Well done. I've done a lot of time travel in my living history hobby over the last 35 years and I always wanted to travel the Erie Canal, but I've never made it. I'm 72 now, so I don't know if I ever will, but I really appreciate this video. I've travelled by coach in Washington and in California on some of the original roads, which were mainly dirt paths and I've travelled on a few steam trains. I have the occasion to do little sailing in the Pacific on tall ships and also be part of a long boat crew re-enacting Sloat's 1848 landing in Monterey. These are some of my fondest memories.
John I live in Western New York, I’m 66 years old soon, I’ve seen parts of the Original Erie Canal that’s no longer in use. There is a newer section still open and I believe Lockport NY is connected to it
Absolutely. People used to take the Erie Canal to Niagara Falls as a vacation or honeymoon trip. According to Wikipedia, the barges were quite luxurious - kind of a cross between a railroad sleeping car (folding bunks etc) and a cruise ship (food service, porters and musicians).
My fifth generation Grandpa Jesse Reynolds married a Henson Marshall County Kentucky and worked as a blacksmith. Buying 4000 acres in Metropolis, Illinois and Marshall County Ky. I often wondered how he worked as a blacksmith. Now I am a CNC Programmer for Aerospace and Military. I am sure we will have a lot to talk about in the next life.
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Early cars, trucks, motorcycles and bicycles also used wooden wheels, so the art of building them did not die out when carriages and wagons became obsolete.
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Nice to see the old 'Pioneer' of the Galena & Chicago Union in steam. I bet they don't let her out to play very often nowadays. And I'm not the only person to notice the car crossing the Erie Canal! Is that an example of a time warp?
This is America. The story of a young man who set out on his own to start a new life. He didn't ask for anything but was willing to do whatever it took to achieve his goal. I wish young people today could wake up and grasp the opportunities that are available to them.
Interesting. The lake steamers of that time were side wheelers. They often pulled packet boats behind them. Strange that he got on a train at that time. In 1841 there was a horse pulled train between buffalo and black rock. It was constantly coming off the rails. Incidentally, many of the ship blew their boilers-not because of poor workmanship, but because of the drunkenness. Buffalo was called the Queen City because of how the other cities were almost made by buffalo. Even a city like Cincinatti was built by western PA logs that were floated down the Allegheny to the Ohio-although George Washington called the Allegheny the Ohio in his writings. I could write for hours about this subject.
I am happy to hear Jim's appreciation for these simpler times. It shows the universal appeal of relating to another time and place. Thank you for your comment Jim.
He should have just bought a ticket on Southwest... ...it’s a joke. A stupid joke. But seriously, I drive between Sacramento and Salt Lake City a few times a year and I often think of the Donner party. How difficult traveling back then must have been! Even if it didn’t end in tragedy!
We did recently upload this, because we had to change the burn-in identifier on this and about 8 other films! Thanks for watching and for noticing. Love our channel? Help us save and post more orphaned films! Support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/PeriscopeFilm Even a really tiny contribution can make a difference.
@@PeriscopeFilm Done! $5/mo - but I try to avoid Patreon - I wish you had a one-time payment system available! (edit - oh, there's the 'Applaud' button up there)
@@3ngi_n33r It's probably that PF# that's baked into the video. They probably put it there to prevent people from downloading this UA-cam video and using parts of it in their own projects. You need to license the content and pay them to get the "clean version".
Good question. And here are 2 reasons, as answered by Hansens Wheel and Wagon Shop: As the diameter of the wheel increases, the draft size of the animal needed to pull the vehicle decreases, hence making it easier on the horses, mules, and oxen to pull the wagons and carriages. So, a wagon with 48" wheels will pull easier than a wagon with 24" wheels. Now for the second part of the answer; if all wagons had 48" wheels front and rear, we would have an engineering conflict. When we try to steer the wagon, the front wheel would strike the body and reduce the turning radius. Also, the assembly of the fifth wheel would lift the body high in the front. So, to overcome this conflict, we lower the height of the front wheel just enough to level the wagon and increase the turning radius. The results are a maneuverable, easy pulling vehicle. Hope this helps.
@@coloradostrong Thanks, that makes sense. I don't understand what you mean when you wrote about the assembly of the fifth wheel lifting the body high in front though. Could you explain more? For some reason I find it interesting when I see wagons, stagecoaches and carriages in old movies and TV shows and I wonder about their design.
