The Pulaski Skyway's Forbidden Mystery

  Рет қаралды 191,151

IT'S HISTORY

IT'S HISTORY

Күн бұрын

Improve your career using my code HISTORY for 30% off on all their programs! Sign up for a FREE Tripleten career consultation with my link: get.tripleten....
The Pulaski Skyway, an iconic elevated highway in New Jersey, was opened in 1932 as a critical component of the route linking Jersey City and Newark. Named after Revolutionary War hero General Casimir Pulaski, this 3.5-mile-long structure was designed to alleviate traffic congestion and facilitate industrial growth in the burgeoning port cities. Constructed during the Great Depression, the Skyway featured innovative engineering with its cantilever truss design and was celebrated as a marvel of modern infrastructure. Over the decades, it became both a vital transportation artery and a notorious traffic bottleneck, leading to extensive rehabilitation efforts in the 21st century to address its aging infrastructure while preserving its historic significance.
Support the Channel by becoming a member 👉 / @itshistory
IT’S HISTORY - Weekly Tales of American Urban Decay as presented by your host Ryan Socash.
• IT'S HISTORY 🔥 Trending
» Subscribe: / @itshistory
» Listen podcasts: ffm.bio/itshis...
» CONTACT
For brands, agencies, and sponsorships: itshistory@thoughtleaders.io
» CREDIT
Sponsor - TripleTen
Scriptwriter - Ryan Socash,
Editor - Karolina Szwata,
Host - Ryan Socash
Music/Sound Design: Dave Daddario
» NOTICE
Some images may be used for illustrative purposes only - always reflecting the accurate time frame and content. Events of factual error / mispronounced word/spelling mistakes - retractions will be published in this section.

Пікірлер: 262
@ITSHISTORY
@ITSHISTORY 6 ай бұрын
Improve your career using my code HISTORY for 30% off on all their programs! Sign up for a FREE Tripleten career consultation with my link: get.tripleten.com/ITSHISTORY
@Millenniumforce
@Millenniumforce 2 ай бұрын
I love this bridge since I first seen it and rode over it back in the late 60's living in Jersey City to get to Newark. One day in the 80's we were driving over one of the high spans at night and a car tire was lying in the road. We hit it and stopped to get out of my car with my friends and pick up the tire and throw it over and off the bridge into the river way below. What a splash and memories. Thank you for all these amazing videos you have posted. I love your channel.
@buzzedalldrink9131
@buzzedalldrink9131 5 ай бұрын
As a lifetime resident of New Jersey you have not really experienced life until you’ve driven over the skyway in a winter storm or pouring rain! my favorite part are the entrances and exit in the middle of the bridge so you have people pulling out in front of you at 20 miles an hour when you’re doing 65 in the fast lane! it’s not the faint of heart,a lot people get killed on that road every year. We just don’t tell you about it.😊
@Jesse615
@Jesse615 5 ай бұрын
You are not kidding! I still can recall, vividly, driving back to Hoboken over the Skyway during a spring Nor'easter; high winds and sideways rain. Good times!
@buzzedalldrink9131
@buzzedalldrink9131 5 ай бұрын
@@Jesse615 Glad you are still here to comment about it! Please be careful on that road! It’s no joke! I guess it was safe and designed to drive the model T over at 20 mph!
@h8GW
@h8GW 5 ай бұрын
The best part of driving the Skyway for me is the southbound section of the 1&9 just north Newark Airport where the bridge sections aren't exactly level and it feels like a bit like a galloping roller coaster if you drive it at a good clip.
@dk50b
@dk50b 5 ай бұрын
The engineer who designed that section, Sigvald Johannesson, had extensive experience in railroad structures. The idea of a limited access vehicular highway was so new, he based it on railroad principles. As signals control all such meeting points, there's no collision potential. The inherent hazard of merging into fast moving traffic wasn't recognized till after The Skyway opened.
@Askani-son
@Askani-son 4 ай бұрын
Or driven a ninja with a person on back, over the bridge grating, during the beginning of a snowstorm. We had our "last meal" of cheeseburgers before getting back on the last leg of our journey, back into Jersey City. We didn't 🎲
@EdwardGregoryNYC
@EdwardGregoryNYC 5 ай бұрын
I'm two blocks from Othmar Ammann's home on Staten Island. In addition to the Pulaski, he also build all for bridges connection Staten Island auto traffic to the world, the Outerbridge Crossing, Goethals Bridge, Bayonne Bridge and the Verrazzano-Narrows Bridge. He also built the GW Bridge in addition to the Whitestone, Throgs Neck, and Walt Whitman bridges.
@phuturephunk
@phuturephunk 5 ай бұрын
He's literally the signature suspension bridge builder for NYC and environs. With the exception of the Brooklyn bridge, literally every other major crossing was one of his projects and designs. Iconic.
