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Hermann Göring's Train Still Exists! 

Mark Felton Productions
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All the top Nazi leaders had special armoured trains, and Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring's was one of the largest and most palatial. And, incredibly, some of Göring's carriages still exist today! Find out how they survived the war and where they are in 2024.
Special thanks to the following channels for access to footage. Please visit each for more fantastic footage!
- Military1945: / @m1945
- Metrobug: / @trainbugold
- Harrikolan Railways: / @harrikolanrailways9829
- Kaspertog: / @kaspertog
Dr. Mark Felton is a well-known British historian, the author of 22 non-fiction books, including bestsellers 'Zero Night' and 'Castle of the Eagles', both currently being developed into movies in Hollywood. In addition to writing, Mark also appears regularly in television documentaries around the world, including on The History Channel, Netflix, National Geographic, Quest, American Heroes Channel and RMC Decouverte. His books have formed the background to several TV and radio documentaries. More information about Mark can be found at: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Fe...
Help support my channels:
www.paypal.me/markfeltonprodu...
/ markfeltonproductions
Disclaimer: All opinions and comments expressed in the 'Comments' section do not reflect the opinions of Mark Felton Productions. All opinions and comments should contribute to the dialogue. Mark Felton Productions does not condone written attacks, insults, racism, sexism, extremism, violence or otherwise questionable comments or material in the 'Comments' section, and reserves the right to delete any comment violating this rule or to block any poster from the channel.
Sources:
- 'Guarding Hitler' by Mark Felton, (Pen & Sword Books: 2014)
- 'After The Battle', No. 19, 1979
- Salonwagen der Deutschen Reichsbahn bis 1945, www.drg-salonwagen.eu/db/inde...
Credits: US National Archives; Library of Congress; Metrobug; Kaspertog; Harrikolan Railways; Military45; Reinhard Dietrich; Holger.Ellgaard

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11 май 2024

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Комментарии : 1,3 тыс.   
@Diogenes1360
@Diogenes1360 Месяц назад
"What did Hermann Goring have for Breakfast ??" . . . "Luftwaffles" . . .
@doberski6855
@doberski6855 Месяц назад
As I understand it Erwin Rommel enjoyed a breakfast including Panzer Cakes.😁
@garyryan2366
@garyryan2366 Месяц назад
All you can eat buffet
@scootergeorge7089
@scootergeorge7089 Месяц назад
Soviet airforce got the borscht of him.
@georgflausch
@georgflausch Месяц назад
That pun even works in German: "Luftwaffeln" 😄
@hastalavista4879
@hastalavista4879 Месяц назад
Icebombs!
@HRM.H
@HRM.H Месяц назад
I cant imagine what all is hidden in private collections around the world..
@jonesy19691
@jonesy19691 Месяц назад
I'm sure some people have some hidden little gems kicking around!
@niveleur
@niveleur Месяц назад
I can't imagine what gets lost when these knowledge dragons pass away and their kids want nothing to do with the collection and dispose of it.
@worldwar_history_narrator7451
@worldwar_history_narrator7451 Месяц назад
Alot! Espicially in the east of Europe. My boss once told me he was there when the car of Himmler was sold to a rich Swiss dentist in secret
@Mirko_C.
@Mirko_C. Месяц назад
Most of nazi treasure is brought in america by soldiers
@kenskinner6948
@kenskinner6948 Месяц назад
Also what’s in Russia?
@RADIUMGLASS
@RADIUMGLASS Месяц назад
Just imagine what we're going to find within the next 50 years as collectors start dying off.
@Wolfovich1
@Wolfovich1 Месяц назад
New collectors are going to buy all stuff.
@Snoozzzzzze
@Snoozzzzzze Месяц назад
That was a great Father Ted episode. 😄
@lolopololoca
@lolopololoca Месяц назад
I saw some unreal stuff at a private collection in Pennsylvania near Gettysburg. So cool
@howardcroft3748
@howardcroft3748 10 дней назад
That is actually a very interesting thought
@QUADFLY
@QUADFLY Месяц назад
Love to learn on a Sunday! Thanks DrFelton
@alinapopescu872
@alinapopescu872 Месяц назад
Proper Sunday school 🙂
@bf-696
@bf-696 Месяц назад
"Goring loved his food." No, really? What gave that away?
@ThomasWBaldwin
@ThomasWBaldwin Месяц назад
at least I'm not fat
@samsmith2635
@samsmith2635 Месяц назад
To be fair being an addict to god know what prescribed by NAZI doctors, he was quite fit in WWI and the 1920's
@normanhacker3588
@normanhacker3588 Месяц назад
His corpulence perhaps lol
@sedzialaguna
@sedzialaguna Месяц назад
Food and drugs.
@tadsomato1940
@tadsomato1940 Месяц назад
His food, and your food.
@davidcookmfs6950
@davidcookmfs6950 Месяц назад
Dr Felton. I have been a WWII buff all my life. If I hadn't gone into forensic science, I would have gotten my master's degree military history. This video is perhaps the most fascinating you have ever done. I never imagined that so much of these train cars would be in regular use into the 1970s and 80.
@tarstarkusz
@tarstarkusz Месяц назад
WHY? Other than being old, there is absolutely nothing remarkable about it. Lots of stuff built by Stalin and the Soviet Union generally is still around. Stalin is either the worst or second worst (behind Mao) guy of the 20 century. Mao is still on China's money. The party he took power with is still the government in China. Kim Il-Sung's subways are still in use and probably with the same cars. Germany has much less physical history because it was destroyed during the war.
@Lerxstification
@Lerxstification Месяц назад
What a revelation this was! I sat on the same toilet seat as once used by Willy Brandt at a hotel in Trier, Germany (so the Innkeeper told me), and Willy no doubt sat on a chair once used by Hermann G. in that dining car! My butt is only once removed from the Reichs Marschall!
