Roadway Express 75 Years of Service

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Komentáře • 493

  • @lilolme69
    @lilolme69 Před rokem +19

    I loved seeing the old trucks. Too bad America is not THAT America any longer....

    • @tonyorsini5255
      @tonyorsini5255 Před 7 měsíci +6

      And now no thanks to Yellow Freight, Roadway is gone for good.

    • @roarywark5941
      @roarywark5941 Před 22 dny

      ​@@tonyorsini5255a

  • @dtwom516motorsports2
    @dtwom516motorsports2 Před 3 lety +32

    My grandfather drove for Roadway when he came home from WWII. He was a proud man and spoke highly of Roadway and its practices. Great video

  • @tonyorsini5255
    @tonyorsini5255 Před 7 měsíci +3

    I have a good friend who started with Roadway in 1966. I'm a Gen-Xer, and got my CDL in 2000. He's been decent enough to share the rich history of trucking THEN with me, and never held me in any kind of contempt as a steering wheel holder. He's a superb ho scale model builder, and I have many of his creations. I've been lucky enough to have a few guys like him from that era as friends.

  • @MrJimZ09
    @MrJimZ09 Před rokem +6

    My father retired from Roadway Express and collected Roadway Minatures from toy firm by the name PIE. I still have his collection and willing to part with some of the trucks, including the famous "Circus" trailer used during one of the anniersaries.

  • @gma729
    @gma729 Před 3 lety +8

    I worked for Trans Con , Consolidated Freightways ( CF ) Northwest NW, but I remember they last of the Teamsters Golden years, when you would see all or close to it of Union carriers on the road. System 99, Willig, Transcon. PIE, Milne Truck Lines, only ABF Arkansas Best Freight is the last of the Mohicans.

    • @constanttraveler
      @constanttraveler Před 11 měsíci +3

      They are definitely Last of the Mohicans. Yellow took all others to the grave with them

  • @thehunterstruck
    @thehunterstruck Před 4 lety +17

    It's absolutely INSANE to see how far trucking has come!

  • @portercoogan4862
    @portercoogan4862 Před rokem +3

    Always on the road and always in the way,as we used to say

  • @jackfarris9364
    @jackfarris9364 Před 5 lety +20

    I was at BIG R 27 years retired in 2000 and there isn't a doubt in my mind that BIG R was the best freight company to work for. Do your job, get paid well and no bull shit from the company. I worked out of 430 White Pine Tennessee.

  • @markc1456
    @markc1456 Před 2 lety +4

    those R model Macks with the twin stacks and window in the back were Detroit 8v71 powered

  • @fa300zxtt
    @fa300zxtt Před 4 lety +8

    Every American should watch this! Why? Because without companies like you we would not eat, or anything else for that matter. For my part a big Thank You.

    • @ernestcotton9324
      @ernestcotton9324 Před rokem +1

      True, as a driver all new drivers should watch this to know the history of how it used to be

  • @jimmarchman
    @jimmarchman Před 3 lety +5

    The first five minutes of truck photos is amazing. Its a darn shame there aren't many of those old truck still around.

  • @joepreterotti7963
    @joepreterotti7963 Před rokem +7

    I was employed in Operations
    as a Roadway Express
    Dock Supervisor and Truck Dispatcher
    at one of their small trucking terminals
    during the early 1970’s, which I
    was successful at and enjoyed working there.
    My goal was to start in this
    employment operations position
    to learn the trucking industry,
    Roadway procedures,
    and prove myself, and seek
    a sales position with them,
    as my career calling.
    While I was in their Operations
    Supervisor Position,
    I had great Terminal Manager,
    a team of Teamster
    dock workers and drivers
    that worked on my crew,
    that I was responsible for.
    They are a greatly respected Company,
    a Trucking Industry Leader,
    and successful innovator.
    I learned a lot while I worked there,
    including their Rexan System,
    as a young man.
    I kept trying to pursue obtaining
    a sales position with Roadway,
    as I thought that was my career calling,
    but was refused by the Company.
    Subsequently, I resigned from them
    to start as a Sales Representative
    for a large Chemical Company instead,
    which I succeeded with.
    If Roadway had offered me
    a sales position, I would have been
    a Roadway Employee lifer with them.
    Thank you Roadway Express
    for the opportunity to allow me
    to work for your fine Company
    in those yesteryears
    of my early working life.

