National Geographic: Love Those Trains (1991)

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National Geographic: Love Those Trains (1991)

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Sometimes is has seemed

that railroads were doomed.

The Durango-Silverton railroad

is one of the most spectacular rides

in the world.

In 1960, it was nearly shut down.

In 1883, the Orient Express ran

from Paris to Istanbul

created the ultimate in luxury travel.

It was abandoned in 1977.

In 1887, rotary snow plows first fought

the snow drifts in the High Sierras.

Looking like relics

they seem improbable holdovers

from the past.

Once this streamlined locomotive

hauled passenger trains

at 100 miles an hour.

But for 20 years,

it sat outside a museum,

its machinery rusting.

Yet today

these trains still run the rails.

Now they evoke a more remote past

when trains first

bridged the continent,

Ferried recruits to w*r

provided celebrities with an opportunity

to be seen and a chic way to travel,

gave a mobile campaign platform

to politicians,

and offered a refuge for hoboes.

Train tracks disfigure

the countryside

Trains as*ault the senses with

brutal noise and begrime the air.

How then account for the multitude

of people who love trains?

When you're actually running a train,

you just can't get enough.

I don't know.

Maybe I'm just a junkie for trains.

But that's about it.

I bought a caboose back in the '50s

because I was busy riding trains

in the '50s.

And suddenly I read in the paper one day

where trains were going to go out.

All passenger trains

would be taken off.

And I knew unless I got a piece of ride

on the train again.

So that's when I bought my caboose

and put it in my yard.

There are grown men who ride toy

steam trains at a mountain retreat.

There are train buffs

who choose to ride

through South America's Andes

on a baggage rack.

There's town in Iowa

that honors hoboes,

and there are thousands

of young people competing

for the chance to engineer a train.

There are people who harken

to the lonesome whistle blowing

and the clickety-clack

of wheels on rails.

Theirs is a worldwide fraternity

with no membership requirements

beyond sharing in the love of trains.

You've got a sheet like this

and it tells you

who's sitting in every seat,

and every seat is assigned, and...

There are many people so enamored

of trains that they take trains,

not to go anywhere,

but just for the pleasure of riding.

Each year the North Alabama

Railroad Club sponsors

an all-day excursion on a

Norfolk Southern steam train.

Seats are always sold out

and there's even competition

for a chance to work on the engine.

Bill Hayslip is a deputy sheriff,

and he loves trains so much that

he volunteers on his day off

for the dirtiest job

in railroading-apprentice fireman.

I've studied steam engines just

about all my life.

I guess I was born about

There's something about a steam

locomotive and railroad

that's just romantic.

A steam engine kind of has

its own personality.

It's like a lady.

You have to treat it just right.

Steam engines evoke

a special affection.

Though inanimate objects

of iron and steel,

they seem to breathe

with the fire of life.

This day the train will run to

Chattanooga, Tennessee,

evoking cherished memories

of a popular song.

I've often wondered

if I was maybe one of those people

that had trains

in my bolld or something.

Some people have alcohol,

I have trains.

I have spent the whole day

in Birmingham

just to see the two trains

go through town.

My wife thins that's crazy,

but, you know, it's a thrill for me.

Part way through the trip,

the train comes to a stop

in an open field.

Now begins the prized ritual

of the steam train excursion.

The train backs up,

cameras are readied,

and then a sweet symphony

for every train-buff's ear.

The train station in Chattanooga

has been transformed

into an entertainment center.

When the train returns to Huntsville,

Dr. and Mrs. Lonie Lindsey

stay on in Chattanooga for dinner

in a refurbished diner.

They remember

another train trip long ago.

We got on the train in Tuscumbia,

Alabama and we went to Chattanooga.

Went up to the courthouse

and we got married.

That was 55 years ago,

and we've had a

very lovely marriage so far.

And here 55 years later,

we do the same start-over again.

The most popular rooms at the Choo-Choo

Hilton Hotel are old train cars,

Nostalgic setting

for recapturing fond memories.