@xiaoka
@xiaoka Месяц назад
And the train, or at least part of it made it all the way to Moscow. Further east then its former owner ever got. 😂
@nodarkthings
@nodarkthings Месяц назад
Agreed, absolutely fascinating.
@bahoonies
@bahoonies Месяц назад
​@@LerxstificationMy goodness. You may very well be the possessor of a famous bottom. Collectors will pay big money to have it their collection 😂😂😂
@olympicjbrag5913
@olympicjbrag5913 Месяц назад
This channel is amazing. Thank you for all your hard work.
@user-ih1mo8vv7o
@user-ih1mo8vv7o Месяц назад
Great video ❤❤❤❤❤
@derekp8082
@derekp8082 Месяц назад
"Porter! Goering is stuck in the tub again!"
@sc1338
@sc1338 Месяц назад
😂😂😂 I imagine he tried it once and they had to get the butter
@queeg6473
@queeg6473 Месяц назад
"OK, fetch the giant crowbar"
@ryecreeks
@ryecreeks Месяц назад
😅
@llywrch7116
@llywrch7116 Месяц назад
@@sc1338"Dummkopf! You do not feed it to Herr Goering, you smear it on the sides of the bathtub!"
@robertafierro5592
@robertafierro5592 Месяц назад
Grab the Hoist!!
@johnwelch6490
@johnwelch6490 Месяц назад
I sat in his Mercedes Benz the Blue Goose in Marysville, Ohio. A collector in Dayton bought it in the early 90's from a Connecticut museum.
@ffjsb
@ffjsb Месяц назад
Is it still there?? Been through Marysville numerous times, never heard of it being there.
@jmac46951
@jmac46951 Месяц назад
@@ffjsb Its now in Louisville KY in a private collection of pre-war Mercedes and Maybachs. Last I knew it was being restored. Very strange that another of the Big 3 cars was in Louisville for a short time. I worked for a man who owned Himmlers personal car. He bought it when the Palace Hotel and museum in Vegas had their auction in the late 90's. I got to drive it. It fealt "wierd".🤨 It was Green with black fenders.
@royale7620
@royale7620 Месяц назад
You can buy stuff from a museum? What
@botalm1878
@botalm1878 Месяц назад
@@jmac46951 I'm sure Himmler wasn't behind the wheel himself.
@marcmercedes2707
@marcmercedes2707 23 дня назад
It was private and stolenn, his daughter try to get it back ! 😮
@willbee6785
@willbee6785 Месяц назад
Dr Felton makes WWII history much more interesting.
@kios05
@kios05 Месяц назад
Man Göring knew how to get the most out of his position
@truthseeker9454
@truthseeker9454 Месяц назад
But only for a short while. "For what does it profit a man to gain the whole world and forfeit his own soul?" - Jesus of Nazareth (Mark 8:36)
@AddyHittler
@AddyHittler Месяц назад
@@truthseeker9454 he went valhalla soooo
@Lerxstification
@Lerxstification Месяц назад
I wonder who did more drugs on that train, HG or Eric Clapton?
@myopiniongoodyouropinionbad
@myopiniongoodyouropinionbad Месяц назад
@@jone8626 True, he was shot near the femoral artery and almost died in the Beer Hall Putsch. The doctor who clandestinely patched him up loaded him up with a shitload of morphine and he was never able to kick the habit...among other vices.
@AddyHittler
@AddyHittler Месяц назад
@@myopiniongoodyouropinionbad youre forgetting about the plane crash in the great war. trust me, you make it through ww1 youre gonna need some good drugs afterward
@jimhoade9265
@jimhoade9265 Месяц назад
On the subject of Göring's trains you may be interested to know that there is a 15 inch gauge locomotive, Black Prince, at the Romney Hythe and Dymchurch Railway in Kent which previously belonged to the Reichsmarshall.
@Loulovesspeed
@Loulovesspeed Месяц назад
@jimhoade9265 - The Germans made some stout locomotives during WWII for sure. However, their best paled by comparison to the mighty Union Pacific 4-8-8-4 "Big Boy" locomotive. It had 16, 5 foot 8 inch diameter drive wheels, was over 100 feet long, weighed 1,200,000 pounds and had a top speed of eighty MPH! It had more power than 2 standard locomotives of its time. They were built by ALCO (American Locomotive Company) plant in Schenectady, NY. Check RU-vid for some great videos of the only one of 25 built that is still in operation. It has over 1,000,000 miles on it!
@Verethill18
@Verethill18 22 дня назад
​@@Loulovesspeed dude Big Boy is still the heaviest and strongest steam locomotive ever build. It's like comparing them to a LNER A4 when it comes to speed.
@debartellomartinez7214
@debartellomartinez7214 Месяц назад
1:31 I can't get past the Kriegsloks whistles, what a haunting sound from the past, leave it to Doc Felton to keep us up at night.
@NVRAMboi
@NVRAMboi Месяц назад
Completely understood.
@martinjacobsen2992
@martinjacobsen2992 Месяц назад
First sound you hear on your "Vacation" East.
@fabianpeters7077
@fabianpeters7077 Месяц назад
Haunting.... what a load of bollocks. Sounds like any other steam whistle.
@theonlymadmac4771
@theonlymadmac4771 Месяц назад
The locos in the footage are no Kriegloks. And BR 52 are not especially powerful, just simplified BR 50s optimized for mass production.
@corydunaway
@corydunaway Месяц назад
Haunting? All old coal trains have whistles like that. We still have several in the U.S.
