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" KING OF THE RAILS " GENERAL ELECTRIC MILWAUKEE ROAD EP-1 / EF-1 ELECTRIC LOCOMOTIVES XD14204 

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Dating to 1915, this black & white, silent film promotes General Electric's "King of the Rails" electric locomotives built for the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad (Milwaukee Road). These locomotives formed two classes designated EP-1 and EF-1. There were eventually forty two such boxcab electric locomotives built by the American Locomotive Company (Alco) in service, and the remained in operation into the 1950s.
Opening titles: King of the Rails presented by General Electric (:09-:20). A brief and peculiar history of how to haul or move heavy items starts the film. First, Native Americans in headdresses are seen walking through the woods. Then, White men chop down trees as they clear the forest as part of "Progress". The lumberjacks try to figure out a way to remove the huge logs. A log cabin. Stone boat was a useful tool but heavier objects had to be rolled. Men roll a heavy rock (:21-2:50). Primitive wheelbarrow is used to move sticks and rocks. Ox-drawn cart helps pull people in a wagon. Horses pull wagons. In the western United States, the Pony Express is utilized. In the snowy North, dog sleds are used (2:51-4:10). The DeWitt Clinton, America's first steam locomotives. A hand holds a piece of paper that reads 'Schenectady to Albany.' People board the DeWitt Clinton train. It moves down the tracks slowly (4:11-5:18). Horses pull trolley cars down the street in major American cities, this shows New York Railways on Broadway (5:52). When the trolley stops, people exit and enter. Electric street cars in big cities. Elevated trains above city streets. Subway trains go into a tunnel (5:19-6:46). People migrate westward across fields. Transcontinental railroads on tracks. The 'King of the Rails' is built, this locomotive is powered by electricity. One of the motors is placed into position as the train is constructed. The railcar is being built (6:47-8:20). The railcar is brought to the assembly factory and placed on a truck at G.E.'s Erie Works in Erie, PA. Railcar body is lowered onto the trucks. Electric train goes down the tracks. The Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul, and Pacific railroad has electrified 660 miles of track from Harlowton, Montana to Avery, Idaho and from Othello, Washington to Seattle and Tacoma. Rainbow Falls, Montana, the Missouri River was harnessed to help give electric energy. Great Falls, Montana hydro-elecric dam. Inside the dam's walls (8:21-10:44). Voltage is transported to other substations to assist. Transformers help convert as well. A pantograph goes up and down, the railcar starts moving as the pantagraph is up. Rocky Mountains, a train on the rails. Silverbow Canyon in Montana (10:45-12:15). Train goes through Pipestone Pass is in the Rocky Mountains in MT. Into a tunnel near the Continental Divide. Train goes over a bridge on the Eastern Slope. Through Jefferson Canyon. Eagles Nest train tunnel. Electric train goes down the tracks as seen from the side (12:16-13:59). Trains used for freight service. Electric train goes downhill, using regenerative braking. A steam locomotive on the rails (14:00-14:59). No end credits.
The Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad (Milwaukee Road) classes EP-1 and EF-1 comprised 42 boxcab electric locomotives built by Alco in 1915. Electrical components were from G.E. They were composed of two half-units semi-permanently coupled back-to-back. As built, 30 locomotives were assigned to freight service, classified as EF-1 and numbered 10200-10229. The remaining twelve locomotives were assigned to passenger service as class EP-1, numbered 10100-10111, with higher-speed passenger gearing. The design was highly successful, replacing a much larger number of steam locomotives, cutting costs and improving schedules. General Electric self-proclaimed this electric locomotive to be the “King of the Rails” in a silent promotional film from 1915. In 1919, with the arrival of a newer generation of passenger power, the EP-1 locomotives were converted to EF-1 freight locomotives, and renumbered 10230-10241. In this role, they served until the 1950s, when the arrival of the Little Joe locomotives began to replace them in freight service.
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This film is part of the Periscope Film LLC archive, one of the largest historic military, transportation, and aviation stock footage collections in the USA. Entirely film backed, this material is available for licensing in 24p HD, 2k and 4k. For more information visit www.PeriscopeFilm.com

