Train Journey from Dublin to Cork, Ireland 1979

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 11 вер 2022
  • The preparations that are made by passengers and the railway company for a train journey from Dublin to Cork.
    ‘Trains’ a series of four programmes on CIÉ and the Irish rail system. This episode looks at the Cork train and the preparation that takes place at Heuston Station in Dublin prior to departure.
    Certain movements and processes lead the train to the traveller.
    From the early morning calm at Heuston Station to the peak of business as commuters and travellers go about their day. The station is also the home of the board room of the railway system where important decisions are made.
    Passengers spend time queuing for tickets, buying snacks and waiting for the train to depart. The locomotive is prepared for the journey to Cork at Inchicore works before the driver carries out final checks and travels to Heuston to pick up the passengers. Capable of carrying 1,300 passengers the train will also transport goods so there is cargo to be loaded as well.
    The bar and the kitchen on board are stocked for the journey.
    120 portions of bacon, 90 portions of sausages, 20 portions of chops, 5 thin pans of bread, 8 large toasting pans, 20 brown cakes from the railway bakery, 15 dozen ham sandwiches, 2 to 3 dozen steaks, 12 portions of chicken and ham, 2lbs of cold roast beef, and 12 portions of plaice, a hundred portions of chipped potatoes, milk 36 pints...
    As the journey gets underway, food and drinks are prepared and served to the passengers. The train’s position is monitored throughout the journey by traffic control.
    This episode of ‘Trains’ was broadcast on 21 November 1979. The narrator is Norris Davidson.
  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 237

  • @ShawnDaygoogles
    @ShawnDaygoogles Рік тому +57

    Impressed with the hearty comestibles on offer for dining. 3 dozen steaks, fresh plaice etc. Can’t even get a cup of tea now.

    • @SirGilbot
      @SirGilbot Рік тому +1

      15 dozen ham sambos and a 100 portions of chipped potatos 👌

    • @Sileaine
      @Sileaine 9 місяців тому +2

      Sure you can hardly get a kit kat now

    • @shutup2751
      @shutup2751 4 місяці тому

      because everything is about money now, society is being deliberately demoralised

  • @brokenglasses121345
    @brokenglasses121345 Рік тому +102

    Herself and I took a trip on this in August 1980, to pick up a car I'd bought in Killarney (I spotted it in Tarrants VW garage while working in Kerry that week doing engineering surveys of the new RTE TV transmitters. Our survey van had broken a clutch cable).
    Lovely journey, change train in Mallow for Killarney. In the diner you could get a really nice scrambled egg with smoked salmon on the breakfast menu, juice, toast and tea served in a little silver plate teapot. Memorable day out, but I'll always remember the slow pass by of the Buttevant train wreck which had occurred a few days previously. Strangest thing, August three years later we cycled/railed around Ireland, Dublin, Wexford, Rosslare, Waterford, Mallow, Cork, then Tralee an back home to Kildare Station. On the home leg we passed the wreckage of the Cherryville crash which had occurred while we toured. At that stage I had left RTE in 81, and was commuting in and out of Dublin on the newly reopened Maynooth line, in a mix of intercitys, Cravens and plastic seated push pulls. I commuted this line daily for 39 years, until retirement in late 2020. Worst I've seen on that line in forty years was a derailed freighter in Maynooth, runaway engine that was sent up the siding in Clonsilla and caught fire on buffer impact, and being the only passanger on the last train into town on the way to my staff Xmas party, when we hit a cow in Ashtown. Cow was only stunned, I offered to help the driver move her off the line.
    Have my travel pass now, time for a few more trips.

    • @yant8777
      @yant8777 Рік тому +8

      Lovely memory,thanks for sharing.

    • @alllovingcowherdboy4475
      @alllovingcowherdboy4475 Рік тому +2

      Jaysus...exciting stuff surely

    • @annieroche22
      @annieroche22 Рік тому +4

      I got the last train (9pm) from Dublin to cork in around 2006. The train hit a cow as well then. As a farmers daughter, I understand that they can easily get through fencing.
      Didn't get home until 3am

    • @bridgetnolan3947
      @bridgetnolan3947 Рік тому +2

      Lovely memories, thanks for sharing. I spent my childhood playing on the railway banks 4 miles outside of Athy.
      Trains are a lovely way to travel.