@rwboa22
@rwboa22 5 ай бұрын
You also forgot the Delaware Memorial Bridge between Delaware and New Jersey.
@greentriumph1643
@greentriumph1643 5 ай бұрын
He was good but not perfect. He didn't fully appreciate the importance of a stiffened deck and relied too much on plate sides for the bridge deck. Several of his bridges needed to be strengthen after the Tacoma Narrows Bridge failed. They quickly added the lower deck to the GW bridge to stiffen it.
@dk50b
@dk50b 5 ай бұрын
​@greentriumph1643 Not accurate. The only Ammann designed bridge needing reinforcement was the Bronx-Whitestone. It was not in danger of collapse like the Tacoma Narrows, but wind oscillations were sufficiently troubling that cable stays then a stiffening truss were added. A lighter road deck has since allowed that truss' removal. The George Washington Bridge never had such issues. The lower deck was planned from the outset, originally to carry a rail connection. Increased auto traffic lead to its addition in 1962, with diagonal stiffening trusses.
@greentriumph1643
@greentriumph1643 5 ай бұрын
@@dk50b "In addition to providing extra capacity, the lower level served to stiffen the bridge in high winds; before the lower deck was constructed, the George Washington Bridge was known to swing up to 30 inches" You can also read, "To Engineer is Human, Henry Petroski.
@LawyerCalhoun1
@LawyerCalhoun1 5 ай бұрын
I was born in Kearny New Jersey within sight of the Skyway. If you look at pictures of the Skyway, the point where the bridges rest on the concrete pylons are extremely small. The loading per square foot must be enormous.
@georgeplagianos6487
@georgeplagianos6487 5 ай бұрын
You're right I was looking at those two it's like looking at 3D pivoted triangles on each of the four corners holding the main span.. if one of them slips or an earthquake tremor could easily cordless domino effect. Just like the key Bay bridge . Real marvel to look at. But.... How many cars a day pass over the Pulaski skyway
@h8GW
@h8GW 5 ай бұрын
@@georgeplagianos6487 Good thing no giant container ships pass under the Skyway, then. They're all relegated to the bay.
@stephenhanneken3041
@stephenhanneken3041 5 ай бұрын
I was up there several times as a paramedic. One foggy night the ground was shrouded by the fog. You couldn't see anything below other than an eerie glow from the streetlights. I remember wondering if that's what Heaven is like.
@Ephemeral2023
@Ephemeral2023 3 ай бұрын
Your soul will be stuck in traffic for eternity? Sounds like Hell to me.
@ChristopherSeyler
@ChristopherSeyler 5 ай бұрын
As a north Jersey resident I'd always hear jokes of Hoffa's body being buried under Giant Stadium. After the old stadium was demolished and replaced with Metlife, I never heard of it again until now.
@abrannymaldonado7187
@abrannymaldonado7187 5 ай бұрын
Same, apparently it’s somewhere on the grounds of waste management
@rwboa22
@rwboa22 5 ай бұрын
They did look for any signs of Hoffa after they tore down Giants Stadium, but did not see anything. There is however a Potter's Field located in the vicinity of Seacaucus Junction (NJTP Eastern Spur Exit-15X) that still has bodies buried there.
@jimpatrick5918
@jimpatrick5918 5 ай бұрын
An investigator who has tracked the Hoffa disappearance from it’s start is convinced he was cremated right after his murder
@InaEsin
@InaEsin 5 ай бұрын
I joke and say that one day we're gonna find Jimmy Hoffa hiding at the bottom of my purse.
@Nodice-qq7jo
@Nodice-qq7jo 3 ай бұрын
MetLife stadium was budgeted to cost about 800 million. It ended up costing about 1.6 billion and looks like crap. Cost of doing business in NJ.
@nrken1
@nrken1 5 ай бұрын
I worked under and around, as well as used the Pulaski highway, during my employment with N.J. Bell Tel in the 70's. Great memories, thanks for the history of this great structure
@alanpecherer5705
@alanpecherer5705 5 ай бұрын
I grew up Montclair, NJ, visible on your map at 3:25. I remember riding over the Pulaski Skyway with my Dad, going into NYC usually through the Holland tunnel. I remember he thought the Skyway kind of a special privilege to drive over. This was late 50's - early 60's. Wasn't any big deal to drive through the Holland or Lincoln Tunnels, but the Skyway, that was special.
