Hoboes and Cold Weather! [1930s Travel Tips! ]

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  • Опубліковано 14 січ 2024
  • Discover the resilient world of 1930s hoboes in 'Hoboes and Cold Weather! [1930s Travel Tips!]' as we explore the survival skills and strategies they used to overcome harsh conditions and scarce resources. Learn how hoboes adeptly navigated the challenges of road travel and town life, from makeshift camping to enduring extreme weather with limited clothing. Join us in this historical journey, witnessing their remarkable toughness and adaptability, and how maintaining a positive attitude was crucial in their daily struggles.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,2 тис.

  • @DavidCanterbury
    @DavidCanterbury 5 місяців тому +95

    Good job buddy

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +7

      Thanks so very much! I really do appreciate it.

    • @10thAveFreezeOut
      @10thAveFreezeOut 5 місяців тому

      The eloquence, verbosity, and laconic nature of this compliment cannot be overstated. Bravo, sir. Bravo.

    • @tanner882
      @tanner882 5 місяців тому +2

      Kinda bothered you didn’t talk about the Hobo-Pocket 😕

    • @g.sepich9997
      @g.sepich9997 5 місяців тому +2

      My dad rode the rails for 4 years I was told. I'm not sure of the year, but he was born in 1911. I believe he left home somewhere around the age of 17 and rode the rails as I said for 4 years. He never talked to me about it. I was quite adventurous and I guess he was afraid I would do the same thing. He did tell me once that he used to use his belt to lash himself to the top of a rail car. Back in the day rail cars had a narrow walkway on top. That way he could sleep without the worry of falling off, which would have been fatal. He traveled to all 48 states by rail. He talked to other people about his adventures, but never me. My grandparent were uneducated LEGAL immigrants from Europe and were very poor. My grandpa worked in the shaft coal mines in our west central Illinois area. My grandpa once told me that my dad was born in a box car which was their home, and the kids would call him boxcar Johnny. Maybe that's where he got the notion to ride the rails. This is all true to best of my recollection.

    • @js-willard4014
      @js-willard4014 5 місяців тому

      Could you please do an episode on how in the Hobo in the example 1930’s with insects, I would really appreciate it. Thanks

  • @user-by8dr4it8w
    @user-by8dr4it8w 5 місяців тому +490

    As a retired hobo with 50 years of the rail. Again you are spot on. Here's some other tips for cold weather that were common in the 1930s. You often wore 2 full sets of clothes. This had a duel propose, warmth, and when you hopped off took the outer layer off. The inner layer was cleaner and made work hunting easier. Tossed newspaper were pure gold. You wrapped your feet with it, put socks over it, and then your shoes. As often your shoes were second hand and a size or so too big, and this would prevent frostbite. Tucking your pant legs in your socks and filling your pants with crumpled newspaper helped a whole bunch to stay warm. Many freight yards had a sand house. Steam engines would carry a small load of sand to drop on slick track in case the wheels started spinning for traction. The sand house was heated as cold sand would clump badly with a little moisture and cold weather. If you were quiet you could sleep overnight on that warm sand and dream of a topical beach.

    • @yonmusak
      @yonmusak 5 місяців тому +27

      Very interesting - thank you very much for the information.

    • @chuckppyro3137
      @chuckppyro3137 5 місяців тому +12

      Wow, thank you for sharing your wisdom.
      I have heard that newspaper works ,
      Does it really make a big difference?

    • @ievaification
      @ievaification 5 місяців тому +32

      ​@@chuckppyro3137it really does, i grew up poor and we would put a paper layer in our shoes if the shoes were not warm enough. I grew up in a country occupied by communist russia. In the winter it could get -20celsius. Paper really makes a difference

    • @user-by8dr4it8w
      @user-by8dr4it8w 5 місяців тому +8

      Yes. The difference between frostbite and staying at least half assed comfortable.

    • @surfdocer103
      @surfdocer103 5 місяців тому +7

      Retired hobo 😂

  • @jerryberryhill3619
    @jerryberryhill3619 5 місяців тому +495

    I'm 57 years old and about 10 years ago I found out my Grandfather on my Mothers side was a Hobo, he was an acoholic and would catch a train out of Guin Alabama and stay gone for months, come back with just enough money sometimes to pay the bills until the next trip. I also found out he was tramping down to Florida and working as a laborer for AT&T installing telephone lines to rural areas.

    • @TheIronweed-vx5lg
      @TheIronweed-vx5lg 5 місяців тому +44

      Many of them worked hard.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +38

      Thanks for sharing the family history and for watching the video!

    • @user-ez5fc5lp6j
      @user-ez5fc5lp6j 5 місяців тому +29

      Must have been tough young people in this country now will never understand

    • @KevinSmith-yh6tl
      @KevinSmith-yh6tl 5 місяців тому +28

      jerryberryhill3619
      That was a great story.
      My Grampa on my Mom's side,was a farmer in Arkansaw, who supplemented his income running a still in one of the many hollers where his homestead was.
      When I was a young kid, Grampa
      said he was gonna show me how to build a still. 😀
      Gramma put an end to that even before we got started.
      I was crushed! 😢

    • @stephenbarabas6286
      @stephenbarabas6286 5 місяців тому

      ​@@user-ez5fc5lp6j🙄 they were no more tough than people who survive nowadays....