  • @Cubmaster5014
    @Cubmaster5014 Před 6 lety +116

    Good history lesson. Retired 30 years service in 2000 from Columbus, Ohio. . Best decision I could have made in 1970 to drive for Roadway. Lots of good memories. Drivers worked together with the company and dressed professional furnished by the company if you drove safely. When drivers had a problem with dispatchers or company personnel and Galen Roush showed up , heads would turn. He took care of the problem. Thanks for the video.

    • @jimmyb4801
      @jimmyb4801  Před 6 lety +6

      Your welcome.

    • @donaldbartram6315
      @donaldbartram6315 Před 4 lety

      They were good jobs back then , We had 25 union cos on a 6 mile stretch of rte 1 in Ct back then. There weren't many long haul co's like today .

    • @milaelizabeth2237
      @milaelizabeth2237 Před 3 lety

      Hi

    • @bobpaulino4714
      @bobpaulino4714 Před rokem

      @ Paul Mick Reed : Did you know an ole ratchet jaw highway hero out of Morrow county by the name of Fisher?

  • @bobpeg7457
    @bobpeg7457 Před 5 lety +192

    My Dad drove for Roadway back in the early 1950s. Switched to Yellow in the early 1960s and also drove for Swift.. Dad always said you needed a sixth sense in order to drive a truck. Always had to "know" what the other (dummies) people were thinking and what they might do next. He taught me well. Started driving in 1974 and retired in 2014 with a accident free record.

    • @michaelmacluskie6089
      @michaelmacluskie6089 Před 5 lety +16

      The other "Dummies" must have been Swift drivers.

    • @NomadicSociety
      @NomadicSociety Před 5 lety +3

      @@michaelmacluskie6089 lol funny

    • @MasterWitchDoctor
      @MasterWitchDoctor Před 5 lety +7

      BOB PEG Swift = Sure Wish I Finished Training.

    • @Eagles0690
      @Eagles0690 Před 4 lety +8

      Sounds like your dad was a smart man. I’ve trucked all my life and that’s been my philosophy. If you plan for dummies, then you’re way ahead of the game.
      Matter of fact, when my daughters started driving, that’s a lesson I always preached to them in their cars, always expect someone to do something stupid.

    • @gearjammer4779
      @gearjammer4779 Před 4 lety

      BOB PEG Liar! 😏

  • @mmahtnart8986
    @mmahtnart8986 Před 5 lety +16

    I worked for Roadway for a short time. It was a good experience. At the time I was also working for another Teamster organized company which hired me on regular before Roadway could.

  • @neckarsulme
    @neckarsulme Před 5 lety +23

    I worked for Roadway in Oakland, Ca. I started on the docks, then began driving LTL

  • @waltstovall372
    @waltstovall372 Před 5 lety +46

    Always on the road, Always in the way, Roadway.

    • @leebarnes6872
      @leebarnes6872 Před 4 lety +3

      Walt Stovall yes they may of been the slowest trucks on the road but the drivers had more fun than most of the other truckers and had plenty of time to sweet talk the ladies in the truck stops

    • @vorpalelixr1239
      @vorpalelixr1239 Před 4 lety +1

      That’s what I’ve always said lol

    • @thelazycoucherslifetalks3555
      @thelazycoucherslifetalks3555 Před 3 lety +1

      Stfu

    • @DanielPEdge
      @DanielPEdge Před 3 lety +1

      Walt Stovall
      Not always...
      Back in the day RoadWay trucks would pass a Greyhound bus I know some folks don't remember it.
      But the old man said if they pass is on the road today they will have our freight tomorrow... and RoadWay trucks ran. They only got slow when when the old man died and the price of fuel went up..

    • @larrygreen8912
      @larrygreen8912 Před 3 lety

      The only difference between Roadway and Schneider is blue fenders .

  • @kathyevans3783
    @kathyevans3783 Před 2 lety +2

    My father in law drove for Eastern Freightways out of Uniontown Pennsylvania. He started driving a new Brockway with factory sleeper and a new Fruehauf stainless steel trailer. We still have his picture hanging up in our home.

  • @carolsmith282
    @carolsmith282 Před rokem +2

    My dad drove for roadway in the 40s we lived in Conneaut Ohio

  • @josephcabrera6396
    @josephcabrera6396 Před 6 lety +71

    i'm a former over the road truck driver, this is a great video. Roadway contributed a lot to the industry, very educational.