@ericastier1646
@ericastier1646 Месяц назад
The shootage accompanying the narration is incredible, would have thought that even the German state with full secret access to war archives could not have produced as relevant video. I don't know how you access them and that alone would be worth an entire video.
@captainpoppleton
@captainpoppleton Месяц назад
He could tell us, but then he'd have to shoot us.
@Darwinawardrecipient
@Darwinawardrecipient Месяц назад
We found Herman Görings train before GTA 6
@anonymouseovermouse1960
@anonymouseovermouse1960 Месяц назад
Lmao excellent comment
@davidmarchant9386
@davidmarchant9386 Месяц назад
They found it before GTA 1
@otaku1524
@otaku1524 Месяц назад
Should come out with a WW2 edition called 'Grand Theft Train: Berlin' or GTTB.
@megarollxrgmbroadcasting91
@megarollxrgmbroadcasting91 Месяц назад
@@otaku1524are you suggesting a grand theft auto game set in nazi germany⁉️
@apurvakmr
@apurvakmr Месяц назад
Mark Felton's video shows up on notification and i am happy
@aerotube7291
@aerotube7291 Месяц назад
Me too! Until the royal(Buckingham palace) tour lol...no it was very funny
@bobhearst7306
@bobhearst7306 Месяц назад
Were these Pullman rail cars of American origin ?
@lovebaja
@lovebaja Месяц назад
Please never stop producing these videos!
@seandelap8587
@seandelap8587 Месяц назад
This is truly fascinating and without this channel I wouldn't even have been aware of it because its never been mentioned elsewhere
@360Nomad
@360Nomad Месяц назад
*Correction Mark, the Class 52 locomotive could pull the 15 armored carriages just fine. They need the extra one due to Göring's weight.*
@dante666jt
@dante666jt Месяц назад
*Bruh*
@forkthepork
@forkthepork Месяц назад
Churchill mostly traveled by boat, because he served as extra ballast for the ship.
@dante666jt
@dante666jt Месяц назад
@@forkthepork lmfaoo
@AddyHittler
@AddyHittler Месяц назад
still less than the average american
@dinahwhite3929
@dinahwhite3929 Месяц назад
verdamnt REichdonalds!
@andyknuckles2903
@andyknuckles2903 Месяц назад
Despite a large tub, HG used commendably little water.
@geraint8989
@geraint8989 Месяц назад
Glad it still exists. I dislike the mania with which some seek to erase any remnants of history they don’t like.
@wayneantoniazzi2706
@wayneantoniazzi2706 Месяц назад
I'll tell you, if the people who lived through and were most affected by the Nazi era didn't have a problem with re-using trains, buildings, or anything else the top Nazis used I can't see why anyone born long after the era has any reason to eradicate all traces of the same. That's thinking with your glands, not your brains.
@CaptainGyro
@CaptainGyro Месяц назад
Good to hear that the post war government put these rail cars to good use and then offered them as museum pieces.
@MrSloika
@MrSloika Месяц назад
There is nothing wrong with retaining items from a defeated regime for display in the proper historical context. That's very different than the BS that took place in the American South which constructed memorials honoring treasonous confederate war criminals.
@quintrankid8045
@quintrankid8045 Месяц назад
I know, right. It's like the story of the Compiègne Wagon.
@schienennahverkehrDE
@schienennahverkehrDE Месяц назад
As a Locomotive Driver for the DB myself, it is realy interesting to see what happend to these Traincars. Thank you for keeping the history alive to every little part that contributed to it!
@longjohnsilver5179
@longjohnsilver5179 Месяц назад
I am amazed at how you are able to research these details!. Amazing and Excellent!
@danepatterson8107
@danepatterson8107 Месяц назад
Goering's opulence rivals any other figure in history. The dude knew how to make himself comfortable...
@NVRAMboi
@NVRAMboi Месяц назад
"171 people/staff". Just for his personal train.
@jbuckley2546
@jbuckley2546 Месяц назад
Oil money makes Goering look like a pauper.
@dennissettlemyre917
@dennissettlemyre917 Месяц назад
Them Saudi Royals do it pretty big it seems 😂 solid gold cars, toilets, etc....
@dmeinhertzhagen8764
@dmeinhertzhagen8764 Месяц назад
British Royal Family: Please hold my tea.
@csaint6780
@csaint6780 Месяц назад
Living like a Rock Star🤘
@cudamandan
@cudamandan Месяц назад
Very nice informational videos. Enjoy all of them.
@jamesgarman4788
@jamesgarman4788 Месяц назад
Another great video Makr!! Many many thanks for posting!
@risinbison1106
@risinbison1106 Месяц назад
Goring had an unbelievable WW1 airplane collection, many were the last one in existence. Love to see a Felton video about those which still survive.
@wayneantoniazzi2706
@wayneantoniazzi2706 Месяц назад
He's done one! Check his video list from about a year, maybe two years ago. Goering's WW1 airplane collection is in Poland now.
@risinbison1106
@risinbison1106 Месяц назад
@@wayneantoniazzi2706 cool! Thanks man!
@wayneantoniazzi2706
@wayneantoniazzi2706 Месяц назад
@@risinbison1106 You're welcome!
@Finestnatural4567
@Finestnatural4567 Месяц назад
I love the look of hermann goering train and railway carriage
@larryzigler6812
@larryzigler6812 Месяц назад
Nothing special for the wealthy
@danielsweeney6742
@danielsweeney6742 Месяц назад
I’ve been watching Mark Felton’s videos for a few years now, I seem to come to the same question every time. How badly the German military treated prisoners and the people in concentration camps. That they thought it was just perfect for them to live in luxury Total disregard for human life. Added note Mark does a great job at informing us! Keep up the great work!