  • @danielreynolds7969
    @danielreynolds7969 5 місяців тому +63

    😢As a young boy, I was visiting my grandparents in upstate New York helping my grandmother outside. I looked up at one point and saw a man coming toward us. His clothing was worn, he was wearing suit jacket and slacks. "Oh look grandma, a bum" I said. Grandma looked at him, and popped me on the back. She said "Daniel! He's not a bum. He's hobo". She saw my confused look, and explained: "A bum wants something for nothing; a hobo offers to work for what he needs". And so I learned a lesson once upon a time in the early 1960's...

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +7

      Indeed, there is a difference!

    • @jjjsmith2497
      @jjjsmith2497 4 місяці тому +4

      @@WayPointSurvival
      There are several books written by hobos…they also have a museum as well.

  • @natashafeld6588
    @natashafeld6588 5 місяців тому +187

    I remember my grandmother telling me that her mother would build a fire outside and have a big pot of hot water boiling. People would jump off the train and come up to their house to get hot water, broth or tea which ever she had. This was in Canada during the winter. She said other farmers would do the same and it was known with people frequenting the trains.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +30

      How very kind! I'm sure those folks truly appreciated it.

    • @woltews
      @woltews 5 місяців тому +5

      what part of Canada ?

    • @carlray4809
      @carlray4809 5 місяців тому +15

      GOD BLESS YOUR GRANDMOTHER AND ALL WHO DID THAT 👍❤🙏

    • @HuplesCat
      @HuplesCat 5 місяців тому +24

      Yes that was common. My partners grandparents would always feed the hobos and let them sleep in the hay barn. They’d do some water moving or such in return. Over the depression these hobos became regulars and friends.

    • @bsd9230
      @bsd9230 5 місяців тому +12

      I have a briefcase just like that that I got at an auction for $5 its very nostalgic and in great condition. All leather. Definitely a great conversation piece. Love the garments and outfits true to period. The comments above re newspaper linings in shoes and pants is both sad and inspiring as to the level of poverty yet resourcefulness and satisfaction and gratitude for just finding a newspaper or pile of warm sand.
      Thank you for bringing history to life. You ought to teach in school history classes when you're not camping or teaching survival classes. Kids today dont know what our parents went through.

  • @Jaden48108
    @Jaden48108 5 місяців тому +157

    In the late 1970s I actually did the hobo scene on the west coast. Picking fruit while making my way to Washington state. Met a real life hobo named Jack Fry who showed me how to make hobo stew with only the finest remnants of food in opened cans. One thing I noticed was alcoholism was very prevalent in their lives. All the travelers I met seemed keen on it choosing wine over everything else, including food. Eventually I made it to Alaska working on a fishing boat. Things got lonely though. All in all it was a good experience.

    • @GazB85
      @GazB85 5 місяців тому +8

      Regarding drug dependence, feeling normal and having your drug of choice (Alcohol, opioids or other GABAergenic drugs.) is sadly more important than food.
      Alcohol has the benefit of being calories but like the majority of other major GABAergenic drugs (Benzodiazepines, Gabapentin and Pregabalin.) withdrawal can be fatal, so using and not going cold turkey is very important.
      The majority of opioid users don't die from withdrawal.
      Alcohol and opioids have the added benefit of opening the capillaries, so you feel warmer but you must if using in the winter layer up cause you actually lose body heat faster that way which can be deadly if out in the cold.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +20

      Yes, it seems that in later days many of the hobos turn to alcohol. However, while many of them might have been inclined to take a nip now and then they also understood the importance of not being a stupid drunk. For instance read the 1898 hobo code which states as much.

    • @planetbarton
      @planetbarton 5 місяців тому +4

      Jack Fry, what a name.

    • @Jaden48108
      @Jaden48108 5 місяців тому +1

      A little historical research revealed winos were more likely to survive the plague than non-alcoholics. As it is alcohol is a high level disinfectant. The only thing it can't kill are spores. I think there's truth to that- might even be proveable. @@GazB85

    • @Jaden48108
      @Jaden48108 5 місяців тому +18

      It's been decades and I remember the whole thing like it happened yesterday. He was good guy. Liked to talk. I met other "travelers" on the rails, especially the two hobos in New Mexico who found a boxcar, went to sleep thinking they were going somewhere, woke up and found all the train driver was doing was repositioning the car all night- because there was a railroad strike going on. They woke up hours later only to find they went nowhere. I guess you had to be there. But it was pretty funny.@@planetbarton

  • @leoscheibelhut940
    @leoscheibelhut940 5 місяців тому +53

    I used to live near Cynthiana, Ohio. At the end of our road was a very nice large red brick house[not a mansion]. The original owner built it in the 20s and had $3 million dollars in the bank and several thousand acres. One day in the 30s, after an argument with his family he disappeared. After seven years, he suddenly appeared in time to prevent his family from declaring him dead. He had been hoboing to see America.

  • @LadyCatFelineTheSeventh
    @LadyCatFelineTheSeventh 5 місяців тому +87

    My grandpa and his brother had to hobo their way from Oklahoma to Grand Coulee in WA state for work on the Roosevelt project. Somewhere along the way they hopped on the wrong train and ended up in Montana. They nearly froze to death. But they eventually made it to Grand Coulee and found out they were no longer hiring so they became ranchers instead. Oddly, neither of them said anything about this until they were old. My mother (his daughter) thinks he was probably afraid his sons (who were a bit wild) would try to copy him and take off.

    • @kathubbard2183
      @kathubbard2183 5 місяців тому +5

      Lived near Lake Roosevelt growing up beautiful area NE Washington

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +7

      Yes, a lot of people didn't speak about their experiences. I believe part of it was because being a hobo was really looked down on during that day.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +2

      Very interesting! Thanks so much for watching the video and for sharing some of your family history!

