Thanks ever so much to you for posting a splendid video showing the COMPLETE switching operation from start to finish - you mentioned the line used to be busier. I may have missed it, but can you tell us some history of this track over the last several decades. Was there regular passenger service, do you know the years of it and the end points? Thanks again, and please post more similar in the future. Best wishes!!
In the 70s there were about a dozen trains a day on this line including Amtrak. I lived next to it in the mid 80s when they still ran 6-8 trains a day but Amtrak got rerouted through northern Kentucky by then. In 1985 they dropped the caboose and all trains were rerouted off the line except one in each direction. The tracks were removed from Greenfield Ohio to the Ohio River area to the east and this became a branch line from Midland Ohio to Greenfield. Today this branch line is owned by the town of Greenfield and it has a few customers that keep the rails shined. The trains are all short with only one locomotive that is kept at Blanchester, Ohio. They only go as far as Greenfield a couple times a week at most to service that small customer. I was hoping that they were going to Greenfield on the day that I filmed this but no luck. I&O Railway leases this line but CSX still owns the old depot in this video. It was offered to a group for 5K to restore it. I'm actually thinking about putting in an offer for the depot myself and put a new roof on it. Just a thought at this time though. The last time I bought property next to a railroad line, the line shut down right when I was trying to make a railfan hangout.
Great video! You brought back a lot of memories for me. My dad's job was to go around to the lumber mills around Humboldt Bay and pick up the loaded cars and take them back to the main yard and and switch the cars around to make up the freight train that would leave the next day. Sure wish I had pictures of him doing his job but almost always he worked nights!
The Leesburg line extended from Cumberland through Parkersburg and Athens through Midland City where it junctioned with the B&O Pittsburgh--Cincinnati line of the B&O and both lines continued jointly to Cincinnati. Leesburg was on an upgrade westward that passes an approach signal with a "G" permitting a freight to advance at slowest speed rather than stopping on a hill. The signal was several miles east of Leesburg. Must have been a tough, long grade or both.
Awesome! I rode a dinner train on this line in the 80s and I rode Amtrak across here in 1979. I also rode the Chessie Steam Special across here in 1978. Thanks for the information!
Thanks for the video. This shows you, what has to be done, to pick up a cut of tankers, and drop off a cut of tankers, and how long it takes, on a normal day and normal traffic.
Magnificent train railroad scene creation full of charm and beauty. You upload some interesting wonderful performance, so clear and very warm looking with all the wonderful places and event, that I enjoy. Greatly appreciated
Someone asked about the history of the Leesburg line of road. The route through Leesburg was, at one time, the Baltimore and Ohio's main line from Baltimore to St. Louis. It was the route of B&O's National Limited (trains 1 &2) and the Metropolitan (train11).
Hey Jaw tooth happy birthday 🎂🎂🎉🎉🎈🎈 .A good way to celebrate seeing trains on your birthday. They should have gates at crossings. Must be alot of drivers not rail fans. Keep up live action. Have a great railroad day
I wonder if the 151.265 T you were wondering about is the transmit frequency of their operations radio? Seems like it's a VHF frequency for something. I love those old worn out train stations ... made out of wood that endures but shows that time is a master of us all. When I look in the mirror and look at my 60+ body ... I see an old train station :) Another great video!
I looked up the railroad frequency assignments and they go down to 159 MHz ... so 151 probably aint RR operations. Some documents about licensing state that 151.265 is forestry service frequency! Unless there is some kinda wood product/forest product industry nearby my comment would be considered a waste. Still a great video though!
heh .. found some frequency allocation information. The town of Columbia Ohio uses 151.265 as one of their police band radios. Maybe it's the same at your location that you filmed. 151 MHz is too low for RR use but maybe its used by RR crews to contact police/emergency services as needed? Maybe the control cabinet freq marking saw was just a reminder for the RR crews in case they needed police/emergency response? PTC is in the 200 MHz and greater freq range and voice is more towards 160 MHz range for RR's.
