Boy, can you just imagine how lucky the people who are riding in the Olympian Hiawatha Superdome car were with the views they had traveling along this route!
@chrisanderson41687 ай бұрын
You’ve done an outstanding job with this video. Great cinematography, narration, music, historical knowledge. Wish there were more videos like these for other railroads.
@gunnersteve137 ай бұрын
Outstanding.
@MountPindos2 ай бұрын
Mr, KZbin, if you are seeing this, please give Todd Hilton an award for all time best video. I am not a train geek, and still I was enthralled with the scope and beauty of this production. I'll be on the lookout for more Nowhere Video Production vids!
@Baldo6007 ай бұрын
Wow, what a great video. I went to work for the Milwaukee in 1978 pounding spikes. I never worked on the lines west, but worked with fellow employees that did and lived west of the twin cities. This video sort of reinforces the stories and places they told me about. I ended up working for the Soo, then CP Rail until 2000 when I left as a railroad detective. I have lots of great memories working as a railroader.
@davec88297 ай бұрын
Easily the best abandoned railroad documentary I’ve seen
@CenTexTom7 ай бұрын
My Dad, my uncle and a cousin of mine worked for the Milwaukee Railroad in the 60's through the mid 70's out of Janesville Wisconsin. They laid off alot of people and you were very lucky to still have a job with them in the late 70's as my cousin found out. They loved working for the Railroad. It was their life and it was a damn shame what became of it.
@fearlessfruge64457 ай бұрын
I worked as a gandy for Wisconsin River Rail Transit Commission during the 90's, rehabbing old Milwaukee road track, Muscoday to Waukesha. I lived in Janesville at the time. Brutal work much enjoyed tho.
@stephensaasen85897 ай бұрын
I was fortunate enough to live next to the Milwaukee Road's Chehalis Sub from 1974 to 1983. I was just 2 years old in '74. I was fortunate enough to see the last few years of this great railroad. The Chehalis Sub saw about 4 to 5 trains a day with the Portland, OR trains mixed in with the locals. The Milwaukee left the West in 1980 when I was just 8 yrs old and then in 1981, I got to see the first few years of Weyerhauser's Chehalis Western continue the tradition of hauling logs to Tacoma using the Milwaukee's own shop built log cars they purchased with the deal. Chehalis Western and the log bunks are long gone but the Chehalis Sub and Morton Sub still live on. However, now the Tacoma Hill is in jeopardy as City of Tacoma is pushing to turn it into a trail. Tacoma Rail turned its Frederickson local over to another line that operates the other end of the railroad from Chehalis because the Hill is too costly to operate.
@markbrinton68157 ай бұрын
Todd, that was fantastic. Great photography, excellent historic storytelling, great narration. Well done! I have seen many of the structures growing up here in Washington, but didn't know their origin. Now I do!
@gs28647 ай бұрын
After watching this.....All I can say is WOW!
@jamesgoettsche7 ай бұрын
Bravo such a fantastic, wonderful, just one of a kind Documentry of the Milwaukee road!! i lived in a small town of Glenview illinois right by the tracks on henley st were the trains were non stop in the sixties and 70s what a wonderous time it was , so getting to the point my mother divorced my birth father and later remarried my step dad who work for the milwaukee road until its demise in the middle 80s he would atest to the fact that everything you had in this video was true and correct and if alive today would have loved to watch it !! what a sad ending to such a great railroad but you know when you look at what you have done here you keep it alive Todd i got tears watching some of the stuff in the video it wasnt ment to go away like it did!! it was leader from the state of the art electric operations to the milwaukee shops building there own freight cars , the tunnels ,the bridges the list goes on yep my step dad woulda been proud of you Todd !! thank you you keeping something dear to me alive ! again bravo!
@jaydee9757 ай бұрын
One more thing I’d like to add, I think that fans of the Milwaukee Road are very, very, very fortunate that there were many rail fans around before the abandonment of the line that took home movies and photographs of the Pacific extension before it was abandoned.
@geoffreypyne58096 ай бұрын
Thanks, Todd. As an Aussie I have from early childhood been fascinated by the great railroads of the Western US and Canada. I've often wondered what happened to the Milwaukee Road and its distinctive electrics. We have rail trails going in here Down Under now and we can hike, cycle (even electric cycle) through tunnels and along manageable grades. Other groups want discontinued rail lines restored but economics decide these issues. Our Inland Rail running 1700kms (1,000 miles) from Melbourne, Vic. to Brisbane, Qld. is an attempt to build another Class 1 Road and restore rail to its former glory.