  • @jeffbelton9796
    @jeffbelton9796 Před 3 lety +18

    Im a mechanic for yrc freight and we continue to put new roadway emblems on all the roadway trucks out of respect

    • @markroman9007
      @markroman9007 Před 2 měsíci

      This didn’t age well one bit. Hope all is well for you boss.

    • @jeffbelton9796
      @jeffbelton9796 Před 2 měsíci

      @markroman9007 I got out of there as soon as I could brother. Hope all is well for you too

  • @robertwalton7307
    @robertwalton7307 Před rokem +1

    Spared at Roadway in the early '80s. greater Boston. Show up, work get paid! Great people to work with.

  • @charleslacy6896
    @charleslacy6896 Před 5 lety +7

    I worked for Roadway R72 / 242 in Columbus Ohio from 4/29/92 to 1/13/99
    I miss the people I worked with. Great people. The bosses on the other hand I do not miss. They were on you all the time. It was just too much stress all the time. I think when you work at a company everybody knows who the bosses are but when you work at a company and they’re always showing you who the bosses are. It makes for a hard place to work.

  • @garybanglebangle7949
    @garybanglebangle7949 Před 5 lety +7

    My late uncle worked in the trucking business. As long as I can remember he did a good living doing it. Most of his business was in the Carolinas.

  • @johnminor9933
    @johnminor9933 Před 5 lety +10

    This was a blast. my father worked for PIE in the 60s-80s in oakland.

  • @kellykonoske91
    @kellykonoske91 Před 4 lety +6

    Good ol' YRC. Fucked over everybody from the dock to drivers to middle management!! Todd the retired trucker .

  • @gma729
    @gma729 Před 3 lety +6

    I worked for RDWY years ago, over 600 terminals at it's peak.

  • @lawrencewheeler8868
    @lawrencewheeler8868 Před rokem +2

    Drove for Roadway for 18 yrs In SLC.

  • @gilzor9376
    @gilzor9376 Před 5 měsíci

    I viewed this about 2-3 years ago and will probably enjoy watching it again in another 3 years if fortunate to still be here. History is all over these old films, beginning to end. It's great that technology has enabled such access to so much, as well as film restoration capabilities. Only, it's a bummer sometimes, to come to the realization of how old I'm getting when I see the 'old videos' have things shown in them that were brand new to me at one time.

  • @robertesposito9871
    @robertesposito9871 Před 5 lety +16

    I ran the road for Yellow Freight for fifteen years and when they bought Roadway I got laid off the day before Christmas Eve so when I turned 65 I grabbed my pension and my SS. Best job I ever had

    • @jimmyb4801
      @jimmyb4801  Před 5 lety

      I got laid off a couple of times. When the companies integrated operations, I went from 14 back down to 33. When I reached 63 1/2 I retired. I think I'd climbed back up to 19.

    • @jamieround2072
      @jamieround2072 Před 5 lety +3

      so what yr,. did yellow buy roadway.....? & for how much then...... is yellow still around on the rds,. as of 1/2019..... any one know.......???? & how's yellow doing still or did they buy any more trucking company's or did they get bought out yet.... if yes to whom... & what yr,. ... & how much .....??

    • @brucewelty7684
      @brucewelty7684 Před 5 lety +3

      @@jamieround2072 try a search.

    • @tonybanner2982
      @tonybanner2982 Před 4 lety

      They didnt buy Roadway they Merged that is why ist where Dove Tailed rather then placing Roadway at bottom as that is what Contract Callled for,

    • @milaelizabeth2237
      @milaelizabeth2237 Před 3 lety

      @@brucewelty7684 Hello any answers yet?

  • @timpriddy349
    @timpriddy349 Před 5 lety +31

    No matter how much technology advances........you will ALWAYS need a human being to adjust something

  • @rayward7609
    @rayward7609 Před 4 lety +3

    Galen Roush bought a mower from my dad in the 1940's for his home in Peninsula, Ohio. I made at least one service call to his residence and met Galen. His house was anything but special. His wife came into our shop in Cuyahoga Falls on occasion to buy parts so Galen could fix his mower. My guess is and I've heard it from numerous others that Galen, although a multi-millionaire was very cheap.A guy that ran probably the only gas station in Peninsula at the time told me about Galen coming in to buy gas and wanting to trade the Goodyear Double Eagle tires that were on his new Lincoln automobile on recapped tires and cash back. We both laughed about that.