@terrisomers7843
@terrisomers7843 5 ай бұрын
In this video, there are 2 quick shots of the old PSE&G gas plant that was where I worked for my first real job. When you took the Belleville Tpk from N. Arlington, through the swamp you went across the Whittpen bridge, and the primary gas holder was right there on the left. The large tank with the metal framework around it is #2 holder. It would be awesome if you could do something about the gas plants that were in NJ that belonged to PSEG. There was West End in Jersey City, Paterson, and Harrison. The Harrison plant had the huge tank that had "Go Navy" painted on the side that was visited from the NJ Tpk. The plants were there to augment the natural gas supply. Brooklyn Union Gas Co. had plants in NYC. When it got very cold in the winter, these plants would come online producing "oil gas", made from a process using #2 oil. If you lived near one of these plants, you always knew when they were online because the stove burners flames were more yellow than blue. Yeah.....I'm old. 😊
@FromSagansStardust
@FromSagansStardust 5 ай бұрын
But do you remember the tanks alongside the Turnpike extension to the Holland Tunnel that said OIL HEATS BEST (one word on each tank)?
@terrisomers7843
@terrisomers7843 5 ай бұрын
@@FromSagansStardust I don't really remember those since we never used the extension. But I do remember the big waterless holder in Harrison that had "Go Navy" on the side thar could be seen from the Turnpike. That was the Harrison gas plant. 😊
@waynejones205
@waynejones205 5 ай бұрын
Passed by there a few days ago. I scanned for what I could find, then spotted that tiny PS Triangle logo within some concrete arch work! Now I can maybe decipher places you mentioned! Thx, A ##JerseyBoy from birth!!
@rogerlewis1361
@rogerlewis1361 5 ай бұрын
Wow….i remember that tank that said Go Navy from my younger days.
@ghayes220
@ghayes220 5 ай бұрын
I wasn't aware of the skyway history. I used to cross it back and forth to work in the late '60s. Good job.
@uverpro3598
@uverpro3598 5 ай бұрын
Gerd jerbs
@emfraza7953
@emfraza7953 5 ай бұрын
Pretty sure you snuck a pic of the Oakland Bay Bridge in there, a much prettier but also far less sinister bridge that deserves its own episode.
@FromSagansStardust
@FromSagansStardust 5 ай бұрын
I saw that too!
@dougcasciegna7544
@dougcasciegna7544 5 ай бұрын
That was the Verrazano Narrows Bridge in it's early stages. They showed it when they showed the Swiss fella that designed the Skyway, Verrazano, GW, Throgs Neck, Bayonne, and several other area bridges
@johnfitzgerald2339
@johnfitzgerald2339 5 ай бұрын
​@@dougcasciegna75446:09
@FromSagansStardust
@FromSagansStardust 5 ай бұрын
@@dougcasciegna7544 At 6:15? That is most certainly the Oakland Bay Bridge.
@jackviviano7231
@jackviviano7231 5 ай бұрын
@@dougcasciegna7544 Bay bridge Oakland to SF
@ThomRealEstate-k1y
@ThomRealEstate-k1y 5 ай бұрын
My grandmother lived in Jersey City 4 houses from the Tonnellee Circle. This was the east end of the Skyway. The Skyway crossed 2 rivers the Hackensack and the Passaic. Later on I drove across it many times going to Philadelphia and I see it as a time warp,it looks exactly as it did in 1930.
@PDaddy44
@PDaddy44 5 ай бұрын
Great video. Worked at Kearny Point for 5 years starting in the early 1990s. Loved working up there. Used to go to the Skyway Diner (now closed) at least once a week under the Skyway which was so prominently featured in The Soprano’s episode when Christopher was shot. Good memories! Shout out to Eddie! Youullll!
@alexanderdukeler3948
@alexanderdukeler3948 5 ай бұрын
I’ve driven on this road hundreds of times back in the 1980s and 90s. It always had a vibe about it that gave me a sense of part thrill and part dread. It’s unlike any other roadway I’ve ever driven on. Just the thought of exits to the left is so unusual. And the steep ramps! Kind of scary, for sure! It does have sort of an eerie beauty about it. It’s as if the structure is beckoning you. Challenging and daring you to cross it.
@RC-ml3ne
@RC-ml3ne 5 ай бұрын
Wow, you really nailed it!
@rikiventura1094
@rikiventura1094 5 ай бұрын
I always hated this bridge. My first time driving on it after many years im in the right lane trying not to be that guy who exits and cuts traffic last second. After about an hour and some change it turns out the right lane ended as an exit only lane and the left lane continued straight which is where i needed to go, massive facepalm moment to myself
@leechjim8023
@leechjim8023 5 ай бұрын
Better to take transit and subways!😀
@rikiventura1094
@rikiventura1094 5 ай бұрын
@@leechjim8023 i really should have remembered that, i live 30 minutes from the city no traffic but live a block away from my local trainstation. Apart from the traffic headache, parking lots in the city are expensive. Id rather just walk the entire time now lol
@kebsis
@kebsis 5 ай бұрын
​@@leechjim8023 yeah if you're talking about driving into NYC. I think I'd rather get a prostate exam than drive in midtown NYC
@leonb2637
@leonb2637 5 ай бұрын
Even to this day, trucks are not permitted on the Skyway. It is still, even after renovations done in 2015-2019 kinda scary to drive on.
