disappointed to see no steam engines for scraping

    • @Sassymouse88
      @Sassymouse88 Год назад +5

      "Aw shucks, bought my chainsaw to work for nothin!"
      😂

    • @marcleslac2413
      @marcleslac2413 Год назад +1

      ​@@Sassymouse88 meanwhile the 6 already preserved western pacific steam locomotives do the Take the L emote from the safety of their museums.

  • @iannarita9816
    @iannarita9816 Год назад +6

    You fail to mention Mike Flanery, WP's last President. It was he who with the rest of WP management who took WP private in an LBO, and then sold the WP to UP. He also saved who's last F units and donated them to museums.

  • @danhoyland142
    @danhoyland142 Год назад +13

    So I’m a business consultant in real life and I have had a lot of experience working with, and becoming friends with, some of the most business savvy business owners of larger sized small businesses. I have to say that after watching these documentaries that you sir are just as smart as they are. They all share this same weird unique characteristic of having a quick wit while being able to see everything around them from a 20,000 foot view. This makes them fantastic at making poignant analysis of complex issues and identifying problems while taking in account how each moving part effects another. I just wanted to tell you that while watching your videos I realized you possess the same knack and are highly intelligent. It’s so refreshing too watching your short documentaries because it doesn’t feel like someone just narrating a slide show while reading a companies biography from Wikipedia. Kudos to you dude.

    • @HistoryintheDark
      @HistoryintheDark  Год назад +1

      Hey, thank you so much! That means a lot!

    • @onestopfabshop3224
      @onestopfabshop3224 Год назад

      I'm a successful SMALL business owner and that was a hell of a compliment!! I too like how you explain things and the fact you're always upbeat. I could take a lesson in the latter.

  • @oldclip70
    @oldclip70 Год назад +7

    WP never bought any 6 axle diesel locomotives. They did utilize the 1% grade to their benefit (except the Highline; which had 2.2%). They ran a lot of perishable and canned goods east. You can thank Sacramento Northern and Tidewater Southern for generating that traffic.

  • @stevejazzy
    @stevejazzy Год назад +9

    btw for those wondering 60 million is $2,051,181,818.18 now in 2023. that is totally insane

  • @lukechristmas3951
    @lukechristmas3951 Год назад +13

    I was hoping for Alfred E. Perleman to appear in this and I'm glad you did enough research to include him. I see he still has his chainsaw.

  • @SouRwy4501Productions
    @SouRwy4501Productions Год назад +4

    It wasn’t a catastrophic failure, but instead a rousing success story.

  • @jamescooley5744
    @jamescooley5744 Год назад +3

    WP was tied to the Rio Grande-RG owned stock in the WP until RG's bankruptcy. The RG connection at Salt Lake City allowed the WP to compete for transcontinental traffic via a WP-RG-Burlington routing...which were also the partners in the California Zephyr.

  • @JackCarsonsRailroadVideos
    @JackCarsonsRailroadVideos Год назад +10

    Interesting History of the WP. Very well done

  • @sulphurspringsrr4383
    @sulphurspringsrr4383 Год назад +7

    You should make a video about the Reading RR in this series, also you could make on about Louisville & Nashville

  • @lordcaptainvonthrust3rd
    @lordcaptainvonthrust3rd Год назад +9

    Factual and fascinating as always 👍

  • @mikehawk2003
    @mikehawk2003 8 месяцев назад +2

    You forgot to mention a big factor in the UP merger; the WP was incredibly reliant on agriculture and the car industry. When those industries went into decline in the late 70s to early 80s, WP knew it would be in big trouble. The Ford plant in Milpitas, CA that justified an entire separate yard was on the verge of closing and it was by far WP's biggest customer. WP also had the aforementioned ATSF-WP-BN Inside Gateway partnership to compete with SP and was another huge source of traffic. With ATSF and SP considering a merger, that was also a serious issue for the railroad. The last issue that the railroad had faced was serious union action that was deeply affecting the railroad. It knew from 1980 onward that it was doomed and so the UP merger was more of a bailout. The UP chose WP for access to the Port of Oakland, as well as to counter SP moving traffic away from the Donner line to the Sunset/Cotton Rock lines.

