Pennsylvania's Abandoned Turnpike Tunnels

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IT'S HISTORY

IT'S HISTORY

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 424
@thomasalfeld3617
@thomasalfeld3617 Жыл бұрын
The Laurel hill tunnel is now a wind tunnel used for motorsports testing
@Bitterman5868
@Bitterman5868 3 ай бұрын
AKA the Area 51 of Racing thanks to Chip Ganassi
@bdub215
@bdub215 Жыл бұрын
Maybe I missed this important bit of information but Chip Ganassi racing used the Laurel Hill tunnel for testing ALOT of their vehicles for years.
@troytheboy9144
@troytheboy9144 Жыл бұрын
Was waiting to find this comment. Wish he mentioned this
@bdub215
@bdub215 Жыл бұрын
@@troytheboy9144 it’s a pretty major oversight tbh.
@helloruan
@helloruan Жыл бұрын
@@bdub215 Ik. As a massive motorsport fan maybe I’m not in the majority but I feel like that bit of info is absolutely integral to the history of this highway.
@marklittle8805
@marklittle8805 Жыл бұрын
He missed this story alright. This creator doesn't always get all the story
@methead1811
@methead1811 Жыл бұрын
Ganassi or Penske? Penske used to have his indy car team bases out of the reading pa area
@WhtAbtBob10
@WhtAbtBob10 Жыл бұрын
Growing up in PA I remember being fascinated by everything about the PA Turnpike. And 30 some years later its still a pet interest of mine.
@gabeross515
@gabeross515 7 ай бұрын
Fifteen now and I was always awestruck by “just a road.” Now knowing pennsylvanias history, I understand why it was necessary to have such a major highway. It’s incredible to think that many times more man hours were put into this road than I’ll ever live in my life
@cxb262
@cxb262 Жыл бұрын
For the record, Allegheny Mountain Tunnel is still in use today. That was given a second portal in the 1960s. However, the Turnpike Commission is actively looking to build a bypass route sometime in the near future, but its still very early in the planning stages and facing some local opposition from at least one group of outdoors enthusiasts. (Ref ~7:00 mark)
@stormbringercoming8105
@stormbringercoming8105 Жыл бұрын
You beat me. This video is full of some errors. I spent four summers working on the Turnpike at the tunnels and for maintenance. Been all through the Allegheny, Blue Mountain and Kittaninny tunnels. Biked and drove through the Sideling Hill and Rays Hill Tunnel before you were really allowed to. I’m a bit of a Turnpike buff.
@AH-ef3rw
@AH-ef3rw Жыл бұрын
I came to say the same thing. I’ve been traveling the length of the turn pike for over 40 years now. I hadn’t heard about a bypass route, but given the age of the tunnels, I’m not terribly surprised.
@rickeuler5792
@rickeuler5792 Жыл бұрын
The Allegheny tunnel in use today is not the original tunnel. The original tunnel sits a bit south of the one in use today.
@stormbringercoming8105
@stormbringercoming8105 Жыл бұрын
@@rickeuler5792 I was thinking it was up behind the westbound entrance of the tunnel. I was there, but it was 35 years ago.
@cxb262
@cxb262 Жыл бұрын
@@rickeuler5792 I'm guessing that might have been the source of confusion over the statement. The one you're referring to was never actually in use by the Turnpike though--it was deemed unsafe and never completed, so a replacement bore (current WB) was made that was later twinned with the EB portal in the '60s.
@TheJstewart2010
@TheJstewart2010 Жыл бұрын
My Dad was a little boy when his father took the family to see the turnpike before it opened. At that point, the speed limit signs read 100 mph. They were replaced with lower speed limits before the road actually opened. I've always thought that it would be pretty cool to cruise the PA Turnpike at 100 mph.
@str8alphamale
@str8alphamale Жыл бұрын
The majority of cars didn't go that fast at that time.
@WhiteTrashMotorsports
@WhiteTrashMotorsports Жыл бұрын
I have cruised the pike at 100 mph many times. Just don't get caught, and when busy, if you're not going 80, you would get run over.
@TheJstewart2010
@TheJstewart2010 Жыл бұрын
@@str8alphamale I asked him about that and he agreed that few cars could have done that speed at that time.
@BobConnor-n2g
@BobConnor-n2g Жыл бұрын
@@TheJstewart2010 The Buick Century was supposed to be able to go 100 mph, hence its name.
@jasonwilliams819
@jasonwilliams819 Жыл бұрын
Can you imagine the accidents on the turnpike at 100 mph speed limit signs people can't drive now it would be a backup mess from fatalities
@jetsons101
@jetsons101 Жыл бұрын
I have been on many many road trips, the Pennsylvania Turnpike is one of the most enjoyable drives, well that and Skyline Drive & Blue Ridge Parkways. The Penn Turnpike is worth the time. If you're on the western side of the country the "Coast Highway" / "Highway 101" is also a great drive between Ventura CA and Port Angles WA. Thanks to Ryan for his time and work..........................
