Railroad Town

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  • čas přidán 6. 08. 2017
  • This short documentary is a delightful trip back to an era in which railroad was king.
    Directed by Don Haldane
    About the NFB
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  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 260

  • @bboucharde
    @bboucharde Před 4 lety +27

    This is the real Canada. Heartland.

  • @truckdaddy1957
    @truckdaddy1957 Před 2 lety +26

    I ,as an old time trucker, can identify with these tough old birds. We really aren't much different. God bless the hard working folks.

    • @Tannertraversed
      @Tannertraversed Před 6 měsíci +3

      My grandpa being a tough worker (trucker) like yourselves used to say as we met "shake the hand thats shook the world"

  • @SuperIliad
    @SuperIliad Před 4 lety +23

    Filmed in 1956 at the sea change from coal to diesel. My days, when a reporter mixed it up in these surroundings, hair groomed and attired in a suit and tie. I miss the civility and ease of language.

  • @LandNfan
    @LandNfan Před 5 lety +58

    Boomer’s career is a close parallel to my granddad’s. Emmett Miller served the Louisville and Nashville from 1908 to 1959. He began as a “call boy.” Since not everyone had a telephone is 1908, whenever the crew scheduler needed someone from the extra board on short notice, they would send a kid on a bicycle to go knock on his door. When he was old enough, he got on as a fireman, then worked his way up to engineer. He didn’t like to be gone overnight, so he always bid on local freight and switching jobs in and around Nashville.

  • @Test-hw5fn
    @Test-hw5fn Před 7 měsíci +4

    Beautiful film. I hope Boomer and his wife had a long and happy retirement. He’ll now be driving loco's up there in that railroad in the sky having the time of his celestial life.

  • @Seazer009
    @Seazer009 Před 5 lety +16

    I enjoyed the film railroading in bygone days was far different than it is today..Railroading used to be quite a family affair but its rare to see several family members working on the railroad together in modern days..I spent 35 years working for an american railroad, retiring in 2000 I have had a long wonderful retirement..Still after all these years away from the rails I still miss it at times..Most of the small towns that used to be rail hubs for many years and depended on railroad dollars to keep families and small businesses operating have gone by the wayside now...

  • @AlaskaTrucker
    @AlaskaTrucker Před 5 lety +32

    Grand-Dad worked on the Frisco line for 37 years - track foreman.
    My Dad remembered the old steam locos as a kid and always recalled them quite fondly.
    I love these old movies - a lot of these guys like Boomer were probably WWI Veterans and a lot of WWII Veterans in this too. I remember when there were a lot of these old guys around, solid, dependable men. Thanks for posting!

  • @christopherkingsland4604
    @christopherkingsland4604 Před 4 lety +9

    From 1945 to 1967 Canada was beautiful!

    • @paulsenecal98
      @paulsenecal98 Před měsícem

      Yes! Before the Trudeau father and son destroyed Canada!

  • @OutdoorEnt
    @OutdoorEnt Před 5 lety +30

    I grew up in Melville in the 60s. Real cool to see this. I knew Buck Morgan a bit. He was a friend of my Dad's back then.

    • @120446219
      @120446219 Před 4 lety +1

      do you know if Ted is still alive..I know Buck died in 2008,,what a fantastic family....

    • @spark5580
      @spark5580 Před 3 lety

      What was he like

  • @davehiggins8083
    @davehiggins8083 Před 5 měsíci +3

    This is a great production and a window into what life was like for the working class family in a small town a few generations ago. Our "esteemed" prime minister just accused his conservative opponent of wanting to take the country back to the '50s -- we should be so lucky!

  • @danbeau9404
    @danbeau9404 Před 5 lety +25

    Great story in Trains Magazine how the boys souped up those railroad carts to do 65 miles an hour and the RR knew nothing about it. They also built tops for them and put pieces on the front to deflect the wind. They had to go out in Minus 30 weather to fix tracks, check things, etc. Sometimes spending hours going thru deep snow drifts, 40 mph winds and minus 30 to 35F. Can you imagine, wee hours of the night, those conditions and several calls a night? The author did it for 35 years I believe. Special breed.

  • @russellloomis4376
    @russellloomis4376 Před 4 lety +9

    As of today, Melville has grown by 62 people since this film was made. Wish my body did well in the cold weather. It would be nice to get back to small town living.

  • @lhall9381
    @lhall9381 Před rokem +6

    My Great Grand Father (Benjamin Chatfield) was an Engineer for the New Haven R/R back in the 1800's. He ran out of the Cedar Hill yard through the Naugatuck Valley (the fruit train from the docks). My online logo (to the left) . Yes the railroad is in my blood. I'm a railroad artist. The logo stands for Wall Road. All my work goes on the Wall.