@rogermason58337 ай бұрын
This has to be the best produced and presented long form documentary I have seen on KZbin. Well done.
@xr6lad7 ай бұрын
Certainly of an American railroad.
@GoneDeadTrain19607 ай бұрын
My dad (Jim Irvin) was the agent at Cedar Falls, Wa from 1958 until the last day of operation. We lived at Cedar Falls (railroad house) from 1958 to 1970, mom and dad built a new house about 5 miles away. Dad had 40 years with the Milwaukee Road. I was a operator from 1976 (16 years old really!) until May 1979 got laid off. I worked at Cedar Falls, South Cle Elum, Kittitas and a couple of times at Beverly. Cedar Falls what a great place to grow up! My dad passed in 2016, age 90 and he was a World War 2 veteran, Navy.
@stephensaasen85897 ай бұрын
Wow! That's something. I grew up south of Tacoma along the Chehalis Sub, near Roy. I got to see about 5 trains a day with the Portland trains and locals. I know that was more traffic than the mainline saw in the last few years.
@dannork12407 ай бұрын
I grew up in Milwaukee, and my dad worked in railroads (for the US Army) There’s next to nothing about this railroad in town so I always want to learn more about it. Thank you for this video!
@erbewayne68687 ай бұрын
I have seen pictures of the two power house chimneys that are left from Milwaukee shops along the river.
@samh30297 ай бұрын
This is just amazing. The drone work is top-notch. You look at a heavy-duty main-line railroad as something permanent but that's just not the case. This reminds me of the Pennsylvania RR through my hometown of Greenfield, IN. A high-speed dual track railroad which is now the "Pennsy Trail". Thank you for producing this magnificent piece of art containing so much history!
@amamdawhatever7 ай бұрын
I once ran trains on the former Northern Pacific, current BNSF along the Yellowstone River from Laurel MT to Glendive MT. You can see many miles of Milwaukee Road right of way, a few bridges and their old car shops in Miles City. I would also run their old mainline from Terry MT to Hettinger ND. I found the history of the railroad fascinating while I was working there and feel fortunate to have ran on Ol' Milwaukee Tracks.
@OnefastAZfarmtruck7 ай бұрын
Amazing video!! I find abandoned stuff, especially railroads absolutely astonishing. At the same time it makes me sad watching stuff like this or exploring abandoned railroads myself. To think men broke their backs with pride and died building these structures just to have it all abandoned and destroyed hurts my soul
@randywarren71016 ай бұрын
I used to see many of the cars that belonged to The Milwaukee Road in the Menomonee Valley area of the western end of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Now it's being rebuilt with stores and small businesses but I miss seeing the trains running through the city,north in the morning and south in the evening!
@brianmonica11047 ай бұрын
This is amazing. As a lifelong Milwaukeean who saw the railroad completely disappear from it's home city since the 1980's, the story you've told, the video and the music stir emotions. Sad to see what has been lost of the greatness that once was, but grateful to you and others who care to preserve what remains in beautiful Washington State. Your video is an absolute treasure. God bless you and your family.
@richardhawkinson30207 ай бұрын
I was in college in the later 70's in Ellensburg, Washington. I still recall seeing the orange and black Milwaukee locomotives passing through the CWU campus as well as traversing Snoqualmie Pass next to I-90. Regrettably, I didn't have an interest in trains back then. I had no idea I was watching the end of an era play out. I wish I had taken more pictures but at least I got to see the Milwaukee when it was still in operation. Thanks for the outstanding video.
@SBF966 ай бұрын
This is probably one of the best, PBS quality documentaries that I have seen in a very long time. I am a fan of railroads and have been fascinated by abandoned railroads for a very long time. The Milwaukee Road also ran through my home town of Beecher, IL. It ran parallel a mile east from the shared Chicago & Eastern Illinois/Missouri Pacific railroads (Now CSX and Union Pacific). Abandoned two years before I was born, I have childhood memories of the painted railroad crossing symbol still at the abandoned grade crossing on Indiana Ave a decade later before the road was repaved in the early 90’s. Eagle Lake Road to the north of Beecher had a notoriously steep grade crossing for motorists and after the tracks were gone, my dad used to jump the crossing with his 1972 Olds Cutlass all the time when I was a toddler. It was leveled out somewhere in the mid 90’s. Thank you for this enjoyable documentary. Very well done.