  • @ebnertra0004
    @ebnertra0004 Год назад +5

    On the subject of WP's CTC system, they used almost the exact same hardware as their chief rival, SP, namely H-2 searchlights from US&S, even mounting heads on two-head signals _seven and a half_ feet apart, just like SP (most railroads used six-foot spacing; and GN, for one, used five). Their rules comprised a whopping 11 signals and didn't use any three-head aspects. They were also painted turquoise for a long time, too, because a carload of turquoise paint derailed once, and the customer just sold the stuff to them. So they used it...

  • @sulphurspringsrr4383
    @sulphurspringsrr4383 Год назад +6

    PS. Love all your videos, keep it up👍

  • @davidetrimigliozzi3091
    @davidetrimigliozzi3091 Год назад +5

    This series is interesting, are you planning a video on great northern?

  • @vaclavmacgregor2464
    @vaclavmacgregor2464 Год назад +15

    Pearlmann back!Luckily he came after Wp diesliazed(quite early in 1955) so 8 WP STEAM ENGINES SURVIVE!

    • @Rocker-1234
      @Rocker-1234 Год назад

      shhhhhhh dont say that his descendants will come to destroy them while everyones asleep 🤣

    • @harrisonofcolorado8886
      @harrisonofcolorado8886 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@Rocker-1234not if my combat shotgun, AR-15, Katana, and my bow and arrows have anything to do about it!

    • @marcleslac2413
      @marcleslac2413 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@harrisonofcolorado8886have a snickers.

    • @harrisonofcolorado8886
      @harrisonofcolorado8886 9 месяцев назад

      @@marcleslac2413 Why?!

  • @marcleslac2413
    @marcleslac2413 Год назад +3

    I think we are all here for 14:17
    GOOD!

  • @2quintly
    @2quintly 9 месяцев назад +2

    Good job with this video. I liked the "positive" flare.

  • @thekidfromcleveland3944
    @thekidfromcleveland3944 Год назад +8

    Technically...............Western Pacific was eligible to join amtrak in the spring of 1971. As a matter of fact the company's original intention was to revive the California zephyr with the original route as it was more populated than the espees. However it was 528 mission st themselves that refused to take any meeting with amtrak whatsoever. As they didnt want to have to buy into to a system that would compete for track space. Also most of the Cz rolling stock had been sold off or given to the CB&Q. So they would've had to contribute their f units or pay a percentage of their losses to join. Not to mention the whole train off experience with the government and ICC left a very bad taste in their mouths when it came to reaching hands across the aisle in Washington. The only attempt came on March 12th of that year. Which they were straight up ignored. However they couldn't prevent amtrak from using their route as a emergency detour and this has happened several times. 1973, 74, 75.....2006??? And 2012. Those are just the ones I know off the dome.

    • @harrisonofcolorado8886
      @harrisonofcolorado8886 Год назад

      I thought Amtrak's original plan was to revive the Zephyr on the original route up to SLC, then past SLC, it would go to Ogden where it would then continue on the Espee to Oakland.

  • @JDsHouseofHobbies
    @JDsHouseofHobbies Год назад +3

    Ah, my beloved Old Wobbly!

  • @hamiltonsullivan6563
    @hamiltonsullivan6563 Год назад +3

    Don't know what these guys are watching but sounds cool👍

  • @RantzBizGroup
    @RantzBizGroup 9 месяцев назад +2

    Excellent video!!!

  • @rottenroads1982
    @rottenroads1982 5 месяцев назад +2

    The 3 Pacific Railroads:
    Southern Pacific, Western Pacific, and Northern Pacific.
    While the Southern Pacific and Western Pacific were consumed by Union Pacific, Northern Pacific was taken over by Burlington Northern which merged with Santa Fe to become BNSF.

  • @candycrushhater5828
    @candycrushhater5828 Год назад +4

    14:45 Little did Alfred Perlman know that at least five WP steam engines made it into preservation.

    • @Imsorrywat
      @Imsorrywat Год назад +1

      “BOYS WHERE ARE THOSE STEAM. ENGINES. YOU PRESERVED!

    • @marcleslac2413
      @marcleslac2413 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@Imsorrywat"I WANT THAT STEAM ENGINE"

  • @vaclavmacgregor2464
    @vaclavmacgregor2464 Год назад +4

    HMM THIS VID IS 1 JOUR EARLIER THAN USUAL

    • @StarrySGH
      @StarrySGH Год назад +1

      Probably because most of the US just went forward an hour for Daylight Savings Time.

  • @jazeroth322
    @jazeroth322 Год назад +4

    Why do we watch history in the dark?
    1 the history.
    2 the MEMES!!!