  • @joehvacr2515
    @joehvacr2515 Před 5 lety +22

    Yup, Remember this era. I worked for CP Rail as a trainman out of Nelson Yard back in the late 1970’s then transfered to Revelstoke. Was good until they took away the caboose. Left just before that happened.

    • @chuckabbate5924
      @chuckabbate5924 Před 5 lety +4

      It's a damn shame the cabooses are gone. I did a brief stint on Conrail as a brakeman in the mid , and I've been a commuter rail conductor in Boston for 17 years now. It definitely in the blood!

    • @The_DuMont_Network
      @The_DuMont_Network Před 9 měsíci

      Virtual Railfan CZcams channel has a camera at Revelstoke. There is a small bear which appears from time to time, crosses the road and disappears between two houses, then reappears later. They have named him "Revvie", I believe.

  • @mikeh37
    @mikeh37 Před 5 lety +38

    A great film about a little town in the middle of the Prairies. It was fun to hear how they talked in the 50's, and see the steam locomotives. Thanks very much, NFB!

    • @brandonmuir5117
      @brandonmuir5117 Před 2 lety +4

      I especially loved how they predict that dieselazation "may" result in some layoffs... turned out to be the single biggest contributor to reduced staff across then entire industry

  • @NP-ux9xg
    @NP-ux9xg Před 6 lety +56

    Fred's lunch bucket is a .50 caliber ammo can. Pretty neat.

    • @russellloomis4376
      @russellloomis4376 Před 4 lety

      That's Curleys lunch box NP.

    • @battlemouse1
      @battlemouse1 Před 4 lety +2

      Mom packed a Herman Munster size lunch in that can.

    • @kennyspaulding796
      @kennyspaulding796 Před 2 lety

      I thought the same thing. Love his lunch box. Look at Curly's size and look at how much his wife is packin'

  • @MrPaul1872
    @MrPaul1872 Před 5 lety +10

    This is just extreme classic Canadiana!
    Oh the nostalgia of it.

  • @davidpoor8638
    @davidpoor8638 Před 4 lety +10

    WOW...3500's with Vandy tenders. This was back when there was pride in railroading.

    • @cjgangi0123
      @cjgangi0123 Před 4 lety +2

      David Poor there was pride in EVERYTHING.

    • @russellloomis4376
      @russellloomis4376 Před 3 lety

      @@cjgangi0123 took the words right out of my mouth.

  • @James_Knott
    @James_Knott Před 9 měsíci +4

    I started with CN Telecommunications in 1972 or about 17 years after this film was made. In 1975-1979, I was based in Capreol Ontario and much of my work was for the railroad along the main line. In those years I was often on trains, including the Supercontinenal and freights. I was first on the Super, when I took my vacation in July 1974, and went from Toronto to Vancouver and back. On that trip, I passed through Melville twice, but I don't remember it, as it was in the middle of the night.

  • @pacz8114
    @pacz8114 Před 5 lety +23

    (Enjoyable film, which was clearly made with care and consideration. Also worth noting how all the folk are slim and trim -- before the convenience food overlook the dietary landscape; it's also nice to see the freight cars devoid of graffiti hieroglyphics -- initially an import from America's peculiar and violent gang culture...)

    • @David-lt6lt
      @David-lt6lt Před 4 lety +3

      100% agree with you about the demeanor of people changing. Especially with how diet has affected us all and how we work. But from what I've learned from internet and people I've met rail graffiti truly started from the hobos and workings tagging the cars with paintsticks and grease markers to mark what cars they worked or traveled on.

  • @Caje-zf8md
    @Caje-zf8md Před 4 lety +8

    DWP, a subsidiary of CN was just up the street where I lived. Steam went out in 1957, two years after I was born. The neighborhood kids spent a lot of time crossing the rail yard to get to the hills beyond. In 1984 the DWP relocated over to Wisconsin.

    • @richardcolborn8337
      @richardcolborn8337 Před 4 lety +1

      Caje1962 I worked in the old dwp yard on hwy 105 just outside Oliver wi

  • @Captain_Char
    @Captain_Char Před 5 lety +21

    I remember when there was many rails here when I was young, a large rail yard always busy with freight cars being shunted, now fast forward 25 years the yard is gone, all the remains is the old mainline, and abandoned locomotive shops, its actually sad to see an era that was so busy disappear, but im glad videos like this exist, so people can see what it was like, not just imagine it

    • @kennethquesenberry2610
      @kennethquesenberry2610 Před 4 lety +3

      I grew up in a railroad town myself. The Virginian Railroad had shops that employed a thousand men in the 1950s. They were closed down and the operation moved to Roanoke after the merger with Norfolk & Western. What happened to railroads? See all those eighteen-wheelers on the highway along with the cars driving down the interstate? That's what happened to railroads.