@tbs109163017 ай бұрын
Wonderful documentary I am in awe as to the greatness of that railroad. Thank You
@WAL_DC-6B7 ай бұрын
This is an incredibly well-done documentary on the remnants of the Milwaukee Road in Washington state. Thanks so much for producing this! I was lucky to witness much of the Milwaukee trackage through Washington state and even Montana on a camping trip I took as a kid with my parents, brother and sister back in 1968 from the Chicago area to the Pacific coast and back. Curiously, I didn't see many Milwaukee Road trains except once at night and in the distance when we turned south for Yellowstone National Park in Montana. Also, I was employed as a locomotive engineer (now retired) at the Soo Line's former Milwaukee Road, Bensenville (IL) yard. I got to operate a lot of former Milwaukee power such as EMD MP15ACs, GP40s, GP38-2s and SD10s over former Milwaukee trackage mainly between Chicago and Davenport, IA.
@BrucePerkins-mc3hp7 ай бұрын
I grew up in the Town of Cosmopolis, Washington and I remember the Milwaukee Road Train that passed through town 7 days a week saddened by the end of this R 7:30pm
@stephensaasen85897 ай бұрын
Wow!! A very excellent documentary of the Milwaukee Road in the West. Thank you! I grew up along the Milwaukee Road's Chehalis Sub near Roy, WA. We lived there from 1974 to 1983. I got to see the last few years of the Milwaukee. This line sported 1 or 2 daily locals and 3 Portland, OR trains as well as the nightly WAM Logger. I was just 8 years old when the Embargo of Lines West took effect. I had the privilege to ride the rails of the entire Chehalis Sub in 1992 under the ownership of Weyerhauser's Chehalis Western RR shortly before they ceased operations. They hauled logs to Tacoma using the former Milwaukee shop-built log cars from 1981-1992. I was told those cars were built in the early 1970's from the first run of 1940's era Milwaukee Road PS-1 boxcars. Some things to note concerning the line West of Snoqualmie Pass. The poles and centenary arches you said sported telegraph lines actually did not. The canted poles next to the rail bed were actually catenary poles for the electrification. The crossarms sported the 3,000 volt supply lines for the centenary. This is also true of the crossarms remaining on the steel centenary supports on the bridges. The Telegraph lines ran further away from the railroad bed and actually followed the ravines of each of the creekbeds and were never attached to the bridges. I was fortunate enough to see all of this in 1992 after taking that last ride on the Chehalis Western. The telegraph lines, catenary poles and cannibalized signals were all still intact. We accessed the right of way at the Asahel Curtis trail. The location was a fill known as Humpback Creek. (Famous photographer Asahel Curtis snapped a promo shot of a Bipolar Electric locomotive heading the Hiawatha passenger train on that fill prior to 1920.) They were just starting to clear the right of way for the trail you see today. Burlington Northern actually had purchased the line from Maple Valley all the way to Easton in 1980 with intentions to run trains over Snoqualmie in favor of its easier grades than that of Stampede Pass. After the Hull Creek bridge collapse and unrealized traffic, BN removed the track from Easton to Renton after selling the Milwaukee right of way to Washington State in 1988. My guess is the signals you saw piled up in that one area may have been done by the crews we saw in 1992 because the signals were still intact when we hiked between Humpback and Hansen Creek. I'm guessing the snowshed that still stands is at Humpback Creek. It definitely once was much longer. The reason it looks rebuilt is because according to Frederick Hyde's 1990 Milwaukee Road publication in color, a section if the Humpback Creek snowshed was rebuilt in 1979 or 1980 after a derailment damaged a section of the shed.
@ib1rcnut7 ай бұрын
Thanks for a great video production! The Hiawatha is one of my favorite trains, especially its Skytop Lounge. I to follow along old railroad right of ways usually through Google maps. It kind of makes me wish there was a time machine to go back to the heyday when railroad was king. Thanks again.
@michaelnotigan77967 ай бұрын
One of the greatest RR documentaries I have ever viewed. I cannot imagine the logistics you've done to bring this tour de force to life; the time, the scouting of locations, the camera angles and the money spent........ just astounding. So grateful that your vision of this great, abandoned railroad, can now be presented to all of us. Thank you.
@TheMidgardViking7 ай бұрын
Wow, what a production! You have done the Milwaukie Road proud with this memorable and surreal video. The emotion that this video produces brings me to tears of sadness and also joy to see such a video detailing these locations. Thank you so much!
