Wow, that was a great hike adventure, substantial, nice day it is, gorgeous scenery one could feel nature touch, thanks for the shared information, enjoyable to watch!
This place just keeps getting more interesting, great work! Glad you found the old bridge and trestle (and that you'd made it safely across). Thank you for sharing this adventure; you did great with showing the info on the signs also...plenty of time to read them even without pausing, and the lighting was fine. Stay safe and take care! 👍😁
Thanks man I appreciate you and yea I'm glad I was able to get down to the viaduct and trestle it was really cool with the waterfall under it and I'm also glad you was able to read the signs I was hoping it would turn out. Stay safe as well bro
A lot of history from the flood. The bridge looks like it was built during the steam train era. If my memory serves me correctly the flat piece of steel above the tracks was used as a deflector plate for the exhaust. I only seen one more like it in Robinson.
To my knowledge the Bridge was still in use after the 1936 flood and was not is use after Bethehem Seet shut down Johnstown Steel Production in 1992. I do not know if it even existed in 1889 when the most famous Johnstown Flood occurred. The Conemaugh and Blacklick only became a railroad in 1923, but was the result of mergers of several other railroads used by the Steel and Coal Companies in and around Johnstown PA.
this is part 2 of my path of the flood trail hike hope you enjoy it and thanks for watching
That is a nice view
thank you it was a nice trail
Wow, that was a great hike adventure, substantial, nice day it is, gorgeous scenery one could feel nature touch, thanks for the shared information, enjoyable to watch!
thank you and thank you for watching glad you liked it
Beautiful view from the trestle and definitely cool how the train came as you cleared the viaduct
Yea it was definitely a nice view I enjoyed that hike
❤😊
Thank you
Loved the videos. It was nice to read the signs and learn some history. I hope to someday walk this trail; now that I know it exists.
Thank you so much and glad you was able to read them wasn't sure if they was showing up. Also the trail is really nice I enjoy the hike
I'm glad you made it across that train track section okay with those grates being loose. Was cool to see the old train bridge too
Yea it was really old but cool its still standing
This place just keeps getting more interesting, great work! Glad you found the old bridge and trestle (and that you'd made it safely across).
Thank you for sharing this adventure; you did great with showing the info on the signs also...plenty of time to read them even without pausing, and the lighting was fine. Stay safe and take care! 👍😁
Thanks man I appreciate you and yea I'm glad I was able to get down to the viaduct and trestle it was really cool with the waterfall under it and I'm also glad you was able to read the signs I was hoping it would turn out. Stay safe as well bro
A lot of history from the flood. The bridge looks like it was built during the steam train era. If my memory serves me correctly the flat piece of steel above the tracks was used as a deflector plate for the exhaust. I only seen one more like it in Robinson.
Yea I think you might be right it was definitely a old viaduct and trustle really cool hike and cool view from the viaduct
To my knowledge the Bridge was still in use after the 1936 flood and was not is use after Bethehem Seet shut down Johnstown Steel Production in 1992. I do not know if it even existed in 1889 when the most famous Johnstown Flood occurred. The Conemaugh and Blacklick only became a railroad in 1923, but was the result of mergers of several other railroads used by the Steel and Coal Companies in and around Johnstown PA.
@@paulmentzer7658 very cool