Northern Pacific Shops at Brainerd, Minnesota

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 31 янв 2025

Комментарии • 33

  • @raykeogh8533
    @raykeogh8533 4 месяца назад +1

    Superb research and presentation!

  • @bedlam71
    @bedlam71 28 дней назад +1

    This is a wonderful video with no mistakes that I can tell, which is rare. Great job putting it together.

  • @patmcdonald766
    @patmcdonald766 8 месяцев назад +2

    During the last CENTURY I actually rode the passenger car and had a ticket. The nice Conductor made sure to get me off at the Brainerd Station where I would meet my Auntie or Grandma. Even though I was only 9 I was old enough to ride without an adult. Made me feel great. Riding with friends that worked on the train who always knew MY Great Grandfather had died in 1917 explosion that took out the ROUND HOUSE

  • @Brutushungwell
    @Brutushungwell Год назад +2

    My great uncle and aunt lived across the street from the shops in Brainard.

  • @kneel1
    @kneel1 Год назад +9

    Just want to re-iterate how much I absolutely love your channel.

  • @dogyerf21
    @dogyerf21 Год назад +1

    Great video!

  • @darroniverson
    @darroniverson Год назад +1

    Very good presentation.
    Learned a lot.

  • @edwardstd52
    @edwardstd52 Год назад +9

    I've had the occasion to drive through Brainerd quite often starting in the 1970s and saw many of the more recent changes taking place. This video does a great job of filling in what happened "back in the old days." Thanks!

  • @jimmeltate2139
    @jimmeltate2139 Год назад +4

    thank you i enjoy all of your videos

  • @218philip
    @218philip Год назад +14

    Growing up in Aitkin, 30 miles to the east made Brainerd the “big” city to visit and shop.

  • @wolfgangweber9924
    @wolfgangweber9924 Год назад +3

    That is an excellent video for a variety of reasons: from the clear diction, short sentences, synchronized highlighting of the text to the selection of historic maps. Absolutely excellent!

  • @JP-su8bp
    @JP-su8bp Год назад +3

    Solid presentation, thank you.

  • @jeffreywick4057
    @jeffreywick4057 Год назад +3

    Excellent presentation!

  • @fertfaust
    @fertfaust Год назад +6

    Wow, and excellent history of "The Shops" as we used to call them as kids. The Shop's shift change whistle was our timepiece back then, and it told us when we were to be heading home for supper, and more. Lots of good info here in a timeline that tells the decades-long history in a concise and informative way.

  • @MrMopar413
    @MrMopar413 Год назад +3

    That gave me goosebumps. My grandfather came over from Norway in around 1890 for a few years then went back to get his bride to be. Then came back over and finally settled in Hawley Minnesota. Around 1896. He had 3 children by his first wife who past away. He then remarried had two more girls and my mother was the last one born in 1920. He did a lot of different employment in Hawley and was part of the board of directors of the First National bank of Hawley- Dilworth Minnesota. He built the family house in Hawley that still stands to this day. He must of done OK because he owned a Saxton automobile back then, they where vary expensive. I never met him or my grandmother because they all past away decades before I was born.

  • @richardhead1114
    @richardhead1114 Год назад +4

    Great video it’s fun to learn about the towns you drive through and wonder why it was built.

  • @sagecoach
    @sagecoach Год назад +3

    Como Shops in St. Paul - now Bandana Square - are similar and my Northern Pacific career started there in 1961. The Brainard Shops were important to the Como Shops' passenger and freight car work. I enjoyed working at both shops over the years. You have produced a wonderful historical update.

  • @samuelt5131
    @samuelt5131 Год назад +2

    Like a lot of online things, I came across this one by random chance (I think...).
    My dad was from Crosby, Mn (15 miles east) , and we visited Brainerd many times. Very interesting.

  • @billcasso5428
    @billcasso5428 Год назад +1

    very interesting thanks. My dad was a Brakeman/Conductor on the NP

  • @clydeschwartz
    @clydeschwartz Год назад

    Very interesting video

  • @LearnwithJanice
    @LearnwithJanice Год назад

    🇺🇸 hello from Kansas

  • @tahlulabang
    @tahlulabang Год назад

    I live in Walker Minnesota about 60 mi north of brainerd and we own the original cement block making machine that basically built this whole town in the late 1800s and it still works

  • @kevinmoynihan8087
    @kevinmoynihan8087 Год назад

    Wow. Impressive video. Will re-visit. As another person noted, this is very similar to Bandana Square in St Paul…it’s been converted to a medical clinic and an event center and some offices….overall it seems to be thriving…folks think of shops first…but a medical clinic is always necessary and generally a very good option…the medical companies have the funds to rehab it properly….

  • @BGwhy
    @BGwhy Год назад +1

    My Grandfather was a machinist at the shops.

  • @patmcdonald766
    @patmcdonald766 Год назад

    My Great Grandfather was a worker in the Locomotive Shop until he was involved in an Industrial explosion that killed him. Many of the carpenter moved on but had come from Finland, Europe with offers of LAND, Hunting and Blueberries.

  • @keltecshooter
    @keltecshooter 8 месяцев назад

    I worked at the Oelwein Ia shops for CNW in the late 70s and early 80s , went back a few years ago and its a total shame how a great repair shop could be turned to utter garbage.

  • @chuckoaks6756
    @chuckoaks6756 7 месяцев назад

    How many churches at that time.

  • @rosemarycornwell1528
    @rosemarycornwell1528 Год назад +2

    Wah-tab, not Wah-tahb.

  • @SharonNitz
    @SharonNitz 10 месяцев назад

    l have some chaska bricks

  • @claudiadarling9441
    @claudiadarling9441 Год назад

    Wow, Brainerd used to be pretty.

  • @justion337
    @justion337 Год назад

    It's pronounced "Wah-tab", not "Wuh-tob". At least I've never heard anyone pronounce it that way in my 38 years of living in the area.