@luisarroyo1368
@luisarroyo1368 5 ай бұрын
I love that bridge. Nothing scary about it at all, unless you fear Heights. When I was a child and my parents drove over that bridge it was like I was flying in an airplane. The side railings /walls of the bridge have openings which at high speeds become translucent.. and you can see the world below.
@dk50b
@dk50b 5 ай бұрын
​@@luisarroyo1368Agreed one of the most exhilarating trips you can take. Industrial sprawl isn't everyone's idea of scenery, but soaring above on the first elevated superhighway still gives me goosebumps.
@KSE828
@KSE828 5 ай бұрын
As a trucker, it’s just about the only place in Jersey that I haven’t been, save for the tunnels and such.
@chriswright2250
@chriswright2250 5 ай бұрын
I have driven over this skyway many times in my 30 year career as a UNION Pipefitter. God Bless Jersey City ❤
@chiaralistica
@chiaralistica 5 ай бұрын
Which local were you?
@edwardluke4920
@edwardluke4920 5 ай бұрын
God Bless You brother. From a retired 420 Philly Steamfitter.
@joeshmoe7789
@joeshmoe7789 5 ай бұрын
No mention of truck 1& 9, which is an easy bypass of the Skyway.
@dougcasciegna7544
@dougcasciegna7544 5 ай бұрын
I don't think this was a route planning video lol. I mean they could list off dozens of ways to avoid the PS
@skizztrizz4453
@skizztrizz4453 5 ай бұрын
Takes forever. I went to NJCU and don't let a ship come. Late again 😂
@rwboa22
@rwboa22 5 ай бұрын
Even that's irrelevant as I-278 has a connection between US 1-9 and the NJTP, of which then the Newark Bay Extension (I-78) reconnects with NJ 139.
@joeshmoe7789
@joeshmoe7789 5 ай бұрын
@@rwboa22 I don't think the Newark Bay Extension was built until the 1950's and that is an expensive toll route for trucks. The video implied alternatives were very long in 1933.
@Chips2323
@Chips2323 5 ай бұрын
Professor again another great history lesson from the past, have a great day be at peace and be safe...
@RetroEli1982
@RetroEli1982 5 ай бұрын
Another cool and super informative video Ryan 👍🏽😎👍🏽
@ITSHISTORY
@ITSHISTORY 5 ай бұрын
Thanks 👍
@micvic83
@micvic83 6 ай бұрын
That road is a death trap. Driven on this road countless lf times. Theres no shoulders for disabled cars. Get into an accident there, traffic is almost at a standstill for miles.
@1pcfred
@1pcfred 5 ай бұрын
We always had really good luck on the Skyway. It's a road not many want to use. We used it to avoid the Turnpike going to the tunnel. But I can see the whole hazard aspect of the road. Why people would choose not to take the Skyway. It is a bit spooky. I remember there was road construction for years at one end of the Skyway. The crew was just making a career out of the job. Then one day they got to working and finally finished it. We couldn't believe when they left.
@gilbertmiller390
@gilbertmiller390 5 ай бұрын
If you’re gonna do a show on the Pulaski Skyway then do not use footage of the Baybridge in San Francisco
@JaySmith-j6x
@JaySmith-j6x 5 ай бұрын
I just noticed this.
@giselematthews7949
@giselematthews7949 5 ай бұрын
Everyone's a critic
@billtheunjust
@billtheunjust 5 ай бұрын
At the very least it would be nice if the photos were captioned to let us know if it's the item in the topic or not.
@gilbertmiller390
@gilbertmiller390 5 ай бұрын
@@billtheunjust it’s not just this creator that is guilty of poor research. There are many content creators on this platform that use stock footage of anything they can find most of the time something that has nothing to do with the topic they’re discussing and use that footage in their video which makes no sense to me
@dougcasciegna7544
@dougcasciegna7544 5 ай бұрын
I uh .. I'm not sure what you saw but the only bridge that I saw that wasn't the Pulaski was the beginning stages of the Verrazano. And that was only when they showed the fella that designed the Verrazano, GW, Pulaski, and Throgs Neck bridges to name a few.
@charlesvanacore7459
@charlesvanacore7459 3 ай бұрын
thanks for the video. As a utlity worker in Brooklyn living in N.J. I had a daily diet of the Pulaski for many years .In every kind of weather day or night and stuck in traffic jams for hours too ..I can attest to the steepness of the off ramps. It is still an amazing structure but I'm happily retired now. Just knowing I don't have to face it every day or night rain and snow is a blessing in itself
@cynthiagarcia9240
@cynthiagarcia9240 4 ай бұрын
I think a big detailed missed is how the NJ turnpike was constructed AFTER pulaski. One of the biggest issues /concerns was figuring out how the turnpike would pass pulaski. They were unsure weather to go over or under and contenplated how the clearence would work and the incline etx. Its a small detaike di lesrned about when reasing about the contruction of the turnpike
@gregtaylor3432
@gregtaylor3432 5 ай бұрын
What isn't mentioned is that Mr Hoffa disappeared near Detroit. It really doesn't make a lot of sense for the an organized crime enterprise to transport either a body or a prisoner 600 miles to dispose of or kill and dispose of him in New Jersey. Especially considering that there are two great lakes within 50 miles of Detroit (lakes Huron and Erie, not counting Lake Saint Claire right off of Detroit) My bet is that his remains are at the bottom of one of those lakes.