    • @elimorris2273
      @elimorris2273 5 місяців тому

      I would imagine the majority of people who hobo are doing this. Sort of thing just do exist. Like your grandfather whatever you said. I've been going to the comments and seeing this a lot. And I've met a couple of wild men in my day. And that seemed to be the case for them as well. Stopping wherever they had 24 working and moving along.

  • @daveburklund2295
    @daveburklund2295 5 місяців тому +58

    A few years back a German bushcraft channel (I think it was Waldhandwerk) did a thing where the guy wore a thirftstore wool overcoat wild camping. He said it was warm, well made, inexpensive, and environmentally conscious. That convinced me and I have been doing that ever since. With a wool blanket, you have an extra layer, and, if you're wearing your coat, your arms don't get as cold if they stick out the blanket.
    I really enjoy your hobo series!

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +6

      Yes, those old timers really knew what they were doing with their wool. Thanks so much for watching and for the encouraging comment!

    • @thomasmusso1147
      @thomasmusso1147 5 місяців тому +7

      👍 Waldhandwerk (Sepp) is a good channel to watch.
      Thirty-odd years ago, I bought, in South Africa, a 2nd hand Woollen Top Coat (New York Mafia Boss style 😏) at our local budget 'Pep Stores' Outlet. It cost then, the Dollar equivalent $7.00. That was when Importers could still bring in 'bales' of used clothing for sale locally. It was eventually stopped as apparently this pracfice was having a negative effect on the local / chinese import clothing industry 🤔. In a way, a pity, as one could get good quality albeit previously used clothing at more than reasonable prices.
      Living now in Switzerland, I still have that Top Coat. It now (during the chilly months) hangs at the front door .. ideal for donning in our current sub-zero temperatures, together with a woollen Tilley Winter Hat, prior to taking the Pooch out for her twice-daily walk 😊.

    • @carlray4809
      @carlray4809 5 місяців тому +5

      THIS VIDEO HAS GOT ME LOOKING FOR A WW2 ARMY OVER COAT 👍❤🙏

    • @fjb4932
      @fjb4932 5 місяців тому

      daveburklund,
      "...environmentally conscious..."
      Poor, cold, sheep . . .

    • @daveburklund2295
      @daveburklund2295 5 місяців тому +4

      @@fjb4932 environmentally conscious because these are clothes that have already been made and are perfectly usable. I buy and wear mostly secondhand for that reason.

  • @woodstrekker6345
    @woodstrekker6345 5 місяців тому +69

    I love this hobo series. I would love to see a video on what a hobo resupply looks like once he gets to a town and can shop for goods.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +13

      That would definitely be an interesting video! Thanks for watching.

  • @sharonrigs7999
    @sharonrigs7999 5 місяців тому +21

    Wool is a wonderful material
    Provides warmth even when wet, fast drying, abrasion and fire resistant

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +1

      Indeed.

    • @oliverklozhoff
      @oliverklozhoff 5 місяців тому

      Are u insane? Wool is all of these things EXCEPT fire resistant. There's a reason it's a crime to make a garment out of 100% wool; cause it'll go up like a torch. I had a friend when i was younger that was wearing a wool nightgown next to the stove when she was a little girl early in the morning. It actually burned a nipple off 1 side of her chest. Chilling memory

    • @franklinmagnum8544
      @franklinmagnum8544 5 місяців тому +1

      ​@@oliverklozhoffIm sorry your friend had to go through that and for the painful memories it might gave you,but wool-compared to modern synthetics- is absolutely way more fireproof.I had the bottom part of a fleece jacket's sleeve melt into my hand while attending my fire and it was like napalm.
      Synthetics melt,wool gets burned.

  • @danhattaway3513
    @danhattaway3513 5 місяців тому +25

    I hoboed in the early 70's when they were transitioning to all metal boxcars, but sometimes you could find an older and warmer wooden floored type boxcar during a cold day.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +5

      Very interesting! I'm sure that they were a real blessing on those cold nights!

    • @nancybutts9190
      @nancybutts9190 4 місяці тому

      How did I find you? So glad you popped up with great videos. Living history. Thank you for doing this. American Hobo in Europe author, can you spell the name and where could I find that book ?

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  4 місяці тому

      I believe if you Google it you can find the book for free on the Gutenberg project website.

  • @JaHa216
    @JaHa216 5 місяців тому +37

    Here in Finland there wasn't a big hobo culture as such but there were plenty of outdoors workers and also some migrant workers, especially during depression. Lumberjacks, railroad builders, farmworkers, etc. And we do have quite a cold climate. One common affordable aid to stay warm was old newspapers. One could use them as an extra layer between one's clothing, or shred them and stuff them into boots, line hat with them etc. They were cheap and plentiful.

  • @maxxpowers5275
    @maxxpowers5275 5 місяців тому +10

    My grandpa worked on the railroad and he told me about a wealthy hobo who lived in a cave most of the time. He would come down once a month and make everyone in the train yard hobo stew. My grandpa said the hobo just liked living free.

  • @57WillysCJ
    @57WillysCJ 5 місяців тому +31

    The wonderful thing available was the army wool coat or the sailors pea coat. They wore like iron and lasted for years. By the time of the Depresion there was surplus available. My dad had his to use from WW2 into the 1970s when he passed away. I don't know what happened to it afterwards. They had wool sweaters which were fairly common as was wool underwear. If you get a chance read Louis L'Amour's Education of a Wandering Man. Some of his other short stories are also about living lean so to speak espeacially waiting for a job on a ship.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +5

      Yes, I really do like that book and I read it probably 30 years ago.