For those who love

to ride steam trains,

each trip is a journey into the past.

In the beginning, steam engines were at

the center of the Industrial Revolution

which could not even begin until

mankind learned one crucial trick

how to transform heat energy

into motion.

In the first century A.D.,

the Greek scholar, Hero of Alexandria,

invented steam-jet propulsion.

Hero's ingenious device remained

a toy until 1712

when Thomas Newcomen developed the

first successful steam engine

Newcomen's engine was used to

pump water out of coal mines.

One hundred years passed before

the first British-built steam

locomotives took to the rails.

Soon the public everywhere crossed

the threshold of a new age

as horses were replaced by the

latest locomotive invention.

Today, these early engines can

usually be seen only at museums,

where they seem

as distant as dinosaurs.

The John Bull is the oldest

operable steam engine in the world.

To mark the 150th anniversary of

its first American trial,

the Smithsonian Institution

brought it out

for a run along

the Chesapeake and Ohio Canal.

People who love trains dressed up

for the occasion and gathered

from miles around.

Many had never heard the hoot of a

steam whistle

or the screech of brakes.

Nostalgia for those seemingly

innocent days of American history

is very much alive today.

For some, no doubt,

steam engines are the attraction.

For others, perhaps,

it is the appeal of travel.

Or could it be that so many share

the romantic notion of growing up

to be an engineer?

These trains are called live steamers.

Seymour Johnson loves trains so much

that he donated land and equipment

for a miniature railroad at his home

in Montecito, California.

I think in my case and in the case of

a lot of people,

you kind of grew up with them as toys

and these are pretty big toys.

I started building

this particular engine in 1947

and I completed it in 1951.

And that's why I have the numbers on

the side-4751-to remind me of the time.

Johnson and the local members

of the Goleta Valley Railroad Club

spent 17 years building their line.

Today they test their engines

on more than a mile of track.

There is something nostalgic

about steam engines now,

of course, but the thing is,

a steam locomotive is live.

The engine talks to you

when you're running it.

You can feel what it's doing.

It tells you I'm working too hard

or I'm taking it easy.

You can hear it in the stack,

you can hear it in the sound of the

blower, the sound of the fire.

They've got steam engines that

are over a hundred years old

that continue to run.

Once a year, Johnson and the club

host a three-day meet

that attracts model owners

from all over the country.

Each engine is custom-built,

representing thousands of hours

of meticulous machining.

And as in real life,

the engineers discover

that steam engines can be cantankerous

beasts capable of fighting back.

Well, this is a 21/2-inch scale,

narrow gauge locomotive built

to run on 71/2-inch track.

We're trying to duplicate exactly

the kind of engine

that the Colorado & Southern used

back in the years

of 1890 through 1936.

Hey, John, you want to push

the daylight car into the siding?

The most popular daily event is

the grand tour of the line

for families and friends.

Three engines are coupled.

Together they are pulling six tons

of engines, cars, and passengers.

We now have 14 cars.

Mostly they're freight-car type

because people are way out of scale.

This train is one-eighth full size,

but people aren't.

So if you put them in a passenger car,

you can't put a roof on.

But if you put them in a freight car,

the sky is the limit.

Many of those who build and enjoy

riding live steamers

can still

recall the old days

when steam engines ruled the rails.

The halcyon days of steam and

rail began after World w*r 1.

The Big Boy of the 1940s was driven

by four pistons

that powered 16 drive wheels.

It was the largest steam engine

ever built,

and could pull a train five miles long

And during World w*r II, steam engines

transporting the freight,

weapons, and troops to the seacoasts,

made possible the fast buildup

of America's w*r machine.

In the 1950s, steam gave way to

diesel and rail companies,

competing for passengers

promoted streamliners

as the chic way to travel.

But late in the decade,

passengers shifted to automobiles

and airplanes for long-distance travel

and trucks took over much

of the freight.

The low point came in the 1970s.

congress rescued six bankrupt

railroad by creating Conrail.