    • @anoodono1841
      @anoodono1841 Рік тому +1

      Enjoy ure free trips

  • @andrewclark8630
    @andrewclark8630 Рік тому +12

    They're the old British Rail Mark 2 carriages. A more civilised age with proper dining on the train.

  • @jigsey.
    @jigsey. Рік тому +77

    Traveling from cork to Dublin seems a lot better in 1985 than it does today

    • @davidparks6637
      @davidparks6637 Рік тому +20

      Proper trains with proper dining cars and carrying parcels, newspapers and mail. Doors with opening windows......but CIE knows what the public wants is 22000 airtight, sardine cans.

    • @jigsey.
      @jigsey. Рік тому +10

      @@davidparks6637 yep... Booked tickets the other week...from mallow to Dublin....even reserved seats...got the on the booked seats were taken up by some drunken louts who refused to move... The ticket man was non existent...
      After a bit of a chat the 4 gentleman agreed to move so my party could take their seats ..

    • @davidpryle3935
      @davidpryle3935 Рік тому +3

      It’s 1979.

    • @jigsey.
      @jigsey. Рік тому +9

      @@davidpryle3935 1970 - 1989 was all the same year back then ..things didn't change until Italia 90

    • @davidpryle3935
      @davidpryle3935 Рік тому +2

      @@jigsey. Yeah, I know what you mean. But hey, what about Euro 88, Stuttgart and all that 😀

  • @stephenkful
    @stephenkful Рік тому +70

    I was born in 1995 so these videos are a priceless snapshot of the city I was born and raised in throughout the 20th century. Thanks so much for these priceless glimpses into what has or has not changed in Ireland. And I never have to deal with sponsorships or ads for the pleasure 🙏

    • @burntbacon7995
      @burntbacon7995 Рік тому

      Shut up, snowflake.

    • @caranook
      @caranook Рік тому +3

      I’m exactly the same, born in 96 and i love seeing the history of the place I grew up in. So interesting!

    • @soldier2297
      @soldier2297 Рік тому +7

      Before we were blessed with diversity huh 😄😄😄

    • @CastleKnight7
      @CastleKnight7 Рік тому +1

      @@soldier2297 What colour is a soul?

    • @soldier2297
      @soldier2297 Рік тому +6

      @@CastleKnight7 ask that question to the racists celebrating Black history month

  • @patrickryan5570
    @patrickryan5570 Рік тому +31

    Great memories of my childhood travelling on the train from Thurles to Dublin - It was like a magical moment in life for the first time getting to travel on the train to the big city lights - I still love trains and those days inspired me to travel on the trains around the world - I would end up in Dublin as student in the 80s but unfortunately the Irish economy at that time was going down the crapper - Then my train became a plane as I flew out of Ireland for good.

  • @tomofield
    @tomofield Рік тому +8

    Can't get a cup of tea on the train today! 🤣

  • @sabrinajoyce9540
    @sabrinajoyce9540 Рік тому +5

    We need our railway lines opened up again for bettet connections throughout our whole country

  • @marymary5494
    @marymary5494 Рік тому +4

    Fabulous nostalgia here. I remember visiting Ireland every summer 1960’s/70’s, we would travel by train from Lincolnshire then the ferry from Holyhead to Dublin, finally we would get the train to Mayo. I recall my Mum telling us to listen to the noise the train made on the rails, she would say it sounds like “Going home, going home.” ☺️

    • @vivianhughes9347
      @vivianhughes9347 6 місяців тому

      A lovely memory. Thanks for sharing. My late wife was originally from Belmullet so did that journey from England many times.

  • @cheri238
    @cheri238 Рік тому +22

    I just found CR'S Video Vaults. I am grateful for these videos. Amazing work. I am eternally grateful. I challenge myself everday to gain knowledge of our world 🌎. Love from America. ❤️

  • @ciaranburke3243
    @ciaranburke3243 Рік тому +13

    Very cool, cant even buy a sandwich on today's long distance journeys 😁

    • @RJH1971
      @RJH1971 Рік тому +7

      I know man, I couldn't believe it, steaks! Plaice! Bring it back!

    • @serbkebab2763
      @serbkebab2763 Рік тому +2

      @@RJH1971 And then you'd be complaining about the price. Moaners gonna moan.