    • @DAViDD767
      @DAViDD767 Před 4 lety +1

      @@kennethquesenberry2610 don't forget about the airlines

    • @kennethquesenberry2610
      @kennethquesenberry2610 Před 4 lety +2

      No doubt but rail service in my hometown ended in the early fifties, fifteen years before they moved the shops. An article about the railroads appeared in the local paper a few days ago. The Norfolk Southern is using longer trains (two or three miles long) and operating them with only one or two employees. Less coal is being shipped, too, I am led to believe. There used to even be a roundhouse in my hometown. Steam locomotives required more maintenance. And doesn't that man have slicked-back hair!

    • @canuckster24
      @canuckster24 Před 3 lety +2

      @@kennethquesenberry2610 People like us killed it as well, we want our cheap Chinese crap so nothing is manufactured here anymore. We don't want railroads in our back yards either so all kinds of switching lines are disappearing more and more, being replaced with intermodal service, trains don't service industries anymore, they service waypoints.

    • @kennethquesenberry2610
      @kennethquesenberry2610 Před 3 lety +2

      @@canuckster24 I take your point, yet more things are manufactured here than we get credit for. Many foreign car manufacturers have plants in this country now--though not in Detroit. In fact, something close to 20% of American autos are exported. We just import more than we export.
      The Chinese produce things that cost less than we might be able to make it for but that isn't to say Chinese products are necessarily of poor quality. Besides, there's a market for junk products. We just used to make them ourselves. But remember; if it isn't made where you live, it's imported.

  • @juliencaron3264
    @juliencaron3264 Před 4 lety +12

    Magnifique reportage sur les "hommes du rail", leur organisation et leur travail. Passionnant.

  • @MFXdump
    @MFXdump Před 5 lety +16

    Golly! All these people were really swell!

  • @JamieSmith-fz2mz
    @JamieSmith-fz2mz Před rokem +2

    I had been riding my bike for years on a rail trail near me before I learned that it was my grandfather’s run on the Pontiac Oxford Northern to Caseville. Takes on new meaning now knowing the history.

  • @exenrontexas
    @exenrontexas Před 5 lety +9

    I come from railroad town USA. The headquarters of the UP and where the owner of BNSF has his operations. This is a very well produced historical video and I very much enjoyed it and give kudos to the producer and staff. Truly railroading has changed immensely since then but one thing that has not changed is the love and dedication the men have to their jobs. Talking about change I worked on a project for BNSF testing the use of compressed natural gas for locomotive fuel. It was very successful but due to corporate politics was not implemented. That may change since the owner of the BNSF and the gas supplier and now the same person.

  • @keithpurduecroft
    @keithpurduecroft Před 6 lety +18

    I'm a sream buff. Sadly those days are gone forever. My house was near a C&EI track. I miss those sounds. And now the AT&SF turned into the BN&SF. l remember "Santa Fe all the way". And the UP. etc.
    Thank you for this!!! Old times. Good times.

    • @nathanwatson01
      @nathanwatson01 Před 6 lety +3

      yeah I love those sream locomotives

    • @danbeau9404
      @danbeau9404 Před 5 lety +4

      My house growing up was also near a C&EI track in Chicago on 100th st. It was this proximity to the C&EI that started my love for Railroads. As a kid we had a siding on 100th where they would park cars for a day or so. I spent many hours climbing on these cars and wondering where they were going. My friends thought I was a little weird, but I didn't care. The RR police would catch us now and then, but it wasn't severe, usually a lecture and escort of the tracks.

    • @donwolfe9131
      @donwolfe9131 Před 5 lety

      Keith Purdue
      909

    • @michaelwertzy9808
      @michaelwertzy9808 Před 5 lety +2

      @@nathanwatson01, good sreamin reply! What made the sream, maybe coal? And some wha-wha!

  • @sharkheadism
    @sharkheadism Před 4 lety +5

    9:55 _"Would you like to see one of our diesel locomotives?"_ "No thanks I'm good here"

  • @sfm5s
    @sfm5s Před 6 měsíci +1

    Love the flannel checkered shirts My grandfather wore them and brought back great memories. I remember Fred Davis as a tv announcer. Seemed like a real classy guy.