  • @RailPreserver2K
    @RailPreserver2K Год назад +6

    Tell me do you think you could cover the Gainesville Midland Railway? It was one of the last steam-powered short lines in my area and the railroad and most of the steam engines that ran on it are still in existence today

  • @andrewwhite2863
    @andrewwhite2863 Год назад +2

    Could you do a couple videos on the history of the Nickle Plate Road. And the Lima Locomotive works?

  • @philvanderlaan5942
    @philvanderlaan5942 Год назад +4

    Just a thought with April fools day coming up . Maybe doing a video on railroad games , both board and computer?

  • @williamflowersrailfannerpr3808
    @williamflowersrailfannerpr3808 Год назад +5

    I Miss Western Pacific

  • @TorridPrime217
    @TorridPrime217 Год назад +2

    How -HOW did I know Albert Perlman was going to show up in this video?

  • @catboyandwolfgirl4545
    @catboyandwolfgirl4545 Год назад +3

    Could you talk about the success of Union Pacific next?

  • @SmokyHillsSwitcher
    @SmokyHillsSwitcher Год назад +4

    Denver and Rio Grande Western when?

  • @donutlordband24
    @donutlordband24 11 месяцев назад +2

    the story of the wprr would make for a good underdog movie

  • @PantherLineProductionsofOhio
    @PantherLineProductionsofOhio 3 месяца назад

    I would love to see you do a detailed video on the Wabash railroad.

  • @calvingreene90
    @calvingreene90 Год назад +2

    Being bought because you being great value to the table is entirely different than being bought to settle debts at a discount.

  • @dknowles60
    @dknowles60 Год назад +3

    Al after 1972 Became CEO of the WP

  • @robertwilloughby8050
    @robertwilloughby8050 Год назад +5

    Ah, History, are you ready for your dose of..... Pearlman!

  • @jamesleyshon
    @jamesleyshon Год назад +3

    Do the Denver and rio grande western please

  • @midnightexpress8556
    @midnightexpress8556 Год назад +2

    If you do another one of these do the old NS please no one give this old railroad a thought when it comes to old class 1’s. (It was bought by Southern in 1974)

  • @kristoffermangila
    @kristoffermangila Год назад +2

    How about continuing this fallen flag series with the other constituent railroads of Union Pacific like C&NW, D&RG, et al...

  • @Dannyedelman4231
    @Dannyedelman4231 Год назад +3

    Can you do a video of KCS

  • @class28studios78
    @class28studios78 Год назад +2

    Could you possibly talk about how Southern Pacific and Santa Fe were going to merge, but that didn't happen?

  • @93greenstrat
    @93greenstrat Год назад +2

    If those knuckleheads at PC would have listened to Pearlman and not been at war with each other, they may have at least lasted longer than they did. But hey, look at the bright side: we got Conrail.

  • @zsoren42
    @zsoren42 9 месяцев назад +2

    Espees route over the mountain will always be superior to the WPs because the steep grades and slow speeds with those grades only range for about 40 miles from Colfax to the summit. After that it was all down hill and out across the high desert, Espee could get to that high speed desert a lot faster to

  • @fanofeverything30465
    @fanofeverything30465 Год назад +2

    Just for added suspension my phone frose at 14:40 😆

  • @johnoneill5661
    @johnoneill5661 6 месяцев назад +1

    Good old Montgomery Burns the perfect meme for the greedy robber train barons of then and now. 👍

  • @donnie2832
    @donnie2832 Год назад +2

    What are your favorite F Unit locomotive railroad liveries?

  • @sp786fanboy9
    @sp786fanboy9 Год назад +2

    14:41 “All of our steam engines are gone”. My guys, y’all just donated Nos. 94 and 334 a few years before Perlman came along. We’re y’all *trying* to lie to him?

  • @joshatterberry2887
    @joshatterberry2887 8 месяцев назад +2

    Do the Missouri Kansas Texas railroad also known as the Katy

  • @redranger3742
    @redranger3742 Год назад +2

    There are five surviving western pacific steam locomotives

  • @Robbi496
    @Robbi496 Год назад +2

    The EsPee never got to SLC, they went to Ogden, also it is pronounced Goold, not Gold, good video though

  • @sweetroll1723
    @sweetroll1723 Год назад +5

    Hah. Im the 69th like. Nice.

