13:16 Ah, yes the snitch gauge, displaying the train's speed for all the executives to see. I know what I'd do to that darn thing if I was the engineer and got a moments chance to. Lets just say it would need quite a few stitches > : )
"Shoutout Oceanliner Designs" first the adjacent tie to Aging Wheels through shared sponsors, then being on Lawrie's Podcast, now our friend Mike Brady... It really is a small world... It's nice to see the interior of this business car still intact, we have a business car from the Dominion Atlantic Railroad (later part of CP) named Nova Scotia, that survived the Halifax Explosion of 1917, and later went on to be CP Business Car #7 where it went on to be one of the last wooden cars in mainline service in Canada. Unfortunately by the time we got it, it had been completely gutted other than the bathroom and a single office at the B End, as it got used as the reception car in a restaurant made out of train cars called the Ossawippi Express... As such we turned it into an exhibit car, and restored the exterior as best we could, but, still a shame that it lost it's true charm...
You can tell the private car is from the late 1800s to early 1900s because the bathroom has a push button light switch. Those switches are beyond cool and stupid simple when you look at the internals.
To do a fine gentleman voice isn't about sounding british, it's merely the extravagant use of eloquent words in a fine fashion of everyday parlance. The greater the use of such words to convey even the simplest message, the better. So, to the esteemed Director Mr. M. Huber of the East Salida & Denver Railroad, I must extend my greatest and most sincere gratitude for this thurough and immaculate presentation which, in no small quantity, have granted me the pleasure of witnessing such a delightful vehicle as this fanciful carriage, ever so resplendant in the finest craftsmanship seen upon this great Earth, and with the opulence and luxury as can be expected of the golden age of rail travel, be it for business or pleasure. Add to that, a most respectable appearance of Director Mr. M. Huber himself.
At the end when he’s thanking the engineers, it shows an engineer runing the train, when he’s thanking the firemen, it shows a fireman shoveling coal into a fire, when he’s thanking the conductors, it shows a conductor leaning out the side of the train, and by this logic, when he’s thanking the brakemen, it shows a brakeman getting run over!
Lmao, I only had the one shot of someone doing brakeman things and it wasn't long enough, and I liked the shot of 491... That's a hilarious take though
Loved this episode! I'm an 80 year old lady who has had some amazing railroad experiences. Back in the nineties I actually got to travel on the Union Pacific executive cars. It was fabulous and a never forgotten experience. We had a porter and a chef with a kitchen, dining and sleeping car but best of all was the caboose where we spent the day. This caboose had been used by multiple US Presidents and it was fascinating and historical as many of the instruments were still fully functional. When a president was on board there were special communications and accommodations for staff. Of course the entire locomotive and a couple of other cars were all spiffed up and shining for every executive move including the one I was on. All that and I didn't have a camera!
Damn. I've never seen a private jet but from various accounts they got nothing on this car. Love all that mahogany (and in spite of it not being a very light colored wood it doesn't make the space feel smaller). The galley is tiny but whoever laid it out knew what they were doing and a single chef could work in there really efficiently. The staff quarters also look remarkably comfortable. Thanks for sharing! PS. I lol'd so hard at the tail end of the video.....
Having seen a few lesser private jets, and also having had a chance to tour a few retired "Air Force One" jets... The only private jets that can compete are on the level of Air Force One. Which actually makes a lot of sense, when you think about it. In a train car, you primary concern is simply finding space for everything. A private jet also has to consider weight, because it massively affects range and fuel usage. A lot of modern executives favor range and speed over amenities; they can do their work on the ground. The jet doesn't need to double as an office, like this one does. Air Force One does need to work as an office and a command center AND has in-flight refueling capabilities, so these things aren't huge issues, and more amenities can be included.
We are planning to release a fully updated version of our Colorado Midland Car Big Train Tour once the car finishes the current batch of restoration work in the shop - it will eventually end up next to the 96 car.
that must have been the car I saw in the left side of the restoration shop when I visited the museum last september; if I remember correctly, most of the outer sheathing had been completely removed and I could see the inner structure of the car (of course, this was all seen from the safety of the visitor's observation room) Hopefully next time I visit, restoration will be complete and it will be in its new permanent home next to the 96!