  • @GuyjKite
    @GuyjKite Před 11 měsíci +1

    Watching this video reminds me of my grandad. Southern rwy. 47 years. He too was a loco. engineer. Started on extra board as a fireman steam loco. 1950 promoted to engineer. Young people today should watch these black and white videos and learn rich history. 😊

  • @ttystikkrocks1042
    @ttystikkrocks1042 Před 5 lety +5

    Funky old flick! Reminds me of a lot of films I used to watch when I was a kid... Almost half a century ago.

  • @janetcohen9190
    @janetcohen9190 Před měsícem

    Wow, very interesting to see and hear real everyday folks, their surroundings, town, steam and diesel locomotives, trains, railroad tracks, , functions, works, ...
    Thank you.

  • @MrShobar
    @MrShobar Před 5 lety +44

    The appearance of the rolling stock suggests that the spray can had not been invented in 1955.

    • @grunt4life657
      @grunt4life657 Před 5 lety +4

      "Tagging" hadn't been invented either.

    • @MrShobar
      @MrShobar Před 5 lety +7

      It's not a new invention. "Tagging" has existed forever. For example, in the southwest, indian tribes used petroglyphs to mark their territory. Tribes in Central and South America did the same. Cave "tagging" by prehistoric man was used to mark possession of a habitat. These were not just artistic impulses, as modern man would like to believe.

    • @russellloomis4376
      @russellloomis4376 Před 4 lety +10

      People had more respect, greater work ethic also has to do with everyone's skin color.

    • @maxshelltrack9720
      @maxshelltrack9720 Před 4 lety +5

      Whites could tag just as good as blacks.

    • @AlexR2648
      @AlexR2648 Před 4 lety +5

      People were more afraid of the railroad bulls back in those days

  • @christopherdibble5872
    @christopherdibble5872 Před 2 lety +3

    The engineers don't wave from the trains not like they did back in 1954.i still get a tear in my eye when I hear an old train in.the night

  • @dav1099
    @dav1099 Před 4 lety +4

    dang ole Curly looks rough for being 52 yrs. old. thanks for posting

  • @harrysteiman
    @harrysteiman Před 5 lety +15

    Oh, the nostalgia! I was there, and I remember. People were more formal and polite. Being introduced as Mr Davis, not just Fred. For that matter a young Fred Davis. Imagine someone today climbing aboard a locomotive wearing a suit! Imagine a family today where everyone was working for the same company --let alone everyone working. It was a different planet. I regret they didn't shoot this in colour.

    • @allon33
      @allon33 Před 5 lety +7

      What has happened to our world, it was so much better then.

    • @harrysteiman
      @harrysteiman Před 5 lety +4

      Not really.@@allon33

    • @captainmorgan757
      @captainmorgan757 Před rokem +2

      Filming in colour would have been a greater expense, but filming it in black and white adds to the nostalgia.

    • @nordvegfigg7746
      @nordvegfigg7746 Před rokem +2

      The NFB of Canada was federally funded and on tight budgets, so virtually nothing they produced was filmed in colour until the 1960's. Short docs like this were produced by the NFB for Canada's first national TV network the CBC. Since the CBC didn't begin broadcasting in colour until the 1960's it made no sense to produce these shorts in colour.

    • @James_Knott
      @James_Knott Před 9 měsíci

      Fred Davis spent many years at the CBC. What eventually became the CBC was started by the CNR to provide entertainment for passengers.

  • @rickenbacker315
    @rickenbacker315 Před 5 lety +20

    I'm 60, I'm retiring next year. I'm done .. I don't mind railroading, but it's time to go.

    • @bestfriendhank1424
      @bestfriendhank1424 Před 3 lety +1

      I want out now and I’m not close to 60😳

    • @twizz420
      @twizz420 Před 3 lety +1

      2020 would have been the perfect year to retire lol

    • @spark5580
      @spark5580 Před 3 lety

      @@twizz420 agreed I've been welding for the railway for 4 years now

  • @ericzerkle5214
    @ericzerkle5214 Před 6 lety +14

    Good ol Canadian railroading!!!

  • @SuperIliad
    @SuperIliad Před 4 lety +5

    The car at 17:00 looks to be a Studebaker Champion 4-door sedan, circa 1954.

  • @davewilson9772
    @davewilson9772 Před 2 lety +2

    Bravo!
    What a treat, gave me a look at what my own family did back in the 30's and 40's.

  • @davidlisowski5245
    @davidlisowski5245 Před 3 měsíci

    The locomotive in the opening shot (6503) and the one that pulls in with the banner on the front (6500) were sadly written off in separate accidents in the Rockies. 6503 also appears in the more modern CN scheme in the opening of the Rockumentary Festival Express.