@charlesclager6808
@charlesclager6808 Жыл бұрын
During the 1950's our vacation consisted of two weeks visiting relatives near the Jersey shore. Traveling from Ohio we traveled over the Pa pike and through these many tunnels over the years. They were always the highlight of the trip. I never remember a traffic backlog at any tunnel, the traffic always seemed to move smoothly. Thankyou for this great video.
@mxplk
@mxplk Жыл бұрын
One summer in the mid-1950's, our family took its only road trip--from NYC across Pennsylvania on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, through Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, to my father's brother in Columbia, Missouri. From there we drove back through Illinois to Chicago, where we met the rest of my father's siblings. After a few days in Chicago, we drove back to NYC; whatever the reason, we never went on another family road trip.
@tomhohl4373
@tomhohl4373 Жыл бұрын
In the '60s we did the reverse. We lived in NJ and our extended families were all in OH, and we visited them every year. The Tunnels were our highlights too. We claimed them. Sideling was my brother's. Mine was, and still is Tuscarora. Dad's name was Ray... Another thing I miss is the roadside picnic tables I still love the PA turnpike.
@sanchoproudfoot2
@sanchoproudfoot2 Жыл бұрын
I was a kid in the 50s when my parents moved from NJ to St Louis. But I remember quite a few trips “back east”. To get there we (my dad) drove the length of the Pennsylvania Turnpike. I remember counting the tunnels (all seven) and looking at the trucks hauling gas and freight. Made a big impression on this youngster! Great to see the pictures!
@Adogslife54
@Adogslife54 Жыл бұрын
Same here. I was a kid in the 50s and we traveled between Philadelphia and Detroit often. Seven tunnels is the count I remember as well. I don’t remember the names but, when I hear them, they do ring a bell. Surprisingly!!
@Retired88M
@Retired88M Жыл бұрын
I’m a trucker and I remember driving thru 5 tunnels on the East-West section and now it’s only thru 4. I think a story I heard was that at Sideling Hill when they wanted to drill a second tube they hit a huge section of sand which collapsed which in turn forced them to build the bypass Drive thru the Lehigh tunnel just about every night North and South for over 5 years on a dedicated run and remember all the traffic backups on Friday nights going north and Sunday nights going south with all the Poconos weekend traffic before the second tube was bored
@scurfie2343
@scurfie2343 Жыл бұрын
It still backs up.
@edmundanderson657
@edmundanderson657 Жыл бұрын
@@scurfie2343 Not like back then. What difference it made when they added the second hole in the wall.
@twobrotherskayaking4736
@twobrotherskayaking4736 Жыл бұрын
Very true 88M, I've run Lehigh Tunnel many, many times (18 wheelers). The only time there was any real backup was when they had us all using, I believe it was the west tunnel as doing maintenance in the east tunnel. Prob was 2 or 3 years back. But mostly a pretty decent run through there. I'm retired now too. Congrats on that!!
@Retired88M
@Retired88M Жыл бұрын
@@twobrotherskayaking4736 how about in the wee hours of the morning in the dead of winter when it would be single digits and they would divert all the traffic into the newer bore to knock the icicles from the ceiling in the old bore? I’m still driving but as a semi retired semi driver and it’s so nice to be able to call the boss on Saturday and tell him what days I’m available to help out
@nancydemoss2945
@nancydemoss2945 Жыл бұрын
This video sent me on a memory trip. My family is from Southwest Ohio and my aunt, uncle and cousins lived just outside of Philadelphia in the late 1960's. I remember our trip to see them so well even though I was in 5th or 6th grade. Driving on the Pennsylvania Turnpike was a real adventure. We drove all night and occasionally stopped at the "rest area's" with the restaurants. I remember the restrooms had vending machines that sold combs, plastic rain hat's like my mom and grandma used to wear, and lot's of other items a woman might need. I remember the Blue Mountain and Kittateny (I know I misspelled that) Tunnels. Part of the turnpike was under construction. We went through there after dark and it was pouring down rain. My mom was driving and my dad was asleep. She was scared to death so on our way home she made sure my dad was driving so he could see what she dealt with. There were places where the road was narrow and had steep dropoff's. My mom was grateful it had been dark so she couldn't see past the road itself!
@nathanfisher4687
@nathanfisher4687 Жыл бұрын
My great grandfather was a PA coal miner. Mine closed and he had to work on the turnpike. My great grandmother died around this time and my grandmother was farmed out at 9. She’s now going on 97 years old. Interesting you capture this story.
@edwardkaminsky8142
@edwardkaminsky8142 Жыл бұрын
I do not believe many individuals understand the term " farmed out"
@walterjr.steinert6054
@walterjr.steinert6054 3 ай бұрын
Nice job Ryan!