@TenShine1productions
@TenShine1productions Месяц назад
Because the Nazis believed that those in the concentration camps were "sub humans" and that if you weren't German then you didn't deserve the same level of human rights. Basically racism and anti semitism at its fullest
@ampatriot
@ampatriot Месяц назад
No different than any other conquerors throughout history. They ALL did the same things.
@reubensandwich9249
@reubensandwich9249 Месяц назад
Has there been a government and military throughout history that didn't live in luxury while it's common citizens and soldiers sacrificed, or treated the enemies badly?
@keith3761
@keith3761 Месяц назад
Lol same as every invader
@moss8448
@moss8448 Месяц назад
they thought themselves as the 'Master Race'
@jimmy8653
@jimmy8653 Месяц назад
Lots of work put into these trains
@Sills71
@Sills71 Месяц назад
Mark, you do a great job. One of the best channels on YT.
@longplainfirstnation
@longplainfirstnation 23 дня назад
Himler bunker was interesting
@Spearhead-lz1oq
@Spearhead-lz1oq Месяц назад
Bravo! I don't know where you keep coming up with great historical material.
@LisaNull
@LisaNull Месяц назад
You should do a video on Goring’s bunker built by the wolfs lair.
@botalm1878
@botalm1878 Месяц назад
It's all shambles. Blown up by SS, when they retreated. I've been there.
@jonfoulkes3160
@jonfoulkes3160 Месяц назад
This video surprised me. Much appreciated. I geek out biiiig time looking up these trains 😅 Thanks again Dr 🙏
@davidbrims5825
@davidbrims5825 Месяц назад
He also had a model train set, say what you like, you gotta love a guy who’s into trains.
@jamesengland7461
@jamesengland7461 Месяц назад
You can love THAT a guy is into trains. You can remember that Nazis loved to use trains to haul multitudes of women and children to their torture and death.
@NVRAMboi
@NVRAMboi Месяц назад
Rod Stewart, Neil Young and "TCotB" Frank Sinatra among them.
@wayneantoniazzi2706
@wayneantoniazzi2706 Месяц назад
He was one of German toy train producer Maerklin's best customers. Not one they're particularly proud of today but they are willing to talk about him.
@Jeppe-Covid1959
@Jeppe-Covid1959 Месяц назад
But what happended to that?
@wayneantoniazzi2706
@wayneantoniazzi2706 Месяц назад
@@Jeppe-Covid1959 Do you mean Goering's train set? It's believed that when Carinhall was emptied of Goering's collections the house staff were told they could take anything they wanted that was left behind before the estate was blown up. It's supposed the staff may have taken the Maerklin trains but there's no way to know for certain. Mind you, this means the locomotives and cars, not the whole layouts with tracks, buildings, and so forth, they were too massive to remove. There was no mention of the trains being with the collections found at Berchtesgaden.
@WickedMuis
@WickedMuis Месяц назад
4:13 This shot of the man walking with Göring is Adolph Galland, a fighter ace. I always recognise his face, because that always reminds me of AngryJoe xD
@quintrankid8045
@quintrankid8045 Месяц назад
Are they discussing where to get a squadron of Spitfires?
@JblackSupportTeam
@JblackSupportTeam Месяц назад
... and the shot of the man walking with Chancellor Willy Brandt is Günter Guillaume. His personal assistant who was arrested in 1974 for being a spy for the East German Stasi. Placing an operative so close to the head of govt. of the enemy (West Germany) was the biggest coup of East German intelligence ...
@Wuestenkarsten
@Wuestenkarsten Месяц назад
@@quintrankid8045 Well, yeah, after that Göring didn´t like Galland so much anymore, the Reason he treated the "Jagdflieger" later as Traitors and Cowards. Even dgrading Galland so he decided to lead JV 44.......so not to need to talk to "Meier" anymore,or, as less as possible.
@salvadorromero9712
@salvadorromero9712 Месяц назад
Oh lord you are right! Hmmm. I believe Angry Joe is from Latin America, quite suspicious; are we sure we know who all his grandparents are?
@thatoneinasuit6404
@thatoneinasuit6404 Месяц назад
The fact that their are still carriages AND Kriegsloc trains still around today blows my mind, very shocked that they have managed to keep them in such a good condition when you consider how much we have lost due to it being either stolen or repurposed over time. Great video as always Mark, please do keep up the great work!!!
@MarceloBenoit-trenes
@MarceloBenoit-trenes Месяц назад
There are kriegsloks in several European countries in tourist railways and museums.
@Dylans-Depot
@Dylans-Depot Месяц назад
There's one in field gray livery operational in The Netherlands. From time to time it hauls tourist trains between Apeldoorn and Dieren. It's engine number 52 3879
@roberthenning4186
@roberthenning4186 Месяц назад
The BR 52 Kriegslok is Germany's most produced locomotive ever. There are still quite a few around. Greeting from Mannheim, Germany! 😀
@iancragg6192
@iancragg6192 2 дня назад
The Kriegslok became the standard locomotive for several formerly-occupied countries after 1945 because they were basically left where they stood at the end of the war. When those countries came to rebuild their railways, it was one less thing to have to worry about.
@Chief-Solarize
@Chief-Solarize Месяц назад
Hans Joachim Marseilles The Yellow14 / ME109 Hands down undeniably the best to ever pilot a fighter. He is so extremely good he reminds me of Babe Ruth. He was an anomaly. He would ask his crewchief not to load his wing canons with ammo so to keep his roll rate quick. He always came back with most of his ammo anyway. Hed still get 1-5 kills..... He once flew over a British airfield and dropped hand written directions to a pilot hed just shot down. He was a natural mastet of deflection shooting. Its like he was born with a calculator in his head. Hed just tap his trigger and plsnes would fall. Hed always try to spare the enemy pilot, jusy shoot the plane up so theyll parachute out... this is mostly what happened. Once he shot a pilot and the pilot ended up in pow hospital and Joachim went everyday to check on him. This Nazi, this hero of the riech, was best friends with a black guy....in Nazi Germany....at a party with Hitler there Hsns kept playing American Jazz records. "Black music" with Hitler there. Dr.Mark i could go on for hours about the crazy anomaly of Hans Joachim Marseilles so i know you could really dive in and document this guy. If there were ever an honorable Nazi it was Joachim..