    • @charmainejames9539
      @charmainejames9539 Před 3 lety +1

      I wonder if that was a second home for Mr.&Mrs. Roush in the 1940!s In Peninsula. I know by the early 60’s they lived on Major Rd. in an old farmhouse and there was a barn on their property. I’m pretty sure at least some of their children went to Buchtel High School in the 1950’s when the Roush family lived in west Akron, on Storer Ave. I believe.

  • @hammered0184
    @hammered0184 Před 4 lety +3

    Worked in a Roadway garage in 1989. While there, found that the owner at the largest privately owned freight carrier in the world was a former Roadway driver; R.Y. Sharpe, Pilot Freight.

  • @stevengriffith436
    @stevengriffith436 Před 5 lety +12

    Over the past 25 years I've heard a lot of stories about them. Drivers never had a day off because they were always on call so they couldn't go far from home. Back in the 60s my uncle worked at a furniture place and Jackie Gleason order a special table from PA, it was shipped by big R to CA but they lost it or broke it and they had make another one. I think the most famous blunder they made was when they lost the Oscar trophies..

  • @RickaramaTrama-lc1ys
    @RickaramaTrama-lc1ys Před 6 lety +9

    Very interesting and informative. I was raised in a small Arizona Town and we had one local driver and a medium size truck in town and I would see him every day on his deliveries and he knew everyone in town and drank coffee with us when he could. Good show~!!!

  • @MikeBrown-ii3pt
    @MikeBrown-ii3pt Před 4 lety +4

    Ahhhhhh Roadway. My earliest memories of Roadway are riding with my dad in the 70s and 80s. He was an owner operator leased to a local company as I am today. Back then, if memory serves, they were running C series Ford tractors and the saying was "Roadway, always on the road and always in the way". Roadway lives on today as part of YRC Companies. Personally, I could NEVER do LTL like those guys do!

  • @john-waxerone6972
    @john-waxerone6972 Před 6 lety +42

    In my wearhouse, receivers moan at the morning meeting when assignments are given out and they get a Roadway to unload...the pallets are almost always damaged as with alot of the product. The Vans are filty and show adnormal wear and tear. As I drive down the highway and see a Roadway truck, nine out of ten times that truck looks like it is not maintained with any care or pride whatsoever! In ending, Roadway might have been a giant in the industry back in the day...but is only a sad represented remonance of the past today. Great video all the same! Really shows the growth and transition of the industry!

    • @williamevans2176
      @williamevans2176 Před 5 lety +6

      This is BS, Yellow Freight bought Roadway years ago. The company this is about hasn't been in business for years.

    • @rpm12091
      @rpm12091 Před 4 lety +7

      The Yellow plague destroyed Roadway, you still see a lot of Roadway equipment on the highways, most of it was wore out years ago.

    • @tonybanner2982
      @tonybanner2982 Před 4 lety +4

      @@williamevans2176 Roadway was Debt Free till Yellow Merged with them that is a fact.all though bussiness was in decline

    • @justinsane7128
      @justinsane7128 Před 2 lety +1

      Always on the Road and always in the Way..... Roadway.

  • @bendover9411
    @bendover9411 Před 5 lety +9

    Awesome history lesson! Thank you!

  • @donnebes9421
    @donnebes9421 Před 4 lety +7

    When I started driving in 1980 roadway was simply known as big R. There was other successful ltl trucking companies then but roadway was king. All those other companies have either gone out of business or been absorbed into other companies. I’m still driving but it’s been a long, long time since I’ve heard anyone call out for Big R on the two-way.

  • @wilscott3150
    @wilscott3150 Před 4 lety +7

    Jimmy B, thanks for this great video. It brought back some fun memories. My first 8 years were with Roadway. That experience propelled me through the next 32 years. Still standing.

  • @chriswright8464
    @chriswright8464 Před 6 lety +5

    I remember my Dad taking me to the terminal in East Brunswick, NJ. My Grandfather drove for White Motors in New Brunswick NJ.

  • @neilpuckett359
    @neilpuckett359 Před 4 lety +12

    Drivers will never see middle class wages and benefits again.

    • @donaldbartram6315
      @donaldbartram6315 Před 4 lety +1

      I was making $17 change back in 92' in the union, when I retired in 2015 I was only making $21, non union.. & we had a decent pay rate compared to HUNT & other like them, at least we got paid for all time at a stop, no wait time. Always had new trucks, always clean & maintained. Hauling groceries to stores.

  • @rodhigh7
    @rodhigh7 Před 5 lety +7

    You don't see many Roadway trucks out here in Arizona but I do see them pulling double trailers on Interstate 10 every once in a while.