I think it's absolutely wonderful the museum gets to preserve such a beautiful train car. Generations to come should be able to see these things in as pristine condition as possible.
Awesome tour of the business car. I saw FDR's car at Scrantan, and what struck me was how firm the beds were. They (Steam Town) had about 2/3 the interior restored, but they opened it up for Steam Days. It was really cool.
You really got your kit on for this vid, Hyce- very classy! I actually got to be in this same business car when I took the Kitchen tour the museum hosts when I came by in June and part of me felt very under-dressed for it, but learning some of this history was more than worth it! Also got to see a crew doing some work on getting the over side getting work done for the second car site.
I almost forgot to comment on this, but this has given me a new goal in my railroad adventures. I am now adjusting my goal of building a caboose to building my own personal business car. (lucky what I was doing for to build a 2ft. caboose will work well with the standard gauge business car idea) Have a wonderful day everyone! *birbs*
What good fortune this vid is in my algorithm today, i saw CN’s business train on the end of a freight train in the wild around Oshawa a couple days ago
OMG what a beautiful tour and absolutely magnificent business car, Mark. I kept stopping your video to more closely observe the many wonderful period details. The rich figured paneling is to die for. I enjoyed seeing the historic bathrooms and kitchens that were OMG. The electric lighting fixtures were another favorite. Seeing inside the electronic cabinet was totally cool! Everything about this business car and its high quality restoration brought joy-the CRRM is a truly exceptional place! Speaking of exceptional many thanks to you Sir Professor for yet another amazing 101 learning moment; YES, please Mark feature the other two business cars in future episodes. As always cheers to you and the CRRM!
My hats (no pun intended) to you for wearing a tuxedo. I had to wear one in music college and I don’t miss it. But the point is mark, very very dapper!
Great presentation, Hyce! I'd vote for an in-depth tour (in costume or not) of different cars and engines. Since I live in Ohio and don't have the means to check these out in person, especially with someone as knowledgeable as you, I can enjoy this vicariously through the video until I can visit in person.
This video was very well timed with my current art-deco highly ornate obsession lol (i know this style is nowhere near real art deco, but it is very fancy & pretty)
Visited a few months ago, so glad to hear you sre getting roofs for everything, it is definitely necessary. It was sad to see some of the rolling stock rotting away out back.
Some railroad depots had special sidings located at the depot called coach tracks. These were for visiting VIP’s private cars to use if they were “in town” for extended stays, my how things have changed. Speaking of passenger train equipment, you should cover the mail/baggage car at the museum.
Fancy as hell! I think I'd rather take a short trip on one of these than on a modern cruise ship. Also, porter's quarters. That's fun to say. Porter's quarters porter's quarters porter's quarters!
Come ride the Via in Canada! Our 1950s Budd cars may lack the wood paneling, but everything else is basically the same. Plus we’ve got dome cars! I try and do the trip from Edmonton to Vancouver every winter, when sleeper tickets are cheap and return flights are cheaper.
Great video Mark! I can’t imagine how cool it would have been to ride one of those cars from one end of the railroad to the other. I’ve only ridden the one at Strasburg.
*pushes glasses up nose* WELL ACTUALLY...per CB&Q standards business cars tended to actually travel at the head end of passenger trains since management's view was that the people in the tail car paid to be at the rear, not to stare at the back of another car. As with all things railroad though there were exceptions for every single rule so the business car placement at the head end of the train was not hard and fast
Blasphemy! I mean, Hyce talking and teasing narrow gauge cars and not showing them! I can get Mark not being too excited (Mark is the serious guy behind Century of Steam), but this channel is Hyce. The crazy and more fun narrow gauge enthusiast. TLDR, yes we want to see Hyce's take on the narrow gauge business car.
Such a beautiful car they certainly don’t make them like this anymore. So amazing to see the old mix with the new, beautiful old mahogany wood and AC with a kitchen to boost they sure were small homes on wheels.