Considering I grew up in the Jet age literally, on my ninth birthday in 1964 my dad brought me to work with him at Niagara Falls AirForce Base and I met a pilot 👨✈️ who took me for a ride in his F-101 Voodoo Fighter Jet. My 66th birthday is in a few weeks, when I was 17 years old I ran away from home and my third ride brought me to the Pocono Mountain’s Racetrack for Rock Concert #10. Three Dog Night, Humble Pie 🥧 two Days of Music 🎼 for Free. I was heading to Wilksberry Pennsylvania to help with the Flood Disaster July 1972. They opened the gates at said concert because of the Flood. In 1979-1980 I worked at Niagara University till the Physical Plant went on strike and after the strike we all lost our jobs, so I gave a friend a ride to Fairfax Virginia to a carnival 🎡 and I worked with that carnival for a few weeks and left and ended up back in Wilksberry Pennsylvania area and worked at Rocky Glenn’s Ghostown in the Glen that Summer till August then returned to Niagara Falls for few months then gave another friend a ride to Miami and I stopped back to Tampa Florida for 13 months till October 1981. January 1983 I ended up in Basic Training at Fort Benning Georgia 🇬🇪 age 27, and I got out of the Army RNG because I would pass out every time I stood up Six Months Service General Discharge under Honorable Conditions
@@lembriggs1075 Hi Lem, have not tried Brave browser on iphone but have used it for 3-years on desk top and have not had to suffer through even one boring advert, so far. Good luck, fellow traveler.
Harris, I mean no disrespect, but if you could learn just one word to spell properly, it would probably be ... "prolly" = "probably". I say that because you sound like an otherwise smart person. Why would you want to sound uneducated over just one word?
Cart, just trying to be funny. Honestly I can’t imagine sending for a young son to travel like that by himself. Never knowing what happened if he didn’t show up. They were much stronger people then.
@@Wildstar40 But not in any of the areas this kid passed thru. It was illegal there. Does it ruin your mood to know that there are places in Africa and the Middle East where slavery exists today?
@@Wildstar40 I would be very careful what products you buy from China then but all the people who talk about the legacy effects of slavery tend to ignore modern slavery.
I loved watching this video. You know it had to be hot as hell down by the boiler and be constantly stirring and adding more wood. Nice to watch but I would pass on living in that time. But I wouldn't have to go through getting the vaccine for Covid-19!! LOL
No Covid but... malaria, smallpox, polio, choloria, no antibiotics, only primitive anesthetics... and of course no phones, no lights no motorcars. I'll take the early 21st century any day!
@@JeffDeWitt So true Jeff. The infant mortality rate was very high. No vaccines back then. Today's children have to be vaccinated to attend public schools. The anti-vaxxers didn't gripe about that.
I like the titles that Periscope Films have, and wish I could watch them, however, the addition of the PF# and timer drives me nuts! It is a shame they had to put their labels in every frame, in an obtrusive and distracting spot, really!! These are important historical films and should not have been destroyed this way! All for a copyright, that i would not be surprised to learn that they acquired for free...
They restore old films such as this. The marking is to keep it from being rebroadcast without proper dues being given. Restoration costs money and you can buy most of these without the "labels" imbedded in them from Periscope Films. Now pipe down.
Ha ha, when i showed grandpa the letter, he just said go! A sense of relief seemed to come over his face...
He turned to me and said:
"Are you still here?"
Grew up next to the Barge Canal. Went right through our little village. Where McCormick Reapers were made.
Well done. I've done a lot of time travel in my living history hobby over the last 35 years and I always wanted to travel the Erie Canal, but I've never made it. I'm 72 now, so I don't know if I ever will, but I really appreciate this video. I've travelled by coach in Washington and in California on some of the original roads, which were mainly dirt paths and I've travelled on a few steam trains. I have the occasion to do little sailing in the Pacific on tall ships and also be part of a long boat crew re-enacting Sloat's 1848 landing in Monterey. These are some of my fondest memories.
John I live in Western New York, I’m 66 years old soon, I’ve seen parts of the Original Erie Canal that’s no longer in use. There is a newer section still open and I believe Lockport NY is connected to it
good living John, thanks for sharing your memories
We can reenact this video if you want. You can play the narrator and I’ll play Grandpa
@@jeremybarcelo6486 its a perfect idea :)
Didn't know that you could film in colour and with sound in the 1840s ! crazy!