    • @michaelwalsh9145
      @michaelwalsh9145 Рік тому

      @@serbkebab2763 yet here you are moaning about moaners, hypocrite.

    • @Juliukas101
      @Juliukas101 Рік тому

      I had to buy my cup of tea at Limerick Colbert station before changing trains!

  • @paulbelfastlimerick5547
    @paulbelfastlimerick5547 Рік тому +3

    I can't believe that I have only seen this clip for the first time on 16th December 2022, 43 years after the documentary was made. I was 12-13 in 1979 and it brings it all back to me. My grandfather worked in Colbert and I can remember being taken for "free" journeys in guards vans earlier in the 70s too.
    CIÉ were much better than BR for grub and I think they had a subsidiary that provided the catering staff.
    For the benefit of younger viewers, absolutely every member of the travelling public had to go the ticket office to but a rectangular ticket stamped (then) by an Almex machine AND apart from a few miles on the main line, there used to be a "clickety clack" noise as rails came separately.
    And of course, let's not forget that the 071s are still going strong albeit on the few remaining freight workings and infrastructure trains.

  • @elvissam100
    @elvissam100 Рік тому +4

    I was 10 years old, I want to go back to this Dublin again ❤️

  • @lmc4964
    @lmc4964 Рік тому +12

    my mother was from kerry so we always did the Dublin to Killarney via this magical place called Limerick junction back in the 70's and ealy 80's. nice memories getting a meal or snacks form the cart.

    • @daniellinehan63
      @daniellinehan63 Рік тому

      Saw that Limerick Station nr.the soccer field in '94.Beautiful.

    • @michaelwalsh9145
      @michaelwalsh9145 Рік тому

      You could also go to Galway through limerick junction but by the mid 80’s you’d have to take the cork Dublin train to port Arlington and wait for the Dublin Galway train.

  • @bridgetroche8128
    @bridgetroche8128 Рік тому +12

    A wonderful nostalgic video. Great food on board back then. We've gone backwards. The same locos are driven today for freight work. The drivers still book on the same way. Lovely video.

  • @vingotaq777
    @vingotaq777 Рік тому +6

    I remember the sound of those old CIE locomotive engines , it was music to my ears

    • @michaelwalsh9145
      @michaelwalsh9145 Рік тому +1

      I can still hear that sound when ever I think back.

    • @AaronSmart.online
      @AaronSmart.online Місяць тому

      The 071 class are still in regular use for freight, and occasionally for diesel railtours

  • @alllovingcowherdboy4475
    @alllovingcowherdboy4475 Рік тому +16

    It is most amazing to me the incredible and precise engineering that goes into creating and maintaining the undercarriage of a train. So many parts have to align properly, so many pipes and springs have to work in conjunction with each other in order to have the train run without a hitch. My hat is off to such designers and manufacturers of the myriad moving parts and to the men who put them all together to give us trains. And also to the trained up train drivers who we often see peering into the dark underbelly of the carriages to ensure all is ok for the journey. Well done. Bravo.

    • @colors6692
      @colors6692 Рік тому

      We can thank continental brains for that!

  • @dannyspelman1468
    @dannyspelman1468 Рік тому +3

    I was born in 1984, in Dublin. We mostly used the Dart but I remember that orange train with the black running along the windows passing our station. It frightened the Hell out of me when it passed because of the speed, the horn and the noise of the diesel engine. I remember my uncles learned to grab me and put their big hands over my ears whenever they saw it approaching because I would scream in fear and start crying! 🤣 Good times.

  • @laetitialogan2017
    @laetitialogan2017 Рік тому

    This was just lovely..thank you so much for uploading

  • @jakmak1199
    @jakmak1199 Рік тому +4

    Girl with the Honda 50 @ 8:46

  • @patrickwarby1140
    @patrickwarby1140 Рік тому +1

    Pity the don't make short films like these anymore. Love the back round sounds and the monotone narration.

  • @jaws6869
    @jaws6869 Рік тому +1

    Another great video, thanks 😊 👍

  • @hoptops8627
    @hoptops8627 Рік тому +5

    Great video thanks for upload

  • @daveyddunne
    @daveyddunne Рік тому +3

    Simply brilliant, my grandfather worked in Inchicore Works up until 1993.
    I can remember my first train journey, which was to Wexford back in about 1987. The train looked exactly the same as in the video!