    • @tntltl
      @tntltl 5 місяців тому +1

      Yeah back then things were made to last not like these days.

  • @user-jn9gr7tg3h
    @user-jn9gr7tg3h 5 місяців тому +22

    I'm currently testing My lifestyle in central michigan it is −5° right now. I think we've got about 10 inches of snow I'm gonna do it all year. I started in July.
    Of course, it's in my yard. But I'm in a pop-up camper.
    So far, so good. Thanks for the tips.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +1

      Sounds great and you're welcome!

    • @salauerman7082
      @salauerman7082 5 місяців тому +1

      You make me grin - trying a hobo style life, with the internet handy?! 😁

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +4

      @salauerman7082 most modern hobos carry smartphones with them. People will give them to you for free if they're a couple years out of date or have a cracked screen. Free Wi-Fi can be found many places including libraries and can be had for the price of a coffee at most McDonald's.

  • @halfsharona
    @halfsharona 5 місяців тому +14

    Wool sure was an important material.

  • @electronixTech
    @electronixTech 5 місяців тому +8

    One of my favorite movies with hoboes was the 1973 movie Emperor Of The North with Lee Marvin playing a hobo called A Number 1 trying to ride a train with Ernest Borgnine playing the role of a psychopathic conductor named Shack who hated hoboes.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +1

      It's a classic!

    • @panatypical
      @panatypical 5 місяців тому +1

      That sounds like a good movie. I don't know how Ernie was ever in McHale's Navy....

    • @electronixTech
      @electronixTech 5 місяців тому

      @@WayPointSurvival It sure is! I downloaded it years ago and have watched it many times. It never gets old and has a lot of good parts. I won't give away anything but the ending of the movie with the fight scene is pretty amazing.

    • @jefferyharris4066
      @jefferyharris4066 4 місяці тому

      🐕💚🍕 dogs like pizza 🤠 I'm a meat eater 🐻 trumpy bear and kellyanne in 2024👺 rats like cheese 🐀💚🧀

    • @destitute8493
      @destitute8493 3 місяці тому

      Be sure to read the books by the real-life A-No. 1
      wikipedia DOT org/wiki/Leon_Ray_Livingston
      Incidentally, "Cigarette" in that story was modeled after a youthful Jack London.

  • @TerryC69
    @TerryC69 5 місяців тому +20

    Hi James! When I was a little feller, I enjoyed coming up with my own homemade costumes to dress like people I admired from TV, movies, or real life. That was a lot of fun. Whenever I see one of these style videos, I detect the fun you are having and suspect some of that same spirit is in you. Blessings to you!

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +6

      I fell in love with reenactment quite a few years ago. It's one of the ways that we can truly study history by trying to live a little bit of it and dressing and wearing and using the items that they did.

  • @cheeto.1
    @cheeto.1 5 місяців тому +36

    You always put so much thought, effort and energy into your videos they are all a pleasure to watch.

    • @susanp.collins7834
      @susanp.collins7834 5 місяців тому +5

      Real historian. One of the few UA-camrs whose videos I can watch from start to finish and ALL of them.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +3

      Much appreciated!

  • @DavidCooper-vh4nr
    @DavidCooper-vh4nr 3 місяці тому +2

    Six months on the Appalachian Trail taught me the importance of wool. Even when it's damp, it's still warm. Synthetics and down are great, but have their limitations.
    I enjoy your videos immensely. Thank you..

  • @grumpyoldwizard
    @grumpyoldwizard 5 місяців тому +13

    I live in San Antonio, TX, and I worked at a large hospital here. Every winter, some poor soul would be found "down" when the weather got cold. They usually died.
    Now, every winter I pray for the poor people living on the street. It still makes me sad knowing that people live, or die, alone and cold. God bless and help them.

  • @j.chriswatson6847
    @j.chriswatson6847 5 місяців тому +12

    My grandfather was born in 1899 in Western NC. He used to run shine and got into a physical altercation with the sheriff and knocked him unconscious. My papaw thought he killed him and since they were by the rails, he jumped on a train and rode north to Detroit. He hooked around, reportedly, until he found some work in the Detroit area. A few years later, he got word that the sheriff was alive and well and he came home. He died in the 60s so I never got to know him but, Lordy, I wish I could've gotten to know him. He was a shine runner, lumber mill owner, ended a Civil War family feud, ginseng hunter, and good Ole mountain boy by all accounts. He lived through these times you bring to life.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +2

      That's absolutely fascinating! I would love to sit down by a fire and chat with him.

  • @russellrlf
    @russellrlf 5 місяців тому +4

    I learned to love wool when I was a young soldier in the Army. It is a superior fabric for winter.

  • @YouveBeenMiddled
    @YouveBeenMiddled 5 місяців тому +5

    Remember that many _homes_ were still heated with wood or coal stoves. Heck, even businesses had limited methods unless in a large industrial or commercial complex. Warm clothing was commonplace in the wintertime, even indoors.

  • @patrick...........-447
    @patrick...........-447 5 місяців тому +5

    Hope everyone is having a great year!

  • @lizardjr.7826
    @lizardjr.7826 5 місяців тому +12

    Your hobo series never disappoints

  • @matthewouellette5857
    @matthewouellette5857 5 місяців тому +13

    You bring more enthusiasm to your channel than a discovery channel hero does. (I like them, too, im learning a lot from all you folks in Ohio and wish everyone well) (pro tip ...you cant go wrong cheerimg on the Michigan Wolverines!)