@kartierglory
@kartierglory Жыл бұрын
Socash is STILL an amazing name. If Ryan put out a mixtape id listen ngl
@BobConnor-n2g
@BobConnor-n2g Жыл бұрын
I asked if Ryan is a singer or an actor and never heard.
@markusgeimer3099
@markusgeimer3099 Жыл бұрын
Yoo if he dropped a rap album under the artist name of SOCASH or SoCa$h would go hard!!
@kartierglory
@kartierglory Жыл бұрын
@@markusgeimer3099 facts. Someone right that down 😂
@dumbbo1
@dumbbo1 Жыл бұрын
2015-2016 I was a truck driver and drove the Northeast Extension from the Wyoming Valley to Allentown and back twice a day Mon-Fri. They really kept it up well. I used the interstates, too. Ugh! All potholes and construction, and they allowed the lanes to merge at the last minute just before the construction zones, tying up traffic. 😢
@Alan-lv9rw
@Alan-lv9rw Жыл бұрын
My family drove the Pennsylvania Turnpike many times in the 1960’s when we traveled between our house in Chicago and my grandparents in NYC. The tunnels were always a big highlight of the trip.
@michealdrake3421
@michealdrake3421 Жыл бұрын
My parents are from Altoona and my grandfather worked on a couple of those tunnels back when they were building the turnpike. There's a lot of great history in that area.
@fd9987
@fd9987 Жыл бұрын
My first and only lengthy PA turnpike trip was about 1963. We traveled west from suburban Philadelphia to Pittsburg for a family vacation to visit relatives. I was fascinated with the landscape and tunnels and I believe that’s when I saw my first oil well. Years later, in the 1990s, my dad mentioned that this trip reminded him of the depression as it reeked of poverty. Pittsburg was an especially dirty city. I was too young to recognize or understand what he was talking about.
@piratepete842
@piratepete842 Жыл бұрын
Greyhound bus..Hagerstown MD..squirrel hill tunnel into pburg..be sunny in Hagerstown..dreary in pburg..all changed now
@fd9987
@fd9987 Жыл бұрын
@@piratepete842 I remember Pittsburg being very run down. I’ve heard it’s beautiful now. I’ve always lived in Philadelphia and the city has been totally remade. It’s nothing like it was in the 1969s.
@yhssd6573
@yhssd6573 Жыл бұрын
Nice summary with lots of great old photos!!! I remember traveling through all 7 tunnels on the East-West turnpike when I was a kid. However, the FIRST section of the turnpike to be abandoned was not the section around Breezewood. It was the section that took out the Laurel Hill tunnel in 1964. It necessitated the deepest rock cut ever accomplished at that point where a whole section of the Laurel Hill adjacent to the old tunnel was simply cut away. The Breezewood bypass of the Sideling Hill and Rays Hill tunnnels wan’t completed until 1968.
@markdodds844
@markdodds844 Жыл бұрын
I'm not surprised of the old tunnels and roads. My great respect for the engineers and workers of the PA Turnpike! I've travelled this road many times.
@nathanrosenthal9879
@nathanrosenthal9879 Жыл бұрын
When I was a boy my father told me about the Pennsylvania Turnpike. We drove on the western section between the Ohio line and Breezewood when we moved east in 1962. Since moving to the Philadelphia area in 1985 and working as a field service tech, I have driven the road many times. I had heard about the abandoned tunnels. The portion of the Turnpike east of US 1 in Bucks County to the Delaware River is now part of I-95 and it connects to the New Jersey Turnpike filling in the gap in I-95. That road used to cross the Delaware River on the Scudder Falls Bridge and was originally planned to continue north in New Jersey. That road was never built hence the gap.
@janetrichey8734
@janetrichey8734 Жыл бұрын
Our family did this with our bikes in August of 2018 when our kids ranged from 11 to 21. It was a tougher bike ride than we thought it would be. Could have used better headlamps and more water, but it still goes down as the coolest thing our family ever did together. There were a lot of people that ranged from young families to kids who were smoking weed in the woods, and even two guys who were testing their motor bikes in the tunnels (illegal).
@bonkers_dave
@bonkers_dave Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Pennsylvania, and I spent MANY hours stuck in weekend backup at the Lehigh tunnel when it was one lane in each direction. It could take three hours to get through that tunnel at peak times. It is amazing that it took so many years to put in the second tunnel.
@amazinggrace5692
@amazinggrace5692 Жыл бұрын
Hello from Allentown! I’ve had those kind of delays from NY via Holland or Lincoln tunnels. It always involved strategic planning for exiting (mainly food and toilet functions)
@Goobnav
@Goobnav Жыл бұрын
The second tube of the Lehigh was completed in 1991, delayed due to Turnpike treating the NE Extension as a stepchild of the system until Philly wanted to connect I-476 to it and the requirement of separate tubes needed to declare it an Interstate. The surprising thing is that the second tube was completed before I-476 was finally completed west of Philly.