  • @FionanOMurchadha
    @FionanOMurchadha Місяць тому

    Great grandfather used to do this train for 40 years from the 20s to the 60s

  • @davidcolreavy8077
    @davidcolreavy8077 Рік тому +2

    Brilliant railway of old CIE many memories find more please 🙏

  • @seancourtney9021
    @seancourtney9021 Рік тому +9

    I moved to Dublin from Cork in 1972 and lived there for two years. On Friday afternoon, I joined the throng of young 20 somethings like myself 'abandoning' the Capitol for our Homes every (other) weekend. We took the bus from the center of Dublin out to Euston and then the Train to Cork. God be with those days!

  • @alllovingcowherdboy4475
    @alllovingcowherdboy4475 Рік тому +27

    Does anyone miss being able to stick their head out the door window and feeling the wind in your face and being afraid you'd get your head knocked off by a telegraph pole or a passing train

    • @Steve14ps
      @Steve14ps Рік тому +1

      Yes!!

    • @raygreen5926
      @raygreen5926 Рік тому +3

      Yes. I remember sticking my head out too in the rushing train and afraid of decapitation

    • @michaelwalsh9145
      @michaelwalsh9145 Рік тому

      In fairness you’d want to be fairly stupid to do that.

    • @alllovingcowherdboy4475
      @alllovingcowherdboy4475 Рік тому +1

      @@michaelwalsh9145 then most all of us are stupid because it was fun not stupid

  • @tomv4408
    @tomv4408 Рік тому +1

    Thanks for the video! Couldn't help noticing the ashtrays in the boardroom.

  • @sitaruim
    @sitaruim Рік тому +3

    It leaves no doubt, that society was much more stout and cohesive back then. The good old days, indeed!

  • @daraghoshea7858
    @daraghoshea7858 Рік тому

    Amazing content

  • @drawingboard82
    @drawingboard82 Рік тому +2

    I used to travel from castlebar to Dublin in the 80s as a kid. Looked exactly like this, although with mk3 coaches

  • @PeterShieldsukcatstripey
    @PeterShieldsukcatstripey Рік тому

    Looking forward to catching the train to Cork next year.

  • @ewanduffy
    @ewanduffy Рік тому +4

    08:45 Taking a motorbike on the train! Health & Safety how are ya!

    • @vulgivagu
      @vulgivagu Рік тому

      Here in the UK I used to take my NSU Quickly on the train to Waterloo many times. They had the wonderful guard's vans then that you could put anything in. Today I can't even get a bike on the London train.

  • @crh84
    @crh84 Рік тому

    This is brilliant

  • @JaffaGaffa
    @JaffaGaffa Рік тому

    And 25 years later I and my then GF (Irish) took a train from there to Galway. The fact that they served pints onboard made my happy. No such thing at the time in Sweden :) and those carridges almost looks familire

  • @seanredmond8988
    @seanredmond8988 Рік тому +1

    FHESTY a friend of mind tried to be a train robber but his horse couldnt keep the pace. He left Ireland in 1987 and got married at the train station in Alburquerque New Mexico in 1996. Twas a great day - we call his wife FHESTETTE and a handsome lucky woman she is.

  • @christopherbentley5216
    @christopherbentley5216 Рік тому +2

    I did that trip 1977. Working on the Kinsale offshore gas pipeline.

  • @fintan2830
    @fintan2830 Рік тому +4

    10:29 Sizzling through Sallins

  • @user39h2j8il
    @user39h2j8il Рік тому +2

    The days when people gave a damn about doing their job properly, and with pride.

    • @jgcondron
      @jgcondron 7 днів тому

      A year later the worst railway fatality happened because they failed at the most basic task of keeping people safe. The railways were a death trap until Irish Rail took over.

  • @silvergirl2847
    @silvergirl2847 Рік тому +1

    1981.forst.trip to dublinathe ripe.old.age off 9 on our school tour it was fabulous 😍

  • @RJH1971
    @RJH1971 Рік тому +4

    05:17 check out the catering!!! Dozens of steaks, chicken ham and plaice! Long gone are the days...
    09:46 bit scabby with the bread though...

    • @Juliukas101
      @Juliukas101 Рік тому

      I was quite surprised at all the fancy food on offer! Wow! And they were so carefully slicing that loaf! Those were the days, where you could get your fortune told on a machine, then have a nice meal on the train to Cork!