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +5

      Thanks so much for watching and the boots I'm wearing are made by Wolverine, does that count?

  • @sineriafrankenstein7316
    @sineriafrankenstein7316 5 місяців тому +27

    As a youngster and many, many years after I'd dream about hopping trains and riding the rails around the country. Seeing the countryside, camping out here and there, working where I could and then moving on. Was a wonderful dream!!! Back when I was a child boxcars we're typically opened and unlocked and once in a while you'd see someone stowing away in one as the train passed by. Things are much different now but I've been blessed to live in the country alongside a rr track who's only train is an old steam engine that runs a short trip for tourists.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +7

      Do you suppose anyone on that train line would be willing to let me film with the steam engine?

    • @sineriafrankenstein7316
      @sineriafrankenstein7316 5 місяців тому +4

      @@WayPointSurvival come to think of it, wasn't too long ago the train was loaded up with folks in mountain man garb and long rifles and for some reason, right by my place they stopped and most of the people jumped off the train hooting and hollering and were running around in the big neighboring field. Idk if they were filming or just reenacting for fun but it was pretty neat to see. The tracks run the border of my place so I always have a front row seat!!

    • @PeaceJourney...
      @PeaceJourney... 5 місяців тому +2

      There's a steam locomotive that runs from Neuvo Laredo to Mexico city, costs less than 50 for a private sleeper round trip. Runs through mountains and around volcanos. Nice adventures ​@@WayPointSurvival

    • @sgtrock68
      @sgtrock68 5 місяців тому

      That made me think of the books "The Boxcar Children"...and now I have to find some of them. Thanks!

  • @davidm5982
    @davidm5982 5 місяців тому +4

    My uncle was a Hippie during the sixties. He would hitchhike and hop trains across the United States. He got caught in a snowstorm while hoppping a train. They almost froze to death he said. They lived, but quit hopping trains in bad weather.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +1

      Yes, there are many stories of folks weather in bad weather and making up their mind to never do that again!

  • @lakerdigital
    @lakerdigital 5 місяців тому +4

    This guy is a gentleman and a scholar.

  • @thespider7898
    @thespider7898 5 місяців тому +1

    Hoboing at least once builds character, it makes you feel more connected to the world around you. In my younger days I spent a few summers on the road.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому

      Being out on the road is definitely an education!

  • @angelite711
    @angelite711 5 місяців тому +3

    My grandpa and his brother were hobos at ages 12 and 14, after the stepdad beat them with a singletree ( heavy wood and metal pole used to hitch horse to pull wagon). They had to hop a train and fought hard to keep from being thrown off by other hoboes. Rough life. Both made it to the next town and found work. Never went back home. Their Mom had died and stepdad was a mean SOB. Later grandpa let hoboes work on his farm, gramma fed them and they slept in the barn. Folks can be resilient!

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому

      Amazing story, thanks for sharing it with us all!

  • @jamesellsworth9673
    @jamesellsworth9673 5 місяців тому +3

    Longjohns made of cotton or wool (with the drop seats and saggy ways) were also available as a heat-holding underlayer.

  • @illmade2
    @illmade2 5 місяців тому +1

    My great uncle was a hobo for 2 decades 20's and 30's he spent his winters with two widow ladies in Iowa. He said it was very warm. Well at least according to him.😊

  • @2gpowell
    @2gpowell 5 місяців тому +15

    Hi James! I had just watched a few of your previous hobo videos that I had watched before a few hours ago. I love your presentations, creativity combined with history and survival. Great job!

  • @artawhirler
    @artawhirler 5 місяців тому +3

    I'm not a hobo, but I am a huge fan of suspenders. Once I discovered how comfortable and functional they are, I never wore a belt again.

  • @antoniescargo1529
    @antoniescargo1529 5 місяців тому +3

    The Dutch village where I am from, BRKLN, lived a wealthy man named Dudok de Wit. He traveled on foot from the Netherlands to the Dutch East Indies (Dutch colony). He also traveled on foot in your country.

  • @KSMvidcast
    @KSMvidcast 5 місяців тому +2

    The '30s era hobo life has always fascinated me. The freedom, the ingenuity, the sense of community. It's a far cry from what you see in cities of today with homelessness. Not traveling for work, but simply surviving wherever they can. Though even within that there are a lot of clever solutions people come up with. I'm sure a lot our image of hobo life is romanticized, but still, the independence was unparalleled.

  • @MegaRudeBoy69
    @MegaRudeBoy69 5 місяців тому +1

    I talked to some NYC homeless, they told me that wrapping the feet in newspaper made a huge difference.

  • @geobloxmodels1186
    @geobloxmodels1186 5 місяців тому +8

    Keep these coming. I love the mix of survival, bush craft, and history. Love the style too.

  • @apancher
    @apancher 5 місяців тому +12

    That was really interesting! Thanks for keeping this history alive.

