PLYMOUTH CORDAGE COMPANY ROPE, TWINE, NET & CORD PRODUCTION INDUSTRIAL FILM "LIFELINE" 56574

  Рет қаралды 3,344

PeriscopeFilm

PeriscopeFilm

Күн бұрын

This early 1950s color documentary “Lifeline” is a long advertisement for Plymouth Cordage Company. It is a George F. Foley Production and narrated by Thomas Mitchell (best known as Scarlett O’Hara’s father). A lumberjack holds his hand to his mouth; a tree top falls (1:50-2:20). A Plymouth machine ties bundles of newspapers printed on high-speed presses (2:21-3:13). A farmer uses binder twine to bind bundles of wheat collected in the field (4:31-4:42). A cowboy uses a lariat to rope a calf. Two bulls butt heads (5:00-5:32). A tractor uses baler twine to harvest hay into bales picked up and loaded on a farm trailer (5:34-6:25). A halibut fisherman ties baited hooks to a heavier line before tossing it overboard. Very large halibut are placed into the hold (6:30-8:02). A lobster pot is pulled onboard by rope (8:03-8:43). Tuna, salmon, and sardines are caught using purse seine rope (8:44-9:26). A whale is caught using a harpoon attached to specialty rope (9:27-11:02). Rope is used to swing cargo to ships. Tugboats are attached with sleeve lay rope (11:04-13:15). A deckhand uses rope as a lariat to circle the pier peg (13:16-13:49). A tug uses nylon rope to move a train car barge (13:50-14:45). Highly twisted rope secures boats passing through the New Orleans locks (14:46-15:33). A slag ship is pulled on the Great Lakes to the steel mills (15:34-15:50). Smoke rises from steel factory chimneys. A construction worker straddles a steel girder high in the air. Another uses rope to pull a beam into place (15:51-16:15). Oil wells use wire with fiber centers and those of 100% fiber made into a spinning line (16:16-16:58). Girls wade across storm flooded streets (16:59-17:10). Telephone repairman fix pole lines using storm line (17:11-17:45). Costumed Rockettes walk backstage in front of stage ropes before performing (18:00-18:34). Skiers use a ski tow rope (18:36-19:00). Circus workers use ropes to pull up tents (19:02-19:20). Climbers use nylon mountain climbing rope. A climber carefully uses his shoes, pick, and ropes to climb (19:22-20:00). A cowboy lassos a calf at a rodeo (20:02-20:35). Sailboats use linen ropes to work the sails (20:36-21:13). A speedboat pulls performing water skiers (21:14-21:43). Smoke rises from a pilot’s crash-landed plane. A rope is thrown from a rescue ship to the exhausted pilot floating in the water and pulls him onboard. Wounded soldiers on stretchers are moved by ropes to a hospital ship (21:44-23:07). Food is transferred in a rope cargo net to a combat vessel. Assault troops leaves ships via rope ladders. Ammunition moves towards the beachhead secured by ropes. Sailors are transported to a ship via a rope swing (23:08-23:53). The process of rope-making is shown at the Plymouth Cordage Company. Fibers are combed. Many spools are wound. The results are wound into strands on a turning machine, adding twist. The strands are made into rope. The test laboratory is shown with its various machines. Bottles of liquid test resistance to mold and parasites. The stress test machine is shown in action (23:55-26:52).
The Plymouth Cordage Company was a rope making company located in Plymouth, Massachusetts, USA. The company, founded in 1824, had a large factory located on the Plymouth waterfront. By the late 19th century, the Plymouth Cordage Company had become the largest manufacturer of rope and twine in the world. The company specialized in ship rigging, and was chosen among other competitors in the early 1900s to manufacture the rope used on the USS Constitution. The company's twine, Plymouth binder twine, popular among farmers, was the inspiration for the naming of the Plymouth brand of automobiles first produced in 1928.
The Plymouth Cordage Company served as the largest employer in Plymouth for over 100 years. It went out of business in 1964 after over 140 years of continuous operation. By the early 1960s, it had bought all the materials needed for production, had no debt and a lot of cash and was bought out by the Columbian Rope Company in 1965.
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Пікірлер: 14
@markferbert52
@markferbert52 3 жыл бұрын
Walking through these old buildings are crazy I love the old wood everywhere
@marionmitchell261
@marionmitchell261 6 жыл бұрын
Thanks for taking the time to upload these gems!! I really enjoyed this, but on a lighter note, I could not help thinking about Mousehunt, "because a world without string is Chaos." Rudolf Smuntz. Marion.
@r.i.6225
@r.i.6225 5 жыл бұрын
I live right down the street from cordage park in plymouth. Have seen the old pictures in the building. It is now a medical building. My clothes line rope broke, cheap Chinese crap. At an estate sale I found "braided cotton cord" made at cordage. Still in perfect shape. The difference in quality between the Chinese and old USA made are miles apart. Coradage twice as thick. Also lucked out and found old USA made clothes pins in the old bag that hangs on line. Again the difference in quality is depressing. USA made larger sturdy and don't break just using them for there simple purpose. I long for the days of quality products made here in the USA.
@BrassLock
@BrassLock 6 жыл бұрын
I'd love to get my hands on some "cargo-handling rope" which can take a load _without untwisting._ Common rope from hardware shops these days is unsuitable for use in simple hand-cranked block & tackle cranes due to the twisting (rotating) of the system under load, making it impossible to use for raising bricks up to a 2-storey building.
@southjerseysound7340
@southjerseysound7340 6 жыл бұрын
dav snow just get some double braid.
@BrassLock
@BrassLock 6 жыл бұрын
+SouthJerseySound : Thanks for your great idea, Wikipedia explains load-rotation (with simple rope construction) & gives details about *double braid,* which I didn't know about until you mentioned it.
@southjerseysound7340
@southjerseysound7340 6 жыл бұрын
dav snow it's also pretty easy to splice, add loops etc compared to others. You need a few fids but they're cheap. The great thing is a total amateur can follow a video and make a splice no problem.
@BrassLock
@BrassLock 6 жыл бұрын
+SouthJerseySound : Thanks again. I just need to get my hands on some now and try it out. My "balcony crane" is homemade 1:2 ratio (two pulleys). The rope has relaxed enough to not twist with hauling light bulky loads, but a dozen bricks or sand for the balcony garden causes twists, so friction between the rope strands is overwelming. I suspect you've solved my problem with your suggestion, and I'm glad you spoke up!
@dbx1233
@dbx1233 2 жыл бұрын
They featured all kinds of rope but the one type they didn't mention was the Hangs man rope. When snapping the neck of an unscrupulous piece of human garbage, the rope that will withstand the tremendous pressure required in the sudden change of momentum can only be done by the hangman's noose. Can I get a Whoop Whoop?
@TheFunArchivist
@TheFunArchivist 10 ай бұрын
You must be fun at parties!
@dbx1233
@dbx1233 10 ай бұрын
I don't want to brag or anything but yes I'm a real killjoy. That didn't go unnoticed by your keen eye.@@TheFunArchivist
@samiam5557
@samiam5557 6 жыл бұрын
HEMP rope, hard to find 'real' rope anywhere now.
@GaryThompson-sushiguru
@GaryThompson-sushiguru 6 жыл бұрын
I get mine from ropes direct (uk based). You can also buy from the Chatham ropewalk.
@Sciolist
@Sciolist 2 жыл бұрын
It has nothing whatsoever about cordage production, just a marketing film.
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