  • @johnmehaffey9953
    @johnmehaffey9953 Рік тому +4

    And not a mobile phone in sight, I’ve been promising myself to take this journey for a few years now Covid stopped me so hopefully I’ll get to do it soon, my wife’s grandmother traveled from Belfast to cork and beyond (she was born in west cork) many times from the steam to the diesel and getting from Amiens st to heuston in those days was a nightmare, the quays hardly moved sometimes if someone broke down but happier and less hectic days, lovely post

    • @Jaymes400
      @Jaymes400 Рік тому +3

      to be fair, the only reason there isn't a mobile phone in sight is because nobody had mobile phones in 1979, if mobile phones were around then as they are now every single person in this video would have had one, so it's not all that impressive that they don't.

    • @Sileaine
      @Sileaine 9 місяців тому

      Life was definitely a lot easier then... if you were a man. People bought loads of papers and magazines I remember some comics would be on sale on the train that you couldn't buy in Cork

  • @MarkLynskey
    @MarkLynskey Рік тому

    7:46 the greatest moment of this film is the whistle of that EMD.

  • @andrew-hd8do
    @andrew-hd8do Рік тому +1

    I was bortn in 79..great year

  • @josephturner4047
    @josephturner4047 Рік тому +3

    Awesome. I left the RN in 79. Joined BR at Helensburgh. I sometimes wonder how things might have turned out of I had crossed the Irish sea.

    • @thomasburke2683
      @thomasburke2683 11 місяців тому

      Helensburgh on the north bank of the Clyde.
      An amazing contrast between the suburban electric terminus of Helensburgh Central and the rural tranquility of Helensburgh upper, little more than a mile away.
      Helensburgh Upper was the first West Highland station I encountered back in 1978 and the mere thought of these stations, simple but full of character, always cheers me up.

  • @steeviebops
    @steeviebops 9 місяців тому

    I saw a clip which I think was from this programme but for the life of me I can't seem to find it again. It showed a laboratory in Inchicore where they examined oil samples from the engines in order to predict engine failures.

  • @PeterShieldsukcatstripey
    @PeterShieldsukcatstripey Рік тому

    Love his paisley tie.

  • @eddiestaunton514
    @eddiestaunton514 Рік тому +2

    Awesome

  • @dechannigan2980
    @dechannigan2980 Рік тому +17

    The western corridor Sligo to limerick line should have been maintained and extended to kerry or Cork.

    • @Dreyno
      @Dreyno Рік тому +2

      The whole western seaboard is decades behind. How Cork/Limerick doesn’t have a motorway is beyond me. Probably should’ve been built before Dublin/Galway.
      They closed the Limerick/Sligo line and didn’t upgrade the roads until recently when the motorway to Tuam opened. The road from Charlestown to Sligo is an embarrassment. An absolute disgrace.

    • @richiehoyt8487
      @richiehoyt8487 Рік тому

      @@Dreyno Cor! I was just about to come on here and make a sarcastic comment along the lines of "Oh Well, it might be worse, at least Limerick and Cork have the motorway link..." (They don't, of course!) Now I don't have to!

    • @ArcadiaJunctionModelTrains
      @ArcadiaJunctionModelTrains Рік тому

      The line was dead in the water and had no passengers and in the end the locals stopped using the freight. It was a miracle it lasted till 1975.

    • @Dreyno
      @Dreyno Рік тому +2

      @@ArcadiaJunctionModelTrains People stopped using it for freight because it was horrendous. They lost a baler on my father. A massive hay baler on it’s own flatcar. They also lost a dog that was sent to my mother by a breeder. Turned up days later smeared in excrement, starving and dehydrated. It was desperately unreliable. It was sheer mismanagement that stopped people using it.
      Passengers started using buses because it was actually faster. The ‘Burma Road’ as it was called was built on the cheap. It had too many corners and crossings and journeys were slow. When it closed it was with the promise of improved road infrastructure. There is still parts of that road that have had no improvements made in the almost half century since.
      You could make almost any train line in the world run badly enough that people stop using it and use the low ridership to justify closing it.
      It’s not so much that I think that the line could’ve/should’ve been saved. But not improving the roads for so long after is unacceptable.