I like the picture of the small old depot which as with most or a lot any way all had that bay type of window. When I think we were in second grade in Genoa, Il we were walked about one block over from Davenport Grade School to the Milwaukee Railroad Depot to see it. I cannot remember what you call a person who runs a depot anymore or his name but back then I actually knew him as he was friends of my parents, but the tells graph sat right in that bay window that way he could see a train approaching from either direction. We got to see a passenger train throw the mail bags out and catch the outgoing caught off of the hanger. I can't remember what they call that either. They also had to hand off a note to a passing train on a long pole made for that. Right across the street from the depot sat a little bitty shack that had a crossing guard for children walking to school to protect them from trains. There was another guarded crossing three blocks to the west for the same school and that one Mr Walter Naker was the watchman and back at the one across from the depot was Old Mr Scotty Butz who I had no idea in second grade then, but eighteen years later I married his granddaughter my wife Jill (Butz) Nicholson and she thought it was pretty neat that I new him. When I stayed at my grandmothers house I would walk to school in th morning and back and forth to lunch with her and back to her house after school. So I would see Scotty four times in one day then and if it was cold in the winter he would let you come in and warm before being on your way again. Everyone knew everyone in our little town back then. When I went to school from home I used that Wes crossing where Walter was and he would talk to all of us every day. They were good ole days maybe why I like railroads so much. We played on the Illinois Central embankment all the time we were growing up. We even took an idea I had and talked my buddies into building a dug out that we put up one wall of ties and a roof of ties we had all gathered and then thru dirt all over it. It grew over the next year and that railroad fort that we built and camped out in many times (would fit four people) was there for over twenty years but could not be seen after the growth on the roof after the first year. I know I'm long winded here but maybe somebody will like this including you Jaws.
This railroad used to be a busy mainline, but now its split up into small sections. Once CSX got their dirty little fingers on it, they abandoned certain sections of the line.
WHAT?!… as a former railroad Engineer myself I would certainly be disappointed if I was part of that crew doing all those multiple moves unnecessarily! I would have gotten that done in half the time and half those moves! I was shaking my head watching this video to see how inefficient these two guys were at switching! GEEZ!
In a response to some of you people saying what a great job it was as switching…As a former railroad Engineer myself I would certainly be disappointed if I was part of that crew doing all those multiple moves unnecessarily! I would have gotten that done in half the time and half those moves! I was shaking my head watching this video to see how inefficient these two guys were at switching! GEEZ!
I find the angle of the run around track unusual ( 9:00 ). It looks like it may have served another industry at one time but was modified to it's present use. Great video and very interesting Brian. Thank you!
The seven digit number, six numbers and one letter, is the DOT crossing number. Every railroad crossing in the United States is assigned a unique number for the crossings database.
Awesome video, check out the railroad crossing signal when you rewatch the video, it acts weird by shutting off when the train is still on the island block and it'll come back on and then before they shove all the tank cars in it acts up again, idk if it's supposed to do that or not but I just wanted to mention it incase you didn't notice it or not
Jaws I wrote so much I ran out of room but here is the most important things I didn't mention. That old Milwaukee Road depot the people of Genoa, IL got together and got enough money and moved it to Waterworks Park on on the west side of town on the main drag which is IL Rt.72 They completely redid it and turned it into a museum complete with the paving bricks from where the depot was on the railroad. Then they saved up the money and bought one of the old Illinois Central cabooses and totally redid it and put in rails in front of the Depot and the caboose sits on those just to the front of the depot. So if your ever up this way stop by sometime. You still have rather good size coaling tower on the Union Pacific in the town of DeKalb, Il about twenty miles away and the Illinois Railway Museum is maybe twenty miles north east also, which in the summer has street cars, diesel, and steam trains most weekends running a five to six mile route each way. That's where I took my kids when they were little and we got to ride in the top lookout seats in the caboose. The is also the Illinois Trolley Museum located in South Elgin, Il with rides available and the big one is the Double Diamond 24 hour Rail Park in Rochele, IL with the BNSF and Union Pacific main lines crossing there. I think there is a live feed you can look up also. With Union Pacific's Global 3 just west of town. So there you have it. Another great video Jaws!