Railroad lines were abandoned,

and hundreds of

stations closed for good.

Although Americans seemed to lose

interest in passenger train travel,

some countries maintained their

trains as national treasures.

The narrow-gauge Guayaquil and

Quito Railway in Ecuador

plays a vital part in national life,

and people here use the railroad

like a party line.

It even serves as a food market

on wheels.

Train buff and writer Carla Hunt

has traveled

throughout South America on trains.

The Guayaquil-to-Quito run draws

her back as the

most exciting in South America.

A train buff's dream

an American-built Baldwin engine-

a relic from 1900-begins a two-day

climb from sea level

to over 11,000 feet in the Andes.

Passengers have a choice

of three classes.

Second class costs a dollar sixty.

First-class cars sport padded seats

for two dollars ten cents,

and local vendors offer lunch

on brown paper.

The affluent, who ride deluxe,

get reserved seats and meal service.

But some prefer the roof where

conductors seldom collect tickets.

American engineers

laid out the route in 1898.

It took ten years to cut the line

from the sugar cane fields

of the lowlands up over the Andes.

When the train going up fails to meet

the train coming down

at the appointed siding,

there's an unscheduled stop

for a phone call to find out

what happened to the other train.

These trains, not only do they

carry the people up and down,

but they carry the mail.

Every once in a while you see them

with a medical prescription,

a telex that might have come

into Guayaquil

but can't make it up

between the two points.

There is a telex facility at Tiobamba.

But between here and Riobamba

there is absolutely nothing.

The train that's coming from Riobama

has a problem in Huigra.

One of the wheels of the machine

was falling down off the track.

And now we are going with this

train to help the other train.

So, back to Huigra.

Ah, fantastico.

Derailments are common,

but the speeds are slow

and the accidents usually minor.

As a bonus, amateur supervisors

get a chance to see how,

with a minimum of equipment,

a derailed car can be coaxed back

onto its track.

After a change of engines, the train

climbs into the mountains once again.

In the early days of the American west

railroad builders often resorted

to zigzagging switchbacks

to gain altitude.

On this line, a famous switchback

is still in use.

The train has proceeded

as far as it can up the valley.

Now it switches to another track,

and backs up the side of Devil's Nose,

giving passengers on the rear

platform a front-end view.

The train backs around the mountain,

then switches again to climb higher.

Going forward again,

the train has climbed

of the mountain.

At the end of the first day,

the train stops at Riobamba.

For Carla Hunt, a visit to the

market is a fascinating

feature of the trip.

People come from miles around

to sell and buy.

You see things in this market

you won't see anywhere else

in Latin America.

But more than anything else,

I like to wander around and look

at all those beautiful faces.

From Riobamba to Quito,

the train is really a bus on rails.

There are seats inside,

but for hardy train buffs

like Carla Hunt,

there is a much more

exciting vantage point.

The place I like to ride is up

on the luggage rack on top.

That's the best sightseeing seat

in South America.

To go through the mountains and to

climb over the two ranges of the Andes

to go through the beautiful

upland villages

with all the wild changes of

weather on route,

there's nothing in the world like it.

Clouds shroud the peaks of the Andes

as the line climbs high through cuts

in the mountains and then descends

to Ecuador's capital,

the Spanish colonial city of Quito,

to bring to an end one of the world's

most extraordinary train ride

In the United States,

another spectacular train ride

inspired one train buff

to take dramatic action.

The line from Durango to

Silverton, Colorado

was threatened

with abandonment in 1960.

Charles Bradshaw Jr.,

Florida citrus grower,

rescued it in 1981.

Like many a town in the old West,

Durango was created by a railroad.

The Denver & Rio Grande chose the

site laid out the streets,

and sold lots around the depot.

Young people, who share Bradshaw's

enthusiasm for trains, keep it running

I love it. I really love it.

I go home and tell my husband,

I learned all kinds

of new things today.

I would like to be

an engineer very much.