    • @ArcadiaJunctionModelTrains
      @ArcadiaJunctionModelTrains Рік тому +1

      @@Dreyno Yes I heard about this. That happened all over the network. CIE was a disaster. But the line was doomed - and still is - because it was little more than a tramway north of Tuam. There was never really a Limerick to Sligo line. There was a Limerick to Tuam railway line, and from there a light railway to Coolooney - pointing in the wrong direction!
      The people who think this line is coming back are naive. To get the Athenry to Sligo section up to modern standards would cost BILLIONS. And for what? There is no population north of Limerick to justify it. Galway is not even on the line. Another lie/myth about it. Having said all this. I do think a commuter line from Tuam into Galway is a decent idea for the future.

  • @noelmaher4633
    @noelmaher4633 Рік тому +2

    Observation, lads camera crew here tomorrow, go up to stores and get Hardhat, and Wear them!

  • @Juliukas101
    @Juliukas101 Рік тому +1

    LOL! Old Heuston station looked different back then with those black and white tiles...and that fortune-telling machine! Haha! Catering seemed good. I went from Dublin to Nenagh and couldn't even get a cup of tea :( Did you see how carefully he was slicing that loaf?! I don't like the area around Heuston station, especially Infirmary Road...it has a really weird vibe to it that gives me the creeps!

  • @ewanduffy
    @ewanduffy Рік тому

    11:36 Spotted the Journal of the Irish Railway Record Society on the table.

  • @PeterShieldsukcatstripey
    @PeterShieldsukcatstripey Рік тому

    Lots to think about in that job.

  • @mrjdsworld80
    @mrjdsworld80 4 місяці тому

    10:24 that’s the front page of The Irish Press newspaper of Wednesday, 15 November 1978.

  • @MichaelODonoghueMOD
    @MichaelODonoghueMOD Рік тому

    I want that catering service. I can't remember the last time I had something decent to eat on a train.

  • @Dreyno
    @Dreyno Рік тому +6

    The train wash must’ve stopped working some time in the 80s because they used to be filthy in the 90s.

    • @burntbacon7995
      @burntbacon7995 Рік тому

      A bit like yourself so, gobshite.

    • @capnskiddies
      @capnskiddies Рік тому

      That train is freshly painted. Either painted specifically for the film or coincidentally and then nominated as the set to be filmed.

  • @RYNT1157
    @RYNT1157 10 місяців тому

    Drivers Jack Duggan and Paddy Guilfoyle , loco foreman Jimmy Nolan Inchicore. Train sent away by Stationmaster Jack Storey at Heuston.

  • @nordiskkatt
    @nordiskkatt Рік тому

    The list of foods starting at about 5:10 simultaneously makes my mouth water, and my soul feel a bit discouraged. When did we stop eating delicious, simple foods, and when did we get convinced that a diet of nothing but carbs was a good idea?

  • @Fcutdlady
    @Fcutdlady Рік тому

    I was going to ask is 084 getting a new break shoe (or what looks like it) in Inchicore Railworks? Manys the time I've been catching trains from Hueston to various places and took photos of the Inchicore scrap line from the door window of a 22k or mark 4 railcar in more modern times then shown here !

  • @daniellinehan63
    @daniellinehan63 Рік тому

    Took train from Galway- Dublin & back in '94.Had beers with 2 Swedish gals going and a gent about 85.
    Going back had a huge dinner of eggs, rashers, bangers, beans, tomato and Jameson's fruitcake.Then the Ukrainian lads ac.the way passed around the poteen and....
    Great time!

  • @72mossy
    @72mossy 7 місяців тому

    Made a few trips up to the zoo as a kid in the 70s from Templemore

  • @newshades7009
    @newshades7009 Рік тому

    when i went to ireland on holidays in the sixties the only station my dad showed us was knocklong

  • @user-yk8tt3ce1n
    @user-yk8tt3ce1n Рік тому

    Looking so romantic 😍 💕 🇮🇪

  • @sidewindersid4180
    @sidewindersid4180 Рік тому

    This video needs to shared more

  • @margaretnesbeth593
    @margaretnesbeth593 Рік тому

    Did you know there are no train direction signs anywhere in Dublin to inform you where this station is located, the locals know, but you can forget it if you are a tourist or a visitor to the city, nowhere in O'Connel st is there any mention of this station.