  • @hrtdinasaurette3020
    @hrtdinasaurette3020 5 місяців тому +1

    “There’s no such this as bad weather, just the wrong clothes” - Something an old man from the Orkneys 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 once told me. 😊

  • @Rainismusic
    @Rainismusic 5 місяців тому +1

    We lived by the tracks when I was a small child in the 1960’s. Hobo’s occasionally came to our back door and asked my mama for food. She’d scramble eggs or re-warm leftovers and the men would sit on the ground and talk and eat. We kids thought they were interesting and riding on the train very exciting. We had no idea what their lives were like or what places they’d been. One day a man got out of a boxcar while the train was stopped to hook up carloads of pulpwood. He came to the door and, along with asking for something to eat he asked my mother if she would please read him a faded letter from his daughter that he had carried in his pocket for years. He told her that he couldn’t read, so if he met someone who was kind enough he’d ask them to read it to him. I couldn’t imagine not being able to read, or not seeing your family for years, and it made me sad. From then on I realized that the men who were hobo’s were not just having fun adventures on the trains that passed through our little town every day. I didn’t envy them anymore.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +1

      Yes, for many of them, they had a difficult life. However, there were those who truly enjoyed the experience.

  • @Rotasnoria
    @Rotasnoria 5 місяців тому +7

    Thanks so much for sharing your videos with us! You shed so much light on a lot of history that has been lost, and it’s a great service you are doing!

  • @TimJameson-jg8sl
    @TimJameson-jg8sl 5 місяців тому +9

    I need all the tips I can get. I gotta go work out in the cold this week😂

    • @TimJameson-jg8sl
      @TimJameson-jg8sl 5 місяців тому +1

      @InhumanCondition-gh2qj thanks

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +1

      Understood! The newspaper tip is valid and valuable to know!

    • @mikeaden8790
      @mikeaden8790 5 місяців тому

      Layers of soft foam sheeting that come with electronics to protect them from impact work real well for insulation in clothing and bedding (sleeping bags)

    • @mikeaden8790
      @mikeaden8790 5 місяців тому

      Hot water bottle tucked in bed with you works good in the winter time also

  • @willames363
    @willames363 5 місяців тому +1

    This is so cool, thank you very much for this series!

  • @peterott-tn6pf
    @peterott-tn6pf 5 місяців тому +5

    I truly enjoy your hobo series James!! Thank you for sharing more amazing content with us my friend, and God bless!!

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому

      Thank you so very much and may God bless you as well, my friend!

  • @BBQDad463
    @BBQDad463 5 місяців тому +7

    Thank you for this video. Fascinating information.
    When I was a little boy ( I am soon 72.), hoboes would sometimes come through town seeking work. Often, a hobo would be given some pay in exchange for some chore. (There were many more rail lines in this area then than now, including some passenger lines. Hoboes nowadays are unknown in these parts. I have not seen one since my childhood.)
    He carried his belongings in a folded-up cloth made from what looked like a tan bedsheet. (I wonder now if it had perhaps been treated with linseed oil and/or beeswax, or if it was just patinaed by the grime of ten thousand miles.) This he tied to a frame made of sticks tied together with roots.
    I have often wondered what happened to him. He seemed like a nice fellow.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому

      That's very cool! It would have been neat to hear his story! Was the frame a type of backpack?

    • @steverose3318
      @steverose3318 5 місяців тому

      @@WayPointSurvival most likely.
      That hobo would not recognize
      today's backpack.
      I think a rucksack with shoulder straps, fastened to a wooden frame,
      might be what he was describing.
      Timeframe was likely early 1960's.
      There were still vagabonds who
      hopped the trains around
      my hometown until about 1970.

  • @cliffmorgan31
    @cliffmorgan31 5 місяців тому +4

    Keep the series going. Information like this will likely be useful to a lot of people in the near future….

  • @user-ln1nx9dq4u
    @user-ln1nx9dq4u 5 місяців тому +1

    After hitch-hiking from N.Y. City,to Los Angeles,Calif-I jumped my first freight train out of Phoenix Ariz.-Took me Northerly thru Flagstaff and into Colorado- Felt very safe(safer than hitch-hiking)-rode those "Nags" all thru Rockies,open doors at night,amazing views.Ended up at Mardi-Gras-1977- guess I rode for 3 months,All hobo's were perfect people,always willing to help me,when I needed it! An often ,overlooked,history of our country!

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +1

      Yes, the hobo community was and is still a marvelous thing, for those who still hold to the old ways.

  • @lewisbrodnax7898
    @lewisbrodnax7898 5 місяців тому +1

    3 of some of the finest men I've ever known all told me that one day I should ride the rails, one of them was a USMC drill srg. My father. I never have, but I think about the difference between hobos looking for work along the way and the homeless of today and realize how different they are.

  • @lauriemclean1131
    @lauriemclean1131 5 місяців тому +3

    Very interesting history & survival information as always! Thank you.

  • @theadventuresofdaveandrc1447
    @theadventuresofdaveandrc1447 5 місяців тому +3

    Really enjoying learning about the hobos. Keep them coming!

  • @Crodmog83
    @Crodmog83 5 місяців тому +2

    I really really enjoy this old hobo content. Ive learned so much from your videos. Thanks so much

  • @ethanbox2010
    @ethanbox2010 5 місяців тому +1

    Thanks so much for referencing the book you sourced it from. I'm really hooked on your hobo videos, and it really lit a fire under me to read more into it. It gives me something to chew on between your videos, and it adds so much validity and substance to your content. An American Hobo in Europe is now in my shopping cart.

  • @GazB85
    @GazB85 5 місяців тому +6

    I really love your videos and this series is great!
    As someone who loves survivalism and prepping, which isn't a big thing here in the UK, I watch a lot of American channeks in UA-cam who do it.
    I must say unfortunately since 2016 a lot of those channels have been political and paranoid to the point of being unhinged and I am so thankful you have not taken that route!
    You also don't do stupid paranoid click bait thumbnails which I hate, which a certain Canadian does so he can sell stuff to the uninformed.
    Thank you for staying true to your original intent of the channel, I know channels evolve but you're going in a great direction and not grifting from viewers which I respect.