I want to visit Rochele and the Illinois Railway Museum. I almost went to Rochele last year to meet up with a friend of mine who went there. I have watched that live feed a few times
Jaw Tooth that guy who runs the rail crossing would be the first one to complain he would say..... ho! the railroad crossing lights didn`t work or he didn`t honk his horn that`s why I got hit!! my back my back!!! what is the history of the track you said it used to be Busier? something like that? can you run it by me again? I got a big kick watching the switching all of it! now that`s live-action! fantastic video JT I like your work! keep it up!
This use to be a busy B&O line. Amtrak ran on it in the 70s. But in the 80s it was cut a few miles east of this video at Greenfield. Today this branch to Greenfield is owned by the town of Greenfield and leased to Indiana and Ohio railway. They only run trains on it a few days a week. The branch starts at Midland. I remember when there were about ten to twelve trains a day over this line. I rode Amtrak on it , I rode the Chessie Steam Special on it and I rode a dinner train on it. The depot in Leesburg was just purchased by that town and it will be restored.
Modeler stake note. It looks like that candle maker took that great long string of tank cars we saw at the beginning of the video and left with a few from the plant. Jaw Tooth reports the a windy day.
Pretty neat to see how it all works.. back and forth, back and forth. Lol.. hey jaw tooth , since your kinda close to me.. know of any good rails around central Indiana.. Indy north. Peru and logansport are pretty good but know of any others or how I can find out when big freight come through.. awesome video bro. And hey I was there for the reds parade.. we stayed in Covington . Got to check out the Ludlow or whatever that little town is. It was just a mile in a half from are hotel. Good ol best western.. rail fans stay there.. great service and they feed you constantly.. lol
Ludlow has that new railfan platform that recently opened. I made a video about it. You should check it out. Its two stories high and faces the busy NS Rathole Line. I'm still checking out Indiana but I like Michigan City. Its a little north but it has streetrunning, commuter trains and a lift bridge and a coaling tower and....
Thanks ever so much to you for posting a splendid video showing the COMPLETE switching operation from start to finish - you mentioned the line used to be busier. I may have missed it, but can you tell us some history of this track over the last several decades. Was there regular passenger service, do you know the years of it and the end points? Thanks again, and please post more similar in the future. Best wishes!!
In the 70s there were about a dozen trains a day on this line including Amtrak. I lived next to it in the mid 80s when they still ran 6-8 trains a day but Amtrak got rerouted through northern Kentucky by then. In 1985 they dropped the caboose and all trains were rerouted off the line except one in each direction. The tracks were removed from Greenfield Ohio to the Ohio River area to the east and this became a branch line from Midland Ohio to Greenfield. Today this branch line is owned by the town of Greenfield and it has a few customers that keep the rails shined. The trains are all short with only one locomotive that is kept at Blanchester, Ohio. They only go as far as Greenfield a couple times a week at most to service that small customer. I was hoping that they were going to Greenfield on the day that I filmed this but no luck. I&O Railway leases this line but CSX still owns the old depot in this video. It was offered to a group for 5K to restore it. I'm actually thinking about putting in an offer for the depot myself and put a new roof on it. Just a thought at this time though. The last time I bought property next to a railroad line, the line shut down right when I was trying to make a railfan hangout.
Capers bull huh j h j uvjvucuhih
Jaw Tooth i love all Gennesse & Wyoming railroads like Indiana & Ohio. Ohio central Huron & Eastern Marquette Rail Mid Michigan Railroad
@@railroadingfan3681 Except for the terrible uniform paint job.
Jvjbjlplkllpkplbbpvhvvpvkvlkklkkkklkkljllll
Very good video. Shores complete operation so we can really understand how these small rr’s work. Good work!
Thank you for showing the complete operation! It illustrates so much clearly what is actually required to switch an industry.
I love that station. It would be neat if someone restored it. No one builds structures like that any more.
Great video! You brought back a lot of memories for me. My dad's job was to go around to the lumber mills around Humboldt Bay and pick up the loaded cars and take them back to the main yard and and switch the cars around to make up the freight train that would leave the next day. Sure wish I had pictures of him doing his job but almost always he worked nights!
Very cool! I love the railroad jobs. I bet your dad had some great stories to tell
Thanks to those customers that get rail service that keep those local short lines open .
You got that right!
Good ol' I&O 5014, that engine is a workhorse.
That was a great rail fanning experience watching the complete switching operation. Loved it!