You have to go through

all the training,

which is pretty physical for a girl

and then you have to also a fireman,

which shovel six ton of coal a day.

I wouldn't want to get out of my

limit I don't think that's right.

My father and my grandfather

and my great-grandfather

were all railroaders before me.

They worked for the Rio Grand.

Not this particular branch.

I'm the first one in the family to

work for this branch of the railroad.

None of them were conductors.

They were all in different parts

of the railroad,

so I'm the first conductor

in the family.

They have to be pretty

responsible people.

They can't be irresponsible at all.

Aren't you pretty young

to be an engineer?

I hear that about 30 times a day.

If I couldn't handle the job,

I wouldn't be here.

Silverton is only 45 miles

from Durango,

but to get there, the train must climb

almost 3,000 feet

In the 1870s,

huge discoveries of ore were made

in the mountains surrounding Silverton

but there was no economical way

to get the ore out.

The railroad made the mines profitable

The ore is now removed by truck.

The traffic has changed,

but the town still prospers-mining

tourist dollars.

All aboard.

As soon as the route was completed,

the drama of the train's traverse

of the Animas River Canyon

was recognized as one of the great

sights of American railroading.

In the early 1880s,

photographer William Henry Jackson

lowered himself into the canyon

to take this picture,

published in Harper's Weekly magazine.

Today's passengers can still enjoy

the same spectacle.

The ride is potentially just as

dangerous now as it was then.

A derailment could topple

the cars 200 feet into the gorge.

An extraordinary train run has been

preserved because of the dedication

of one man and the delight that

more than 100,000 people a year

take in supporting the line.

Boston has its marathon;

New Orleans its Mardi Gras.

Britt, Iowa honors hoboes.

Once a year, this small town invites

hoboes from all over the country

to drop by for a visit.

The get-together largely attracts those

who have retired from

actively riding the rails

and can now look back on their former

rag-tag wanderings with nostalgia.

Hoboes were not always so honored.

Hoboing began during hard times

after the Civil w*r.

And in the Great Depression,

the desperate once again took

to the rails.

Sometimes railroad police

threw them off moving trains.

Others jumped rather than face

the reception they received

when caught crossing state lines.

If we are to protect the public

of Southern California

from the indigent transient class.

They are coming here at this time,

not for the purpose of securing work,

but for the purpose of living

on relief,

stealing, or begging.

Where is your home?

Chicago.

You ride a freight all the way

from Chicago?

Yes, sir.

Well, you can ride, 'em back too,

or any way you can to get back.

We're going to see you

over the state line.

Don't come back to California

until you can come in like a man.

Hobo camps are called jungles,

and life in them has always been hard.

But in Britt, Iowa

the jungle is a place to

renew friendships and swap stories.

...in '78

Yes, yes.

Yeah, I remember you.

My memory that bad?

Now wait a minute!

Every year you get older,

you have a special privilege.

Every year you will get a little

bit better at forgetting.

Yes. I am there already.

Hoboes are known most often

by their nicknames.

"Steamtrain" was first elected

hobo king in 1973.

Now we got a young goat here,

and it's going to be

some pretty tender eating

when we get him all browned up here.

Yes, sir.

We'll have some of the

best music and some of the best food

you'll ever sit down to.

Time has reversed these hoboes' roles

once they were outcasts.

Now Britt youngsters look up to them as

knights of the open road

who seem to have lived

in a mythological age.

That's my name, see.

That's your name? Well, this is mine.

Mountain Dew. I was talking

to the hoboqueen and she says,

Would you like to be a hobo?

and I said, "Sure."

And I go, How do you be a hobo?

and she said-well, she pulled out

this kind of perfume stuff,

whatever it is-and she goes,

I acquire you prince, a hobo price.

And she put some on my forehead.

So I'm a hobo prince.

And my name is "Beer-Belly Bob."

I started out when I was about 16,

and had 12 years on and off,

different places.

Working irrigation ditches up

in Washington,

or cutting pulp wood in New York,

dong lifeguard work down

in Miami Beach,

working in a gypsum plant in Yuma,

Arizona,

washing dishes in California

You know, different stuff like that.