  • @anthonycheek6469
    @anthonycheek6469 5 місяців тому +3

    I've been waiting on this one for a while now

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому

      Thanks so much and I'm glad that you liked the video!

  • @vikingskuld
    @vikingskuld 5 місяців тому

    One of the better video series I have seen on youtube. Great job thank you

  • @spencers-adventures
    @spencers-adventures 5 місяців тому +1

    James, this is my favourite channel recently! The content itself is great, but what really makes it for me is your attitude. Your excitement for the subject matter and positive demeanour leaves me with a smile every time I watch a video. Thanks for all you do - and hello from Canada!

  • @davekelly9657
    @davekelly9657 5 місяців тому +3

    Nice history lesson. Thanks for sharing 👍🏻

  • @leearmstrong2743
    @leearmstrong2743 5 місяців тому +3

    It's 12 degrees & 8 in. of snow ln Nashville Tn.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +1

      Awesome! I feel like I need to move South to get more snow!

  • @bobg.8954
    @bobg.8954 5 місяців тому +1

    Awesome series, loving it! Thank You Sir.

  • @rogueraven7603
    @rogueraven7603 5 місяців тому +2

    Love the Hobo stuff. Practical ways that could come in handy.

  • @hobojoe3844
    @hobojoe3844 5 місяців тому +3

    I was thinking of changing my look. I think you made up my mind 😁

  • @sgtrock68
    @sgtrock68 5 місяців тому +3

    Dangit, this going to hurt.
    My grandad, Henry Clay McGuire, a little Irishman born in Missouri a carpenter by trade but also a farmer, just like everyone was. He was red headed and he had eyes so blue and clear they looked like chips of ice, even when he was 90. He was a deep thinker, even if he didn't understand the modern world around him. He said the first time he drove a car he was hauling but down main street pulling on that steering wheel screaming "WHOA thar! WHOA!" and he kept pulling and kept a whoain' all the way into the side of the bank building at the end of the street. Well, in his words he 'hoboed out to California from Oklahoma during the depression' but Okies also had the added incentive of the Dust Bowl. Henry Clay had 11 brothers, his mother and father, his wife and he had 4 new babies of his own to provide for. So he was off to California on his own to work the timber patch and the saw mills. In Oklahoma The Dust Bowl destroyed farm land, jobs, and lives. He rode the train as much as possible. He said he'd get atop a particular type of train car that had two rails running down the middle of the roof like a sidewalk what stood up on perches a few inches above the roof. He'd get that car because he could lay down, undo his pants belt and string it through the roof rails and in that way he'd be tied to the train and wouldn't get flung off if he fell asleep. He'd hop off and most towns were usually put off the tracks by about a mile or so. Something I didn't know was a thing considering today they seem to get train tracks tangled up in stoplights, power lines, and highways right in the middle of town. He'd walk to the town and buy a whole loaf of bread and however many eggs he had pockets for. Most stops he'd just buy raw eggs and eat them that way with a few pieces of bread. I doubt it was sliced. He'd wrap the bread in a gunnysack and wrap that around his belt and minding his eggs he'd lace his belt to the train for the next leg of his trek. He went to out to Northern California where he became a skilled lumberjack. He sent money home to Oklahoma and many years later he returned to Oklahoma to continue having a family, farming larger and larger parcels, and building most of the houses in Crescent Oklahoma...and most are still there. He also had a moonshine still in the side of a cliff down by the Cimarron River. Also one of his 11 brothers robbed a bank, Guthrie I think, and was shot down by a drunken posse. Henry's son followed in his footsteps farming except he had a more curious nature. He built his own glider back in the 50s or 60s, long before the had gliders for regular folks. The newspaper even came out for his test flight... and THAT is why there is an odd B&W photo of my uncle seemingly falling out of a clear blue sky, for no good reason. No glider to be seen or barn to jump off of, just him falling out the sky into a field of wheat. He had 'got skeered when it actually worked' and he jumped out. Broke a leg but back to farmin'. That's the McGuires of Logan County, Oklahoma (my mothers side). Now the story of the Chickasaw, McClure family of Logan County (My fathers side) is a lot less wholesome and much more rough and tumble. Some of their story was supposed to be in that book "Killers of the Flower Moon ' but I'm not sure what part exactly. California or BUST!

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +1

      Wow, that's very interesting! Thanks so much for sharing the history!

  • @karijaneify
    @karijaneify 5 місяців тому

    As a kid, my friend’s mother used to tell tales of living in a tiny town where the train would stop daily. Often there would be a hobo or two jump off the train. They often would knock on doors, seeking small jobs, or handy man tasks exchange for food, clothing, or money. This was normal and even welcome as husbands were mostly farmers already busy out in their fields and not available to assist their family during the day. Her mom enjoyed, defeating them a hot meal for their work.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому

      Yes, they were responsible for getting a lot of work done all across the country.

  • @FredFreiberger-pk6wc
    @FredFreiberger-pk6wc 5 місяців тому

    Thanks James

  • @chrishogue5070
    @chrishogue5070 5 місяців тому +10

    I really enjoy your entire Hobo series, a lot of history and a lot of practical and useful travel and survival information and tips that anybody could use.
    Thanks for your great videos !