@bonkers_dave
@bonkers_dave Жыл бұрын
@@Goobnav476 AKA blue route was the forever highway. They worked on it forever. For years it did not seem like they would ever finish it. Too many lawyer's houses in the way.
@DavidRichTheForth
@DavidRichTheForth Жыл бұрын
Always wanted to visit. But so many videos, it’s satiated this interest. In a good way. Thx
@phildiegidio4658
@phildiegidio4658 Жыл бұрын
As you, I have traveled this road more times than I can remember. I never knew of the abandoned tunnels. I do now. In fact, I will be doing it again this coming weekend. Thanks for the lesson. Well done.
@williampalchak7574
@williampalchak7574 Жыл бұрын
Been through all of the original tunnels as a kid riding in the backseat. I still remember the rough cut walls and red lanterns along them. There was no interior lighting back then. There were signs as you approached the tunnels stating "turn on lights and remove sunglasses". There were also the ubiquitous "road work ahead" signs.
@josephhicinbothem7670
@josephhicinbothem7670 Жыл бұрын
love your series.... I have a suggestion. Living in eastern Massachusetts a great deal of my life, I never heard of the Hingham Naval Ordinance Center. I did a little digging and found it to be fascinating and worthy of your consideration of a series.... if not enough for a full episode, you could also link in the Watertown Arsenal. Just a thought.
@vaclavholek4497
@vaclavholek4497 Жыл бұрын
I have hiked and camped on the Abandoned Turnpike numerous times. Last year, I even ran a half marathon on the Abandoned Turnpike. Running through the tunnels with only a headlamp for light was a neat experience. There was another tunnel planed for the turnpike. Named the Clearview Tunnel it was near Bedford. Rather than bypass the tunnel, the builders simply cut through the mountain where the old railroad tunnel had been. Original 1940 PA Turnpike maps show the Clearview Tunnel. Now this area is referred to as the "Clearview Cut."
@exhauste-d
@exhauste-d Жыл бұрын
I did a photojournalism project for a class in Lewisburg PA about Urban Decay and went with a friend to document the tunnels in photos at night for the project. One of my favorite HS memories.
@BobConnor-n2g
@BobConnor-n2g Жыл бұрын
By the way, as of this year, Quemehoning tunnel is no more, it was dug up to widen the roadway to 3 lanes so if you are in the right lane about mm 106 you are driving where this tunnel used to be.
@jimgeiser487
@jimgeiser487 Жыл бұрын
They now have a north south extension that is not connected to original turnpike. It now starts at US 51 and goes down to W. Va. border. It has very little traffic but it sure is a great way to go from the south side of Pittsburgh through all the towns along the Monongahela area.
@greggorsag9787
@greggorsag9787 Жыл бұрын
And it’s usually almost empty of traffic.
@mattalbrecht7471
@mattalbrecht7471 Жыл бұрын
Ahhh, the Penna Turnpike. Pretty narrow compared to most interstate highways today. I hate toll roads in general. They never seem to pay for themselves
@MK-of7qw
@MK-of7qw Жыл бұрын
Unfortunately not. The turnpike commission also has to find the State Police they patrol the highway. So it takes a lot of the budget.
@SethMcConaughey
@SethMcConaughey Жыл бұрын
You used to actually be able to go up into the top of them. They have giant blowers that they use for the ventilation shaft that runs the entire way across the top of a tunnel. You could walk up there as well and look down through the holes where the lights dropped. down
@ramcharger9146
@ramcharger9146 Жыл бұрын
Yeah you're still able to do that
@Jason-rn4jk
@Jason-rn4jk Жыл бұрын
You still can…I’ve been there 5 years ago
@2gunz122
@2gunz122 Жыл бұрын
The ventilation shaft I was in got shorter and shorter as it went, eventually becoming a pain in the neck
@catreader9733
@catreader9733 5 ай бұрын
The Blue Mountain and Kittatinny Mountain Tunnels are very close to each other. As a teen, I rode trail motorcycle on the Blue Mountain and through the valley between them. I recall walking downslope to near the top of one of the tunnels and having an interesting point of view into the mouth of the other tunnel.
@gregorynagy8448
@gregorynagy8448 Жыл бұрын
All very good, but as of the publishing date of this video, the Allegheny Mountain tunnel is alive and well. There is plans being developed to bypass the tunnel, but its going to be about a decade before that is completed. The "abandoned" tunnel through Allegheny mountain lies just to the right of the westbound lanes on the east side of the mountain.
@BobConnor-n2g
@BobConnor-n2g Жыл бұрын
Alive, but not well. The buildings on both ends look terrible, the walls of both of the tubes have missing/broken tile, it leaks everywhere, and the poor condition of the facility is one of the reasons for the bypass.
