I saw it with my own two eyes as a child. It was a September evening during the annual Stumptown Steam tractor show. Many of the folks who were members of Stumptown were also members of the coal park next door. Anyhow we were told to not go up on the hill since that was mine property. We were kids so whatever. We could see the light moving over the hillside, so we climbed up to see the Spade about a mile away. It was working, and even though it was so far away you could hear it and see it clearly. It was lit up like a city, and looked like some sort of mechanical monster eating away at the earth. It was an amazing machine.
I am fortunate to be one of a few folks in the area to have been on all three machines that consol owned.the gem the spade and the mountaineer....my family worked on and around these machines for their living.truely amazing and as a young boy when i got to go on board i was scared yes but i wish i could turn back time
The greater tragedy is that we could never build machines like this again. Even if our lives depended on it. We no longer have the people who can do it. Including no longer having the industrial facilities, the factories, the know how, the priorities, the infrastructure, or the habits of an industrial country. All lost thanks to Reaganomics, globalization, and deindustrialization. A nation of zombies doesn't even know what a woman is or how many genders there are.
@@miningshorts this video was awesome and emotional…it was sad and awful to watch and see the machines retire and say theyer goodbyes to theyer owners big Brutus had survived and was put in a museum but they could’ve kept them in a museum but not blow them up and watch them fall and crash…but I just hope Muskie, the captain and spade are watching over us…thanks to these machines we would never ever get the way of digging out of the dirt.
I love these videos on the history of these truly amazing machines! Please keep them coming, and thank you for the time and effort you put into your content, its greatly appreciated!!
I saw the Spade the first time when it was parked, just before it moved across the road and then twice again on the far side of the road in the new pits. Seeing it working at night was something that I will never forget. Its ironic to know that all of the reclaimed pits where the Spade once worked have been drilled and frac'd for natural gas. Seeing it up close was amazing because I didn't even come half the height of the tracks.
As I understand from other videos, the final failure was in the slew bearings; the huge roller bearings that allow the upper part of the machine to rotate on the track frames.
I saw it with my own two eyes as a child. It was a September evening during the annual Stumptown Steam tractor show. Many of the folks who were members of Stumptown were also members of the coal park next door. Anyhow we were told to not go up on the hill since that was mine property. We were kids so whatever. We could see the light moving over the hillside, so we climbed up to see the Spade about a mile away. It was working, and even though it was so far away you could hear it and see it clearly. It was lit up like a city, and looked like some sort of mechanical monster eating away at the earth. It was an amazing machine.
I am fortunate to be one of a few folks in the area to have been on all three machines that consol owned.the gem the spade and the mountaineer....my family worked on and around these machines for their living.truely amazing and as a young boy when i got to go on board i was scared yes but i wish i could turn back time
A truly amazing machine! Such a shame it's not still around to be admired today.
Absolutely! Nice group of people tried their best - sadly that wasn't enough
The greater tragedy is that we could never build machines like this again. Even if our lives depended on it.
We no longer have the people who can do it. Including no longer having the industrial facilities, the factories, the know how, the priorities, the infrastructure, or the habits of an industrial country. All lost thanks to Reaganomics, globalization, and deindustrialization. A nation of zombies doesn't even know what a woman is or how many genders there are.
@@miningshorts this video was awesome and emotional…it was sad and awful to watch and see the machines retire and say theyer goodbyes to theyer owners big Brutus had survived and was put in a museum but they could’ve kept them in a museum but not blow them up and watch them fall and crash…but I just hope Muskie, the captain and spade are watching over us…thanks to these machines we would never ever get the way of digging out of the dirt.
I love these videos on the history of these truly amazing machines! Please keep them coming, and thank you for the time and effort you put into your content, its greatly appreciated!!
I saw it run in 1999 right before they scraped it.Awesome machine.👏👏👏
I did as well. I watched them cross I-70 in 1973.
I saw the Spade the first time when it was parked, just before it moved across the road and then twice again on the far side of the road in the new pits. Seeing it working at night was something that I will never forget. Its ironic to know that all of the reclaimed pits where the Spade once worked have been drilled and frac'd for natural gas. Seeing it up close was amazing because I didn't even come half the height of the tracks.
Sure puts things in prospectus eh.
Im involved with Harrison coal and reclamation Park and luckily they have the cab and part of the bucket
As I understand from other videos, the final failure was in the slew bearings; the huge roller bearings that allow the upper part of the machine to rotate on the track frames.
Appreciate the video.
They literally worked this machine to death...
Yes they did , but that's what it was built for and a great job it did as well as the Gem of Egypt and Mountaineer.
48 years is an amazing lifespan for a daily working outdoor machine
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the music on your channel is amazing. wwhere can i buy it?
Haha thank you! You can't buy the soundtracks sadly - I made them myself ;)
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Fix the audio