  • @mcevoyproduction1231
    @mcevoyproduction1231 Рік тому +1

    Have you any videos of the train driving in the west of cork?

  • @dgoggin2k10
    @dgoggin2k10 Рік тому +2

    Where can we watch the full episode

  • @chrisclark1761
    @chrisclark1761 Рік тому +1

    @6:58 Classic state companie. Working environment mouldy dirty.

  • @patnagle5031
    @patnagle5031 Рік тому

    wow look at the size of the sliced pan bread compared to today

  • @HistoricAntrim
    @HistoricAntrim Рік тому

    😊oh I would love that map

  • @orlacampbell518
    @orlacampbell518 Рік тому

    Is there a part 2 to this video

  • @thomasburke2683
    @thomasburke2683 Рік тому +5

    Amazing how 084 is prepared and checked in Inchicore for this service but 083 couples up to the train.
    They must think the viewers are all zombies.
    That aside, a well presented video.
    Is pp O'Reilly the narrator?

    • @michaelwalsh9145
      @michaelwalsh9145 Рік тому +1

      It was just showing the process, nobody was trying to fool you.

    • @laughlot
      @laughlot 11 місяців тому +1

      Norris Davidson is the narrator

  • @lcannonplo4411
    @lcannonplo4411 10 місяців тому

    He leaves the shed on 084 but it's 083 that takes the train??

  • @handeyecoordinationskills
    @handeyecoordinationskills Рік тому

    I wonder would the driver know Jimmy Maher from cathedral road in CORK who was my aunt's husband ?

  • @willhovell9019
    @willhovell9019 Рік тому +1

    Uniforms much smarter than British Railways. Mark II coaches.
    Great stuff.

    • @capnskiddies
      @capnskiddies Рік тому +1

      Those are MkII coaches. Mark 3 had powered doors

  • @Mishima505
    @Mishima505 Рік тому

    I hope the bar was well-stocked…😉

    • @ednorton47
      @ednorton47 Рік тому +1

      It would have to be in Ireland.

    • @michaelwalsh9145
      @michaelwalsh9145 Рік тому

      @@ednorton47 drunks were thrown off trains even back then.

  • @alllovingcowherdboy4475
    @alllovingcowherdboy4475 Рік тому +4

    I claim the fame of being the first person to do my morning Yoga exercises on an Irish train for a full hour in a carriage aisle and neither the passengers nor ticket inspector batted an eyelid.

  • @ProFTowN
    @ProFTowN Рік тому +2

    them were the days..a smoke on the train...2022 now.. the gimp train...good luck...

  • @brianbadonde8700
    @brianbadonde8700 Рік тому

    The orange and black trains stand out in my mind when did they change them

  • @killboggins
    @killboggins Рік тому

    The footage is excellent. The narration... less so.

  • @Jaymes400
    @Jaymes400 Рік тому

    last time I got a train from Dublin to Cork was about 15 years ago, and the one way ticket cost me 73 Euro!, to sit on a cold ancient train for 2 hours. needless to say that i've never wasted my money on that kind of experience since then lol. great video though!,

    • @michaelwalsh9145
      @michaelwalsh9145 Рік тому +2

      Those old trains were out of service then, maybe one going to Galway but definitely not cork

    • @kirbyculp3449
      @kirbyculp3449 Рік тому +1

      For some awful train stories check out the YT channel Ushanka Show. Sergei has some stories about travelling by train in the USSR.

  • @DartzIRL
    @DartzIRL Місяць тому

    084 would've been brand new at the time. Not even run in.

  • @haralamc
    @haralamc Рік тому +1

    Im pretty sure those trains were still running in early 2000s, at least the ones between killarney and mallow were anyway 🤣

    • @michaelwalsh9145
      @michaelwalsh9145 Рік тому

      There was one going from Dublin to Galway in 2007

    • @europa2000man
      @europa2000man 3 місяці тому

      The MK2 carriages (seen here) were in use from the 70s up to about 2006. The MK3 carriages which were built in the 80s were in use until 2009 on the main lines. The MK2s were the first carriages in Ireland to have air conditioning. Before this you had to open a window for cold air, hence why these carriages don’t have windows you can open (apart from the doors). The MK3 push pull stock which were built in the late 80s had windows you could open because they weren’t able to install air conditioning due to its electrical system.