@NowhereVideoNetwork7 ай бұрын
Your welcome
@scottnielsen15537 ай бұрын
I clicked on this video and almost clicked it off when I saw that it was over an hour long. I then thought, oh I'll give it 5 minutes. I ended up staying for the entire video. Well done Todd. This video was awesome. No way it could be done better.
@1Nanerz7 ай бұрын
Beautifully done documentary. Well done. Would love to see an Idaho and Montana segment. Thank you for putting this work into my favourite railroad.
@jeffryreese7 ай бұрын
Now if we can just find someone with the skills and knowledge to work on this end of the line (through Wisconsin) with several abandonments throughout the state. Took a family trip with my mom and dad in 1958 on the Milwaukee all the way to Seattle not even thinking that decades later it would no longer exist. Great job!
@stevenb.88477 ай бұрын
If there was any railroad related documentary I would want to be seen done it would be this, "What Became of the Milwaukee Road Mainline in Washington State?" Well you did it, and superbly done I might add. Your narration, the stills and drone work, showing aspects of the right of way in the "then and now" and the production work is top notch. And the fact you said it was a chance visit to Lind in 2017 that sparked your interest is to be considered fairly recent so that's very impressive that you were able to do all the work in just a few year's time. I also liked how you incorporated your children's enthusiasm to be out with you in that it reflected my own enthusiasm at that age of watching the Milwaukee run here in Washington. Thank you so much for your time and efforts too do this documentary, I have shared it with others and it is greatly appreciated.
@fordisfurious7 ай бұрын
That was really well done!! I hope for more in the future.
@michaelodonnell82097 ай бұрын
This fantastic documentary is better than 98% of movies shown in theaters. I felt this overwhelming sense of sadness over how time erases humans and human built endeavors. Think of the men and woman who worked this amazing stretch of railroad for three-quarters of a century. They are now mostly gone. The brilliant engineers who designed those tunnels and bridges, works of art, are all gone. The film narrator had the perfect voice. I was left wishing that somehow this remarkable train line could have been saved.
@hikingmansteve7 ай бұрын
Fantastic video....my grandma lived in Renton when I was a kid where the Milwaukee ran down Houser Street and the line crossed the Northern Pacific Sumas Line at Burnett Street. I spent many a day and hours sitting on the curb watching the Milwaukee and NP travel by. It's where my love of trains started. Thank you for putting this together and sharing with us. Steve R.
@jaydee9757 ай бұрын
A large section of the original transcontinental route still exists between Chicago and Montana. You should definitely come out to Minnesota and view the Milwaukee Road 261 which is a steam train that makes excursions twice a year. I know you would love it!
@HiThereZoomy6 ай бұрын
In MT you can see the old road in the countryside roads riding alongside you.
@chooch98167 ай бұрын
What an amazing video. It is great to see that a fair amount of the MILW infrastructure is still in place. A well done documentary, an enjoyable watch.
@MesquiteBelt7 ай бұрын
What a fantastic historical production! Well done Todd! One of my best friends is a Milw Road guy… This is GOLD!
@TDMackay7 ай бұрын
Kudos on your film. You’ve managed to tell a great story with respect to the past and also without closing the door on the future potential. The Milwaukee road story isnt one of loss of a railroad but one of change, discovery and adventure. Thank you for making this my day is better because of you.
@markwarmann12627 ай бұрын
I live in kenosha wi and Milwaukee road was my first favorite railroad... Loved this video
@joejoebus88146 ай бұрын
This is an Awesome Documentary Video. I never knew how gorgeous the railroad mainline was constructed through the land. I worked for the Davenport, Rock Island and Northwestern (DRI&NW RR), or The DRI Line, partly owned by the Milwaukee, for a summer when I was a kid. The Milwaukee was a master at building trestles, there is a wooden trestle in Davenport, Iowa that they built that has always been an awesome landmark structure to me. ThX for sharing.
@Joe-d7m6k7 ай бұрын
What can I say??? Perfect--- very well done, excellent--- and then some. A complete exhibit of what the MILW used to be,and how it got there. Also--- a complete memorial to corporate greed,stupidity and malfeasance to ever let this all die. Out of 5 stars, I give it 20. THANK YOU!!!!
