The Lackawanna Railroad & Phoebe Snow 1958

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  • Опубликовано: 2 фев 2025

Комментарии • 21

  • @Dave4664
    @Dave4664 11 лет назад +16

    Fantastic footage! I loved every second. It gives one pause however, to be reminded of just how much we have lost as a country. I would sure love to have the DL&W or EL back.... I would trade the interstate highways away in a heartbeat....just to have those glorious trains back!

  • @davidwayne1475
    @davidwayne1475 7 лет назад +3

    Gotta love this video. This on dvd would be a great Christmas or Birthday gift. One can only wish. Thanks so very much for sharing.

  • @davidmonteverde3043
    @davidmonteverde3043 9 лет назад +11

    Great footage of the Phoebe, mostly in Western NY. at 9:41 my GROVELAND sign appears as #15 the Owl with 12 mail and express cars, a coach, sleeper and buffet-lounge car, added at Elmira, comes down off of Dansville Hill into the Genesee Valley,; followed right after by the Phoebe Snow #6 making speed to attack Dansville Hill, the second steepest, after the Poconos on the Lackawanna. Following footage is Cohocton with the offset train order signal, and the through truss bridge at Avoca.

    • @catw0rld
      @catw0rld 8 лет назад

      +David MonteVerde Thank you for the great info. I spent a lot of time growing up in Cohocton, never would have recognized the place in that short clip. Priceless!

  • @cats0182
    @cats0182 8 лет назад +4

    Rode the Phoebe Snow once between Hoboken and Binghamton. Rode other DL&W trains between the two destinations going to and from college. The diners had excellent food. Views through the Delaware Water Gap were just lovely.

  • @OwenOgleby1
    @OwenOgleby1 12 лет назад +3

    Thank you so very much for sharing. The Phoebe Snow and the EL itself were a great RR.

  • @76JohnBee
    @76JohnBee 12 лет назад +1

    These videos are PRICELESS TREASURES. If you can't appreciate them sound or no sound GET ANOTHER HOBBY!!!

  • @1995billy
    @1995billy 6 лет назад +4

    Growing up my dad would always talk of this train. My grandfather was a conductor the Erie Lackawanna RR(for more than 40 years, my dad still has his pins for service). According to my father his dad was the conductor on this trains last ride. I was never able to verify it (my grandfather passed away a year before I was born).

  • @composerlecturer
    @composerlecturer 7 лет назад +6

    When I was in college, we'd take a bus from Ithaca down to Owego and catch the eastbound Phoebe Snow heading to Hoboken. I'd get off in Summit, NJ. Back in those days, the drinking age was different in NY than in PA. So 18 year old would go to the lounge car and have a beer. Magically, the staff on the train knew the very moment they crossed into PA and shut off the under age drinkers.

  • @josephabraham259
    @josephabraham259 10 лет назад +2

    1958 - was seven years old and lived near Bath Pa. I remember sitting on my front step when the El passed. Lots of pictures where taken by photographers prior '58. I also remember the EL sitting on the rails by the Keystone Cement Plant. Thanks for the memories.

  • @redbarnz
    @redbarnz 11 лет назад +1

    Nice movie clips of FAST train travel from the past. Nicely done, really interesting!

  • @petelako1
    @petelako1 9 лет назад +1

    fantastic footage....thanks for sharing

  • @tommyhaynes521
    @tommyhaynes521 8 лет назад +4

    The concrete viaduct in Nicholson PA is still there. It's a couple of hours from my house. Saw is last year. No trains went over it..I think the Susquehanna may use it at times..I believe it's the largest concrete bridge or structure in the US or the world

  • @2NY100
    @2NY100 14 лет назад +1

    At 1:00 I finally got to see how Thurston St. Tower was configured in relation to Eldridge Park. Wow. And then blowing by Thurston and slowing down. Amazing.

  • @b951fmcom
    @b951fmcom 10 лет назад +26

    Notice there's no graffiti? People had respect back in the day.

  • @alexhozempa1184
    @alexhozempa1184 10 лет назад +2

    This train was very in port of history to New York State and Pennsylvania

  • @jlebaron1
    @jlebaron1  14 лет назад +1

    @ghostrider19441 Sorry bout that, the sound is still back in 1958, time machine's in the shop, flux capacitor's still on back order!

  • @MissRailfan
    @MissRailfan 13 лет назад +2

    I live in Elmira, & where DLW yard was is now few lanes of Clemen's Center Pkwy, Wegman's plaza & open lot.The Elmira station is empty lot next to the former Albee truck sales I have videos of it.@5:33 the DLW on the bridge is cream without the lettering :( I love the past look, in the 80s/90s it was white & red cuz of Conrail or the city.@6:00 what tower is this?@7-7:14 the factory looks like Kennedy Valve right after that wow,Newtown Creek bridge along I86/RT.

  • @videothen
    @videothen 10 лет назад +1

    Lovely, though one wishes some of the shots could be lightened: they were hard to see.

    • @michaeleggleston6873
      @michaeleggleston6873 9 лет назад +3

      +Martin Smith You need to understand that back in the 1950s, Kodak Movie film had a very low ASA speed of 10 or 16.. For the most part, it was only usable during a bright sunny day, as close to high noon as possible. For shaded, evening or night photos or movies it was damn near impossible unless you had floodlights. It tended to be grainy in the 8 mm size, which was actually a 16 mm roll that you shot, and then turned the rolls over inside the camera once you had used up one side. Combine that with the not-so-great lenses on the 8 mm cameras, and you were darn lucky to get anything that wasn't dark or fuzzy. And it was ungodly expensive in the 1950s. Most railfan photographers stuck to their 35 mm black & white Single Lens Reflex or Kodak Brownie cameras (German and Swiss cameras had the best lenses), 120 or 127 size twin lens reflex cameras because the color film costs were prohibitive.

  • @cbehr91
    @cbehr91 11 лет назад

    Where was AQ tower?