  • @europa2000man
    @europa2000man 2 місяці тому

    The ticket man says the price for a return to Tralee is £7.50. That’s just over €48 in today’s money. A return to Tralee from Dublin is nearly €68 (even if you get the low fare, it’s still €49.98 (€50 basically)).

    • @jgcondron
      @jgcondron 7 днів тому

      Yes, but wages were much much lower. Adjusted for inflation, the average wage in 1979 is about 55% of today's median wage.

    • @europa2000man
      @europa2000man 6 днів тому +1

      @@jgcondronThat’s the unfortunate side to it. Wages were bad back then

    • @jgcondron
      @jgcondron 6 днів тому

      I think she was given a reduced fare. You'd have to halve the ticket prices as under 26s pay roughly half the fare today.

    • @jgcondron
      @jgcondron 6 днів тому

      €32 booked online for two flexible single tickets if you're under 26.

  • @emmayoung3355
    @emmayoung3355 Рік тому

    They could have opened the bottle of wine for him!

  • @tompollard6643
    @tompollard6643 Рік тому +4

    The narrator? Sounds so perfectly West British... RTE 🤣

    • @OP-vt2xj
      @OP-vt2xj Рік тому +2

      Painful, tortured accent.

    • @t.p.mckenna
      @t.p.mckenna Рік тому

      Do you want chips with that? Oh, no, I can see you've plenty.

    • @samnicholson5051
      @samnicholson5051 Рік тому

      Anglo Irish. The narrator was Norris Davidson (not the same person as David Norris, whatever the parallels) who was from a very upper class background.

  • @laetitialogan2017
    @laetitialogan2017 Рік тому

    Cant even get a cup of tea now on the trains, not a drop of water..its a shame

  • @ianhudson2193
    @ianhudson2193 Рік тому

    Shame it dosent bother to say it's virtually none of the original film....

  • @liamfoley9614
    @liamfoley9614 Рік тому +1

    God be with the days. You can't even get an overpriced stale sandwich these days.

  • @peterlewis7228
    @peterlewis7228 Рік тому

    What? Where is Dublin and where is Cork? Ok a bit of Dublin. And!

  • @sitluxetluxfuit4481
    @sitluxetluxfuit4481 Рік тому +3

    The building is still the same , no improvements for forty plus years .

    • @joboward
      @joboward Рік тому +8

      rubbish, theres a supermacs now

    • @Juliukas101
      @Juliukas101 Рік тому

      I liked the fortune-telling machine. Those black and white tiles were a bit strange, though.

  • @ignoblesurfer6281
    @ignoblesurfer6281 Рік тому

    What's this guy's accent? Is it upper-class Irish?

    • @GodOfVictory501
      @GodOfVictory501 Рік тому +1

      Back then when an Irish person was well educated, it was reflected in their enunciation (particularly if they had an intention of going into television or radio broadcasting with Rte). Nowadays, this kind of plummy, classic accent is rare in Irish broadcasting - replaced by a kind of drab Mid-atlantic accent.

  • @007eumamerda
    @007eumamerda Рік тому +6

    I don't see the grey tracksuit "just kids" attacking people. Must be good times.

  • @llamashockz
    @llamashockz Рік тому

    amazing how much its regressed since

  • @MrJoemolin
    @MrJoemolin Рік тому +1

    Loving the proper pronunciation of Portlaoise instead of Portleash.

    • @Alphae21
      @Alphae21 Рік тому

      when is it said

    • @Alphae21
      @Alphae21 Рік тому

      12:24 it is said as portleash

  • @alfredroyal3473
    @alfredroyal3473 Рік тому +3

    It looked like Ireland with Irish people in it. Not now.

    • @Alphae21
      @Alphae21 Рік тому

      are you blind by any chance

    • @Juliukas101
      @Juliukas101 Рік тому +1

      Oh shut up, you miserable bastard! :(

  • @seanbonella
    @seanbonella Рік тому

    when people actually worked on trains....

  • @cteasdale1979
    @cteasdale1979 11 годин тому

    Irish. Rail same uk

  • @jgcondron
    @jgcondron 7 днів тому

    Nostalgia is great for rotting people's brains.
    Thankfully, we have proper train services today instead of these slow, overpriced offerings with only a handful of trains per day on tracks that were absolutely shocking and where passenger fatalities happened every few years.