Nothing is impossible in Hollywood. .
You should see the original Paul Bunyan with Babe the Blue Ox home made films.
Those darn Americans and their Yankee ingenuity
They had cars already too. @8:17
Did you pay your "tele" licence fee yet?
And people complain about traffic jams on highways today. Amazing film series, please keep posting!
180 years later, we are still moving at 8 mph.
8:16 a car drives over the bridge. Bet he wished he had one of those.
Nice catch. I missed it.
That was an UDO!
Canal Barges,
Now that looks like a relaxing way to travel.
Absolutely. People used to take the Erie Canal to Niagara Falls as a vacation or honeymoon trip. According to Wikipedia, the barges were quite luxurious - kind of a cross between a railroad sleeping car (folding bunks etc) and a cruise ship (food service, porters and musicians).
There are bloggers on UA-cam who still pleasure cruise the canals in England, like Crusing the Cut. It's a whole different spin in RV life.
My fifth generation Grandpa Jesse Reynolds married a Henson Marshall County Kentucky and worked as a blacksmith. Buying 4000 acres in Metropolis, Illinois and Marshall County Ky. I often wondered how he worked as a blacksmith. Now I am a CNC Programmer for Aerospace and Military. I am sure we will have a lot to talk about in the next life.
I was born on the I&M canal in Illinois. Same method of transport as seen, here.
Great video. When I see these recreations, I think little did they know the nation would be almost torn apart in their near future.
In what way
@@norcal9168 world wars
@@Theorangecrushgamer pretty sure they meant the Civil War.
Wow! This is like traveling back in time to a time I don’t know much about!
I live in carriage town in Flint, Mi. A lot of stagecoaches built here.
I grew up in Flint and it was called 'Vehicle City' in my day.
@@OldDood Carriage town is a neighborhood near UofM flint campus. They used to make Horse drawn carriages there. I grew up and still live in Flint.
Astonishing.
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Wow! Great video. Wish more like this was available.
I will visit my Great grandfather’s grave today, born in 1842, and came to Oregon by wagon train from Ohio in 1864.
This is AMERICA Baby.!!!!!! I Love It.!!!
I watched magnificent buildings with electric energy and beautiful trains in Tartaria.
At 8:17, in the upper left corner, you can see a car passover the bridge. Oops!
Lol yeah he could’ve just hitchhiked the rest of the way.
Early cars, trucks, motorcycles and bicycles also used wooden wheels, so the art of building them did not die out when carriages and wagons became obsolete.
It still hasn't, the Amish make excellent wagon wheels.
mark twain went on cruise to europe and egypt on a paddlewheeler and wrote An Innocent Abroad. It's good reading.
❤️I love this video
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Plot twist: grandpa forged the letter to get rid of him. (Pun intended.)
That was a Awesome video !!
Nothing short of fascinating!
Anybody else notice the time travelers crossing the bridge in the background in their automobile at 8:16?
"My mule Sal
She's a real fine gal
15 miles on the Erie Canal"
Nice to see the old 'Pioneer' of the Galena & Chicago Union in steam. I bet they don't let her out to play very often nowadays. And I'm not the only person to notice the car crossing the Erie Canal! Is that an example of a time warp?
This is America. The story of a young man who set out on his own to start a new life. He didn't ask for anything but was willing to do whatever it took to achieve his goal. I wish young people today could wake up and grasp the opportunities that are available to them.
Wow, you're so edgy, talking down on "young people today"
@@mikaelgaiason688 Why didn't he go with the rest of his family?
@@tomservo56954 How would I know that and why would I care?
Excellent.
Interesting. The lake steamers of that time were side wheelers. They often pulled packet boats behind them. Strange that he got on a train at that time. In 1841 there was a horse pulled train between buffalo and black rock. It was constantly coming off the rails. Incidentally, many of the ship blew their boilers-not because of poor workmanship, but because of the drunkenness. Buffalo was called the Queen City because of how the other cities were almost made by buffalo. Even a city like Cincinatti was built by western PA logs that were floated down the Allegheny to the Ohio-although George Washington called the Allegheny the Ohio in his writings. I could write for hours about this subject.
Wow! If you tried to do that now, you would probably be robbed, shot at or killed!
Great video and all, but where did he go poop?
Great video
I'd love to go on an adventure like that. These days you'd need 20 years of education and experience to travel by trade.