@misterwhipple28707 ай бұрын
This brought back memories! I was a communications technician for AT&T for 28 years, and we maintained a transcontinental cable from Ellensburg to Garcia, underneath the John Wayne Trail, and three of its regeneration huts were mine! Each about 20 miles apart, I remember Cle Elum (Thorpe), Snoqualmie and Garcia. I visited each once a month and more often if alarms came in. I used the John Wayne Trail for this in my 4WD work truck, which sometimes (especially in winter) could be very dangerous. We were told to access the JWT from certain points off the main roads (especially I-90) and were warned never to use the old bridges or tunnels, but, when the boss wasn't looking, we'd go through the Big Bad Tunnel!! We had keys to those gates. Good thing we never got caught, because we had no legitimate reason to be in there. When you came out of the tunnel from East to West, you had driven under the divide of the Cascades, and the climate changed abruptly from semi-desert to almost a rain forest. The trail became much more dangerous at this point because of the moisture. Along with the state police and the park rangers, we were the ONLY people allowed on the trail with a motor vehicle. I can remember driving over horse-poop in summer and having to use snowmobiles and Snow-Cats in winter, which I hated! The Yakima River had very steep rock banks and it was freezing cold all year, and if you fell in, you were a dead duck. There were bears and wolves, but I never saw any, but I sure was afraid of them at night. I would find tracks sometimes. This was Sasquatch Country (the Snoqualmie National Forest) too, again, I never saw one. Even some of Ted Bundy's victims were discovered on the Snoqualmie Access Road (I-90 Exit 62, Kachess Lake Road), so that Volkswagen of his traveled the same road I did. The phone company loved to bury cable on railroads, because then they were virtually invulnerable to damage. I saw many AT&T Right-Of-Way marker poles in this video (the old wooden 4x4s) and I can remember having to replace some of them. I was based in Yakima and any work on the JWT was good for burning up a whole day! It was a good job and I miss it! I'm retired now, but if I were still young and healthy, I would go back tomorrow. I'm from Minneapolis originally, and I was well-acquainted with this railroad, the NP, the UP and the BNSF. Thank you for making this documentary of the Milwaukee Road!
@joebliss36097 ай бұрын
Good history lesson! Thank you!
@guenther17 ай бұрын
Fantastic. Thank you so much for your interest in this part of our history and the time you spent creating this little masterpiece. Now on to the NP or GN?🤞
@scottwithrow37937 ай бұрын
This is wonderfully done. Thank you for producing and sharing it.
@ChrisWalda6 ай бұрын
This is an amazing video. The great Milwaukee Road passenger trains skipped the Rock Lake section. They took the UP line beginning in Plumber, ID to access Spokane and rejoined the Milwaukee Road line west of Rock Lake in Marengo.
@KCPrible987 ай бұрын
What a beautiful documentary Mr Hilton. You should be very proud of your self as an amateur videographer, I can only imagine the time you put into this, the filming and editing not the least to say the gathering of the copyrights and selecting the most incredible music - which is worth it all by itself to listen too. The Title drew me in as I have In-Laws living in Milwaukee and I have never heard of this RR before now. They are excited as they have plans to put up a new Chicago, Milwaukee to Minneapolis route in the near future. In retirement I picked up Microsoft Flight Simulator and love to recreate famous routes, such as the first Automobile trip across America in 1904, The Oregon Trail, Amelia Earhart's etc. I believe you have inspired me to check out the rest of this route and create a Flight plan out of it to take the journey from above - so to say. Bless you for the work you did on this as it truly is a work of art.
@NowhereVideoNetwork7 ай бұрын
Been editing/ Video taping since 8th grade and am 48 ,worked for a public tv station many years ago . I strive to be professional. Thank you I have another documentary I did on the Shanghai tunnels you might enjoy.
@KCPrible987 ай бұрын
Thank you. I will watch it as well. I have a friend who wants to move back to that area.
@fallapollo55186 ай бұрын
BRAVO. AMAZING WORK HERE. easily one of the best railroad documentarys ive ever watched. may the milwaukee road live on.
@bpeterfeso7 ай бұрын
As someone who volunteers at one of the few surviving Great Northern roundhouses it's always sad to see the Mighty Milwaukee Road in its current state. On benhill road in St Paul Minnesota a small bridge stands. Owned by the Canadian Pacific track speed is 35mph but when the Milwaukee Road owned the line it heralded the Atlantic Hiawatha's into Minneapolis Minnesota and the track speed was 110mph
@ryanfrogz7 ай бұрын
They did 110 thru the Cities? I find that hard to believe, especially over Shortline Hill.
@davidgow71317 ай бұрын
Where is this Great Northern Roundhouse?