Somewhere here on youtube is a video posted by a woman in New Zealand. She and her hubby bought some land out in big sky country, and surprise! it came with a short length of track and two cars! They'd been used as a chicken coop, I think. So they salvaged what they could, rebuild the rest, and now they have a wonderful home under the stars.
Yoo, the museum local to me has a very similar style of car! Kind of unintentionally, though. It's at the Gallipolis Railroad Museum in Ohio. It used to belong to the Ringling Brothers circus as a sleeper car for their performers. It was half-demo'd before the museum found it, so half of the car is... lets say, an open-floor plan, with holes in said floor. There are I think 3 rooms, though, that are still mostly intact. Each room had 2 beds, a stove (and oven if I recall correctly), a microwave, room for a TV, cabinets, and a full bathroom with a shower. Definitely not as high-class as that business car, but more akin to an apartment on rails. The car still had its water heater though, as well as a washer and dryer set on-board. I'd honestly love the idea of a rail-based apartment. Like, you live on the train, with everything you need, with stops every now and again in towns or cities to restock supplies and explore, only to leave again the next day. Not heading anywhere but enjoying the journey. Every look out the window is a different place.
I know at some point you said you'd love a guitar out of wood like that, but if there was a guitar made out of wood as nice as the stuff shown inside the business car, it'd either have to be an Gibson ES-335, or a Les Paul, maybe even a Gretsch Semi Hollow
That thing is just gorgeous. We truly had luxury trains. We used to be a proper country damnit! My mother and I got to ride in James B Dukes private car Doris at the North Carolina Transportation museum one of the few times it was on the museum train. I havent been inside it since, and all I remember was my mother spilling a glass of wine in the parlor area and me thinking "mom, we dont have the kind of money to pay cleaning fees in this fancy place!" Speaking of business... we need to see the narrow gauge business cars. Where they talked about their mining establishments and mining consortiums!
It would be nice to be able to charter it and take it out on the rails such as a once or twice yearly heritage train tour. This would help keep it in the public eye and in the local news which would attract donations as well as charter fees.
Here we have the great Hyce, president of the ES&D, doing his best Sir Topham impression. Seriously, that car is gorgeous! Mahogany is a beautiful wood, especially when its well taken care of. The museum has clearly done just that, since the interior of that car damn near looks brand new. The worst I saw was fading on the seats in the parlor, thanks to that wonderful Colorado sun. (Lived in Grand Junction for a short time; can confirm, the sun is evil for most of the year.) I've been watching too much History in the Dark, because I kept picturing his version of Alfred Perlman off and on during the tour. Banging out memos about how he "Wants that. Steam. Engine!" at the desk, and grumbling about the fuel being wasted by a lead footed (or would that be lead handed?) engineer while looking at the speedometer. Speaking of Perlman, have you ever considered doing a video about him, Hyce? Everyone talks about his time with New York Central, but his saving of the Rio Grande tends to get ignored. It would be interesting to hear your take on him.
Actually, that paneling looks like quartersawn white oak.
The museum's documentation says both, now that I've checked - I'll take your word for it! :D
The wood on the outside of the rooms, the exterior car walls, is Honduran mahogany. Either wood is high class.
@@Hyce777 i just saw a photo on FB of you in your pirate outfit trying to hijack Brett on 20
Second on oak. There's probably mahogany in there somewhere, but oak is recognisable and mahogany is way darker
@@chipworrell6025 Thaaaaaaaaat makes sense.
Welp, time to add "Sir Hyce of Kenosha' to the lore....
Founder of the es&d
@@complexcanvas3825 First of his name
Mark looks like he is the president of a mining consortium.
Good sir!
Would you like some ore? What about uranium?
@@NoahDutkewycz GOOD SIR! IT IS NOT YOUR-RANIUM, IT IS MY-RANIUM!
@@awildjared1396 *MYSTERY CITRUS!*
A MiNiNg CoNsOrTiUm?
