My favorite as well, indeed my only one. The encounter is still remarkable after all the years since that day. We used a borrowed video tape recorder with no prior experience. The video capture was poor, but the sound was exceptional. The sound echoing off the surrounding hills was truly unexpected. A matter of luck, being in the right place at the right time. Glad I could share it. Thanks for commenting.
My grandma used to live one block from that old wooden bridge on the corner of 5th and Main. When I heard a train coming I would high-tail it down to the bridge to watch the trains pass underneath. You could hear the trains coming eastbound long before you saw them, as they struggled up Rolla Hill. Great memories from the late 50's and early 60's as a young boy who LOVED trains!
As the locomotive and train pulls the grade and is nearly visible, I hear "here it comes" (my wife) and later towards the end as the train passes someone says, "that was incredible" (and it was). The rest is unintelligible to my ear. Thanks to everyone who has watched and enjoyed this video. The camcorder video was rather poor, but the audio was "serendipitous."
Engine crew did a great job. No wheel-slip!
Wow! that is a heck of a grade! She was really laboring...but managed it - quite something to see and hear!!!
One of my favorite 1522 videos. The work taking place to get up that hill is just mesmerizing.
My favorite as well, indeed my only one. The encounter is still remarkable after all the years since that day. We used a borrowed video tape recorder with no prior experience. The video capture was poor, but the sound was exceptional. The sound echoing off the surrounding hills was truly unexpected. A matter of luck, being in the right place at the right time. Glad I could share it. Thanks for commenting.
My grandma used to live one block from that old wooden bridge on the corner of 5th and Main. When I heard a train coming I would high-tail it down to the bridge to watch the trains pass underneath. You could hear the trains coming eastbound long before you saw them, as they struggled up Rolla Hill. Great memories from the late 50's and early 60's as a young boy who LOVED trains!
You can hear Frisco 1522 coming from 3 days away.
Thanks for sharing, my grandfather might have done work on that locomotive, he was a machinist with the FRISCO Line in Memphis, Tn.
One of my favorite beautiful and loud
That was my first time as 1522 engineer on the main line.
Hope you enjoyed the video. It was a very memorable occasion for me, I'd guess even more so for you. Thanks for commenting.
Is that you Don W.?
It was always me on Rolla Hill. Every trip.
love that whistle
It's cb&q 5 chime
thanks
Michael Wood Frisco 3 Chime*
@@Unionpacifcfan Bruh, in many of the shots, you are dead wrong.
"I THINK I can, I THINK I can..."
Lol that’s what I thought 1522 was saying
Fun fact 1522's whistle could be heared on the 2001 disney film atlantis
1522 is doing what she did best.
I love both Frisco 1522 and Frisco 1630.
David can I ask you something
What did the woman, in the background say?
As the locomotive and train pulls the grade and is nearly visible, I hear "here it comes" (my wife) and later towards the end as the train passes someone says, "that was incredible" (and it was). The rest is unintelligible to my ear. Thanks to everyone who has watched and enjoyed this video. The camcorder video was rather poor, but the audio was "serendipitous."
@@davidroede the audio was excellent. Listening to that stack thunder was awesome.
Shame this great steam locomotive will never run again
Well, it actually could. It just depends on who buys it and what it's mechanical status is.
@@regularguy7266 the museum has specially said it doesn't want to sell anything in its collection
@@atsfevan0242 why
@@rogerlollar4325 because they own the engine, and its their decision.
@@atsfevan0242 could someone lease it