  • @user-ez5fc5lp6j
    @user-ez5fc5lp6j 5 місяців тому +4

    Somehow you keep coming up with aspects of American life that most people would never know about if you weren't doing this......i personally I'm great full

  • @kaydonahue
    @kaydonahue 5 місяців тому

    Love the outfit! A man from Iowa jumped off a train in Texas, and married my aunt's sister. He was an amazing, successful, terrific man. Many young men got on train cars without a ticket, looking for work.

  • @vaidotasratkus7619
    @vaidotasratkus7619 5 місяців тому

    what a fantastic series, thank you sir

  • @WayPointSurvival
    @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому +37

    Thanks so much for watching! Please leave a comment and a section down below! Also, make sure and check out the website at www.waypointsurvival.com. See the various classes we teach, the class schedule, and the required gear list.

    • @user-ez5fc5lp6j
      @user-ez5fc5lp6j 5 місяців тому +1

      Thanks my man keep going!!!!

    • @Mechanic-s-Arktura
      @Mechanic-s-Arktura 5 місяців тому +1

      Привет .А что носили в чемодане? Где ночевали бродяги зимой ?

    • @jfu5222
      @jfu5222 5 місяців тому +2

      Any thoughts on a video about the CCC and WPA?

    • @cesarfernandez96
      @cesarfernandez96 5 місяців тому

      😊😊😊

  • @jfu5222
    @jfu5222 5 місяців тому +1

    Thanks James, you're looking sharp. It's obvious that you're enjoying making this series as much as we are watching it.

  • @chriskincaid6035
    @chriskincaid6035 5 місяців тому

    Thank You ...

  • @Blunt420Baron
    @Blunt420Baron 5 місяців тому

    Love these videos, been a long time watcher, can't wait for the next one!

  • @FidoHouse
    @FidoHouse 5 місяців тому +1

    Wonderful presentation, James!

  • @tw8464
    @tw8464 5 місяців тому

    Thanks for getting into these important historical details. Good work

  • @brnrecluse2946
    @brnrecluse2946 5 місяців тому +1

    Excellent video, James!

  • @dm1523
    @dm1523 5 місяців тому

    Thank you for another outstanding video. These videos give a great visual element in learning about this era.

  • @marshajones8685
    @marshajones8685 5 місяців тому

    Thank you

  • @peterbailey6930
    @peterbailey6930 5 місяців тому +1

    Outstanding video James

  • @michaelbeams9553
    @michaelbeams9553 5 місяців тому

    Well done . Thank you.

  • @Mayhemcountryliving
    @Mayhemcountryliving 5 місяців тому +2

    Great job!!!

  • @zikend
    @zikend 5 місяців тому

    Thanks for sharing this with us, I love this all, the history left behind by our new generations, the freedom and the really hard times that are yet to come and just a few are ready to face.

  • @My_Alchemical_Romance
    @My_Alchemical_Romance 5 місяців тому

    Loved this great job thanks

  • @reignofchaos6463
    @reignofchaos6463 5 місяців тому +1

    Another great video. Thank you. Really liking the hobo series

  • @robertalbert623
    @robertalbert623 Місяць тому

    I worked at a shipyard and ice rink most of my life, semi retired now. Many of these ideas to stay warm I used often, good stuff

  • @shoot2win506
    @shoot2win506 5 місяців тому

    Looking rather dapper my friend! Love the history of it all. Thanks James...but stay warm out there! Take care...Robin

  • @billwolfram412
    @billwolfram412 5 місяців тому

    Great Video James !! Many Thanks !!!

  • @robinbonaventura4951
    @robinbonaventura4951 5 місяців тому

    James you are looking rather dapper in this one!!! Thank you for all the hard work you put in to educate and to entertain us!! As always...take care...Robin

  • @dorseyblack9833
    @dorseyblack9833 5 місяців тому +2

    Great video, bro!

  • @Nyctophora
    @Nyctophora 5 місяців тому

    Thank you! So interesting.

  • @leemckinney6471
    @leemckinney6471 5 місяців тому

    Just told some of my friends about you they said they would watch love all the videos and telling everyone I know keep it up

  • @statusdisarray9598
    @statusdisarray9598 5 місяців тому

    I adore your videos so much! Thank you for sharing

  • @rubyparchment5523
    @rubyparchment5523 5 місяців тому +2

    After the Civil War, some folks just didn’t want to go home. A multi-racial group of them settled in a Stafford, Virginia woods! (43.6 miles south of Washington DC.) Some got into the turpentine business.

  • @pinetree9343
    @pinetree9343 5 місяців тому +2

    Always a great video. You're spot on about wool. I tell my freezing friends about it, but most people are about style and trends. I'm about staying comfortably warm.

    • @WayPointSurvival
      @WayPointSurvival  5 місяців тому

      Indeed. Wool is an awesome product for the outdoors!

  • @kingsclownvideos
    @kingsclownvideos 5 місяців тому

    I like this post and this series on Hobos! Thank you.

  • @SomeDamnForestHippie
    @SomeDamnForestHippie 5 місяців тому +1

    One thing about newspaper is that it absorbs moisture. This can be a bad thing, as when it gets soggy it will no longer insulate. But it can also work to your advantage.
    If you change the paper inside your boots, especially rubber boots that don’t breathe at all, you can keep your woollen socks dry troughout a whole day of walking when without the paper condensation could get your feet wet and frozen.
    I’ve used this trick sometimes when hiking in very wet snow wearing rubber boots.

  • @Ghost_Os
    @Ghost_Os 5 місяців тому

    4:26 Wool overcoats, absolutely. It cannot be overstated how much that will do to keep you warm.
    A well made video, sir 🍷