@bpeterfeso6 ай бұрын
@@davidgow7131St Paul Minnesota
@morg527 ай бұрын
This route is on my bucket list. I followed a portion of the Milwaukee Road down the Musselshell River in Montana by bicycle about six years ago on my way from Portland OR to Bismarck ND. I couldn't ride much of it but followed its course through Harlowton, Roundup, Ingomar and Miles City. The Milwaukee Road used to haul a water tender up from Miles City to Ingomar so the town could have water for its residents and industry. (sheep shearing) This is a wonderful production with drone shots and overlays. Thank You for this treat.
@carlfalt1747 ай бұрын
Excellent work. It's strange that no other rail company would have bought the line.
@skyh7 ай бұрын
Great Northern and Northern Pacific made the route redundant.
@stephensaasen85897 ай бұрын
Definitely true. The irony is the Milwaukee pushed thru the 1960's to merge with the more willing Chicago & Northwestern but the ICC dragged its feet on many needed mergers, not realizing that highway traffic was the stiff competition and keeping the big roads separate was no longer necessary. Unfortunately, by the late1970's, the infrastructure was in terribly bad shape and would've taken more money than the tightly regulated railroads were willing to put out to revive it. In fact, after the 1977 bankruptcy and Embargo of Lines West, the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad sent a young employee named Bill Edgar out west for quite some time to do an in-depth study of the Milwaukee's Pacific Extension to determine if the line was worth purchasing from the Milwaukee. After long deliberation, it was determined it would cost too much for the C&NW to purchase and rehabilitate the infrastructure and give the land locked C&NW it's own outlet to the West. Bill Edgar is an avid photographer and took many images of the Milwaukee operations in the Northwest in 1978 and '79. Another former employee that used to work between Portage, WI and Milwaukee said that in 1980, a Japanese company that did alot of shipping with the Milwaukee Road actually wanted to purchase the whole railroad and run it their self. They had plans to electrify too. A judge blocked the purchase. My guess is the stiff trade competition with Japan at the time and the thought of a foreign company having a large stake in US territory swayed that decision. So trying to revive it was deeply considered, but just like the Rock Island RR that fell at the same time, the "vultures" swooped in on the corpse and swept up those portions that they deemed viable for operation. It truly is sad because this railroad was the shortest and most direct route to Chicago from Tacoma and would've been great to see still alive.
@MrDgwphotos7 ай бұрын
Because A: everything that was worth being served, was already being served by other railroads, and B: the line was in very poor shape, which is part of what led to the downfall of the Milwaukee, it would have cost too much to rebuild it to be a reliable railroad line again.
@Maine_Railfan7 ай бұрын
when I first saw that the video was over an hour long, I figured I would just watch the first few minutes. Then I ended up watching the whole thing in one sitting. You absolutely knocked it out of the park with the imagery, the history, and the stories. I am looking forward to future videos on the Milwaukee!
@stevengunning57217 ай бұрын
Absolutely brilliant documentary about the Milwaukee Road rail line, excellent photography and historical research. I’ve had a fascination with the Milwaukee Road for many years, especially when riding the Cedar River Trail. An outstanding tribute to the Old Milwaukee Road and its legacy.
@kristopherlundt5177 ай бұрын
This is a great video. You should do a Vol 2 video to cover the other Milwaukee Road gems around Puget Sound. On the old Everett Branch, there are two impressive trestles; the one north of Snoqualmie Fall is a beautiful horseshoe curve. Another Milwaukee Road artifact you need to document are the two, wire shields under the N. Meridian overpass. They are left-over from the electrification era. They can be viewed from Todd Road. There are also the depots in Duvall, Monroe and Everett. Also in Everett are the pilings where the roadbed once was. At the intersection of East Marginal Way and Diagonal Ave S. in Seattle is a Milwaukee Road tri-light signal still used today.
@adventureseeker98006 ай бұрын
Loved it! Loved it! Loved it! Very nicely done. Any history teacher would hand out a solid A+ for this beauty!
@MrHonestZ17 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for hard work you did on this video it reminds me of part of the Milwaukee road in my old town which had the Milwaukee trains and railroad yard in my old town.