@SpeccyMan
@SpeccyMan Месяц назад
Please learn the use of the apostrophe in contractions. They exist for a reason!
@suzanneflowers2230
@suzanneflowers2230 Месяц назад
Definitely someone we should know more about! Thank you!
@chriscarbaugh3936
@chriscarbaugh3936 Месяц назад
Almost all of his kills were made in a Bf-109F, which had NO wing guns. He died due to an engine fault / failure of an early G model. He was not shot down and killed.
@Chief-Solarize
@Chief-Solarize Месяц назад
@@chriscarbaugh3936 thats right he was upset with the G model came out because it rolled slower and he died jumping from his cockpit, his body struck the tail end of his plane and he never used his shoot on thebway down. Atleast thats what ive read from other Luftwaffe pilots. Tons of stories about that young man. Freaking legend. He played jazz at Hitlers party lol.... and schmoozing the base commander to use his car on dates. He dated alot of the film actresses for 1 or 2 days...but really his skill in 109s is what stood out to me. He was different. The Knights Cross of the Iron Cross with oakleaves swords and diamonds.
@Chief-Solarize
@Chief-Solarize Месяц назад
@@SpeccyMan i learned that in school, i chose not to use them online because its a waste of space and i trust other literate readers to decipher the mysterious text.
@godsowndrunk1118
@godsowndrunk1118 Месяц назад
Many of Herman's wildlife conservation laws are still in place....
@edwardscott3262
@edwardscott3262 Месяц назад
Wildlife conservation laws aren't for the wildlife. They've always been about making it impossible for people to live subsistence lifestyles. Part of grand plans to drive peasants and people into the cities. Various excuses used through the centuries but always with the same goal.
@alanfitzgeraldsr2201
@alanfitzgeraldsr2201 Месяц назад
Isn't it a terrible shame that he thought more of animals than human beings.
@rob213chappel
@rob213chappel Месяц назад
Is that bad thing then, just becuause Goering introduced them?
@shengyi1701
@shengyi1701 Месяц назад
If we put these wildlife into a special zoo, they will be called Herman’s Hermits with one signing, “I’m Henry the VIII I am!”
@panderson9561
@panderson9561 Месяц назад
@@shengyi1701 That would be the elephant singing, right?
@glenchapman3899
@glenchapman3899 Месяц назад
Honey, I am just popping down to Walmart for milk. Do you have the keys to the train?
@keithnorris6348
@keithnorris6348 Месяц назад
No but the train has the keys to the mart.
@donpromillo141
@donpromillo141 Месяц назад
There is no Walmart in Germany
@glenchapman3899
@glenchapman3899 Месяц назад
@@donpromillo141 Aldi then
@davidscott2821
@davidscott2821 Месяц назад
@@donpromillo141 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@donpromillo141
@donpromillo141 Месяц назад
@@davidscott2821 You know the Story
@MrXdmp
@MrXdmp Месяц назад
Thanks Dr. Felton!
@ranchorivera4103
@ranchorivera4103 Месяц назад
Eric Clapton doing blow and jamming out in Gorings rail car. What a world we live in lol.
@gringopig
@gringopig Месяц назад
In terms of drug use, Clapton was a lightweight compared to Goering.
@TheeGlocktopus
@TheeGlocktopus Месяц назад
@@gringopig Absolutely not.
@Dylans-Depot
@Dylans-Depot Месяц назад
I like how you've documented the train carriage by carriage, including its present whereabouts and what happened after the war. In The Netherlands there's a BR 52 'Kriegslok' still wearing the field gray livery, has a bullet hole in the exhaust and is operational! From time to time it hauls tourist trains between Apeldoorn and Dieren. Maybe worth visiting the VSM heritage railway if you get the chance. Cheers!
@D3ViLTh3OrY
@D3ViLTh3OrY Месяц назад
Blows my mind, everytime. Give us more knowledge! it's so good!
@shaider1982
@shaider1982 Месяц назад
I remember from a Dr. Felton video that Goering also had a large toy train set.
@muskokamike127
@muskokamike127 Месяц назад
I think you could accurately say "goering also had a _______" and never run out of things.
@voiceofraisin3778
@voiceofraisin3778 Месяц назад
Yes, it was called Bavaria
@alamore5084
@alamore5084 Месяц назад
​@@voiceofraisin3778 LOL good one!😂
@alamore5084
@alamore5084 Месяц назад
That was his large toy train set😂
@douglasturner6153
@douglasturner6153 Месяц назад
Goering look's pretty fit and trim in that cover portrait you're using. Must be how he saw himself. 🤣😊👍
@larryzigler6812
@larryzigler6812 Месяц назад
Even when fat he got around very well as show in this video
@douglasturner6153
@douglasturner6153 Месяц назад
Yeah. He seemed to have a lot of energy. I wonder if Hitler had died years earlier and he took over if he would have gotten in shape like he had to do after his capture
@garygallagher5978
@garygallagher5978 Месяц назад
It's amazing that so much effort was put into destroying anything to do with the Nazis era after the war that these carriages managed to survive.
@francoislapalme6728
@francoislapalme6728 Месяц назад
Really too bad,the destroy of Nazi stuff,its history,to remember no matter what the side people are.