Well done ,the showing an actual swap out at a customers place was fantastic ,thanks for sharing.
Thank you!
The Leesburg line extended from Cumberland through Parkersburg and Athens through Midland City where it junctioned with the B&O Pittsburgh--Cincinnati line of the B&O and both lines continued jointly to Cincinnati. Leesburg was on an upgrade westward that passes an approach signal with a "G" permitting a freight to advance at slowest speed rather than stopping on a hill. The signal was several miles east of Leesburg. Must have been a tough, long grade or both.
Awesome! I rode a dinner train on this line in the 80s and I rode Amtrak across here in 1979. I also rode the Chessie Steam Special across here in 1978. Thanks for the information!
Holy crap! That was the longest switch in the world! Thanks for filming to the end though!
Thanks for the video. This shows you, what has to be done, to pick up a cut of tankers, and drop off a cut of tankers, and how long it takes, on a normal day and normal traffic.
One of the better switching videos around. Thank you.
Love the blue graphics
AWESOME job
Lo.ved this video! Liked the fact that you captured the entire switch job
Love the old station, and seeing the artifacts. Great job as always! 🙂
They have a building with the station back in the day as a painting
Awesome video JT, nice to see some old
fashioned switching & swapping pretty cool.👍🏼🚂
Thanks. Chris from England.
It's great to see the trains working.
It sure is
thank you for share real operation video with other
That was quite intense with the cutting of cars to eventually getting both full cars & empty cars swapped to the right way around.😎👌👍
5014 is one of the most dirtiest engines ive ever seen great video Brian
Great video! Enjoyed the switching operation.
Cool old depot there that someone needs to restore!
Cool aerial shot of that siding!
Sublime-finding the unusual is your thing -so much information in such a short video ! Hats off to you again Brian -you are the Train Man !
My favorite loco. Cool old station
Once again...good one bud! I love the g&w paint scheme 👍👍👍👍
Always good and interesting movies...Thanks:
Magnificent train railroad scene creation full of charm and beauty. You upload some interesting wonderful performance, so clear and very warm looking with all the wonderful places and event, that I enjoy. Greatly appreciated
my only fav ohio train fan 110% makes me happy
Love. The. Trains. On. Jawtooth
Someone asked about the history of the Leesburg line of road. The route through Leesburg was, at one time, the Baltimore and Ohio's main line from Baltimore to St. Louis. It was the route of B&O's National Limited (trains 1 &2) and the Metropolitan (train11).
Hey Jaw tooth happy birthday 🎂🎂🎉🎉🎈🎈 .A good way to celebrate seeing trains on your birthday. They should have gates at crossings. Must be alot of drivers not rail fans. Keep up live action. Have a great railroad day
Hey jaw tooth great pictures and video of tanker train going over that long train tressel
Thanks 👍
Good showing
Thanks again for the great video!!!
Great job. I lpve to watch switching operations. Great overhead shot.
I like how you spliced in the satellite view. Thanks!
When you zoomed in on that old station, “thought I saw a ghost”,
Great video and im a subscriber. I love to see when railroads use siding. That are not often use. Thanks again awesome job.
gateless crossing. no bells. just the kind of crossing i like
Nice video, thanks for showing the whole operation and Happy Birthday!!!
In one of his replies he said something like his old bones turned 58 today so I assumed it was his birthday! @@@youraveragejoe2
# 5014 has nice paint-Great Northern Jr.
i enjoy switching videos with scanner audio. great video brian.
you have awesome train videos, my friend
I really enjoyed watching that. Thanks for uploading
👍cool factory too
Awesome video and sweet pictures!
I wonder if the 151.265 T you were wondering about is the transmit frequency of their operations radio? Seems like it's a VHF frequency for something. I love those old worn out train stations ... made out of wood that endures but shows that time is a master of us all. When I look in the mirror and look at my 60+ body ... I see an old train station :) Another great video!
I looked up the railroad frequency assignments and they go down to 159 MHz ... so 151 probably aint RR operations. Some documents about licensing state that 151.265 is forestry service frequency! Unless there is some kinda wood product/forest product industry nearby my comment would be considered a waste. Still a great video though!