@domerie6 ай бұрын
Great video -- thanks for putting this together. In 2004 my daughter (then 16 years old) and I did a self-contained mountain bike ride along the Milwaukee Road right-of-way from Taft, Montana to Rattlesnake Lake, Washington. We road the RoW where we could, but had to parallel it past several obstructions (e.g., Cow Creek Trestle, Rock Lake, Beverly Bridge). It took about a week and was a memorable experience -- some good memories and some difficult. We had to push our bikes through several miles of sand from the Beverly Bridge up to the Boyleston Tunnel -- it was there my daughter said "Dad -- I'm having a hard time keeping a good attitude". In spite of that, she's often said that she'd repeat the trip in a heartbeat. It was nice to be able to revisit many of the sections from the comfort of my home.
@RonStanek7 ай бұрын
Wonderful homage to the CMStP&P, it must have been a fantastic ride. The Pacific Coast Extention served the U.S. well. Thank you, Todd, for enlightening people's to the historical heritage of The Milwaukee Road.
@GG1man7 ай бұрын
I finished watching your video last evening. I usually don't watch videos as long as this one. It was well worth the time I spent. Thanks again.
@chrisp16016 ай бұрын
PBS quality documentary, a true labor of love. Great job!
@tpwilliams7 ай бұрын
Absolutely fantastic!
@NickP167 ай бұрын
Excellent documentary Todd! So interesting to see the remnants of the Milwaukee Road in Washington state. Part of the old Pacific Coast extension mainline goes to the town I work in. Eden Prairie, Minnesota. Today it is run by a short line railroad called the Twin Cities and western
@AZPapa257 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your superb Documentary! I enjoyed your detailed and unhurried treatment of a fascinating subject. Your splendid use of drone photography adds a wonderful touch. I found myself moved at times by your eloquent narration.
@alexandercolgan78127 ай бұрын
I love the soundtrack of this. Abandoned railroad alignments and structures are so cool to spot and learn about.
@jaxithfox6 ай бұрын
It's awesome that the train thru the base is not blocked off permanently. I assume it's closed during training though for obvious safety reasons.
@JohnLobbanCreative7 ай бұрын
An absolutely stunning and beautiful production. Wow!❤
@FutureRailProductions7 ай бұрын
Well done. You've given me new appreciation for what the Milwaukee Road accomplished. Now I have four words for everyone that owns the right of way. Bring. Back. The. Milwaukee.
@MattChaffe6 ай бұрын
Holy crap, what a documentary! I hope this was worth the effort for you, because it definitely has for us!
@Dukers23007 ай бұрын
This is probably the best historical content I’ve found on this rail line! Thank you!
@michaelpannell57297 ай бұрын
One of the saddest closures of all time...beautiful classy video production
@randyluginbuhl90857 ай бұрын
Fabulous production…Thank-you!!
@carolinebarnes20097 ай бұрын
Very informative… Tony.
@daveeberle14107 ай бұрын
AWESOME! Excellent documentary. Professional quality. Thank you so much!
@robhooper14945 ай бұрын
Absolutely a SUPERB job Todd on capturing one of my favorite railroads, the Milwaukee Road on the Pacific Extension. I grew up as a kid in the late 60's by the main road of the Milwaukee Road in the suburbs of Milwaukee, WI. It makes me sad that I can no longer watch the Road coming up the grade out of Elm Grove, heavy on the throttle or seeing the Hiawatha flying by on its way to St Paul, MN. I still looks for remnants of this once great railroad as I now travel through MT, ID, and WA. When I think about all the time, money, and work that created these now relics of history, we could never redo today what those pioneers accomplished when these were originally established. I am so thankful that many right-of-ways have gone to Rails to Trails route of reuse. Thank you, WA State Parks, for renovating bridges like the Renslow Trestle east of Ellensburg to once again allow safe travel of people over these historic structures. Now we need to get some of the GN Trestles on the Columbia Plateau Trail decked for travel! 🙂
@mpc97887 ай бұрын
Phenomenally well-produced documentary. Thank you for keeping the spirit of the Milwaukee alive!
@lagunsmoose7 ай бұрын
Great video of the Milw RoW, thank you!
@lagunsmoose7 ай бұрын
3rd time watching this, thanks again for the best post-1980 production of the Milw in Washington!!🧡🖤🧡🖤🧡
@georgemoore29527 ай бұрын
The state has actively been working on opening more of the trail. The bridge over I-90 between east of Kittitas was rehabilitated several years ago and I believe the bridge at Beverly also recently reopened.
@shortliner687 ай бұрын
A wonderful documentary. Thank you for your tremendous effort in searching out all those remote locations. Especially sad for me to see it all abandoned, because at my age (73) I well remember when the CMSP&P Pacific Coast Extension was still a going concern and being documented in railroad periodicals like Trains Magazine. Glad to see many of the structures have survived.