@kucelkj
@kucelkj Жыл бұрын
I came across this video on tiktok so I looked it up on KZbin and found you. Great video!
@StarFyre
@StarFyre Жыл бұрын
This inspired me to watch "The Road", can see in it several scenes showing the abandoned turnpike.
@eric3027
@eric3027 Жыл бұрын
In the early 80's I rode the turnpike twice a year from south of Pittsburgh to Carlisle on my way out to visit family in New Jersey. I was very young but I'll never forget the family trips. I never knew about the abandoned tunnels either.
@FixIt1975
@FixIt1975 Жыл бұрын
I haven't been on the PA Turnpike in over 30 years. My first trip on it was in 1986 when we took a trip to see relatives in Pittsburgh. I attended a trade school in Cleveland in the early 90s and although I'm from south Jersey, my roommate was from the central part (north Jersey to me), Cliffwood Beach. We usually took rt 80 back and forth. Better road and it was free. I would be doing 90 mph in the middle of the night often, in western PA and the truckers would often pass me!
@Chips2323
@Chips2323 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the history lesson and the ride, I do love your subject matter.
@jamiesuejeffery
@jamiesuejeffery Жыл бұрын
I went to graduate school in Ohio between 1994-1999. To put ramen noodles in the dinner bowl, I drove motor coach (yes, the huge Greyhound type buses). I haven't driven on the PA Turnpike since I graduated and moved back west. But back when I drove it (and often drove it), you would collect a ticket upon entry then pay upon exit. They were timestamped. I never got a speeding ticket, but several of our company drivers did, because the timestamp didn't match up from beginning to end.
@rixxroxxk1620
@rixxroxxk1620 Жыл бұрын
The NJ Turnpike was the same!
@jasonwilliams819
@jasonwilliams819 Жыл бұрын
Very slick of them to make money I drive semi use to run threw NYC a lot on I 95 heading north bound there is 2 signs stating that toll controlled speed limit which means it knows how long it takes from the GW bridge to the Rochelle toll booths before Connecticut state line then they just bill extra on their expass 😂
@s3thme
@s3thme Жыл бұрын
Love this channel. This was a great episode I travel the PA TPK all the time
@MrEdwardhartmann
@MrEdwardhartmann Жыл бұрын
Nice article, but I wish you had put in maps of the original and updated turnpike so those of us who are not familiar with the area could al least picture what had been done.
@John-se5vc
@John-se5vc Жыл бұрын
Thank you for live, human commentary. Very well done.
@johndoran3274
@johndoran3274 Жыл бұрын
They really need to pay you to drive it instead of the other way around. It’s in horrible condition and they raise the tolls 3 times a year. Even though they got rid of all the toll collectors and half the maintenance workers.
@SethMcConaughey
@SethMcConaughey Жыл бұрын
It's one of the most expensive roads in the world to drive on.
@johnpearson492
@johnpearson492 Жыл бұрын
I do agree. I drive from Erie to the west side of Philadelphia a few times a year to visit family. We used to always take the Turnpike. However with the cost and I-80 being 70mph, we just cut across the state in I-80 and then drop down the north east extension of the Turnpike. The time is the same for travel and it's a far less twisty route.
@Sasquatchprospector
@Sasquatchprospector Жыл бұрын
Thanks for making the video, great job!
@richard.cohen51
@richard.cohen51 7 ай бұрын
The abandoned roadway at Breezwood I have stopped there many times over the years and always wonder about and after watching this video I now know what became of it, so I thank you for story now when I pass the area I can tell my children and grandchildren all about it. Again thank you for this amazing story.
@catreader9733
@catreader9733 5 ай бұрын
As a youngster, I made a few trips westward on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, from Harrisburg. Edutainment included learning and naming all 7 tunnels, in order: Blue Mountain, Kittatinny Mountain Tuscarora Mountain, Ray's Hill, Sideling Hill, Allegheny Mountain, and Laurel Hill. (At a time when most people born or living in Pennsylvania abbreviated their state as Penna., not Pa., we often referred to it as the "Pee A Turnpike" or merely "The Turnpike" it was our only major turnpike.)
@sijonda
@sijonda Жыл бұрын
Been driving as an OTR this year and have been taking I 76 through I 80 before looping north around Chicago. I didn't realize my home state was the first to do a lot of this stuff. When I eventually leave OTR trucking (still waiting to get a call back from PennDOT for a new job) I'll have time (weekends off) to track this stuff down myself and have a look. A lot of the rest areas through PA and Ohio have displays with photos inside documenting a lot of this stuff but I never stopped to read anything.