@JeffEbe-te2xs
@JeffEbe-te2xs Месяц назад
Used by the allies generals Why let luxury go to waste
@Knight1968
@Knight1968 Месяц назад
its great to see that some of the history as survived, great video Mark
@mitchmatthews6713
@mitchmatthews6713 Месяц назад
Continuing to educate us all weekend! Cheers, Mark!
@HamSandwich277
@HamSandwich277 Месяц назад
He needed a special bathtub installed to accommodate his 'girth' 😆😆😆
@rossr6616
@rossr6616 Месяц назад
is that how you say "fat ass" in German?
@HamSandwich277
@HamSandwich277 Месяц назад
@@rossr6616 Ja.
@andrewpinner3181
@andrewpinner3181 Месяц назад
Thanks Mark, always intriguing & just - excellent !
@christyhart8254
@christyhart8254 Месяц назад
Always fun and educational to watch your videos!!! Thanks for another great one!
@filipohman7277
@filipohman7277 Месяц назад
Awesome Work Dr. Felton. Greetings from Helsinki, Finland🇫🇮🇬🇧🇫🇮🇬🇧
@ChrisSM1679
@ChrisSM1679 Месяц назад
Excellent video and information. The BR 52s kriegsloks must have been in front of these trains later on. In the first part of the film, the two locomotives in front of the military trains are of the type BR 56 ( possibly identification number for one of them 56 2611) It woul be great to see original photos or videos with the type 52 locos in front of these trains. Regards
@bryanpetersen1334
@bryanpetersen1334 Месяц назад
Train nerds…
@michaelburggraf2822
@michaelburggraf2822 Месяц назад
... either BR 56 or BR 58. The housing of the cylinder could be a clue to those engines.
@indrakrishnamurti
@indrakrishnamurti Месяц назад
If it were 56 2611, the loco later went on to the western part of Germany and was scrapped by October 1954. It was clearly not a 58 as the number series of the former Prussian G12 locomotives did not reach the 2600s.
@indrakrishnamurti
@indrakrishnamurti Месяц назад
It could also be 56 2671, which had a slightly longer lifespan, being scrapped in Rheydt in 1960.
@ivamori9837
@ivamori9837 Месяц назад
This is incredible ! - as usual when it comes from Mark Felton. Loving It.
@charleskiel2299
@charleskiel2299 Месяц назад
Another interesting video, thanks Dr. Felton
@kevinsoundmixer
@kevinsoundmixer Месяц назад
Fascinating. I RAIL-ly liked this video, it was right on TRACK!
@bryansammis998
@bryansammis998 Месяц назад
Being someone who enjoys trains, those trains would be cool to ride in
@NVRAMboi
@NVRAMboi Месяц назад
I think I'd pass due to the creepiness/known history factor. Each to his own, however.
@bryansammis998
@bryansammis998 Месяц назад
@@NVRAMboi you do have a point🤨
@SpeccyMan
@SpeccyMan Месяц назад
It would be cool to ride in those trains. (Rearranged so the preposition isn't at the end of the sentence!)
@csaint6780
@csaint6780 Месяц назад
That would be cool!!!!
@chickenpommes19
@chickenpommes19 Месяц назад
The Salonwagen at Haus der Geschichte in Bonn cant't be ridden due to the fact that it's located inside the basement with the museum build above it! It's also located at the underground exit that connects to the subway station, so unless you start cutting open the first floor, lift it up and out, it'll never see daylight again.
@themerchantofengland
@themerchantofengland Месяц назад
Again, Dr Felton, you've astonished me with your research, fascinating 👏
@user-em2pe3rf4h
@user-em2pe3rf4h Месяц назад
Only the finest art,residences,uniforms,and morphine for Goering. I understand the need for an armored command train, but the opulence that he insisted upon is something that I find gross. It seems to have been a running theme amongst the Nazis. "We deserve it, so you pay for it." A theme that's alive and well to this day. Thanks for showing these relics Dr. Felton, well done. Cheers from the States.
@jonaldous3446
@jonaldous3446 Месяц назад
Opiumlence?
@user-em2pe3rf4h
@user-em2pe3rf4h Месяц назад
@@jonaldous3446 Ha! Clever. I'm certain that that's the funniest thing that I will hear or read today. Thanks...clever always trumps sarcasm.
@FaustoTheBoozehound
@FaustoTheBoozehound Месяц назад
Yeah the Nazis would've been much more agreeable if not for the profligacy 🙄
@user-em2pe3rf4h
@user-em2pe3rf4h Месяц назад
@@FaustoTheBoozehound And here comes the troll to defend a bridge too far. Of course the totality of what and who the Nazis were and did is the lowest point of what humans have done in history. Their leaders insistence on luxury is just one of many layers of a disgusting onion that should make all eyes water. Ha! I made it across the bridge.
@RRM13
@RRM13 Месяц назад
Respect from São Paulo, Brazil 🇧🇷🇧🇷.
@ettajfan5882
@ettajfan5882 Месяц назад
And from Seattle Washington!
@iCesiumZz
@iCesiumZz Месяц назад
3 heaviest german warmachines of ww2: 3. The Maus tank 2. The Bismarck battleship 1. Hermann Göring
@justintang2294
@justintang2294 Месяц назад
I thought 3 was the Schwerer Gustav.
@TattooedTraveler
@TattooedTraveler Месяц назад
Thanks for another great idea for a video, Dr Felton. Visiting the Kreigsloks in Bosnia was great.
@csaint6780
@csaint6780 Месяц назад
Nothing like spending a little time on Mothers day learning about Hermann Goring's Train, Thanx Mr Felton.