@Pupda
@Pupda 5 ай бұрын
Just going for the clicks…
@rogerpenske2411
@rogerpenske2411 5 ай бұрын
Jimmy Hoffa is with Elvis.
@RaptorJesus10
@RaptorJesus10 5 ай бұрын
Can you do a video on another bridge named after a polish general? The Kosciuszko bridge.
@kebsis
@kebsis 5 ай бұрын
You do a lot of episodes concerning New York and New Jersey, are you from the area or do you find it particularly interesting for some other reason? Not a complaint; I live in NJ and I'm always interested in learning about local history.
@voidfilan5055
@voidfilan5055 5 ай бұрын
Remember my dad driving us over it frequently during late 60’s - early 70’s when taking day trips to NYC from our house in Union Township 😻👍
@officialmcdeath
@officialmcdeath 5 ай бұрын
Probably the most outstanding sight in the foreground when you drive into NYC from EWR \m/
@el_puma_real
@el_puma_real 5 ай бұрын
6:11 San Francisco/Oakland Bay Bridge. Also notice the piers on the Embarcadero in the lower right of the frame.
@kevinmorris2440
@kevinmorris2440 5 ай бұрын
Clearly not the Skyway
@TheNotehead
@TheNotehead 3 ай бұрын
I’ve driven on this roadway hundreds of times, and it can be pretty intimidating on a foggy morning. Even at the best of times, this bridge attracts more than its share of idiots who bonk into each other. You’ll be crawling for an hour in the left lane, and eventually realize that everyone has to creep into the right lane to get around an accident. Then 20 minutes later after you’ve only gone 100 yards, you find that everyone has to get into the left lane to avoid an accident that happened earlier, but no, just as you’re doing that you find that you have to stay in the right lane to let an emergency vehicle pass you. It can take literally hours. I nearly always take a different route.
@stickynorth
@stickynorth 5 ай бұрын
Just about every MAJOR urban bridge has as dark a history. Here in Edmonton? It's the High Level Bridge which until barriers were installed used to have at last 12-24 people leap from it annually... And even today there's usually at least one distress call per week on it even with help phones, cameras, netting, etc. Of course the same is true with THE BRIDGE aka The Golden Gate Bridge and its now infamous documentary about people who have attempted self harm on it...
@kitsmiller2
@kitsmiller2 5 ай бұрын
Your background music takes me somewhere✅️
@spearheadinc
@spearheadinc 5 ай бұрын
As a resident of Warsaw and New York, I always watch the history of these cities and surrounding regions with great interest. Cheers from Warsaw...
@joeylawn36111
@joeylawn36111 5 ай бұрын
1:41 “Which one is my Car?” 😉🤣
@herrdrayer
@herrdrayer 5 ай бұрын
Why is there a grainy picture of the San Francisco bay bridge in the film?
@towgod7985
@towgod7985 5 ай бұрын
Never been on the skyway, but now I am thinking about a trip just to see it! Thanks.
@1pcfred
@1pcfred 5 ай бұрын
Yeah it's quite the WPA project. Amazing it's still standing today. Almost 100 years old now.
@robertdiehl9003
@robertdiehl9003 3 ай бұрын
Last place on this entire earth that you do NOT want to have your car break down or get a flat tire.
@murderwitahashtag840
@murderwitahashtag840 3 ай бұрын
Nah dats would be the Chesapeak Bay Bridge i. maryland!!
@workingrich8464
@workingrich8464 3 ай бұрын
The signs for “ truck route 1-9 are still all over JC. IT WAS for trucks unable to use the skyway. Apart from the signs, nothing was ever done to re route traffic until the turnpike extension was built.
@KLNYC
@KLNYC 2 ай бұрын
we drove over this bridge for decades. never knew this.
@josefmazzeo6628
@josefmazzeo6628 3 ай бұрын
There were all sorts of theories on what happened to Hoffa's body - everything from being buried under the Meadowlands, to under the Hudson to under Yankee stadium. The recent movie about Hoffa (The Irishman) had the most plausible answer - he was cremated.
@AlAl-wu7mp
@AlAl-wu7mp 3 ай бұрын
I worked on and under the area where the Skyway is in the 60's and 70's for N.J.Bell Telephone we had emergency telephones on the Skyway for accidents and break downs. Unless forced to go on it (for a job) I would take US 1 truck route under it. The left lane mergers were deadly.