My old body just turned 58 today. I hate getting old because everything starts malfunctioning. lol
heh .. found some frequency allocation information. The town of Columbia Ohio uses 151.265 as one of their police band radios. Maybe it's the same at your location that you filmed. 151 MHz is too low for RR use but maybe its used by RR crews to contact police/emergency services as needed? Maybe the control cabinet freq marking saw was just a reminder for the RR crews in case they needed police/emergency response? PTC is in the 200 MHz and greater freq range and voice is more towards 160 MHz range for RR's.
I like the picture of the small old depot which as with most or a lot any way all had that bay type of window. When I think we were in second grade in Genoa, Il we were walked about one block over from Davenport Grade School to the Milwaukee Railroad Depot to see it. I cannot remember what you call a person who runs a depot anymore or his name but back then I actually knew him as he was friends of my parents, but the tells graph sat right in that bay window that way he could see a train approaching from either direction. We got to see a passenger train throw the mail bags out and catch the outgoing caught off of the hanger. I can't remember what they call that either. They also had to hand off a note to a passing train on a long pole made for that. Right across the street from the depot sat a little bitty shack that had a crossing guard for children walking to school to protect them from trains. There was another guarded crossing three blocks to the west for the same school and that one Mr Walter Naker was the watchman and back at the one across from the depot was Old Mr Scotty Butz who I had no idea in second grade then, but eighteen years later I married his granddaughter my wife Jill (Butz) Nicholson and she thought it was pretty neat that I new him. When I stayed at my grandmothers house I would walk to school in th morning and back and forth to lunch with her and back to her house after school. So I would see Scotty four times in one day then and if it was cold in the winter he would let you come in and warm before being on your way again. Everyone knew everyone in our little town back then. When I went to school from home I used that Wes crossing where Walter was and he would talk to all of us every day. They were good ole days maybe why I like railroads so much. We played on the Illinois Central embankment all the time we were growing up. We even took an idea I had and talked my buddies into building a dug out that we put up one wall of ties and a roof of ties we had all gathered and then thru dirt all over it. It grew over the next year and that railroad fort that we built and camped out in many times (would fit four people) was there for over twenty years but could not be seen after the growth on the roof after the first year. I know I'm long winded here but maybe somebody will like this including you Jaws.
Nice model 5 siren. 17:03, lights die out for a sec
Always find the way they do the switching to be the most fascinating. :)
Cool looking Geep 50 there
Great video, fine work there
Excellent addition, the overhead areal view! Thank you.
This railroad used to be a busy mainline, but now its split up into small sections. Once CSX got their dirty little fingers on it, they abandoned certain sections of the line.
Jaw Tooth I like all your videos! I sit here on Saturday & Sunday and watch them all! Your'e also funny a lot of times
Great video Jawtooth! Love it!
Thank you!
@@JawTooth welcome ole buddy!
Thank you
Live action Wheeeww!!!
Nice video , and the plant they are switching has some nice details I can use ...thx
Enjoyed watching the switching operation. Great video!
Great video!
That was a good one. Enjoyed watching that very much. Thanks for sharing.
spot on...
Nice. I've watched them switch Hutamaki and stop for ice cream.
Good choice! You are watching my old classics. Thanks!
That was sooo cool! Thanks for the video!
Excellent video mate. That is a very time consuming operation and well planned out. 👍
WHAT?!… as a former railroad Engineer myself I would certainly be disappointed if I was part of that crew doing all those multiple moves unnecessarily! I would have gotten that done in half the time and half those moves! I was shaking my head watching this video to see how inefficient these two guys were at switching! GEEZ!
Great switching!!!!
In a response to some of you people saying what a great job it was as switching…As a former railroad Engineer myself I would certainly be disappointed if I was part of that crew doing all those multiple moves unnecessarily! I would have gotten that done in half the time and half those moves! I was shaking my head watching this video to see how inefficient these two guys were at switching! GEEZ!
Nice post! Thanks!
Another great video! keep up the good work! :)
I find the angle of the run around track unusual ( 9:00 ). It looks like it may have served another industry at one time but was modified to it's present use. Great video and very interesting Brian. Thank you!
Agreed. It's also strange that there's a derail on the run-around.
Very nice video Brian.thanks again.