Working in the coal mines,

but they gave me a day shift.

When I went in, it was dark

and when I come out, it was dark,

and I worked there two weeks.

I told them

when they put windows in there,

I'd come back to work.

How long did you hobo?

From when to when?

About, let's see, 1931 to '38.

Something like that.

What's the satisfaction?

Of being free.

Being free.

In other words, not having to

account to anybody for your actions.

As the sun sets,

the hoboes gather around a fire,

and balladeers recall the hard days

of depression times.

...my wandering.

Ashes to ashes, dust to dust,

If the railroad doesn't get you,

then the bread lines must,

And it looks like I'm never going

to cease my wandering.

When most railroad buffs

think of trains,

they think of passenger trains.

But many of those most devoted

to trains have found their life work

with the railroads.

Whether they maintain the racks

or work on the trains themselves,

the big business for them is freight,

moving everything from coal to lettuce.

And although much of the public thinks

railroads are a dying industry,

in fact they are thriving.

Deregulation has permitted them

to abandon money-losing lines,

and new techniques, like piggyback

hauling of truck trailers

and containers, attract new customers.

The mass-market shipping of fresh

produce by rail

enables farmers in California

to sell lettuce to buyers

Lettuce harvesting has become

an assembly-line operation-

cutter, packer, sprayer, box-closer.

Today's lettuce that

we've got is probably the best

we've had in about a week and a half.

It's 54 to 55 pounds absolutely clean.

Derek Derdivanis is Sales Manager of

the Admiral Packing Company in Salinas.

He sells lettuce by the carload

to buyers all over the country.

Just call us back with that order,

will you?

You know.

The one you got in your back pocket.

A refrigerator car

holds 30,000 heads of lettuce.

This one is bound east

for New York City.

The morning after the lettuce

is picked, the Admiral lettuce car

has been joined to a 50-car train

called the "Salad Bowl Express."

Five Southern Pacific engines

are needed to pull the train

over a 7,000-foot-high pass

in the Sierra Nevada mountains.

The route climbs toward Donner Pass.

On average,

and avalanches have obstructed travelers

as long as the pass has been used.

In November 1846, blizzards trapped

the emigrant Donner party here.

Thirty-five d*ed

of starvation and exposure.

Some survivors resorted to cannibalism.

In the spring of 1982,

ten feet of snow fell in 12 days

in the High Sierras.

Southern Pacific stopped all trains

across Donner Pass.

Diverting traffic cost $100,000 a day.

Snow fighters tried to keep

the lines open

with spreaders-snow plows that push

the huge drifts to the side.

But when the snow drifts too deep,

spreaders stall

and the pushing wings collapse.

The nerve center of the railroad's

fight is a community of houses

and offices connected by tunnels

so buried in snow that

it is call "Mole Town."

Here a hundred men and women

work day and night.

Norden operator.

Everything's in the clear

on the Number Two?

How about the rotary?

Rotary's in the clear

on the Number Two...

Management calls for its ultimate

snow-fighting machines-rotary plows

that can dig through almost

any accumulation of snow.

...that engine's being held right now.

The rotary is going on down

to the other end of the siding.

Throwing five tons of snow a minute,

the rotary can literally dig

a trench deeper than itself.

As one rotary chews toward the top of

the pass from the west,

another struggles up from the east.

The first train comes through.

Beyond the Sierras,

the "Salad Bowl Express"

drops into the desert,

and a new crew takes over.

On the long, straight runs,

there's time for shared stories and

for trainmen to enjoy the camaraderie

which is part of the attraction

they feel for their work.

I don't think it's dawned on me

yet that I've had a kid.

I'm still in shock from it.

Went in Sunday night.

Had it Monday morning.

Last couple of days

have been pretty busy for me.

I was lucky.

Generally the railroad doesn't

allow you to be in town.

They keep you away

from home quite often.

So I was pretty lucky to be home

when it happened.