  • @Rocker-1234
    @Rocker-1234 Год назад +2

    anyone know if hes covered that dude from the new york railroad in detail? i already despise him but i lowkey wanna see how much bad that muppet got lol

    • @carldebellis7310
      @carldebellis7310 Год назад +1

      Look up his video on Penn Central. Pearlman was actually a rather competent executive.

    • @Rocker-1234
      @Rocker-1234 Год назад

      @@carldebellis7310 he may have been competent but imo he was still wildly unreasonable. everyone can understand modernisation but the lengths it sounds like he went with new york railroad atleast to kill off steamers even when people offered to buy the locos from him is a d**k move. especially when the only reasoning ive heard given was he wanted the scrap money. cause if that was the reasoning why refuse to let people take the locos off his hands? its literally standard practice even in those times for preservationists to atleast offer scrap value to the railroads for them. not to mention even the couple times people requested he donates an engine... its like 5-15k... im sure even back then 5-15k was absolute pennies to a railroad.
      which is kinda the reason i was hoping there was a video dedicated to him or whatever... cause atleast with brittish rail while they were incredibly unreasonable towards heritage until recent times, atleast with them from my understanding it wasnt really thier choice. the government was up thier a** to modernise so they just went crisis mode to do what they could. pearlman just seems like the joke of him having a vandetta against steam is more real than a joke. wouldve been interesting to see an insight into wtf was going through his mind ya know? especially considering alot of other railways were alot more open to preservation than him. but him? the only engines that survived his bs were either sold before modernisation or i think a couple were hidden?
      hell look at the incident with metro and that one dude... they had zero reason to give a damn, or care outside of settling with the dude so they could build thier new workshop, but even they tried to stop it being scraped and tried to get permission to just move the thing on his behalf and held thier employees who screwed the whole thing up accountable.

    • @mikehawk2003
      @mikehawk2003 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@Rocker-1234 Donating an engine is not 5k-15k, it was a logistical nightmare and you still need to pay people to do it. Railroads that chose to do it did it at the request of a city who wanted a park engine for publicity sake. Men like Perlman or Southern Pacific's D.J. Russel are ruthlessly efficient men who were also arguably the best of their railroad's leadership. They weren't publicity people too. If you read up about Russel, you would know SP under him had very negative publicity due to the purposeful decline of their passenger trains, yet the 1960-1972 era of the SP was its greatest. The same could be said about Perlman during his tenure on the WP.
      Also if you are referring to the GTW 5629 incident, that was the locomotive owner's fault, he was repeatedly told to move his engine over the course of several years but chose not to. It was HIS property intruding on THEIR land preventing the construction of necessary facilities. Richard Jensen was given so many offers to purchase his engine so it could be moved but he was known for being litigatious and was probably trying to get money in a court battle.

  • @joneades1364
    @joneades1364 Год назад +2

    L&N video ?

  • @rottenroads1982
    @rottenroads1982 15 дней назад

    15:07, Penn Central exploding.

  • @TB76Returns
    @TB76Returns Год назад +7

    Alfred E. Perlman is as much of a running gag as British Rail

    • @kennethhanks6712
      @kennethhanks6712 Год назад +3

      You might want to re-listen to video from 14:55 on. Perlman was an excellent railroad operations and business man. From his D&RGW days to his aggressive tenure at NYC, where he pushed modern operations such as the flexi-van (trailer/container precursor), etc and only the ill-fated PC fiasco he opposed derailed his efforts to re-envigorate the Central.
      WP benefited from his expertise to become more desirable to UP. His reputation amoung practical railroaders, during a period when much of railroading was struggling just to survive, probably not far off from SRs Brosnan.

    • @dknowles60
      @dknowles60 10 месяцев назад

      how young are you

  • @markfrench8892
    @markfrench8892 Год назад +3

    It's pronounced Clie-o, please.

  • @amtrakproductions-mx9ib
    @amtrakproductions-mx9ib Год назад +7

    Do 5 of the best trains ever part 8 with more british rail and you have a war with british rail and before that you say THATS IT BRITISH RAIL THIS CALLS FOR WAR and add the F-units

  • @Warzsoffical
    @Warzsoffical 4 месяца назад +1

    The western pacific be like to UP and SP before being bought out
    : 🖕😐🖕

  • @rogerwhittemore9950
    @rogerwhittemore9950 11 месяцев назад +1

    Gould = goo ld, not gold.