You are now looking at the President of the ES&DT
Sir Topham Hyce, anyone?
im mad at myself for not coming up with that one lmao
I had many color choices for the vest when I bought the tux and I went with the low hanging fruit, what can I say.
limes
@@Hyce777 Hardly low hanging fruit, the morning coat really brings it together
@@Hyce777 you look great Sir Toppan of ES&D
That suit actually looks really good on you.
13:16 Ah, yes the snitch gauge, displaying the train's speed for all the executives to see. I know what I'd do to that darn thing if I was the engineer and got a moments chance to. Lets just say it would need quite a few stitches > : )
“You have caused confusion and delay and I will not stand for it!”
Love the shout out to our friend Mike Brady lol
Tickled me. Such a great channel
"Shoutout Oceanliner Designs" first the adjacent tie to Aging Wheels through shared sponsors, then being on Lawrie's Podcast, now our friend Mike Brady... It really is a small world...
It's nice to see the interior of this business car still intact, we have a business car from the Dominion Atlantic Railroad (later part of CP) named Nova Scotia, that survived the Halifax Explosion of 1917, and later went on to be CP Business Car #7 where it went on to be one of the last wooden cars in mainline service in Canada. Unfortunately by the time we got it, it had been completely gutted other than the bathroom and a single office at the B End, as it got used as the reception car in a restaurant made out of train cars called the Ossawippi Express... As such we turned it into an exhibit car, and restored the exterior as best we could, but, still a shame that it lost it's true charm...
Thats funny I am subscribed to Oceanliner designs and aging wheels!
You can tell the private car is from the late 1800s to early 1900s because the bathroom has a push button light switch. Those switches are beyond cool and stupid simple when you look at the internals.
To do a fine gentleman voice isn't about sounding british, it's merely the extravagant use of eloquent words in a fine fashion of everyday parlance. The greater the use of such words to convey even the simplest message, the better.
So, to the esteemed Director Mr. M. Huber of the East Salida & Denver Railroad, I must extend my greatest and most sincere gratitude for this thurough and immaculate presentation which, in no small quantity, have granted me the pleasure of witnessing such a delightful vehicle as this fanciful carriage, ever so resplendant in the finest craftsmanship seen upon this great Earth, and with the opulence and luxury as can be expected of the golden age of rail travel, be it for business or pleasure.
Add to that, a most respectable appearance of Director Mr. M. Huber himself.
There be a lot of long words in there... we're naught but humble Pirates. :D
Sir Topham Hyce, The ES&D Controller
At the end when he’s thanking the engineers, it shows an engineer runing the train, when he’s thanking the firemen, it shows a fireman shoveling coal into a fire, when he’s thanking the conductors, it shows a conductor leaning out the side of the train, and by this logic, when he’s thanking the brakemen, it shows a brakeman getting run over!
Lmao, I only had the one shot of someone doing brakeman things and it wasn't long enough, and I liked the shot of 491... That's a hilarious take though
Only the best for Sir Hyce. 😂 if you ever lose your apartment, we now know where to find you.
Ah yes, thank you, Mr. Huber for another wonderful and informative short film. You are a gentleman and a scholar.
Loved this episode! I'm an 80 year old lady who has had some amazing railroad experiences. Back in the nineties I actually got to travel on the Union Pacific executive cars. It was fabulous and a never forgotten experience. We had a porter and a chef with a kitchen, dining and sleeping car but best of all was the caboose where we spent the day. This caboose had been used by multiple US Presidents and it was fascinating and historical as many of the instruments were still fully functional. When a president was on board there were special communications and accommodations for staff. Of course the entire locomotive and a couple of other cars were all spiffed up and shining for every executive move including the one I was on. All that and I didn't have a camera!
Damn. I've never seen a private jet but from various accounts they got nothing on this car. Love all that mahogany (and in spite of it not being a very light colored wood it doesn't make the space feel smaller). The galley is tiny but whoever laid it out knew what they were doing and a single chef could work in there really efficiently. The staff quarters also look remarkably comfortable. Thanks for sharing!
PS. I lol'd so hard at the tail end of the video.....
Having seen a few lesser private jets, and also having had a chance to tour a few retired "Air Force One" jets...