Outstanding video
The seven digit number, six numbers and one letter, is the DOT crossing number. Every railroad crossing in the United States is assigned a unique number for the crossings database.
Awesome video, check out the railroad crossing signal when you rewatch the video, it acts weird by shutting off when the train is still on the island block and it'll come back on and then before they shove all the tank cars in it acts up again, idk if it's supposed to do that or not but I just wanted to mention it incase you didn't notice it or not
Nice video, it was very cool to see everything they had to do from start to finish
Nice video!
Nice catch mate
Jaws I wrote so much I ran out of room but here is the most important things I didn't mention. That old Milwaukee Road depot the people of Genoa, IL got together and got enough money and moved it to Waterworks Park on on the west side of town on the main drag which is IL Rt.72 They completely redid it and turned it into a museum complete with the paving bricks from where the depot was on the railroad. Then they saved up the money and bought one of the old Illinois Central cabooses and totally redid it and put in rails in front of the Depot and the caboose sits on those just to the front of the depot. So if your ever up this way stop by sometime. You still have rather good size coaling tower on the Union Pacific in the town of DeKalb, Il about twenty miles away and the Illinois Railway Museum is maybe twenty miles north east also, which in the summer has street cars, diesel, and steam trains most weekends running a five to six mile route each way. That's where I took my kids when they were little and we got to ride in the top lookout seats in the caboose. The is also the Illinois Trolley Museum located in South Elgin, Il with rides available and the big one is the Double Diamond 24 hour Rail Park in Rochele, IL with the BNSF and Union Pacific main lines crossing there. I think there is a live feed you can look up also. With Union Pacific's Global 3 just west of town. So there you have it. Another great video Jaws!
I want to visit Rochele and the Illinois Railway Museum. I almost went to Rochele last year to meet up with a friend of mine who went there. I have watched that live feed a few times
Great video, Brian. 😎👍🏼
Jaw Tooth that guy who runs the rail crossing would be the first one to complain he would say..... ho! the railroad crossing lights didn`t work or he didn`t honk his horn that`s why I got hit!! my back my back!!! what is the history of the track you said it used to be Busier? something like that? can you run it by me again? I got a big kick watching the switching all of it! now that`s live-action! fantastic video JT I like your work! keep it up!
This use to be a busy B&O line. Amtrak ran on it in the 70s. But in the 80s it was cut a few miles east of this video at Greenfield. Today this branch to Greenfield is owned by the town of Greenfield and leased to Indiana and Ohio railway. They only run trains on it a few days a week. The branch starts at Midland. I remember when there were about ten to twelve trains a day over this line. I rode Amtrak on it , I rode the Chessie Steam Special on it and I rode a dinner train on it. The depot in Leesburg was just purchased by that town and it will be restored.
Awesome train my friend !
Another great video. Enjoyed it. Thanks
great video
I enjoyed this, thank you for sharing JT!
Another great video, Mr. Tooth!
151265.T is likely the AAR or DOT ID of the crossing.
Modeler stake note. It looks like that candle maker took that great long string of tank cars we saw at the beginning of the video and left with a few from the plant. Jaw Tooth reports the a windy day.
Awesome Video!
Awesome Thanks for the video.
Thanks for the video Brian.That locomotive has been staged in Blanchester.It needs cleaned up or repainted.
great video, thanks
Very nice jawtooth that was interesting keep it up
Pretty neat to see how it all works.. back and forth, back and forth. Lol.. hey jaw tooth , since your kinda close to me.. know of any good rails around central Indiana.. Indy north. Peru and logansport are pretty good but know of any others or how I can find out when big freight come through.. awesome video bro. And hey I was there for the reds parade.. we stayed in Covington . Got to check out the Ludlow or whatever that little town is. It was just a mile in a half from are hotel. Good ol best western.. rail fans stay there.. great service and they feed you constantly.. lol
Ludlow has that new railfan platform that recently opened. I made a video about it. You should check it out. Its two stories high and faces the busy NS Rathole Line. I'm still checking out Indiana but I like Michigan City. Its a little north but it has streetrunning, commuter trains and a lift bridge and a coaling tower and....
Woaah nice sound train sir brian 👏👏👏
nice action
Never realized how much remote control they were using on these trains.