  • @williamschlenger1518
    @williamschlenger1518 Před 5 lety +6

    1953 I was 10yrs.old &we still had steam in N.J.

    • @JohnSmith-sd4yu
      @JohnSmith-sd4yu Před 5 lety

      We were both born the same year!

    • @James_Knott
      @James_Knott Před 9 měsíci

      @@JohnSmith-sd4yu I was born in 1953 and barely old enough to remember the last days of steam.

  • @P61guy61
    @P61guy61 Před 5 lety +3

    Thank you for posting

  • @rossbryan6102
    @rossbryan6102 Před 4 lety +4

    30 YEARS, 3 MONTHS ON THE SANTA FE!!
    GREAT JOB!!
    GRADUATED HIGH SCHOOL 1960
    STARTED RAILROAD SEPT 1964
    IF I COULD DO OVER, WOULD HAVE STARTED MAY 1960!!

  • @eleanorpowellfan
    @eleanorpowellfan Před 5 lety +14

    As an old Front Page Challenge viewer, I was waiting for Fred to light up a Du Maurier. How grand would it be to drive the Studebaker to the station and board the cab of a steam locomotive?

    • @sitarnut
      @sitarnut Před 5 lety +2

      I watched FPC here on YT.. great show back then..and I scored some vintage Du Maurier ciggies a while back... nice. Most of us kids were around 11 years old in 1955 and remember this world and sorely miss it....

    • @SuperIliad
      @SuperIliad Před 4 lety +1

      I loved the pastel colors of the ciggies. Yeas, I'm a yank (colors not colours).

  • @rvnmedic1968
    @rvnmedic1968 Před 4 lety +4

    The Speed Recorder instrument was made in Utica, NY, 30 miles from where I live.

    • @johnstudd4245
      @johnstudd4245 Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah, we USED TO make a lot of things.

    • @paulsenecal98
      @paulsenecal98 Před 2 měsíci

      Yes we did. Until we got sold-out by greedy corporations!

  • @gunnyu.s.m.c8606
    @gunnyu.s.m.c8606 Před 5 lety +2

    that's awesome, thanks for the video, My compliments sir

  • @BeingRomans829ed
    @BeingRomans829ed Před 4 lety +1

    Wonderful video. Thank you for uploading.

  • @robinengland5799
    @robinengland5799 Před 2 lety

    Wonderful film! Thank you for sharing!!!

  • @aestheticcruise8807
    @aestheticcruise8807 Před 5 lety +4

    My father was born near Mevile. The old steam locomotives would come into town and he would take the truck in to pick up coal, salt, sugar or wood.

  • @OKFrax-ys2op
    @OKFrax-ys2op Před 4 lety +1

    What a sweet movie!

  • @johnrichardson7354
    @johnrichardson7354 Před 5 lety +32

    Frederic Ernest "Boomer" Cardwell b. April 24, 1890, N. Plantagenet Twp, Prescott Co., ON., Canada, d. 1960, Grey Nuns Hospital, Regina, SK., Canada.

    • @sitarnut
      @sitarnut Před 5 lety +8

      Hi John.... many thanks for remembering particulars on "Boomer"... hope his boys did OK.

    • @samh3029
      @samh3029 Před 5 lety +11

      lived a whopping five years after retirement. Never knew anything but railroading

    • @d.m.3259
      @d.m.3259 Před 4 lety +5

      R.I.P.

    • @castercamber
      @castercamber Před 4 lety +5

      @@samh3029 5 years, all too common back then. Plenty of folks didn't even live to see that much.

    • @paulsenecal98
      @paulsenecal98 Před měsícem

      Sad! He only had 5 years after retirement.

  • @nlmfilms6641
    @nlmfilms6641 Před 6 lety +5

    This is Awesome to watch! I'm very interested in the C.N.R. and I would like to see more documentaries on the C.N.R. or any other Canadian railroad like C.P.R.

    • @nordvegfigg7746
      @nordvegfigg7746 Před rokem

      There's another 30 minute NFB doc on CZcams called Train 406 about a freight train's run from Toronto to Halifax in 1958 that shows all the work that went into moving freight cars and crews all that way. I just finished watching it. Some great footage of the long gone Montreal train yards, showing how the train's cars are moved from one train to another, and new cars added to 406. Good footage of the repair shop in Montreal as well.

  • @emdmanSpaziani
    @emdmanSpaziani Před 6 lety +2

    That was a nice little film.

  • @rohnkd4hct260
    @rohnkd4hct260 Před 5 lety +3

    good little video. got some age on it. love to see an updated version of it.