The only private jets that can compete are on the level of Air Force One.
Which actually makes a lot of sense, when you think about it. In a train car, you primary concern is simply finding space for everything. A private jet also has to consider weight, because it massively affects range and fuel usage.
A lot of modern executives favor range and speed over amenities; they can do their work on the ground. The jet doesn't need to double as an office, like this one does.
Air Force One does need to work as an office and a command center AND has in-flight refueling capabilities, so these things aren't huge issues, and more amenities can be included.
We are planning to release a fully updated version of our Colorado Midland Car Big Train Tour once the car finishes the current batch of restoration work in the shop - it will eventually end up next to the 96 car.
that must have been the car I saw in the left side of the restoration shop when I visited the museum last september; if I remember correctly, most of the outer sheathing had been completely removed and I could see the inner structure of the car (of course, this was all seen from the safety of the visitor's observation room) Hopefully next time I visit, restoration will be complete and it will be in its new permanent home next to the 96!
I know (or knew) where CM Car 100 is and have photos of it. It is in Arkansas and detrucked; serving as a residence.
Looking sharp, Hyce!
🚂🚂😃❣️❣️❣️
I think it's absolutely wonderful the museum gets to preserve such a beautiful train car. Generations to come should be able to see these things in as pristine condition as possible.
Awesome tour of the business car. I saw FDR's car at Scrantan, and what struck me was how firm the beds were. They (Steam Town) had about 2/3 the interior restored, but they opened it up for Steam Days. It was really cool.
1:38 Ocean liner designs reference
Oh god, he’s a gentleman now…
He always has been.
Ruuuuun!!!! save yourselves!!
Thank you for sharing this beautiful car Mark. I could live in that! Hello to our friend Mike Brady.
From ocean liner designs
Mike just recently got recognized by Max Miller (Tasting History) as well. Some RUclipsr networking going on.
You really got your kit on for this vid, Hyce- very classy! I actually got to be in this same business car when I took the Kitchen tour the museum hosts when I came by in June and part of me felt very under-dressed for it, but learning some of this history was more than worth it! Also got to see a crew doing some work on getting the over side getting work done for the second car site.
A fancy pants car for a fancy pants Hyce 😄
A gentleman and a scholar. M'yes. Quite dapper.
I, too, enjoy trains. *adjusts monocle*
Oh wow, you need to do more of these equipment tours. Can't get out to the museum, this is the next best thing.
We have a business car!!!! I can't wait to restore it and use it.
Well done Sir! Well done! The suit was a very nice touch. Thank you!
What a fabulous look into times gone by
Absolutely beautiful cars, and they still exist for everyone to see🤠
I almost forgot to comment on this, but this has given me a new goal in my railroad adventures. I am now adjusting my goal of building a caboose to building my own personal business car. (lucky what I was doing for to build a 2ft. caboose will work well with the standard gauge business car idea) Have a wonderful day everyone! *birbs*
What good fortune this vid is in my algorithm today, i saw CN’s business train on the end of a freight train in the wild around Oshawa a couple days ago
OMG what a beautiful tour and absolutely magnificent business car, Mark. I kept stopping your video to more closely observe the many wonderful period details. The rich figured paneling is to die for. I enjoyed seeing the historic bathrooms and kitchens that were OMG. The electric lighting fixtures were another favorite. Seeing inside the electronic cabinet was totally cool! Everything about this business car and its high quality restoration brought joy-the CRRM is a truly exceptional place! Speaking of exceptional many thanks to you Sir Professor for yet another amazing 101 learning moment; YES, please Mark feature the other two business cars in future episodes. As always cheers to you and the CRRM!
My hats (no pun intended) to you for wearing a tuxedo. I had to wear one in music college and I don’t miss it. But the point is mark, very very dapper!
I love our friend Mike Brady's channel!
The business car. One of the best carriages, it's the swankiest coach on the line.
Great presentation, Hyce! I'd vote for an in-depth tour (in costume or not) of different cars and engines. Since I live in Ohio and don't have the means to check these out in person, especially with someone as knowledgeable as you, I can enjoy this vicariously through the video until I can visit in person.