  • @2575cowboy
    @2575cowboy Před 5 lety +10

    My father retired in 77 from Cincinnati. I can remember when he drove sleeper teams, I was surprised they made no mention of the sleeper teams they used to keep the Freight moving.

  • @mmahtnart8986
    @mmahtnart8986 Před 5 lety +11

    God Bless YRC! Keep on trucking!

    • @michaelmoreira4076
      @michaelmoreira4076 Před 4 lety

      Thank God for yellow freight buying out roadway or they with be out of business the worst thing yellow freight did they should let roadway go out of business

  • @Truckngirl
    @Truckngirl Před 5 lety +15

    Good stuff! I know it's corporate public relations, but very satisfying to see the history of the company. Long live LTL!

  • @leebarnes6872
    @leebarnes6872 Před 4 lety +5

    And Yes Yellow Freight System is one of the biggest and best companies to work for and with I drove for Yellow for over 28 years and retired December 31,2004 and I sure miss working with some of the best Truckers in the nation

    • @jennifercapps105
      @jennifercapps105 Před 3 lety +1

      @Hello Lee Barnes how are you doing

    • @leebarnes6872
      @leebarnes6872 Před 3 lety

      @@jennifercapps105 I’m doing okay here just north of Nashville Tn how about yourself? My email address is redtexan49@gmail.com
      Write me

    • @milaelizabeth2237
      @milaelizabeth2237 Před 3 lety

      Hello lee Barned

  • @jeffjones6531
    @jeffjones6531 Před 5 lety +8

    Very well done. I learned alot. Thankyou.

  • @stancerevolution9388
    @stancerevolution9388 Před 4 lety +5

    Great vid very interesting to see where it all started from

  • @apocyldoomer
    @apocyldoomer Před 6 lety +23

    Great historic video, I could watch this stuff all day..👍🏻 Ha, they wore bus drivers hats back than, so did the UPS Drivers..wow

    • @JD-rf1xc
      @JD-rf1xc Před 6 lety +4

      the only part of uniform UPS has lost is Ties and hats, but still nice pants and shirts :-)

  • @MsJinkerson
    @MsJinkerson Před 5 lety +5

    great video and photos these are the backbone of the nations

  • @richardstroope7361
    @richardstroope7361 Před 6 lety +6

    Great video Jimmy.

  • @annemariegraff2743
    @annemariegraff2743 Před 5 lety +6

    Extraordinaire 👍👍👍 historiquement c est bien présente c est aller vite good 😁😁😁❤❤🙋‍♀️🙋‍♀️

  • @toddstevens3557
    @toddstevens3557 Před 4 lety +3

    Awesome video! I liked seeing the old orange trailers.

  • @lcvt8023
    @lcvt8023 Před 4 lety +6

    Big thanks to all you truckers out there!

  • @johnbrown5477
    @johnbrown5477 Před 3 lety +3

    I bet no one at Roadway remembers John McCall...
    He was a strong reason in getting Roadway into the textile mills in the South...he retired as a salesman at Roadway...

  • @s2h995
    @s2h995 Před 5 lety +6

    Legend has it , they still use some them old trucks as spares

  • @johnbouwens2024
    @johnbouwens2024 Před 4 lety +3

    Just love them ol c.o.e trucks,,,, I want one

  • @jesusmorales9122
    @jesusmorales9122 Před 4 lety +2

    Puros recuerdos me recuerda mi compa el jeff teylor travajava en fremont. Corriamos juntos sejido para yucaya ca y mas pueblitos del norte de california 👍🙏

  • @donaldwhitted4214
    @donaldwhitted4214 Před 2 lety

    Hello very interesting video of roadway express lot of history about roadway express over 75 years of real service to customer's one real trucking company still in business as of the year 2022👍

  • @mccrackenphillip
    @mccrackenphillip Před 6 lety +16

    I remember the Ford C Series Gas & Diesel in Ontario Cal when I was a kid

  • @onrr1726
    @onrr1726 Před 4 lety +5

    I remember the Ford C Cabs one used to pass by the house 3 days a week to drop off paper stock to a dairy down the street from my parents home when I was kid in the 1980's

    • @ceetwarrior
      @ceetwarrior Před rokem

      Me too. They were in Colorado springs, in late 80's/ early 90's when I was young. Used to pass by their hub all the time.