@sateeshmaharaj9730
@sateeshmaharaj9730 3 ай бұрын
The Pulaski Motor Speedway..in off peak hours. Named for A Polish General has a speed limit of 45 MPH. I've driven both with and without the concrete medium. For many years a garbage dump burned under the skyway. Recently, repainted and new drainage put up but it actually should be part of a train track connecting NYC and Newark Airport.
@corm7538
@corm7538 5 ай бұрын
I was born at 5:33 AM the same day Jimmy Hoffa disappeared, July 30, 1975. As that was one of the biggest news stories that day. I have always been fascinated by his mysterious disappearance/
@petercarmeci8317
@petercarmeci8317 5 ай бұрын
No way they killed Hoffa in Detroit and transported him to NJ. He’s in a drum at the bottom of Lake Michigan.
@cruzcontrol1504
@cruzcontrol1504 5 ай бұрын
Always on the money !!!
@dk50b
@dk50b 5 ай бұрын
Some corrections and clarifications. There have been bridges over the Hackensack and Passaic Rivers since Colonial times, including several capable of handling vehicular traffic. The Pulaski Skyway didn't replace any ferries, instead providing a high capacity direct route to the Hudson River waterfront and Holland Tunnel. The Skyway is a combination of cantilevered deck trusses and two 550 foot through Pratt trusses spanning the rivers. There are no suspension sections. Those spans were designed by NJ Highway Commission engineer Sigvald Johannesson. As his experience was in railroad structures, where all movements are controlled by signals, the hazards of left merges and no center barrier weren't evident. Othmar Ammann, then Chief Engineer of The Port of New York Authority, played no role in The Skyway's design. Lastly, the time wasted on Jimmy Hoffa would've been better spent discussing the 14 men who died building The Skyway, and William T Harrison, beaten to death by members of the Iron Worker's Union in violence that plagued the entire project due to use of nonunion labor.
@Jon6429
@Jon6429 5 ай бұрын
I wonder if there is a map of every place people have dug looking for Jimmy Hoffa
@bradhig
@bradhig 3 ай бұрын
The Skyway was mentioned in the 1938 war of the worlds radio show. At one point it is stated the Martians are straddling the Pulaski Skyway. It gets destroyed in the 2005 war of the worlds movie.
@TheRyanandTimshow
@TheRyanandTimshow 3 ай бұрын
That’s the Bayonne Bridge that gets destroyed in the 2005 war of the world’s film not the Pulaski.
@sashakimknechtinruprecht
@sashakimknechtinruprecht 5 ай бұрын
Thank You for your great video and your marvelous storytelling. Please allow me one annotation: The structure in the picture from 6:00 to 6:21 m:ss seems to be the San Francisco - Oakland Bay bridge, not the Pulasky Skyway.
@frankzappa3834
@frankzappa3834 3 ай бұрын
There was already several bridges into upriver still in today’s Hudson County including Paterson Plank Road
@followyourheart1366
@followyourheart1366 5 ай бұрын
There is a highway that runs through Delaware and Maryland know as Pulaski Highway. Better known as Rt-40.
@Askani-son
@Askani-son 4 ай бұрын
Jersey City now has a parallel Skyway, recently built, as the old Skyway is being dismantled to acomodate bigger container ships, kinda like they did with The Bayonne Bridge, only its an entirely new bridge, not just a higher span.
@workingrich8464
@workingrich8464 3 ай бұрын
No.
@johnfitzgerald2339
@johnfitzgerald2339 5 ай бұрын
6:09 that's the San Francisco Bay Bridge.
@GenX-Gamore
@GenX-Gamore 13 күн бұрын
This is one dangerous bridge, if you run into car trouble, there is no place to pull over.
@YXUHUNTER
@YXUHUNTER 5 ай бұрын
Great video's 👍🏻
@TyJamal
@TyJamal 5 ай бұрын
I worked next to this bridge at the Kearny Heliport
@davidjaslow6458
@davidjaslow6458 5 ай бұрын
I used to take the Pulaski Skyway to Rutgers Newark eveyday. Then 10 years later I took again. I was totally afraid to drive on this bridge.
@FromSagansStardust
@FromSagansStardust 5 ай бұрын
Rutgers Newark class of 1980 here, but I commuted from Lyndhurst!
@WayneCampbell-l3b
@WayneCampbell-l3b 5 ай бұрын
There's a Park in Manchester, New Hampshire with a statue dedicated to the Polish Marshall-General. I'm pretty sure it's the same one this Bridge is named for.
@Killercutsvideo
@Killercutsvideo 5 ай бұрын
How do you manage to keep on making interesting content?
@woodencoasterfan
@woodencoasterfan 13 күн бұрын
The whereabouts of Hoffa’s body is right up there with the whereabouts of Amelia Earhart’s plane.