In 1950,

I was on a

high-speed perishables train,

and a passenger train come out

of a side track in front of us.

We hit him head

on about 52 mile an hour.

The engineer on the other train

was k*lled.

I'm very lucky to be here.

Now that scared me.

By evening,

the train is in eastern Nevada.

The next morning,

now with a Union Pacific

engine and crew,

the "Salad Bowl Express" climbs toward

the Continental Divide.

Around a curve, Castle Rock,

a well-known American landmark,

comes into view.

The famous photographer A.J. Russell

captured this same scene

when the transcontinental railroad

was nearing completion.

In 1867, it took three months to cross

by wagon from the railheads

on the Missouri River

to the Pacific Coast.

The new rail line cut that time

to less than a week.

Irish immigrants living

in railroad car dormitories built west.

Chinese coolies built east.

It was the most dramatic engineering

accomplishment of the century.

Gorges were spanned, mountains cut

through or tunneled under.

An army of workers fought summer heart

and winter snow

at a cost of uncounted lives.

There were no movie cameras to record

the great undertaking,

but once movies were invented,

filmmakers recreated the drama

in classic films;

John Ford's the Iron Horse

and Cecil B. DeMille's Union Pacific.

Crossing the mountains,

the deserts, and plains,

Fighting the heat,

the cold, and the rain,

Summer to autumn, winter to spring,

Bring 'em up, lay 'em down,

make the hammers ring,

Building a new road under the wheel,

Bind up the earth in iron and steel,

Working east, working west,

we're building our way,

On bad food, hard liquor,

and a dollar a day.

It was a day of national celebration

when the two lines met

at Promontory, Utah.

A.J. Russell recorded the scene

in what is perhaps

the most famous photograph

in American history.

And in 1924,

when John Ford recreated the scene

for his film,

he based the action

on the photographer to pose the crowd.

The joining of America's East and West

by rail is even more important today.

The "Salad Bowl Express" is only one

of 60 to 70 trains a day

moving across the nation

on this one line.

Now, near the end of its second day,

the "Salad Bowl Express" comes under

the traffic control

of dispatchers

at North Platte, Nebraska.

Here three men per shift control

every train

on the 245 miles of track diagrammed

on the walls.

They decide which trains get priority

on the lines.

The "Salad Bowl Express"

is rushed along.

Midnight. The "Salad Bowl Express"

arrives at North Platte.

Some cars will be sent south

and eastward on other lines.

Other cars will be added.

The freight cars are pushed up a hump

and separated.

Gravity powers them down the slope.

The tracks divide again and again.

a*t*matic sensors weigh the cars

and retarders brake them.

There are 221 miles of track

in the yard.

And as many as 5,000 freight cars

at a time.

By 4 a.m.,

a new train has been made up,

a new crew comes aboard,

and the train moves on.

In the afternoon,

the train crosses the Missouri River.

Operated now by Chicago

and North Western railroad,

it traverses the rich farmlands

of Iowa.

The next morning,

the train is in Chicago.

Marshaling yards like this one

are dangerous places.

You have to watch for cars

coming from both directions.

There could be debris sticking

out of the car.

Try not go get caught in a situation

where you have trains moving

at high speed in both directions

on each side of you.

If you do have a tendency

to feel dizzy, lay down on the ground.

You could reel under the car.

Despite railroad emphasis on safety,

there is an average of 15 deaths

and 6,700 injuries

to American rail-yard workers

each year.

Danger for railroaders comes not only

from the trains themselves.

In the early days,

desperadoes like Jesse James,

Butch Cassidy,

and the Sundance kid held up trains

in the lonely plains and mountains

of the West.

Today, trains are most often att*cked

as they pass through depressed areas

We had one conductor-they got him with

a g*n and robbed him at Park Manor.

It's just a few things that we go

through out here.

Everybody thinks

we've got such a swell job.

We have our ups and downs, too.

This is our most dangerous spot

of the trip.

They put different articles

on the tracks to derail us.