  • @sillygoose2508
    @sillygoose2508 Před 5 lety +4

    That was fun no bullshit I enjoyed thanks for posting

  • @salfordladcraigedeane2356

    Thanks for your service,

  • @JalopyTechnology
    @JalopyTechnology Před 5 lety +11

    Great video Jimmy...Krooser from Hank's.... don't forget... "Roadway Always on the road /Always in the way"

  • @captainmorgan1107
    @captainmorgan1107 Před 6 lety +25

    Great video. I remember those Detroit powered long hood R model Macks from the 70's like the one @ 12:02.

    • @donaldbartram6315
      @donaldbartram6315 Před 6 lety +5

      My old boss bought one, put a hyd. tank & pto on it,, we hauled trailer dump with it.

    • @fredbrammer6454
      @fredbrammer6454 Před 6 lety +2

      Captain Morgan www.awesomediecast.co

    • @mattberg6785
      @mattberg6785 Před 6 lety +5

      I live by the Chicago heights terminal and have seen a lot of different Roadway power. The Detroit powered tractors bring back loud memories. US RT 30 through my small state line town was narrow and busy always lots of Roadway doubles

    • @qualityweldingandrepair1424
      @qualityweldingandrepair1424 Před 5 lety +2

      Mack's were powered by mack.

    • @qualityweldingandrepair1424
      @qualityweldingandrepair1424 Před 5 lety +3

      No R model was powered by a Detroit.!

  • @richardgeeding1275
    @richardgeeding1275 Před rokem +1

    I worked for Roadway Express at the Fort Collins, Co. terminal 893. It was a sad day when they sold out to Yellow. Yellow quit the Teamsters Pension Plan and I lost out of being able to take a full early retirement ( eighty and out) by 2 years.

  • @speedskiff2
    @speedskiff2 Před 6 lety +4

    Worked on a Roadway Louisville with Hendrickson suspension and tag axle back late 70s. No traction in weather. Liked low mud flap between axles to cut down on flats.

    • @CatHouseMouse251
      @CatHouseMouse251 Před 5 lety +2

      Hendrickson suspension...also known as the killer suspension! Dangerous

  • @the.porter.productions
    @the.porter.productions Před 4 lety +7

    I liked hearing about the history...I like that 2 brothers got it started and continued, even though they had a different way of operating the company. I think that deregulation was meant to help the trucking industry, but it backfired! It hasn’t been the same since! Thanks for sharing! 🥰

    • @milaelizabeth2237
      @milaelizabeth2237 Před 3 lety +1

      Hello porter

    • @douglasjackson5007
      @douglasjackson5007 Před rokem +2

      Similar things happened with airline deregulation. The excitement and romance of air travel quickly disappeared when so many of the start-up carriers began packing people into those aluminum tubes like the New York subway at rush hour.

    • @the.porter.productions
      @the.porter.productions Před rokem

      @@douglasjackson5007 🇺🇸 Yeah, I can imagine that. I was able to ride the Ford Tri motor…what a thrill to look at & ride! I appreciate the companies that have stuck with it all these years. 🥰❄️✌️

    • @the.porter.productions
      @the.porter.productions Před rokem

      @@milaelizabeth2237 🇺🇸 Howdy from the Porters. 🤩❄️✌️

  • @georgewettig1860
    @georgewettig1860 Před 3 lety +2

    RPS, Roadway Package System became FDX or FedEX Ground in 1998. I joined then and retired in 2008. They were very very good to me. More money in this than robbing banks.

  • @ralphaverill2001
    @ralphaverill2001 Před 5 lety +6

    The video mentioned the primitive roads of the 1920's, but made no mention of the Interstate Highway System started in the 1950's. The government designed and financed interstates were the greatest thing that ever happened to the long haul trucking business, and therefore almost every business in the country as well.
    Of course, after a while it was decided by many that government was the problem and our infrastructure was allowed to age and crumble.
    So sad.

  • @geraldboykin6159
    @geraldboykin6159 Před 4 lety +2

    If wasn't for truckers this country will go down. Keep your thumbs up! RETIRED

  • @johnnyhawkins43
    @johnnyhawkins43 Před 5 lety +13

    Something I just remembered those old loud noisey air starters,scare you to death if it's fairly quite around you when they used them!!!!!!!!