@RJIGGLES
@RJIGGLES 5 ай бұрын
I drove the Pulaski Skyway daily in my 20s. It's a rotten place to be in traffic. I can't imagine how many hours I spent on that bridge.
@KRich408
@KRich408 5 ай бұрын
Very familiar with it! Born in Elizabeth I went to Tech school in NYC .
@lesdabney2144
@lesdabney2144 5 ай бұрын
13:35 is a white 1972 Mercury not a maroon 1975 Mercury.
@eddie054
@eddie054 5 ай бұрын
I caught that too.
@kohldenhochhaus3825
@kohldenhochhaus3825 5 ай бұрын
Rising music of triumph, the completion of the Pulaski Skyway!!! We you an image of the San Francisco Bay bridge???? 6:20
@RC-ml3ne
@RC-ml3ne 5 ай бұрын
The problem with the Skyway is that it is simply too narrow. Even without trucks it was always a bit daunting to drive the thing!
@MrLiDavey
@MrLiDavey 5 ай бұрын
Not to be picky. But I'm going to be... The Hoffa Lincoln you showed. Is from the mid-eighties!! 😉🤣
@Veldkamp88
@Veldkamp88 3 ай бұрын
You do a lot of NJ history. Are you originally from NJ? If so, Porkroll or Taylor Ham?
@flashgordon3715
@flashgordon3715 5 ай бұрын
6:20 San Francisco Bay bridge
@rgwaldron
@rgwaldron 3 ай бұрын
The body was rumored to be buried 15 ft off brother Moscato's property, near the skyway, the truth is more likely he was cremated.
@dougmartin2007
@dougmartin2007 5 ай бұрын
I hated this bridge when I was using it to commute to work.
@nedludd7622
@nedludd7622 5 ай бұрын
What is "forbidden mystery" supposed to mean?
@jeffg.8964
@jeffg.8964 5 ай бұрын
Clickbait
@OgaugeTrainsplusslotCars
@OgaugeTrainsplusslotCars 5 ай бұрын
Bridge was opened on my birthday November 24th
@lisalappe6942
@lisalappe6942 5 ай бұрын
How well has the Skyway been kept up? Was there concern about its condition, after the Minneapolis bridge collapse? That is, like so many other bridges, at the time.
@beanuno4581
@beanuno4581 5 ай бұрын
It’s Kearny (car-nee)
@BIGO787
@BIGO787 5 ай бұрын
We call that the Jimmy Hoffa Bridge
@RonD937
@RonD937 Ай бұрын
The Hackensack is a tidal river which caused the flooding.
@gerrythekay
@gerrythekay 5 ай бұрын
Back in the mid 60’s, I walked the entire skyway.
@geddy450
@geddy450 5 ай бұрын
Check the JACQUES-CARTIER bridge in Montréal QC they have also the "suicide curve " issue around 20 years ago
@jeffg.8964
@jeffg.8964 5 ай бұрын
My grandfather called it “the steel highway of death.”
@Ephemeral2023
@Ephemeral2023 3 ай бұрын
I doubt Hoffa's body is buried in one piece unless he's in a concrete barrel.
@scottmartinmackiesykes
@scottmartinmackiesykes 5 ай бұрын
I believe they actually had one of the killers of Hoffa explain how they got rid of him there in DETROIT and how they cleaned up the scene of the murder.
@jaxz4986
@jaxz4986 5 ай бұрын
I've always heard that he was buried under Giants Stadium
@1pcfred
@1pcfred 5 ай бұрын
I heard they dumped the body in an acid tank. Which is why it'll never be found. But I've heard the Giants stadium thing a lot too. I never believed that one.
@soundrecordings2659
@soundrecordings2659 5 ай бұрын
14:55 for "mystery" which isn't.
@7_of_9
@7_of_9 5 ай бұрын
Multiple bodies have been found underneath that bridge recently
@keithmoore5306
@keithmoore5306 5 ай бұрын
that close to the ocean more likely hoffa was chained to an engine block and kicked overboard a good piece out!!! it'd be at least 500 times harder to find a body done like that as to a land disposal that didn't involve burning or acid!!
@BIGDOXX
@BIGDOXX 5 ай бұрын
Hoffa gravesite is the Meadowlands. Some say Giants Stadium, some say off of route 3. That’s the tale. 🤷🏾‍♂️
@anthonypopola5773
@anthonypopola5773 5 ай бұрын
Hoffa was killed and disposed of in Detroit, how stupid would it have been to transport the body halfway across the country….
@85steph
@85steph 5 ай бұрын
I heard it was under the Hyatt in Chicago
@frankscognamillo3758
@frankscognamillo3758 5 ай бұрын
Creepy road
@11000038
@11000038 5 ай бұрын
Very odd. Started as documentary on an ugly bridge. Ended as a documentary about a mob murder that probably had no connect to the bridge.
