Engines of Disney Ep 4: Ernest S. Marsh
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- Опубликовано: 15 сен 2024
- After nearly a year of waiting, the wait is finally over folks, as we take a quick deep dive of the history of Disneyland Railroad's #4 the Ernest S. Marsh from it's early years, to the present day!!! I do apologize for the many delays on this as I was focusing on other projects than the series, plus I was taking a long hiatus from the series and now I'm back to this wonderful series!!!! So sit back, relax, grab a snack and enjoy this next installment of Engines of Disney!!!!!! Have a good one folks!!!
Credit for the clips used: Walt’s Nephew, RichardsTrainsAndMore and JonRailVideos
Credit for these photos: Google Images
1:45 Just a friendly correction
The name of that engine is pronounced Mon-teh-ZOOM-uh, but as a Railroads Online player I may start nicknaming it by the way you pronounced it because it kinda sounds funny and would piss Hyce off.
@@ivanthevaluable2559 sorry it’s very hard to pronounce the engines name so that’s how I normally say it.
@@carolinarailfanproductions You're lucky they didn't base it off of something like the Allegheny or the Shah-wa-no in that respect!
@@ivanthevaluable2559 true
There’s no such thing as a “Porter” type locomotive. Porter was a manufacturer. A 2-4-0 would usually be called a “four-coupled,” but some sources don’t have any name associated with the wheel arrangement. Oh, there’s also no such thing as a “Boston” type either, as mentioned in another video.
@@stevedegaetano8188 Huh 🤔 that’s funny but that’s how Disney named their engines for the railroad on the Disneyland Railroad and I’m probably going to have to say Boston Type for the Ward Kimball locomotive for my next locomotive to cover unless anyone can tell me what locomotive type the Ward Kimball is.
@@carolinarailfanproductions
Where did you see these names at Disney? I have an extensive collection of internal Disney documentation, and those two names don’t exist in the paperwork. As is often the case, especially when it comes to their trains, Disney is simply incorrect. Both the Fred Gurley and Ward Kimball are “Forneys” or Forney-type locomotives. Again, there are no such things as Boston or Porter type locomotives.
@@stevedegaetano8188 Wikipedia is that wrong using it?
@@carolinarailfanproductions
Absolutely. Anyone who knows anything about steam locomotives would not recognize those terms (except H.K. Porter, the locomotive builder who made several other wheel arrangements besides 2-4-0s). There is so much incorrect information on the DRR Wikipedia page that at this point it is completely unreliable.
Ernest s marsh looks red
@@eunheeyoon9012 more like maroon red
Wow no acknowledgement for Foolish Mortal and the whistle compilation
I’m sorry was there something wrong with the Ernest S. Marsh’s whistles?
@@carolinarailfanproductions well you stole the compilation from another person
@@evanburt2766 technically I did not I was going to give credit for the person which I got the clips from but the problem was I couldn’t find the video he uploaded of the whistles I will reupload credit for those clips if I can find it I do apologize for this.
@@evanburt2766 I just edited the Description and I apologize for the inconvenience.
@@carolinarailfanproductionsjust saw the updated the description, I know a few of my clips are in there too but I don’t care too much
Does that engine look similar to Casey Jr by any means?
In fact yes, because Casey Jr from 1941 definitely resembles the Ernest S. Marsh because they both share the same wheel arrangement.
@@carolinarailfanproductions I thought so.