@scottmelton84147 ай бұрын
This is the video I've been waiting for. Magnificent work. I get bothered every time the Pacific extension is called a "costly mistake." You can look at it that way if you choose. For others, the history and legacy of Mil-West is a treasure. Thank you Todd Hilton and family. I'm sorry to say Smokey's in So. Cle Elum lost its least, at least at the depot location.
@MarkClayMcGowan7 ай бұрын
Outstanding! Easily the best video of an abandoned line I've seen.
@NowhereVideoNetwork7 ай бұрын
Wow, thanks!
@AC44CWCTE56957 ай бұрын
I love the Milwaukee Road so much
@patwalgamott48676 ай бұрын
Absolutely Fantastic! Thank you for your documentary.
@maxmegamax21746 ай бұрын
Amazing documentary! Even though I've never been outside of Europe, I've always found the Milwaukee Road quite fascinating, and this video made me learn a lot about it!
@MySteamChannel6 ай бұрын
Exceptional presentation, beautiful scenery & very entertaining. Many thanks from Australia.
@wintonjones1827 ай бұрын
Very well written and told.Excellent, in it's presentation and professionalism...
@Mrruneight7 ай бұрын
Once I started watching this, I couldn’t stop. This by far is the best presentation on the Milwaukee Road that I have seen. Thank You so much for doing this and for sharing this with us.
@chopperbillintexas58547 ай бұрын
An amazing presentation! Smooth narration, great music, clever editing and overlays all add up to a wonderful project. Congratulations on your hard work, Sir!
@kinotheidiot7 ай бұрын
Im just over 20 minutes into the video but i can already see that a lot of research was done and the bar of quality was set very high! The pacing, music choice and voiceover is also solid. And i won't even touch on the cinematography because it's too great to describe! These are the kind of videos that deseve millions of wiews! Thank you for keeping my AuDHD ass entertained with this quality video for that long! May you have a great day and i wish the alorythm pushes this video to the right audience.😊❤
@erikmcc8046 ай бұрын
Thank you this was amazing. I am now a suber . My uncle and cousin worked for them. My other great uncle used to hobo on them. Thanks again.
@jeffbangkok6 ай бұрын
Amazing video. Really enjoyed this view of great history
@TK-ec5bv7 ай бұрын
CMSTP&P lines west. A real shame that it's gone. Great job on this documentary. Thank you very much.
@NowhereVideoNetwork7 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@darroniverson7 ай бұрын
Very nice video! Well worth the time to watch.
@fstudent01987 ай бұрын
Standing ovation to an excellent tribute video for our Milwaukee Road!! Thank you for producing this!!
@mariaschur45317 ай бұрын
WOW! What an incredible documentary, well done. I enjoyed every minute of it. I love the way the narration and cinematography really capture the history and current beauty of this remarkable trail. I plan to ride it again this fall, and will feel more knowledgeable when I do. Thank you so much for all the work that went into this!
@kelvintorrence59947 ай бұрын
excellently done on my favorite road, and I love orangel well done sir, idn love to see that city wherenthen cabooses are at
@moodymerlin7 ай бұрын
That must have been one beautiful ride! Great documentary, thank you!
@Hogger2807 ай бұрын
Very nicely and professionally done Todd! The Milwaukee Rd. is my favorite and I have explored it from Harlowton to Marengo as well as Ellensburg to Cle Elum. I have run trains from Toppenish to Cle Elum on the BN; specifically the Great Western # 51.
@StormySkyRailProductions7 ай бұрын
WOW FANTASTIC well done video, My wife and I watched it last evening and it was excellent but at the same time bitter sweet. I was fortunate to work with a ton of Milwaukee Road guys when I started on the CP 30 years ago in the Wisconsin area now all are retired. It was a blast working with all them and that generation of railroaders. I also knew a few that worked out that way in the western areas back in the 70s and lots of cool stories. Thinking through that awesome video of yours how I wished we could take our recording equipment and go back in time to experience that part of the Railroad. Got saddened in parts of the video that a lot of that is now gone such as some of the bridges and such but at least they were able to save some of it for preservation. Enjoyed watching and have a wonderful rest of your weekend.(Steve)
@cprtrain7 ай бұрын
WELL DONE!!!!! This is a fantastic video. Thanks for posting a wonderful history of the Milwaukee Road.