@flapjackfae
@flapjackfae 5 ай бұрын
"Monumentous"?!
@nolanjohnson2009
@nolanjohnson2009 5 ай бұрын
I take this bridge to work everyday to get to Kearney point.
@DD-rl4mj
@DD-rl4mj 5 ай бұрын
Logistically it doesn’t make sense. Hoffa disappeared in Michigan it would be way too much exposure to move the body to Jersey. There were plenty of construction sites in Detroit and plenty of sausage factories as well.
@satyakammisra
@satyakammisra 3 ай бұрын
I did 120 mph+ on Pulaski in my 300ZX twin turbo back in my college days. Stupidity of my youth. No cops there so you can speed.
@solanaceae2069
@solanaceae2069 5 ай бұрын
Used Pulaski's hoe axe fighting forest fires. Never knew he made bridges too.
@auntbarbara5576
@auntbarbara5576 5 ай бұрын
13:32 *Vehicle shown is a 1972 Grand Marquis :)
@boblabahh4893
@boblabahh4893 3 ай бұрын
Very entertaining, but but it should really be listed as “based on a true story”, like a movie not a documentary
@brianmatthews9697
@brianmatthews9697 5 ай бұрын
Hoffa is buried in a lime pit in NJ, they'll never find him.
@njlauren
@njlauren 5 ай бұрын
Ugly bridge,to say the least with a less than charming reputation. Chris Christie forced the Port Authority to pay for the renovations, arguing the bridge, which is miles from the holland tunnel, was an approach road. Why they would risk bringing hoffa to nj to dispose of is idiotic. They would have killed him in detroit, then put the body in a car,crush it and then melt it down.
@joeshmoe7789
@joeshmoe7789 5 ай бұрын
Actually, it's a beautiful bridge, considered a beautiful steel structure. Look closely at the bridge, not the area.
@njlauren
@njlauren 5 ай бұрын
@@joeshmoe7789 Even if it was over let's say the Mississippi river I don't think it would be considered beautiful.
@joeshmoe7789
@joeshmoe7789 5 ай бұрын
​@@njlauren Did you even look at it close up? Can you name any steel bridges built in the 1930's that are nicer?
@leonb2637
@leonb2637 5 ай бұрын
True about the PANYNJ being bullied by Gov. Christie (who also used his appointments at the PANYNJ with the infamous "Bridgegate' scandal to get over $1 Billion for needed renovations for the structure instead of getting it from taxpayers. In large part, is was a diversion of PA funds to be used with the replacement of the train tunnel to Penn Station of NY, a project cancelled by Gov. Christie as didn't want the state stuck with billions in share costs to the state's taxpayers. The rational used by the PA was that it was a 'major connector' to the PA's Holland Tunnel. I worked in the PA's law department at the time as a litigation support specialist and brought the documents for the deal after approval of the PA's Board to the office of the Attorney General of NJ in Trenton for them to sign off on it, then the next day delivering documents, possible a check for the transfer (I didn't look inside the sealed envelope) and pick up signed documents.
@markchiz64
@markchiz64 5 ай бұрын
Ryan, your KZbin channel is more interesting and better than anything on television. Keep up the good work!
@crippleguy415
@crippleguy415 5 ай бұрын
Jimmy did more for the working man than anyone else ever did .😔
New York's Most Hated Highway | Gowanus Expressway Explained
20:00
IT'S HISTORY
Рет қаралды 229 М.
Why New York Lifted the Bayonne Bridge
21:17
IT'S HISTORY
Рет қаралды 297 М.
СКОЛЬКО ПАЛЬЦЕВ ТУТ?
00:16
Masomka
Рет қаралды 3 МЛН
What Happened To The Nautilus?
16:57
Mustard
Рет қаралды 12 МЛН
New Jersey's Forbidden Peninsula | SANDY HOOK
19:01
IT'S HISTORY
Рет қаралды 327 М.
5 Unsolved Shipwreck Mysteries
19:20
Sideprojects
Рет қаралды 227 М.
Why Pollepel Island is Totally Forbidden
21:00
IT'S HISTORY
Рет қаралды 517 М.
Map of Manhattan's Broadway, Explained
20:36
Daniel Steiner
Рет қаралды 1 МЛН
Why Salt Lake's Trestle Bridge Was Abandoned
15:50
IT'S HISTORY
Рет қаралды 421 М.
Chicago's Forgotten Island
22:15
IT'S HISTORY
Рет қаралды 277 М.
Brooklyn's Map, Explained
24:21
Daniel Steiner
Рет қаралды 303 М.
New York's Busiest Bridge  | The George Washington Bridge
25:18
IT'S HISTORY
Рет қаралды 202 М.
Why the Railplane Totally Failed
20:09
IT'S HISTORY
Рет қаралды 114 М.