    • @MrGaryGG48
      @MrGaryGG48 Před 5 lety +6

      I ran all "Lower 48 States" for Global Van Lines in 1979 & 1980 and routinely stopped at truck stops along the way. There was nothing quite like waking up early in the morning when some guy with an air-starter would light that sucker off in the next parking space. Nobody needed an alarm clock if one of those was nearby. That was no place for a driver with a heart condition!!!! The coffee in the restaurant was for steadying your nerves, you didn't need any help waking up. ;^)

    • @cjshaw1419
      @cjshaw1419 Před 5 lety +2

      I fell in love with air starters back in the early 90's. I was roughly 5 yrs old when I first seen "Maximum Overdrive". Alot of Brockways & Autocars, lol. Little did I know International Transtar II, Mack Ultraliners, & RS-600/700 Macks were already going the way of the dinosaurs.

    • @seeweezeke
      @seeweezeke Před 3 lety +2

      I was a mechanic at roadway. I never once seen one of those air starters fail. And if it ran out of air you could hook a gland hand from another tractor to it and refill the tank. only required one battery to operate the rig. We re powered many of the old WCL tractors with series 60 engines. This truck line was very well ran, it really surprises me they were absorbed. Now the freight companies invest in equipment instead of people.

    • @milaelizabeth2237
      @milaelizabeth2237 Před 3 lety

      @@MrGaryGG48 hello!

  • @dovidt919
    @dovidt919 Před 5 lety +6

    Bring it back HIGH & TIGHT, lol i was city driver in san francisco, local,#85 , funkiest equipment,

  • @butchs6099
    @butchs6099 Před rokem +1

    Big R diesel car. Single stack mack with a window in the back. Every truck the driver would claim on the radio had 44,000 (on the front passenger seat). My Uncle Gene worked Chicago Heights dispatch as a coordinator 15 years. Then went to Barstow working for Yellow Freight. Norm Mayor, a well known driver for both companies. Both good guys, gone now, would do anything for anyone.

  • @NotSoCrazyNinja
    @NotSoCrazyNinja Před 5 lety +5

    Every so often I still see one of those 1950s era Roadway trailers being hauled on the road. No idea if it has a load in it or why it's on the road, but it's very interesting to see such an old trailer rolling down the road.

    • @ronsea21
      @ronsea21 Před 4 lety

      I can remember when Yellow was all most bankrupt.

  • @johnnyhawkins43
    @johnnyhawkins43 Před 5 lety +15

    Ahhh the good old days when you could only go 35 mph if your truck would run that fast! Hahaha!!!!

  • @Syncopator
    @Syncopator Před 5 lety +2

    At around 14:15 the narrator describes the company using an IBM 7070 mainframe in 1962 in their new office. What's pictured however is an RCA Spectra 70 which wasn't available until 1965.

    • @Boobtube.
      @Boobtube. Před 5 lety +1

      I noticed that as well.

  • @jamesdawson4459
    @jamesdawson4459 Před 3 lety +3

    I'm thinking it may be time to update this video - if my arithmetic is correct, Roadway is now at or approaching 91 years. Good company. Great people.

    • @Bendigo1
      @Bendigo1 Před 3 lety

      The original video this video is showing was produced for the 75th anniversary.

    • @milaelizabeth2237
      @milaelizabeth2237 Před 3 lety

      For real

  • @phoneone1371
    @phoneone1371 Před 6 lety

    My freinds dad who was like a dad to me drove for roadway for over 40 years had diamond ring for no accidents and 3 didgit id number great guy was proud as fuck of his ring wish his kids missed him as much as me

  • @scottayar5136
    @scottayar5136 Před 4 lety +6

    I worked for YRC the pay and benefits where great and the guys on the day shift where great however I was an apprentice mechanic and I had only one co worker on my shift and that was a drunk 🥴 who did not want me there and the afternoon shift made me feel the same I quite it was hard for me to give up a good paying job like that but not being wanted and no it’s one to train me I was forced out I wish I could have made it a career

  • @garc0113
    @garc0113 Před 2 lety +2

    I've been driving 36 years last twenty in the teamsters.the equipment has come along way since I started.the biggest trailer we had at the time was a 45'

  • @77solomonmoses50
    @77solomonmoses50 Před 4 lety +1

    Thk you for the download

  • @glennso47
    @glennso47 Před 6 lety +13

    I recall the White Tilt cabs from when I was a small kid

    • @bobpeg7457
      @bobpeg7457 Před 5 lety +2

      My dad drove a White tilt cab when I was a small kid.

  • @bobn.5173
    @bobn.5173 Před 3 lety +1

    I drove for roadway, until 2009,when they went with yellow. Roadway was a Co.