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3 мар 2021

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Комментарии : 36   
@DATDesign
@DATDesign 3 года назад
Fell asleep and woke up to this playing at 1:15 AM. The imagery combined with the cool ambient music was a trippy place to be. Felt like a time traveler.
@jeffreycoulter4095
@jeffreycoulter4095 3 года назад
A great bit of historical perspective from 1915. Many of the old electrical powerhouses remain in Idaho and Montana. Much of the old railway right of way is a bike, hike, and equestrian trail
@johnt.4947
@johnt.4947 3 года назад
I always enjoy the music selected for these films.
@jaminova_1969
@jaminova_1969 3 года назад
It's very surreal, almost dream like!
@jalilmuhammad8270
@jalilmuhammad8270 3 года назад
@@jaminova_1969 this music is suspenseful.
@vancepomerening4794
@vancepomerening4794 23 дня назад
The music is so wonderfully surreal. Contrast to today's high impact advertising.
@kentcourtney5535
@kentcourtney5535 3 года назад
As a kid, I thought we would be electrifying a lot more of our nation’s railroads. Europe certainly did. We should continue to electrify our railroads. A centralized energy distribution system sending electrical power over wires makes more sense than having thousands of diesel units generating their own electricity on the spot. Now, consider the thousands of trucks, which add to our pollution through individualized energy production. Even from the standpoint of physics, trucks make no sense. Our great grandfather’s had it right. Railroads are the most sensible distribution system for freight and passengers.
@thatrandomguyfromcaliforni971
@thatrandomguyfromcaliforni971 3 года назад
I dought electrifying all the mainlines will happen, battery electric locomotives are already being tested and it looks like those are the locomotives that will replace the diesels, At lest for now. But then the Siemens charger locomotives meet the tier 4 environmental standards, so maybe diesels will carry on, but honestly who really knows.
@gmills5763
@gmills5763 3 года назад
Almost like viewing a lost civilisation. With the passing of the Milwaukee Road, it probably is.
@vancepomerening4794
@vancepomerening4794 23 дня назад
Certainly the most civilized thing in Montana. Milwaukee Road abandoment was like losing part of the circulatory system of an animal.
@jalilmuhammad8270
@jalilmuhammad8270 3 года назад
59 years after this film, the MILW surrendered its electric locomotives in favor of diesel power.
@tubi333
@tubi333 3 года назад
Why?
@jalilmuhammad8270
@jalilmuhammad8270 3 года назад
@@tubi333 Early signs of bankruptcy.
@WAL_DC-6B
@WAL_DC-6B 3 года назад
@@tubi333 The continuation of electric operations by the Milwaukee Road beyond June, 1974 would have been prohibitively expensive for the railroad. This would have required replacement of the worn wooden poles supporting the overhead wiring on the two separate sections, new electric locomotives and probably updating of or replacement of the 22 substations that provided the electric power. The railroad simply didn't have the money to make this possible. Diesel-electrics were a much less expensive alternative.
@tubi333
@tubi333 3 года назад
@@WAL_DC-6B thank you 👍
@kedarseetal1975
@kedarseetal1975 Месяц назад
The Milwaukee actually ended up spending as much money purchasing diesel locomotives as it would’ve spent modernizing and unifying jt’s two electrified divisions into one. They also did this at the height of the oils crisis in the 70’s and only made half as much off the scrapped copper from the overheads as they expected. GE even offered to finance the electrification project but they turned it down. Bad management killed the Milwaukee. Had they chosen to continued down the electric route they might’ve still been a competetive railroad for decades to come. Full dieselization turned out to be one of many nails in the coffin for a once great and innovative railroad
@seanmccann8368
@seanmccann8368 3 года назад
The introductory notes and images would bring to mind Gordon Lightfoots great work "Canadian Railroad Trilogy".
@erbewayne6868
@erbewayne6868 2 месяца назад
The Milwaukee supplied it's own power as commercial power didn't exist in the territory the railroad ran, including substations transmission lines, personal and equipment.
@Snowy167
@Snowy167 3 года назад
People really do be going places and moving things
@jamesslick4790
@jamesslick4790 3 года назад
"The Continental Divide" is when I had to sell my Lincoln to pay off my ex. 😜
@lwilton
@lwilton 3 года назад
The MILW did not own electric generating facilities. The two hydroelectric plants shown belonged to commercial electric utilities, and the MILW bought power from them. The utilities ran 100KV line to the MILW substations. The MILW then distributed the 3KV DC along their lines. In some cases this required running pole lines across hills and valleys at some distance to, or even far away from the actual track layout.
@Greatdome99
@Greatdome99 3 года назад
Montana Power was one of them. Owned by the same stockholders as the MILW, hence a 'sweet deal.'
@user-gc6ow7ys2s
@user-gc6ow7ys2s 2 месяца назад
Music to slash your wrists by. Tesla was not the only individual to do the mathematics required for AC calculations. Steinmetz was GE’s boffin and gave us j notation to simplify mathematical calculations we use today. DC calculations are far simpler.Tesla unfortunately suffered in life.
@raymondscottbehnoud8986
@raymondscottbehnoud8986 2 года назад
Hey CERN we want our copper back
@paulcrumley9756
@paulcrumley9756 3 года назад
Music? What music? Talk about a one-trick pony. . . the "composer" only knew about one note, I think.
@MrSvenovitch
@MrSvenovitch 3 года назад
music is horrendous
@tom7601
@tom7601 3 года назад
Yeah, I like it too!
@jamesslick4790
@jamesslick4790 3 года назад
10:45 G.E. of ALL companies points out 100,000 Volts of ALTERNATING CURRENT! Of course they're not gonna mention WESINGHOUSE or TESLA. Hell that any large, fast trains could be safely controlled AT ALL were because of Westinghouse's air brake AND electric switch and signal gear!
@douglasskaalrud6865
@douglasskaalrud6865 2 года назад
I did not know of Tesla having anything to with the Milwaukee Road’s electrification. I thought GE supplied all the electrical infrastructure and the boxcab passenger and freight motors (that’s what the locomotives were called) under one contract for a long mainline in Montana. I thought GE then did the construction of the lines to the Pacific coast. What part did Tesla play in all that? I’m really curious. Be specific-I’m sure this is news to all people interested in the Milwaukee Road’s electrification and who, according to you, have been lied to for over a century by GE and the Milwaukee Road.
@jamesslick4790
@jamesslick4790 2 года назад
@@douglasskaalrud6865 Tesla invented the alternating current electric motor and Edison (GEs founder) actively fought against alternating current.
@713davidh42
@713davidh42 27 дней назад
We don't get to see the locomotive until almost halfway through the film. It comes off as Jack Welch-type propaganda even before he took over General Electric and tossed whatever ethics there was with American business into the gutter.
@1witt
@1witt 3 года назад
This commentarysection is now property of Germany
@hauntedhose
@hauntedhose 3 года назад
Yes it isn’t
@tubi333
@tubi333 3 года назад
And what is our benefit of the new reign?
@1witt
@1witt 3 года назад
@@tubi333 nothing.. I was just first in the Video
@tubi333
@tubi333 3 года назад
@@1witt But the official language is now German, I guess.... oh sorry: Die Amtssprache ist jetzt wohl Deutsch 😂
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