They put old truck tires

so they'll break the air hoses in two.

They'll throw beer bottles,

anything they can get their hands on.

We've been sh*t at.

They sh*t at me five times

through the caboose windows.

I've got pictures of the holes.

It was either a.38 or a.45

because it put big holes.

Sometimes they do it to rob the train.

They break us in two to rob us,

so they can take things off of us.

On the cabooses they have...

No, I know all about it.

He's going to throw.

No, he's not either.

Oh, we go through this every day.

It's nothing new to us.

The many dedicated man and women

who are drawn to railroad work

also live with the danger that goes

with the job.

The "Salad Bowl Express" rolls through

the heartland

of the industrial Middle West.

On the fifth morning,

the train parallels the Mohawk River.

Now under Conrail control,

it follows the same route taken

in 1825 by the Erie Canal.

Early on the sixth morning,

the "Salad Bowl Express" arrives at

its destination in the Bronx.

Ten carloads of produce are unloaded

at Hunts Point Terminal each day.

The carload of lettuce from Salinas

has been bought by the Armata family,

wholesalers who in turn

sell to markets and restaurants.

Beautiful box of lettuce.

As my father would say,

It talks to you.

As soon as you open up the box...

It has been seven days

since the lettuce was picked.

It took four railroads

and the involvement of 1,000 men

and women

to move it across the country.

Half a million people work for

the railroads in the United States.

In one sense, theirs is just a job,

but it is an essential job,

moving the grain, steel,

coal, automobiles,

perishables-even the lettuce for

a PTA luncheon in Baldwin, Long Island.

Traditionally, little boys

were given model trains for Christmas

and, captured by a dream, many grew up

wanting to become an engineer.

The reality today is not far different.

For a new class of 23 engineers,

the Long Island Railroad

had 2,000 applicants to choose from.

Now to get the train moving,

you'll need to reverse.

You're in forward.

This position.

This is your throttle.

Now we'll go in eight notch.

Alright, blow the whistle.

Dave Decker, senior instructor,

has been an engineer for 14 years.

Decker loves engineering and teaching,

but the memory of train accidents

in his past brings a special urgency

to his teaching.

Engineering used to be a man's job,

but Federal affirmative action

guidelines give Vita Zamboli,

a former secretary, and extraordinary

opportunity to join

an elite group of railroad employees.

I can teach an engineer how to make

a proper brake application

and accelerate, decelerate.

That's the easy part.

My most difficult responsibility is to

instill into an upcoming engineer

that they have

monumental responsibilities.

The is no margin for error.

Not when you are dealing

with 1,600 people behind you.

Hopefully, I can bring this across

to these upcoming engineers.

Are you relaxed?

A little damp.

Alright. That's good.

That means you've got guts.

If you're not nervous in here,

there is something wrong.

How do you feel?

Are you coming in strong?

As she brings the train into a station

Vita must learn the right timing

how strongly to apply the brakes

so as not to stop too soon

or overrun the station.

Okay.

Now what you want to do is bear

off the last second.

No, no, not this.

Right, bear if off.

Super.

You want that feel of this thing

charging into the station

and making your initial application

and then your final application.

You ever run a train before?

Huh? Never?

You did a heck of a job.

What do you think? What do you feel?

You feel that this...

It was exciting. It was great...

...is this going to be

your occupation or what?

Yes, it is.

Yes.

I'm sure it's going to take a while.

But I will get the feeling

of bringing a train in.

There are going to be times

in your career

when you are going to run across

a grade crossing accident.

You're traveling along at 65,

and a car comes around a gate

or through the gates.

There's not a thing you can do.

You hope you give pre-warning,

that a warning whistle or warning bell

before you get to

that crossing are ample.

You'll search your soul to know

whether you did it or not.

It's not just the glory of

running over the road and to say,

I always wanted to be an engineer.

Now I have that.

It's that you have to take

that responsibility.

If her engineering career

follows the norm,

Vital will face 500,000 road

crossings in the next 25 years.

