Very well made video! Great to see the history of some of the more underrated anthracite roads with their mighty fleet of camelbacks and ALCO diesels. That's also the second time Vernon, NJ has been involved in some cursed rail history: first a NJT ski train excursion to Action Park, and now a proposed ski train excursion to the Playboy Mansion...
Great report! Thanks for posting it! There's only one thing I can add, the Lehigh & Hudson River was a great railfan favorite in it's time and was also a VERY railfan friendly 'road. The atmosphere on the L&HR was more like a family than a business according to it's fans and the L&HR's employees were very proud of their railroad and enjoyed showing it off. It's sorely missed to this day by those who remember it.
A fantastic and accurate history. I grew up in Vienna, NJ just a quick walk from the Great Meadows station. During the 1960's there was a number of trains operating with meets at Vienna siding. I was hired as a tower man with the EL Rwy while the L&H Rwy. was still in operation. As an agreement with the BRAC union the EL also provided a qualified operator at Andover Jct. even though the Sussex branch was abandoned. I was one of the few to be qualified there. I retired from NJ Transit 5/1/2013 as conductor. 😎🚂🚃🚃🚃✝
Monongahela Railroad was not one of the railroads that formed Conrail in 1976. It was absorbed by Conrail in 1993. Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines ( PRSL ) was part of the 1976 consolidation.
Hi West of Hudson Studios, As a fan of the L&HR or as the locals called it "The L&H", this is a very nice video of the railroad with some great video footage of the line in action. But as a fan of "The Bridge Line to New England" I need to add, the passenger station and freight house you keep showing when talking about Sparta Jct, is not at Sparta Jct. That is the Great Meadows Passenger Station and Freight house. Cheers, Rich S.
Thanks for commenting this! I'm aware it was the Great Meadows station, but the reason why I put it as "Sparta Jct" in this video is because after continuous searching, I couldn't find any real images of Sparta Jct so I used it as a substitute. Thanks again!
Great video! Speaking of the Susquehanna, you should make a history video about that, including it's passenger history, how the original line went into Stroudsburg PA, it's joint partnership with the Lehigh & New England railway, the cutback to Sparta Junction, the further cutback to Butler NJ after the Smoke Rise washout, near entire abandonment, and the resurgance with the stackpack trains until 1999. It would be a big video with a ton of history and research, but I would love to see one about my home freight railroad
Th Suzy-Q's like the proverbial cat with nine lives. Every time it seemed to be the end for the 'road they ALWAYS bounced back. As bad as things got there was always someone who saw potential in the Susquehanna.
I think that the Central Indiana & Western was shorter. It ran from Anderson to Lebanon, Indiana. By the time Conrail took it over, it might have been cut back to Westfield.
Hang on, wasn't the Ironton Railroad the smallest? OK, it was an LV/RDG subsidiary, its locos wore RDG green (and had the characteristic RDG drip rail on the cab roof), its cabooses were RDG pattern cars but it was a separate company from both LV and RDG. It was so separate that one of its BLW DS-4-4-1000s was the only Baldwin diesel to make it into Conrail...and the only one to be painted in CR blue.
The situation with the Penn Central bankruptcy shows why Nationalisation was necessary. Even if you run your slice of the economy well and are profitable, if you get fucked by the big guys next to you, that's it! You're working with a natural monopoly so can't blame them for not diversifiying their service away from Penn. Moreover, it's a public utility serving the public interest and national defense so it's important that it work smoothly and efficiently. When the banks failed in 2008 because of poor management by Wall Street and the FED, they said the banks were too big to fail. Penn was too big to fail and look what happened. The railroads today should be nationalised for other reasons, but it's the same thing for the banks.
My 1949 Willys Truck is painted Conrail Blue. Because it was a Shop truck at the General Electric Locomotive plant in Erie PA.
Very well made video! Great to see the history of some of the more underrated anthracite roads with their mighty fleet of camelbacks and ALCO diesels. That's also the second time Vernon, NJ has been involved in some cursed rail history: first a NJT ski train excursion to Action Park, and now a proposed ski train excursion to the Playboy Mansion...
Great report! Thanks for posting it!
There's only one thing I can add, the Lehigh & Hudson River was a great railfan favorite in it's time and was also a VERY railfan friendly 'road. The atmosphere on the L&HR was more like a family than a business according to it's fans and the L&HR's employees were very proud of their railroad and enjoyed showing it off. It's sorely missed to this day by those who remember it.