No advanced transportation no cell phones no computers no TVs
But know peace and quiet
Not a single single luxury, like Robinson Caruso they're as primitive as can be.... oh wait, wrong show lol
I like these videos and I'm from the UK
your nationality is irrelevant to everybody. please be quiet about it
@@festusbojangles7027 Your opinion on his nationality being irrelevant to everybody is irrelevant to everybody Please keep quiet.
@@michaelprobert4014 its cringe
I am happy to hear Jim's appreciation for these simpler times. It shows the universal appeal of relating to another time and place. Thank you for your comment Jim.
Great Factual History.
Cross county journey and it looks like he had zero supply’s on him at all.
The camera crew carried all the supplies. 🙄
supplies*
Back than plan a trip that lasts for weeks, now book a plane ticket across the country and be there by dinner. Bruh times have changed😂
damn that was comfy
Very interesting.
Little crime because people had to do right or die
That box from China contains umbrellas.
They had really good cameras back then to capture all of this
Grandpa is dead
This film is as old as I am 😂
He should have just bought a ticket on Southwest...
...it’s a joke. A stupid joke. But seriously, I drive between Sacramento and Salt Lake City a few times a year and I often think of the Donner party. How difficult traveling back then must have been! Even if it didn’t end in tragedy!
Is this a re-upload? I'm getting some wicked deja vu! Like I've already watched this intro segmentthree times or something.
We did recently upload this, because we had to change the burn-in identifier on this and about 8 other films! Thanks for watching and for noticing. Love our channel? Help us save and post more orphaned films! Support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/PeriscopeFilm Even a really tiny contribution can make a difference.
@@PeriscopeFilm Done! $5/mo - but I try to avoid Patreon - I wish you had a one-time payment system available! (edit - oh, there's the 'Applaud' button up there)
I’m getting some wicked deja vu too but it’s because I probably saw this film in elementary school!
@@3ngi_n33r I think it's their logo "burned" into the image, it helps protect them from having their content stolen.
@@3ngi_n33r It's probably that PF# that's baked into the video. They probably put it there to prevent people from downloading this UA-cam video and using parts of it in their own projects. You need to license the content and pay them to get the "clean version".
Going west to Detroit😎
I wonder why the rear wheels on the stagecoaches, wagons and carriages were bigger than the front wheels.
Good question. And here are 2 reasons, as answered by Hansens Wheel and Wagon Shop: As the diameter of the wheel increases, the draft size of the animal needed to pull the vehicle decreases, hence making it easier on the horses, mules, and oxen to pull the wagons and carriages. So, a wagon with 48" wheels will pull easier than a wagon with 24" wheels. Now for the second part of the answer; if all wagons had 48" wheels front and rear, we would have an engineering conflict. When we try to steer the wagon, the front wheel would strike the body and reduce the turning radius. Also, the assembly of the fifth wheel would lift the body high in the front. So, to overcome this conflict, we lower the height of the front wheel just enough to level the wagon and increase the turning radius. The results are a maneuverable, easy pulling vehicle. Hope this helps.
@@coloradostrong Thanks, that makes sense. I don't understand what you mean when you wrote about the assembly of the fifth wheel lifting the body high in front though. Could you explain more? For some reason I find it interesting when I see wagons, stagecoaches and carriages in old movies and TV shows and I wonder about their design.
@@coloradostrong I just Googled fifth wheel so now I understand what you were talking about. Thanks for the info.
its like the adventures of huckleberry finn
Considering I grew up in the Jet age literally, on my ninth birthday in 1964 my dad brought me to work with him at Niagara Falls AirForce Base and I met a pilot 👨✈️ who took me for a ride in his F-101 Voodoo Fighter Jet. My 66th birthday is in a few weeks, when I was 17 years old I ran away from home and my third ride brought me to the Pocono Mountain’s Racetrack for Rock Concert #10. Three Dog Night, Humble Pie 🥧 two Days of Music 🎼 for Free. I was heading to Wilksberry Pennsylvania to help with the Flood Disaster July 1972. They opened the gates at said concert because of the Flood.
In 1979-1980 I worked at Niagara University till the Physical Plant went on strike and after the strike we all lost our jobs, so I gave a friend a ride to Fairfax Virginia to a carnival 🎡 and I worked with that carnival for a few weeks and left and ended up back in Wilksberry Pennsylvania area and worked at Rocky Glenn’s Ghostown in the Glen that Summer till August then returned to Niagara Falls for few months then gave another friend a ride to Miami and I stopped back to Tampa Florida for 13 months till October 1981.