I love how you can clearly tell that top hat is not the right size for your head! ❤😂❤😂
Hyce in a Top Hat(t) and tuxedo was something I never knew I needed.
Appreciate your shout-out to Ocean Liner Designs and our friend Mike Brady. Both of you are tier-1 in my book.
Hyce Referencing Ocean Liner designs Heck Yeah!! The Train Guy And The Ship Guy
Great Video! I would love to see a video of the other business cars!
What a splendid presentation Mr Huber, I dare say magnificent even!
I can't wait to see the yard,thanks again 😊
"Good day, and how do you do" realy got my laughing
Now that's a REAL land yacht!
Great outfit 😁
Nice car, I'd like that as my private car on my way to work 🤣
This video was very well timed with my current art-deco highly ornate obsession lol
(i know this style is nowhere near real art deco, but it is very fancy & pretty)
The interior woodworking is so beautiful
Visited a few months ago, so glad to hear you sre getting roofs for everything, it is definitely necessary. It was sad to see some of the rolling stock rotting away out back.
Looking like a Sir, Hyce 👌
Always cool to see these pieces of railroad equipment up close.
That Mark guy cleans up alright. 🎩
Some railroad depots had special sidings located at the depot called coach tracks. These were for visiting VIP’s private cars to use if they were “in town” for extended stays, my how things have changed. Speaking of passenger train equipment, you should cover the mail/baggage car at the museum.
Fancy as hell! I think I'd rather take a short trip on one of these than on a modern cruise ship. Also, porter's quarters. That's fun to say. Porter's quarters porter's quarters porter's quarters!
Come ride the Via in Canada! Our 1950s Budd cars may lack the wood paneling, but everything else is basically the same. Plus we’ve got dome cars! I try and do the trip from Edmonton to Vancouver every winter, when sleeper tickets are cheap and return flights are cheaper.
Very interesting, it's like a luxury hotel on rails.
That coach is beautiful!
Wot!? No bibs! Culture shock! But wait! Oh look! Our host is Sir Topham Hatt!😀
4:52 i love this fan
This suit suits you so well. It's really cool. :)
Nice Job Mark, all posh with thy self. Neat Hat. I used to wear a similar one while playing. The music. 🦜🥴🥴❤️🦕🚂🚂
Hyce: Walks out in *exquisite* suit
Me: dies laughing and collapses on the floor
What a beautiful Car !!
Great video Mark! I can’t imagine how cool it would have been to ride one of those cars from one end of the railroad to the other. I’ve only ridden the one at Strasburg.
Oh man! This is very cool. Just imagine how the businessmen travelled back in the day.
Anyone else just NOT ready for the dressed up Hyce?
Huge really pulled a thy gracious intro on us.
Never thought Mark would shoutout Mike Brady
Great mini documentary great work
Beautiful Railroad car 😀 Looks like old german Mitropa cars from within
Just a touch of class
quite a dapper looking gentleman i see
*pushes glasses up nose* WELL ACTUALLY...per CB&Q standards business cars tended to actually travel at the head end of passenger trains since management's view was that the people in the tail car paid to be at the rear, not to stare at the back of another car. As with all things railroad though there were exceptions for every single rule so the business car placement at the head end of the train was not hard and fast
Yet another case of, "it depends, drink." Lol! That's neat, I didn't know that about the Q. But they were the Q...
That looks like quartered oak. Very fancy.
“Hahahaha more brandy! Throw more brandy!!!”
Blasphemy! I mean, Hyce talking and teasing narrow gauge cars and not showing them!
I can get Mark not being too excited (Mark is the serious guy behind Century of Steam), but this channel is Hyce.
The crazy and more fun narrow gauge enthusiast.
TLDR, yes we want to see Hyce's take on the narrow gauge business car.
The Museum has hosted many fundraising dinners over the years - they even hosted the Coors family.
Wow, I just saw the CRRM's video on 96! Talk about a coincidence.
There may have been some light coordination between channels behind the scenes.