@outofturn331
@outofturn331 Месяц назад
Yeah, other days suck
@bumpedhishead636
@bumpedhishead636 Месяц назад
I think the survival & use of these cars well after the end of the war shows how train luxury was really at its peak in the 1940s. Unlike planes and automobiles, newer technology did not render these pullman cars obsolete - it was quite the opposite, newer train cars were lighter, noisier, and less comfortable!
@TankerBricks
@TankerBricks Месяц назад
Mark.Thanks for providing my Sunday night entertainment!
@ProfessorM-he9rl
@ProfessorM-he9rl Месяц назад
Thanks Mark, great post.
@roberthevern6169
@roberthevern6169 Месяц назад
Thanks, Dr Felton!
@gertgilich3508
@gertgilich3508 Месяц назад
Viele Dank Mark. Sehr interessant, wie immer. Greetings from SSW, 🇿🇦
@scootergeorge7089
@scootergeorge7089 Месяц назад
Thanks to a double, he escaped the Nuremburg trials and started a band. Hermann's Hermitts
@csaint6780
@csaint6780 Месяц назад
🤣
@DavidStickney
@DavidStickney Месяц назад
Thanks for sharing Dr. Felton!
@Willigula
@Willigula Месяц назад
I find it amazing that iconic heads-of-state from the Nazi’s enemies got shuttled around on these deeply personal rolling symbols of the senior Nazi leaders. Did anyone ask QEII if Her Majesty would enjoy a a bath in Goering’s bathtub while en route to their destination? Quite the amusing scenario. Thanks, Dr. Felton!
@pawelpap9
@pawelpap9 Месяц назад
It is possible they were grownups and they realized the world did not vanish in a puff on May 8th 1945 and started firm a blank slate? They knew that much of the German infrastructure, including airports, train stations, Autobahns and so on was ck stricter during Nazi time. I personally slept in Hitler’s room during one of my business trips to Bonn. And imagine, I am still breathing!
@randyluginbuhl9085
@randyluginbuhl9085 Месяц назад
I have one of Goering’s Marklin toy trains that was purchased quite by accident
@QuietCastle
@QuietCastle Месяц назад
Wow 171 people on the train. Like a small village... Another great video!
@adriaanligthart6171
@adriaanligthart6171 Месяц назад
Very nice video 😊love your work❤
@nodarkthings
@nodarkthings Месяц назад
Absolutely fascinating, Dr. Felton. Thank you.
@patrickwentz8413
@patrickwentz8413 Месяц назад
In the 1950s, the German chancellor visited the Soviets in Herman Goring's train car. Ballsy.
@aeromodeller1
@aeromodeller1 Месяц назад
He may have brought home with him one of my dad's German cousins, the only one of six brothers who survived the eastern front. There were few men in Russia, POWs were kept to rebuild and farm. He suffered PTSD, became a popular school teacher and administrator after his return.
@quintrankid8045
@quintrankid8045 Месяц назад
I wonder where this took place. I'm pretty sure in most of Western Europe there's standard gauge while in Russia/SovUn, the gauge is around five feet. Maybe they changed trucks/boogies on the way?
@jamespage586
@jamespage586 26 дней назад
The one thing that you have to remember is that, once all Nazi emblems and features were removed by denazification. The train cars had to be put into service to rebuild Germany and the whole of Europe.
@andywells397
@andywells397 Месяц назад
Mate, your research is beyound outstanding.
@kayneahnung3661
@kayneahnung3661 Месяц назад
Just a little addon info: The engines shown at 1:26 are not the wartime engines mentioned and shown a bit later - they are old prussian P8 passenger engines (a type of 4-6-0 engine that was really successful in Germany and a few eastern europe countries). The two engines shown still running today are not in Germany but in Bulgaria (or Romania, i am a bit unsure) - they indeed are Class 52 wartime engines. Originally designed to run at max 7-10 years they were quite successful and were in service at many railway companies right up to the end of steam traction. E.g. the GDR did rebuild 250 of these engines to class 52.80 and used them up until the end of the GDR. Poland had them as Ty2 (I think) and various other eastern european countries did use them as well - even the soviet union rebuild some of them to fit their wider gauge and used them - one of these is in Speyer on display today.
@michaelburggraf2822
@michaelburggraf2822 Месяц назад
The engines at 1:26 are quite certainly not former Prussian P8s (Baureihe 38). They're looking like Kriegsloks to me, possibly 52 guessing by the sand containers on the boiler tube. Similar ones are shown at 1:47 which have the characteristic semi-cylindric bath tub tenders which were designed for simplified, faster production. Those tenders were combined with P8 locomotives sometimes - particularly after the war.
@kayneahnung3661
@kayneahnung3661 Месяц назад
@@michaelburggraf2822 look closely the dome configuration is prussian the smoke box is typical for prussian configurations and they are way to short for class 52, also the boiler is to short. I think I can at least spot a leading axle which would make them P8/class 38, the other engines with that boiler config do not have leading axles (G8, G10, T16). Also the cab is open and not the norwegian style the class 52 features which is enclosed. The engines at 01:31 are of course class 52. To be clear: I am talking about the engines in the bw footage in front of the train. Edit: I reviewed the section again - and also the tender absolutely does not fit a class 52, not even a class 50ük which I thought could be possible, but especially look at the first engine - you can even see the typical design of the prussian tender, also looking at the first engine the sand containers would be much less prominent on a 52 - it is the boxy design of the prussian engines. I am however irritated by the fact that the tender seems to have a wall like DRG designs. On the other hand the air pressure tank does neither fit a class 50, 50ük or 52. It also does not fit the typical setup of the P8. The G12 would have a arrangement like that, but the tender typically did not have a front wall (although there were so many versions of that engine that it is quite possible that there were engines with a tender wall). the class 50/52 family had them across the wheelbase and not alongside the walkway (I think a few had one on the driver side as far as I know). I am by no way sure that they are P8, but I am pretty sure they are not class 52 - and especially the tender and the dome arrangement of the first one do look very prussian to me.