January 1983 I ended up in Basic Training at Fort Benning Georgia 🇬🇪 age 27, and I got out of the Army RNG because I would pass out every time I stood up
Six Months Service General Discharge under Honorable Conditions
Ok so I was getting ready to write some smug comment but after the first few minutes it’s actually kinda interesting
Wow! Got way too many tv commercials on here!
Lance Leavitt
Ok. Thanks for info! I’ll check into that! Does it work on iPhone as well? Have you used it?
@@lembriggs1075 Hi Lem, have not tried Brave browser on iphone but
have used it for 3-years on desk top and have not had to suffer
through even one boring advert, so far.
Good luck, fellow traveler.
Steam train prolly cost two bits leaving him enough money for a bath and a house when he arrives out west. lol
Harris, I mean no disrespect, but if you could learn just one word to spell properly, it would probably be ... "prolly" = "probably". I say that because you sound like an otherwise smart person. Why would you want to sound uneducated over just one word?
@@CTLanni Use less commas and work on your sentence structure if you're going to critique others.
@@mikaelgaiason688 Ok, that's "prolly" a good idea. LOL!
Couldn’t the government purchase him a travel ticket and food .
He's not an illegal immigrant (potential blue vote) lol
Do you have to politicize everything? Railroads and canals were heavily government-subsidized. Taxpayers helped build American business.
Cart, just trying to be funny. Honestly I can’t imagine sending for a young son to travel like that by himself. Never knowing what happened if he didn’t show up. They were much stronger people then.
Is he still alive?
Of course. People used to live for hundreds of years, or did you not read your bible? ;)
Good old days😊
@8:17 a car goes by on the bridge above...ruined the whole mood for me...
So it does. I hope you are joking, that would be terribly mean or silly.
What ruined the mood for me is realizing slavery was still a thing in the 1840's.
@@Wildstar40 But not in any of the areas this kid passed thru. It was illegal there.
Does it ruin your mood to know that there are places in Africa and the Middle East where slavery exists today?
@@Wildstar40 I would be very careful what products you buy from China then but all the people who talk about the legacy effects of slavery tend to ignore modern slavery.
@@Wildstar40 I've known that since elementary school.
Grandpa was soon dead after he left for Illinois
How did people travel with money? Did they have to bring all their money? What if they got robbed, how would they get back home?
No Uber?
ဒီvdoက အမှန်ကန်ပဲလား တကယ်ပဲ
သဘာဝကျတယ်နော် သိချင်တယ်ဗျာ
Too many adds.
A modern stage coach is call a greyhound busline.
I loved watching this video. You know it had to be hot as hell down by the boiler and be constantly stirring and adding more wood. Nice to watch but I would pass on living in that time. But I wouldn't have to go through getting the vaccine for Covid-19!! LOL
No Covid but... malaria, smallpox, polio, choloria, no antibiotics, only primitive anesthetics... and of course no phones, no lights no motorcars. I'll take the early 21st century any day!
@@JeffDeWitt So true Jeff. The infant mortality rate was very high. No vaccines back then. Today's children have to be vaccinated to attend public schools. The anti-vaxxers didn't gripe about that.
Worst! Blacksmithing! EVER!
I like the titles that Periscope Films have, and wish I could watch them, however, the addition of the PF# and timer drives me nuts! It is a shame they had to put their labels in every frame, in an obtrusive and distracting spot, really!! These are important historical films and should not have been destroyed this way! All for a copyright, that i would not be surprised to learn that they acquired for free...
They restore old films such as this. The marking is to keep it from being rebroadcast without proper dues being given. Restoration costs money and you can buy most of these without the "labels" imbedded in them from Periscope Films. Now pipe down.
No blacks?
No BLM.
pssst, your bigotry is showing
@@mikaelgaiason688 ha. Only the ignorant buy Into political tricks like BLM.
@@jasoncrandall Only the pathetic feel the need to constantly whine and cry
@@mikaelgaiason688 where did I whine and cry? You’re the one offended by my post.
@@jasoncrandall Ah the immature reductionist stance of an idiot. XD
I’d bet even with this technology trumpeters would yell MAGA. Lol
2000’s SUCKS!!!!!