Perhaps. ;)
“A coal fired stove”
I bet he doesn’t cook off of a coal shovel🤗
Hyce wins😂
If only the museum would let you film the 3/4 show in there. Even just one episode. You could write it off as a BUSINESS expense. lol
I proposed to my wife in CB&Q 96, and 25 years later she’s still here - unbelievably 🥴
Such a beautiful car they certainly don’t make them like this anymore. So amazing to see the old mix with the new, beautiful old mahogany wood and AC with a kitchen to boost they sure were small homes on wheels.
Yes to covering the other cars, but only if you do the full gat and tails again
we need a collab between mark and mike brady for a video about rail ferries
A tiny home styled like a train car would be cool.
Somewhere here on youtube is a video posted by a woman in New Zealand. She and her hubby bought some land out in big sky country, and surprise! it came with a short length of track and two cars! They'd been used as a chicken coop, I think. So they salvaged what they could, rebuild the rest, and now they have a wonderful home under the stars.
Yoo, the museum local to me has a very similar style of car! Kind of unintentionally, though. It's at the Gallipolis Railroad Museum in Ohio.
It used to belong to the Ringling Brothers circus as a sleeper car for their performers. It was half-demo'd before the museum found it, so half of the car is... lets say, an open-floor plan, with holes in said floor.
There are I think 3 rooms, though, that are still mostly intact. Each room had 2 beds, a stove (and oven if I recall correctly), a microwave, room for a TV, cabinets, and a full bathroom with a shower. Definitely not as high-class as that business car, but more akin to an apartment on rails. The car still had its water heater though, as well as a washer and dryer set on-board.
I'd honestly love the idea of a rail-based apartment. Like, you live on the train, with everything you need, with stops every now and again in towns or cities to restock supplies and explore, only to leave again the next day. Not heading anywhere but enjoying the journey. Every look out the window is a different place.
Lovely car. I do like your channel.
Looking fancy my good Sir.
I know at some point you said you'd love a guitar out of wood like that, but if there was a guitar made out of wood as nice as the stuff shown inside the business car, it'd either have to be an Gibson ES-335, or a Les Paul, maybe even a Gretsch Semi Hollow
I'd love to see Markibold Hycetholemew the Third give us a walk around of the other business cars, for sure
Great video !
That thing is just gorgeous. We truly had luxury trains. We used to be a proper country damnit!
My mother and I got to ride in James B Dukes private car Doris at the North Carolina Transportation museum one of the few times it was on the museum train. I havent been inside it since, and all I remember was my mother spilling a glass of wine in the parlor area and me thinking "mom, we dont have the kind of money to pay cleaning fees in this fancy place!"
Speaking of business... we need to see the narrow gauge business cars. Where they talked about their mining establishments and mining consortiums!
While on the restoration crew of the Cyrus K. Holliday, I worked on a car with similar features to this.
Mark looks like someone whos about to build a Transcontinental Railroad
It would be nice to be able to charter it and take it out on the rails such as a once or twice yearly heritage train tour. This would help keep it in the public eye and in the local news which would attract donations as well as charter fees.
History of everything referenced 14:18
, I’d rent this and live in it and I’d be damn happy about it. WOW
Here we have the great Hyce, president of the ES&D, doing his best Sir Topham impression.
Seriously, that car is gorgeous! Mahogany is a beautiful wood, especially when its well taken care of. The museum has clearly done just that, since the interior of that car damn near looks brand new. The worst I saw was fading on the seats in the parlor, thanks to that wonderful Colorado sun. (Lived in Grand Junction for a short time; can confirm, the sun is evil for most of the year.)
I've been watching too much History in the Dark, because I kept picturing his version of Alfred Perlman off and on during the tour. Banging out memos about how he "Wants that. Steam. Engine!" at the desk, and grumbling about the fuel being wasted by a lead footed (or would that be lead handed?) engineer while looking at the speedometer.
Speaking of Perlman, have you ever considered doing a video about him, Hyce? Everyone talks about his time with New York Central, but his saving of the Rio Grande tends to get ignored. It would be interesting to hear your take on him.
I honestly need to do more research to understand him. Lol!