If she is never involved

in an accident,

passengers who ride her trains will

have no reason to learn her name.

There are many great train rides

around the world,

but not one can match

the aura of elegance,

mystery, and romance surrounding

the name-Orient Express.

It ran for almost a century until its

demise in 1977.

Now two men have revived

the historic run to Istanbul.

Albert Glatt bought

the 1920s-vintage cars

and lovingly refurbished them.

Sometimes, you know,

you have to do everything on the train

T.C. Swartz chartered the cars for

those who could afford to recapture

the glory of rail travel in its heyday.

...and then how to surpass it.

People's idea of luxury

is a little bit different

than maybe what is actually was.

So we're trying to do now

is to give them more luxury

than they had in the past.

In fact, to make it the ultimate trip.

I can't believe it,

Oh, it's marvelous.

There will be 98 passengers

on this trip,

each paying a modest $5,000 one way.

I think the dogs are great.

...great, but they are...

Yeah, but I can't see them sitting

in the dining car.

Some passengers, like actor Hal Linden

and his wife,

stage an arrival

in the grand tradition,

harking back to the aura

of a princely trip.

Original inlaid wood decorations

and Lalique molded glass reliefs

still decorate the cars.

Names of the countries the

Orient Express passes through

Austria, Hungary, Romania,

Bulgaria-ring with romance.

Memories of mysteries like m*rder on

the Orient Express surround

the passengers with an atmosphere

of champagne and dreams.

Well, my name is Otto.

And I'm supposed to play the

piano all the way to Istanbul.

It seems like everything that's

wonderful about

the world is going away,

and the trains are one of those things

Kim Vosper and Kyle Collins advanced

the date of their weeding

so they could make this their first

trip together as a married couple.

For bourgeois travelers,

meals in an aristocratic French style

the ultimate temptation for

those who count calories.

I remember as a child we used to put

people on the train in New Iberia.

And I was never sad because

they were leaving.

I was always sad because

I wasn't leaving too,

but I wasn't standing on the back

platform when I'm waving goodbye.

I think I was six or seven when

I took my first train ride.

From that time on, I think I fell

in love with trains.

And then I heard that you could spend

four-and-a-half days on a train

that sold me on this trip.

The train cruises Europe like

an ocean liner.

Gypsies play as they did on the

first run of the Orient Express.

In the evenings, there are gala

seven-course dinners.

And occasionally the train waits

as passengers are bused

to the entertainment.

A champagne tasting at the

Mumm's winery in France.

And just as on its maiden voyage,

there is a festive reception

in Budapest.

On the first trip, no passengers on

the Orient Express

dined at the hunting lodge

of the sultan.

It is an express journey to the sun,

but the high point for

many comes in Vienna

where the Vienna Boys' Choir is only

a part of the entertainment.

Protocol prevented the Austrian

royal family from

receiving plebian passengers

of the first Orient Express

Now the Pallavicini Palace

is theirs for the evening.

And finally, the end of the

line-Istanbul, Turkey-

where passengers get the

red-carpet treatment, Oriental style.

For the 98 passengers of the

Orient Express,

the trip will remain an extraordinary

adventure into the romance of rails.

But the Orient Express has

no monopoly on beauty.

There are grand adventures for

everyone in a rediscovery

of travel by train.

Amtrak's Crescent,

with newly rebuilt equipment,

races like a speeding ship across

Lake Pontchartrain in Louisiana.

The Great Plains offer the same

sweeping vistas that challenged

the pioneers so long age.

There are majestic views of the Rockies

on the Canadian transcontinental route

The San Diegan is a beachcomber

from Los Angeles to San Diego.

In the future, new trains traveling

for the run between

Los Angeles and San Diego,

and that is only the beginning.

Extraordinary experimental trains

may some day revolutionize land travel.

For those who love trains,

whether as engineer,

hobo, or passenger,

there's an appreciation due

for the song-writer's line:

It's got to be the going and

not the getting there that's good.
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