  • @lennylopez6285
    @lennylopez6285 Před 2 lety +1

    Always on the road
    Always in the way.

  • @r.b.holmes2779
    @r.b.holmes2779 Před 4 lety +9

    It's all history now--YRC

  • @joelambert7946
    @joelambert7946 Před 5 lety +3

    My Dad drove 39 years I’ve got some of these pics

  • @glennsaborosch4262
    @glennsaborosch4262 Před 5 lety +6

    I liked the video but there was some 'spin doctoring done in the section about the Roadway-Yellow merger. I remember stock values tanking and Teamsters took multiple wage and retirement pay cuts and management, who's benefits were in the form of company stocks, took a beating too. I didn't know of anyone who was happy with the merger. Maybe the top echelon of management.

  • @charleshess678
    @charleshess678 Před rokem +2

    My. Dad retired from big r after 30 some years knew galen worked out of camphill then Carlisle went by Gene hess

  • @mikewhipkey6863
    @mikewhipkey6863 Před 5 lety +17

    Just think what the industry would be like today if you could bring them drivers and employees into the current time with their work ethic and access to the advanced technology I bet things would be a lot better than they are now...

    • @CatHouseMouse251
      @CatHouseMouse251 Před 5 lety +4

      We would need Big R to be owned by the employee's instead of the jackasses that were supervision after the Rouches passed the company along to Yellow. After that Big R got taken down by Yellow. I've been retired since 2001 and am totally disabled so no way I can go back to work and facing the prospect of losing my paltry pension in a few years. Yellow stole pension funds that should have been paid to the retiree's and future retiree's by begging the union to let them stop paying into the fund plan's. Guys I've been able to talk with who were still working said things got worse after Yellow took over. And deregulation was only the start of the down fall of Roadway and all the other, now deceased union companies. So not only did the government screw the pooch, so did the union and YRC. And now the Mexican and more so the non-union Canadian companies take over trucking with NAFTA. At least with the union's, drivers had a better income and benefits, although I have to say some union's like the AFL-CIO went overboard in hourly pay. People working on auto lines are getting way too much per hour for what they do. But that's another story...

    • @seadog686
      @seadog686 Před 4 lety +1

      They wouldn't stick around very long. They'd find better pay, benefits, and working conditions somewhere else. I was a long-haul tanker-yanker and virtually lived in my tractor. Remember seeing a lot of good deals on the bulletin boards in the company's O.C.s on recreational toys bought by drivers who never got the time off to use them!

  • @mikeisaacs2314
    @mikeisaacs2314 Před rokem

    I like how that old truck was driving through a grass field 😂

  • @j-man6001
    @j-man6001 Před 5 lety +2

    08:45 Here you go, we all know what you are here for! You're Welcome!

  • @Green_Gundel
    @Green_Gundel Před rokem

    Very interesting!

  • @ksr9t
    @ksr9t Před 4 lety +2

    Dont see them any longer but in the past there was motor courts called Roadway Inns. Usually they had lounges and some instances, resturants. Wonder if the two were connected in someway?

    • @Junk_Yard_Dog_53
      @Junk_Yard_Dog_53 Před rokem

      2 completely different companies. Spelled Rodeway Inn and Roadway Express. I worked for the latter. Women in the office would tell me about people calling to make reservations for a room. Lol

  • @deaustin4018
    @deaustin4018 Před 5 lety +2

    local rail and yards have gone driverless in many places. How long before 18 wheelers are barrelling down the road without a driver? Next year or the year after?

  • @naturundhund
    @naturundhund Před rokem

    😎👍 Greetings from Germany

  • @rainbowranddy
    @rainbowranddy Před 4 lety +3

    Giddy-up, Go daddy...giddy-up , Go....

  • @hectorkingjr
    @hectorkingjr Před 3 lety

    Thx.

  • @robertking7883
    @robertking7883 Před 4 lety +3

    Anyone remember Knights of the Road ???? ... those were professionals many years ago !!!

    • @johnhegarty1761
      @johnhegarty1761 Před 3 lety +1

      Absolutely! Now the majority of these new meatheads that drive these big rigs are what I call the "Nightmares Of The Road", they aren't much better than the cell phone huggers in the cars.

    • @milaelizabeth2237
      @milaelizabeth2237 Před 3 lety

      Yeah Robert my king

    • @milaelizabeth2237
      @milaelizabeth2237 Před 3 lety

      @@johnhegarty1761 Hello John