@krisstopher8259
@krisstopher8259 Жыл бұрын
What a cool place to explore. I love abandoned stuff surrounded by basically untouched nature. And the tunnels and those gigantic tunnel exits are wonderful too. I often use tunnels and bridges and concrete podiums in general when i design huge dystopian sci-fi suburbs (usually brutalist) that are built on top of mountains and surrounded by nature (abandoned or not lol). Can't get enough of that. Both colorized sketches and AI generated stuff (later VR/CGI too i hope)
@dieterwolf9549
@dieterwolf9549 Жыл бұрын
I remember driving a line truck (AT&T Long Lines) through one of the tunnels in 1965 and breaking down just about half way in. What a traffic jam I created. Wish I could remember which tunnel not that it matters but I do remember most of the tunnels after watching this great video. THANKS
@rogerpenske2411
@rogerpenske2411 Жыл бұрын
Another real good one there Ryan
@mwilliamson8072
@mwilliamson8072 Жыл бұрын
Thanks! I remember those tunnels and miss them.
@bindig1
@bindig1 Жыл бұрын
My family traveled through these tunnels many times when I was a kid. We would stop at the Howard Johnson's for dinner sometimes. Good memories
@joestrike8537
@joestrike8537 Жыл бұрын
A few years ago an urban explorer friend (Hi Pete!) and I walked through one of the abandoned tunnels. (don't remember which one) The electrical boxes that lined both tunnel walls had been removed, leaving an open shelf-like space in their place...someone left a mannequin head in one of them! When you're exploring a pitch dark place with flashlights, coming across it was a fun surprise 😀
@inconnu4961
@inconnu4961 Жыл бұрын
It was fun, eh? I doubt 'fun' would be my first reaction, but hey, good for you! LOL
@joestrike8537
@joestrike8537 Жыл бұрын
​@@inconnu4961 What can I tell you, I'm weird and appreciate the weirdness of others. (Besides it was very obviously a mannequin head and not a God forbid real one!)
@SuperMustanggt88
@SuperMustanggt88 Жыл бұрын
Grew up less than a mile from the tunnels .would basically spend my summers there with friends while in school . Such good times .
@chadportenga7858
@chadportenga7858 Жыл бұрын
Very interesting! I remember going through the tunnels on the Pike in the 70s, but never knew there were several abandoned ones, too. Maybe you can do a series on abandoned airports in the US. I know there's one in Reed City, MI that has always fascinated me as I pass it on my way up north. Also, in Grand Rapids, MI, there was one located where Roger B. Chaffee Blvd is located now. The blvd was created when the airport was moved to its present location and eventually renamed following the death of the Apollo 1 astronaut (he was a Grand Rapids resident). The current blvd roads are actually where some of the runways and taxiways were.
@daltongalloway
@daltongalloway Жыл бұрын
9:21 That a very beautiful building. That’s one thing I like about PA, it’s stone buildings
@Insertgenericusernamehere809
@Insertgenericusernamehere809 2 ай бұрын
Much better looking than the Sidleing hill plaza that replaced it.
@brucetelfeyan
@brucetelfeyan Жыл бұрын
As a youngster in th 1950s, I tracked each of the seven tunnels along the route. I eagerly anticipated each of the single lane in each direction tunnel.
@adriaanboogaard8571
@adriaanboogaard8571 Жыл бұрын
Good video. I've always had a eye for old grades and have found many interesting old places and many andentures . That's why I take my time going places. It's better when I'm the passenger because I can put my full attention on looking for them while some one else drives. I find bits of old Rail and Highway buildings mine's. It baffles my Freinds but they love going. I say you drive I buy lunch we split the gasoline. 😁
@jimparisho7457
@jimparisho7457 3 ай бұрын
I read about the early days of the Turnpike. Local residents of nearby rural towns would dress up and get on the pike and stop at the service plaza. They would chow down at the restaurant. They were all Howard Johnson's and there was nothing like these for miles around off the turnpike . After their meals they'd get off the next exit and return home.
@-Katastrophe
@-Katastrophe Жыл бұрын
Concise and to the point.
@walterbright1396
@walterbright1396 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. I hope to be able to bike the Pike 2 Bike section in the not to distant future. I have fond memories of riding the Turnpike as a child first with my grandparents and then at the start on my first cross country trip. Sadly, it is a PA state boondoggle now.
@95SLE
@95SLE Жыл бұрын
Construction has never stopped, the power of the trucking industry.
@thomask4836
@thomask4836 Жыл бұрын
Thank You for sharing an excellent perspective. You may have already covered this but if not, have you ever considered covering the part of Route 66 just outside Chicago that was abandoned because the road deteriorated from excavation by the Vulcan quarry? Best Wishes and Take Care, Tom
@xMister.Misterx
@xMister.Misterx Жыл бұрын
Breezewood was EXACTLY where I suspected you were referring to!! I have driven this road as a trucker more times than i can remember. It’s pretty dead over there-especially post-pandemic.