Sounds like the Reading, Blue Mountain & Northern!
@@OldsVistaCruiser Very much so! RBM&N is a worthy sucessor!
A fantastic and accurate history. I grew up in Vienna, NJ just a quick walk from the Great Meadows station. During the 1960's there was a number of trains operating with meets at Vienna siding. I was hired as a tower man with the EL Rwy while the L&H Rwy. was still in operation. As an agreement with the BRAC union the EL also provided a qualified operator at Andover Jct. even though the Sussex branch was abandoned. I was one of the few to be qualified there. I retired from NJ Transit 5/1/2013 as conductor. 😎🚂🚃🚃🚃✝
Those " Maybrook" roads are some of my favorites. Sadly gone now
Monongahela Railroad was not one of the railroads that formed Conrail in 1976. It was absorbed by Conrail in 1993. Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines ( PRSL ) was part of the 1976 consolidation.
Hi West of Hudson Studios, As a fan of the L&HR or as the locals called it "The L&H", this is a very nice video of the railroad with some great video footage of the line in action. But as a fan of "The Bridge Line to New England" I need to add, the passenger station and freight house you keep showing when talking about Sparta Jct, is not at Sparta Jct. That is the Great Meadows Passenger Station and Freight house. Cheers, Rich S.
Thanks for commenting this! I'm aware it was the Great Meadows station, but the reason why I put it as "Sparta Jct" in this video is because after continuous searching, I couldn't find any real images of Sparta Jct so I used it as a substitute. Thanks again!
I forgot the AA was included in Conrail!
Great video! Speaking of the Susquehanna, you should make a history video about that, including it's passenger history, how the original line went into Stroudsburg PA, it's joint partnership with the Lehigh & New England railway, the cutback to Sparta Junction, the further cutback to Butler NJ after the Smoke Rise washout, near entire abandonment, and the resurgance with the stackpack trains until 1999. It would be a big video with a ton of history and research, but I would love to see one about my home freight railroad
Th Suzy-Q's like the proverbial cat with nine lives. Every time it seemed to be the end for the 'road they ALWAYS bounced back. As bad as things got there was always someone who saw potential in the Susquehanna.
Awesome video! I always assumed the rail trail literally across the street from my house was a DL&W line, I had never even heard of the L&HR
It's definitely a marvelous train spotting session !! Greetings from India.
Thank you for sharing. Nice to learn more about my home area!
thank you !!
00:40 “Turned out to be one of the most important” Well, that statement is a stretch!
I think that the Central Indiana & Western was shorter. It ran from Anderson to Lebanon, Indiana. By the time Conrail took it over, it might have been cut back to Westfield.
I thought the Raritan River was Conrail's smallest road.
Did you just read off the Wikipedia Page on the L&HR? I was reading the page and you are reading off the Wikipedia page as your video...
very nice to learn some of the railroad history. keep up the great videos.
Niagra junction and ironton 👀
Hang on, wasn't the Ironton Railroad the smallest? OK, it was an LV/RDG subsidiary, its locos wore RDG green (and had the characteristic RDG drip rail on the cab roof), its cabooses were RDG pattern cars but it was a separate company from both LV and RDG. It was so separate that one of its BLW DS-4-4-1000s was the only Baldwin diesel to make it into Conrail...and the only one to be painted in CR blue.
The L&HR bought locomotives from Cooke prior to their first Baldwin
Very interesting! Do you ever hike these trails? Would be nice to watch a video on that. Keep it up and greeetings from the Netherlands 👍🏼😀
Please refrain from saying “Ray-Road”
The situation with the Penn Central bankruptcy shows why Nationalisation was necessary. Even if you run your slice of the economy well and are profitable, if you get fucked by the big guys next to you, that's it! You're working with a natural monopoly so can't blame them for not diversifiying their service away from Penn. Moreover, it's a public utility serving the public interest and national defense so it's important that it work smoothly and efficiently. When the banks failed in 2008 because of poor management by Wall Street and the FED, they said the banks were too big to fail. Penn was too big to fail and look what happened. The railroads today should be nationalised for other reasons, but it's the same thing for the banks.
I think the Ironton RR and the PRSL were included into Conrail?
Yes! Everyone forgets about the small Ironton Railroad. I was about to comment about it but you already did.