  • @McCracken_9
    @McCracken_9 Před 5 lety +5

    Best acting ive seen

  • @williamlarson3623
    @williamlarson3623 Před 6 lety +4

    Wonderful film, such interesting people, and of course, love those trains.

  • @moggridge1
    @moggridge1 Před 4 lety +1

    And now we know what Harry Truman did after he retired (Burt).
    Great film! 👍😊

  • @JackF99
    @JackF99 Před 3 lety +1

    Wow this is great with Fred and his family. Would be interesting to know how the sons fared in railroading as things changed so much after this.

  • @JeffreyOrnstein
    @JeffreyOrnstein Před 4 lety

    Very good, thanks.

  • @tpxchallenger
    @tpxchallenger Před rokem +1

    Melville, Saskatchewan is still a stop on VIA Rail. They are restoring the old station, which is a good thing, but there is hardly anything left of CN's operation there. Track maintenance, I guess.
    This film was made in 1956.

    • @spencerk4077
      @spencerk4077 Před 6 měsíci

      That’s not true. CN’s mainline still runs through Melville

    • @tpxchallenger
      @tpxchallenger Před 6 měsíci

      @@spencerk4077 Their operations there are a fraction of what they once were.

    • @spencerk4077
      @spencerk4077 Před 6 měsíci

      @@tpxchallenger What are you talking about? They never ran 12000ft double stack container trains 60 years ago. CN’s mainline is very busy.

    • @tpxchallenger
      @tpxchallenger Před 6 měsíci

      @@spencerk4077 It is busy, more tons of freight moved now than ever in the past, but they don't stop in Melville, except for crew change. The car shop is long gone, let alone any locomotive servicing. Passengers getting on and of are literally a trickle, perhaps one or two.
      As for all aspects of railroading, times have changed. When I started at Weston shops with CPR we still had thousands of guys. I don't know how many people still work there but nowhere near what it once was. Better technology has greatly improved efficiency.

  • @abelg.1934
    @abelg.1934 Před 6 lety +58

    Boomer started working when he was 15.?! Damn he’s seen some changes

    • @thomasklimchuk441
      @thomasklimchuk441 Před rokem

      Maybe he started as a call boy Before the telephone when a train was order the crew clerk would give the call boy the address he was to go to with the train he was called for .Years ago there was an Engineer in Hamilton that still got called this way As long as his house was with in 2 miles of the yard this was aloud.There was a foreman in the same terminal that also started as a call boy who started at 15

  • @emjay5577
    @emjay5577 Před 4 lety +1

    The days of my youth when things were much simpler, and I wanted to be a locomotive engineer!

  • @rpm1796
    @rpm1796 Před 4 lety +1

    Great heritage...Great Nation..

  • @bigbthunder9705
    @bigbthunder9705 Před rokem +2

    Damn, she blasted her way through at 3:12

  • @Tailss1
    @Tailss1 Před 5 lety +4

    I remember finding a derelict boxcar with boxes of those torpedoes when I was a kid with a bunch of my friends. We were hitting them on the ground with rocks to set them off. At the time I wasn't sure what they were for. Now I know.

  • @OKFrax-ys2op
    @OKFrax-ys2op Před 3 lety +1

    Finally she gets all the chores done and marked off that honey do list!

  • @dennisthurman2070
    @dennisthurman2070 Před 3 lety

    Reminds me of shops yard where I grew up near I spent alot of time there as a kid

  • @robertbrouillette6767

    And the Canadian National is still alive and well. I just saw three CN locomotives with some Kansas City Southern de Mexico here in Meridian, Mississippi.

  • @Kenny-re8ko
    @Kenny-re8ko Před 4 lety +4

    just looked up Fred Davis, he was married 5 times . FIVE TIMES! And here I thought Knowlton Nash held the Canadian journalist record for marriages (4).

    • @maintuning
      @maintuning Před rokem

      Maybe his wives got tired of him coming home with his suits all filthy dirty. haha

  • @CNGP9
    @CNGP9 Před rokem

    Great film

  • @danielyoung6630
    @danielyoung6630 Před 6 lety

    WOW!

  • @k.s.333
    @k.s.333 Před 2 lety

    The good old days -- before I was born.

  • @THR33STEP
    @THR33STEP Před 6 dny

    In todays railroading, Boomer would have been greeted by a whiz quiz and a charge letter.

  • @kansascityshuffle8526
    @kansascityshuffle8526 Před 9 měsíci

    This guy would have probably trained my grandfather’s good friend who would have hired on as a fireman in 1953 and retired in the mid 80s.