@dwainegabriel1807
@dwainegabriel1807 Жыл бұрын
Hi Mr socash can you do one on the Allegheny mental asylum when was built by who
@MrBillCNW
@MrBillCNW Жыл бұрын
I like history. Thank you for the video
@3DJapan
@3DJapan Жыл бұрын
I'm reminded of a road I discovered near my house in West Point, PA. It's only a couple blocks long but everything is there. Road Signs, painted lines, etc. But it's all broken and over grown with no way to access it at either end
@frankmfeb13
@frankmfeb13 Жыл бұрын
It's crazy that I've done work recently on the turnpike and seeing this video now.
@dubdaze68
@dubdaze68 Жыл бұрын
The first section opened was actually Irwin to Carlisle. Harrisburg to Philly was next, after that was Irwin to the Ohio Line. Allegheny Mountain is still in use (for now).
@lostsheep2640
@lostsheep2640 Жыл бұрын
It’s so cool. I lived here and discovered these about 5 years ago. Never visited any of them but some day soon I will.
@shaidamartz3509
@shaidamartz3509 Жыл бұрын
I pass the entrance to get to Ray's tunnel every time i go to my moms house. My school use to take field trips to the abandoned tunnels. I personally will not go inside them anymore but they are a beautiful site to see.
@oliviaspecht7228
@oliviaspecht7228 8 ай бұрын
I love the tunnel on the Pennsylvania Turnpike, bet part of any car trip along that route :]
@wessebaggers
@wessebaggers Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your videos ❤❤❤❤
@paulw.woodring7304
@paulw.woodring7304 Жыл бұрын
I'm old enough to remember when the service plazas on both the PA and OH turnpikes were really full service and they all had Howard Johnson's Restaurants where you could get a full sit-down meal.
@RocketCat525
@RocketCat525 Жыл бұрын
Great video and channel. Keep up the great work. The abandon tunnels remind me of a road just outside of Bryson City NC. They called it the road to nowhere and there is an abandoned tunnel. It could make a great video for your channel. They call it the road the road to nowhere the broken promise
@DLeadVox
@DLeadVox Жыл бұрын
Very cool! I wonder if the abandon sections can be seen on Google earth??? Something to do! Thanks Ryan for another great episode!
@SethMcConaughey
@SethMcConaughey Жыл бұрын
You can see it on Google maps. It actually shows it as abandoned or shut down or something like that.
@ingo_8628
@ingo_8628 Жыл бұрын
Off course also on g earth.
@dannyjones3840
@dannyjones3840 Жыл бұрын
As a trucker, I hate the turnpike. It costs me $240 to run the entire turnpike, and that's the ezpass rate. Without ezpass, it's friggin $485. Ridiculous. I always take 68 through Maryland and wv
@funken079
@funken079 Жыл бұрын
I too have traveled this highway as far back as my childhood in the 80's , yet I never knew there were more tunnels.
@WideObsJeff
@WideObsJeff Жыл бұрын
Live 10 mins from the blue Mountain tunnel definitely cool to watch this!!!
@owenbrau63
@owenbrau63 Жыл бұрын
I never realized The Road was filmed here. The abandoned sections are very interesting.
@crazyburkey3677
@crazyburkey3677 Ай бұрын
I used to drive the Pike, between 1995 and 2023, it's always an experience
@cryptek7882
@cryptek7882 Жыл бұрын
I drive the turn pike everyday from on ramp 242 harrisburg west to exit 75 new stanton all the new construction happening to make it 6 lanes is amazing. everyday you can see something new as the trees turn and lose their leaves. i grew up going to ohio every july 2nd or 3rd to get fireworks for july 4th im 40 now and all the changes to it are awesome to see.
@549BR
@549BR Жыл бұрын
The original design did not have any center barriers, and because of the closeness of opposing traffic, led to some horrific and deadly crashes. By the 1960's, the Commission added center guard rails and concrete dividers, thus eliminating most of that problem.
@denali9449
@denali9449 Жыл бұрын
And so it earned its nickname of 'the death pike' back in the 50's. Another issue was the long straight sections that could lull an already tired driver to loose attention. While I never drove it until the 60's and a lot of the improvements you mention were completed I can to this day recall my folks using that nickname.
@stevenkaminsky5817
@stevenkaminsky5817 Жыл бұрын
I went to school in PA, and drove the Turnpike home many times. You can see the old turnpike from the new at some sections. I always wondered about it! Thanks for answering my questions after all these years. Would love to hike and explore the old turnpike and tunnels! P.S. I just subscribed to this channel.