@michaelburggraf2822
@michaelburggraf2822 Месяц назад
@@kayneahnung3661 I'm beginning to think that it's one of the several variants of the BR 56, 57 or 58. The form of the housing of the cylinders is quite suspect and pointing in that direction. To be honest the sequence around 1:26 is really difficult to analyse. The P8 was a great design but certainly too weak for that task. For that load some proper pulling force is needed especially on inclined sections.
@kayneahnung3661
@kayneahnung3661 Месяц назад
@@michaelburggraf2822 yes I agree on the 38/P8 being to weak. The engine itself fits the 58/G12 very well - only the wall at the tender is strange - but there were so many G12 Variants - its quite possible there were some with a Wall. Also the G12/58 would be the fastest of the ones you mentioned. So I agree on your guess
@robertf3479
@robertf3479 Месяц назад
Always interesting Dr. Felton, you seem to pick a number of the subjects I have interests in. Today it was Göring and railroading.
@valmid5069
@valmid5069 Месяц назад
The fact that Goring causally surrenders himself with his family to an Allied checkpoint is something to think about. The dude was dangerously charismatic
@NovaFragment
@NovaFragment Месяц назад
1:21am..... 10:30 minute new upload , gotta watch that before bed!
@pauljefferies9087
@pauljefferies9087 Месяц назад
Great stories as usual, Mr Felton. Fascinating as always!
@mikebaginy8731
@mikebaginy8731 Месяц назад
Thanks for the interesting details. I live in Bonn, work at a nearby art museum and have seen and photographed the Salonwagen you mentioned in the History Museum often. Will want to visit the DB Museum near Koblenz for the other cars.
@ericw3229
@ericw3229 Месяц назад
Another well done video. Eric Clapton rode in one of the cars.
@timmyjones1921
@timmyjones1921 Месяц назад
Thank You Dr. Felton.
@user-mg6ml6uf9w
@user-mg6ml6uf9w Месяц назад
This channel is top notch. ❤. Such a incredible opportunity to learn about history from a great source. Thank you for all the amazing information and thank you for your talent at presenting all this in such a rich and beautiful way. Hello from British Columbia Canada
@kingcrazymani4133
@kingcrazymani4133 Месяц назад
Thanks, Mark. Your videos and you “walk on water.” In my sphere, this means one has leave at any time to show up, announced or not. Cheers.
@BELCAN57
@BELCAN57 Месяц назад
An armored Pullman car used by President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, the "Roald Amundsen" is on display at a museum in Scottsdale, Arizona in the United States. The car has everything required for the passengers to travel in comfort and security.
@Wuestenkarsten
@Wuestenkarsten Месяц назад
@BELCAN57: If I am not mistaken, Roosevelt did like to be on Ship´s as he was with the Navy. But as a President he couldn´t be so much Time away from Duty, so he decided to go with the Train as much as possible, he described it as the 2nd best Solution of Travel Feeling to a Navy Ship. In the Movies " Wind of War" with Robert Mitchum is a Scene based on that.....
@bmoboss
@bmoboss Месяц назад
I watched the last video on Goring’s train just a few hours ago and this suddenly comes up?? Amazing timing
@Wideoval73
@Wideoval73 9 дней назад
Thanks for this video. I had no idea these cars still existed. You're the best!
@RubyMarkLindMilly
@RubyMarkLindMilly Месяц назад
Beautiful craftsmanship on show on these wonderful trains 👍
@curtbowers7817
@curtbowers7817 Месяц назад
I’ve wondered how many works of art are still hidden to eventually be found decades later, or if ever?
@lena19191
@lena19191 Месяц назад
Yep same here , but I think it would have all gone now into private collections and probably only to be sold on to private collectors .
@kevinvilmont6061
@kevinvilmont6061 Месяц назад
Goering was a narcissistic monster., but he could put a uniform together!
@rossr6616
@rossr6616 Месяц назад
and he also excelled at splitting uniforms
@alazyfrog5969
@alazyfrog5969 Месяц назад
Great video as usual, thanks Mark
@NSHorseheadSD70
@NSHorseheadSD70 Месяц назад
"Due to the carriage's great weight, Asia was hauled by a pair of powerful Kriegslok locomotives" You mean due to Goring's great weight
@anttitheinternetguy3213
@anttitheinternetguy3213 Месяц назад
You could say göring himself was one of the germanys most luxurious carrieges
@aaronlambert9297
@aaronlambert9297 Месяц назад
When Mark uses an exclamation point you know it's important. He doesn't use them as haphazardly as others do. Top of the Muffin to You!
@markvoelker6620
@markvoelker6620 Месяц назад
They’re just STUMPS! 😡
@krisfrederick5001
@krisfrederick5001 Месяц назад
Dr. Felton's trains always run on time. Happy Mother's day
@AtheistOrphan
@AtheistOrphan Месяц назад
Mother’s Day is in March.
@faithlesshound5621
@faithlesshound5621 Месяц назад
@@AtheistOrphan He means the US Mother's Day, as designated by Woodrow Wilson.
@raytomic2762
@raytomic2762 Месяц назад
Another great video, Dr. Felton. It would be great to see a production about Atelier Thorak, one of the lesser-known surviving works of Albert Speer.
@DerFuhrer76
@DerFuhrer76 Месяц назад
The trains were fascinating mobile luxury estates, such amazing pieces of history. Such great quality videos Dr Felton…
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