  • @57143bodies
    @57143bodies Před 4 lety +7

    I can’t help but think this would have been a funny Mystery Science Theatre 3000 short.

  • @bramptongora2008
    @bramptongora2008 Před 5 lety +18

    Boomer's wife don't let nobody stand between her and her man

  • @jimbobogie8204
    @jimbobogie8204 Před 5 lety +2

    It's great to see historic Canadiana like this. I've ridden the Supercontinental (as the CN train was called) and the Canadian (CPs train). These days only the Via train runs through Saskaton. I always thought that the schedule had both trains passing through Saskatchewan at night.
    I remember when CN converted to 100% diesel...the steam engines were taken to a "graveyard" near Barrie, Ontario to await demolition. My dad took me up there to play "engineer".😁
    Fred Davis was slightly "overdressed" for this show, wasn't he?😉

    • @michaeljbrennan3728
      @michaeljbrennan3728 Před 4 lety

      Jimbo Bogie I was thinking the same thing. Better have a good dry cleaner.

    • @robinforrest7680
      @robinforrest7680 Před 4 lety +1

      Guess he didn't spend enough time on the "real" engine to get himself dirty 😁.
      I did the same once. One of the guards in my team at SNCF got rostered to a steam special with a 4-8-2 mountain (coal fired of course!). Being a steam nut I felt it was my duty to accompany him and make sure all was ok with the train 😉. When I got to the yard I couldn't resist climbing into the cab. SNCF guards uniform or not... and yes, dry cleaners the following day. I don't think the white shirt ever recovered from my turn on the shovel 😁😁😁

    • @James_Knott
      @James_Knott Před 9 měsíci

      Yep. I took the Super to Vancouver and back, in 1974. IIRC, we hit Melville around midnight both ways. I guess they figured there was nothing worth looking at in Saskatchewan. 🙂

  • @Toby32022
    @Toby32022 Před 5 lety +2

    The ONF or NFB have a huge great video clips and i like to see thoses all the time ...
    Since the date of 19 november 18 i was asking for another one as suggested on their site
    But it is not there at the moment ? I just dont know how much time it take to the ONF to add
    a new clip vidéo that i will see on you tube ? The best way is to be patient i think ?
    Anyway , congratulation to the ONF for all your good vidéos .

  • @vicodumb
    @vicodumb Před 3 lety +1

    "What kind of a trip did ya have?" "Stay away from the brown acid, it's bad." says Jim.

  • @johnstudd4245
    @johnstudd4245 Před 5 lety +6

    At 20:37, 15 o'clock.........? What's up with that ? That's a new one on me. Maybe 1500 hours, aka 3:00 pm

  • @geezersgarage8181
    @geezersgarage8181 Před 5 lety +22

    I bet 'Ol Boomer was a real pleasure to spend 16 hours on a locomotive with.

  • @Rog5446
    @Rog5446 Před 5 lety +10

    Boomer looked more like 95 than 65.
    I'm 70 and he could easily pass as my father.

    • @Brian-kl1zu
      @Brian-kl1zu Před 5 lety +2

      My thought too. "Sixty-five?" He didn't age well. No disrespect intended.

    • @jimmyhendrix4495
      @jimmyhendrix4495 Před 3 měsíci

      That's what happens after years of amphetamine consumption.

  • @zelphx
    @zelphx Před 6 lety +8

    16:55 NICE Studebaker!

    • @WAL_DC-6B
      @WAL_DC-6B Před 4 lety

      A 1952 Studebaker to be exact with the so called "clam digger" front grille.

  • @chaosdemonwolf1
    @chaosdemonwolf1 Před 5 lety +44

    Ah the good ole days when a freight train passed without every single freight car having graffiti tagged all over em

    • @warriorgaming1604
      @warriorgaming1604 Před 5 lety +1

      they werent parking them all over the place where anyone with paint could access them

    • @asbestosfibers1325
      @asbestosfibers1325 Před 4 lety +5

      @@warriorgaming1604 wrong.

    • @dknowles60
      @dknowles60 Před 4 lety +9

      @@warriorgaming1604 nice bull crap and lie. They were parked all over the place. What was different that parents spanked a lot in the old days

    • @NERRP2017
      @NERRP2017 Před 4 lety +1

      Yeah I agree

    • @corb765
      @corb765 Před 4 lety +1

      @@warriorgaming1604 yes they did

  • @Greatdome99
    @Greatdome99 Před 4 lety +2

    Classic portrait. Dirt roads, Studebakers, Brylcreem in the hair!

  • @lastplacetrophy3821
    @lastplacetrophy3821 Před rokem +1

    Melville, SK has an almost unchanged population since this film was made.