@edwardkaminsky8142
@edwardkaminsky8142 Жыл бұрын
Greetings, Steven. From one Kaminsky to the Next. ( Manchester, Connecticut)
@misterwirez7731
@misterwirez7731 Жыл бұрын
Cool info.We still live by the old exit 7 (now 67 I think). We still use the Pike, but like everything else, it's gotten expensive. I remember it was 35 cents to go one exit either E or W.. Then for the longest time it was $.50. Now there are no ticket takers, and it's all automatic and it still went to $1.05. The Pike has been greatly improved here in western PA. It desperately needed widened in some places. PennDOT did a nice job.
@shifty1927
@shifty1927 Жыл бұрын
I never knew. Even though i live in Southern Maryland i frequented the turnpike alot. Growing up my stepmoms family had a huge farm/stable outside of Pittsburgh (her dad was a chairman for PPG) Then later in life i started building old honda oddysey/pilot buggies and there happened to be a farmer in West Sunbury Pa that had a shortcourse offroad track on his property called Rolling W. Ranch. So many stops at breezewood in my lifetime.😂
@billkeithchannel
@billkeithchannel Жыл бұрын
The Beach scene of The Road was filmed in Erie on our penninsula. It was a cold damp day when they filmed but was portrayed as warm in the movie.
@thomasthetrain19
@thomasthetrain19 Жыл бұрын
I miss before KZbin. When stuff like this and Centralia weren't ruined
@wayneyork8279
@wayneyork8279 Жыл бұрын
This was pretty cool about tunnels for sure also cool would be a video about abandoned trestles in a forest !
@phunperson64
@phunperson64 Жыл бұрын
I used to live in Wilkes Barre , i remember driving through the Pa turnpike tunnel on my way down to philly.
@throwmack
@throwmack Жыл бұрын
My great-grandpa and his brothers helped build these tunnels! My middle name is Laurel because my dad has fond memories of visiting my great-grandpa's house on Laurel Hill as a kid
@jamesleyda365
@jamesleyda365 Жыл бұрын
The Road was also filmed at Mt St Helens WA in the blast zone from 1980 eruption
@therealdaemion9094
@therealdaemion9094 Жыл бұрын
as someone who lives in PA and who's mother actually engineers highways for a living, i had no idea that this stretch of road existed
@willdwyer6782
@willdwyer6782 Жыл бұрын
We've got abandoned railroad lines that have been paved over in Michigan for bicycle use in the summer in snowmobile use in the winter. We've got a trail almost 40 mi long from Kalamazoo to South Haven.
@48nation96
@48nation96 Жыл бұрын
And I do believe a nascar team used it as a wind tunnel Chip Ganassi racing
@beverlychmelik5504
@beverlychmelik5504 Жыл бұрын
Looking at the lack of traffic in those early years. Driving would actually be a pleasure.
@aaronpratt7763
@aaronpratt7763 Жыл бұрын
I love your channel but wish you would do some stories on history of Boston man as I’m from Massachusetts and not once seen you do any videos on Boston that I can recall
@WilliamMannPGH
@WilliamMannPGH Жыл бұрын
Just watched this and thought you might be interested in exploring a lost part of Pittsburgh. It used to have a large Chinatown. The last remaining building houses Chinatown Inn which has been in their family for four generations.
@timothystockman7533
@timothystockman7533 Жыл бұрын
Our family drove through the Ray's Hill and Sideling Hill tunnels on the way to the NYC World's Fair in 1965. It is obvious at the east end where the abandoned section diverges from the current Turnpike alignment, but the Breezewood end is actually part of the Breezewood exit, so one actually has to get off to get to where the abandoned part diverges. The Laurel Hill tunnel is bypassed by a cut through that mountain half a mile or so to the north. The modern alignment makes jogs on both sides of the cut to get back to the original alignment.
@BobConnor-n2g
@BobConnor-n2g Жыл бұрын
If you are driving east and past the ramps for the service plaza, you can often see trucks congregated at the right side, that is where the old alignment is. The turnpike commission still owns that part of the old road so you really are not supposed to go exploring there.
@timothystockman7533
@timothystockman7533 Жыл бұрын
@@BobConnor-n2g I have also noticed trucks parked at the start of the old alignment. Many may not realize why it's there.
@kennethjosephson134
@kennethjosephson134 Жыл бұрын
We counted seven tunnels while going to the World’s Fair in 1964, then only six when we visited the Fair again in 1965. Our parents knew Laurel Hill had been bypassed and didn’t say anything at first to see our reactions.
@dancremering1198
@dancremering1198 Жыл бұрын
No mention of Laurel Hill tunnel being leased by Chip Ganassi Racing to use as a coast down tunnel (basically a cheap wind tunnel) to gain an advantage with both their Nascar and Indy Car programs. Big let down on this story...
@avcat1209
@avcat1209 Жыл бұрын
👍 Chip Ganassi Racing
@SokkaRocks8
@SokkaRocks8 Жыл бұрын
I don't know If I would label 230 as coasting... but yeah lots of testing by ganassi
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