    • @The_DuMont_Network
      @The_DuMont_Network Před 9 měsíci

      I looked it up on Google Earth with Streetview. Station is still there really nice to see some things remain more or less constant.

  • @hojoinhisarcher
    @hojoinhisarcher Před 5 lety +2

    Yes were still working 1955 on something to replace diesels.

  • @joepepi7394
    @joepepi7394 Před 4 lety

    What a wonderful movie.I wish I had the opportunity to work for the railroad in the old days!

  • @WesternOhioInterurbanHistory

    13:36 anyone know if they have any info on this horn anywhere or what type it is called?

  • @georgen.8027
    @georgen.8027 Před 3 měsíci

    Filmed in 1955, released in 1956

  • @robertgift
    @robertgift Před 6 lety +3

    Thank you, NFB, for sharing this!
    Poor editing 9:30 They should be showing thengine's controls and meters while the men are talking about it.

  • @stevepuffery8918
    @stevepuffery8918 Před 13 dny +1

    What year is this, I lost track….

  • @stevenmetzger3385
    @stevenmetzger3385 Před 4 lety +2

    @08:18 WOW... that was not a safety issue back then!!!

  • @rapman5791
    @rapman5791 Před 2 měsíci

    I knew a Canadian broad once, she had a hot box too. 😮

  • @michaelmeyer7426
    @michaelmeyer7426 Před 2 měsíci

    From a sociological point of view, a really noticeable point is how in this video there are almost no fat or obese folks. Diet in the 1950s was vastly different than that of today's "normal" of chemically enhanced and overly processed "food."

  • @robertbrouillette6767

    Canada, like the US, the railroad was the only link to hold the countries together. From Montreal to Vancouver, it’s a long way.

  • @LordCarpenter
    @LordCarpenter Před 6 lety +41

    Boomer passed away only 5 years into his retirement. :(

    • @jaswmclark
      @jaswmclark Před 6 lety +24

      Unfortunately this often happened to retired railway men, whose only life was the railway. When I worked in the shops we frequently had to chase out retirees so we could get our work done. Those who had other interests and hobbies tended to live longer.

    • @JohnSmith-sd4yu
      @JohnSmith-sd4yu Před 6 lety +15

      I hail from a CPR family; there were members on both sides of my family in the
      employ of the railway.
      On my mother's side, one was a baggage handler at Windsor Station in Montreal;
      his father-in-law worked for CP steamships.
      My father was a journeyman steam fitter, his brother was a boilerman and their father had the job I always wanted. He was a "hogger" until his retirement in 1950. He only ever knew steam.
      Like many men whose lives were the railway, he lasted about a year into retirement and was gone. I was only 7 years old when he died.
      I will forever regret that he didn't live long enough to take me down to the roundhouse and shops to show me around.
      I would have loved it!

    • @naidanac1
      @naidanac1 Před 5 lety +5

      I have a similar experience through the military. I've known many men who retired at 60, and were dead in a year - it's uncanny

    • @robinforrest7680
      @robinforrest7680 Před 4 lety +2

      Same thing here on French SNCF. I've known quite a few over the past 25 years who'd gone within a year of retirement.

    • @nimrod275
      @nimrod275 Před 4 lety +4

      I think it has to do with not having a daily routine once one retires. Some who have had a stressful job all the sudden retire and the body may go into shock and that is harmful to your heart and vessels. I would say to retire full time, get a part time job and slowly work into retirement if you can. Quitting cold turkey is hard for some on anything your body is use too. I wish everyone whom retires gets at least 10 years to enjoy what remains in life

  • @dc9345
    @dc9345 Před 2 lety +1

    What year is this documentary

  • @Tailss1
    @Tailss1 Před 5 lety +2

    Does anyone know if there is even still trains in Melville Sask today?

    • @Vincent_Sullivan
      @Vincent_Sullivan Před 5 lety +2

      Well, a quick look with Google maps and satellite view suggests that there is still a LOT of railroading going on in Melville Sk. today. There is a substantial size yard south of the town and literally hundreds of freight cars parked all over the place. There is no way this is an abandoned facility.

    • @smwca123
      @smwca123 Před 5 lety +3

      @@Vincent_Sullivan VIA's The Canadian now goes through Melville, as CN's old Super Continental used to. Melville is named for Charles Melville Hays, ex-CEO of CN ancestor Grand Trunk, who was killed in the 1912 sinking of the Titanic.

    • @sitarnut
      @sitarnut Před 5 lety

      @@smwca123 Nice tie-in, Bro. I surely didn't think it was Herman.. ha ha.