QUOTE: Originally posted by Sask_Tinplater There are many things about today's railroads that are better and worse than those of yesteryear. Years from now, railroading today will still be looked back upon by railfans with fondness and there will be those who will remenise about it. However, I still don't think that anything going on in railroading today will at all be looked back upon in the same way and with the same nostalgia that that railroads of previous times were. There was something more glamorous about railroads before and these trains will always have a very special place in the hearts of railfans. When you look at the railroads of today, there's just no comparison. I do love today's trains, but not as much as those from days gone by. Steam and first generation diesel will live on forever in our hearts. By the way, I should mention that I was born in 1986 and was never there to experience the eras of railroading we're talking about. I wi***hat I had was born earlier.
QUOTE: Originally posted by jhhtrainsplanes QUOTE: Originally posted by Sask_Tinplater There are many things about today's railroads that are better and worse than those of yesteryear. Years from now, railroading today will still be looked back upon by railfans with fondness and there will be those who will remenise about it. However, I still don't think that anything going on in railroading today will at all be looked back upon in the same way and with the same nostalgia that that railroads of previous times were. There was something more glamorous about railroads before and these trains will always have a very special place in the hearts of railfans. When you look at the railroads of today, there's just no comparison. I do love today's trains, but not as much as those from days gone by. Steam and first generation diesel will live on forever in our hearts. By the way, I should mention that I was born in 1986 and was never there to experience the eras of railroading we're talking about. I wi***hat I had was born earlier. Mitchell, your post had to be written by your grandpa. You spoke just like someone 30 or 40 years or more older than you are. It would be just like what I would say. The steam engines are living, breathing machines to me. It is sad that many will never know the feel of the heat from the firebox, or the hiss of steam. I wasn't old enough to see the steamers in action in their heyday, but have been a museum volunteer on steam excursions. It is simply undescribable to see them highball down the mainline pulling a passenger train. The mix of first generation diesels and all the color available in the 40s, 50s, and 60s was a picnic feast. Railroads then had some character, now they don't. It still is enjoyable to see a train, but there is just something lost now that will never return.
QUOTE: Originally posted by Sask_Tinplater QUOTE: Originally posted by jhhtrainsplanes QUOTE: Originally posted by Sask_Tinplater There are many things about today's railroads that are better and worse than those of yesteryear. Years from now, railroading today will still be looked back upon by railfans with fondness and there will be those who will remenise about it. However, I still don't think that anything going on in railroading today will at all be looked back upon in the same way and with the same nostalgia that that railroads of previous times were. There was something more glamorous about railroads before and these trains will always have a very special place in the hearts of railfans. When you look at the railroads of today, there's just no comparison. I do love today's trains, but not as much as those from days gone by. Steam and first generation diesel will live on forever in our hearts. By the way, I should mention that I was born in 1986 and was never there to experience the eras of railroading we're talking about. I wi***hat I had was born earlier. Mitchell, your post had to be written by your grandpa. You spoke just like someone 30 or 40 years or more older than you are. It would be just like what I would say. The steam engines are living, breathing machines to me. It is sad that many will never know the feel of the heat from the firebox, or the hiss of steam. I wasn't old enough to see the steamers in action in their heyday, but have been a museum volunteer on steam excursions. It is simply undescribable to see them highball down the mainline pulling a passenger train. The mix of first generation diesels and all the color available in the 40s, 50s, and 60s was a picnic feast. Railroads then had some character, now they don't. It still is enjoyable to see a train, but there is just something lost now that will never return. Nope Jim, that was all written by me. I may be young, but that doesn't mean I don't have an appreciation for the finer things of the past. I've always been a big fan of the 40's-60's, not just railroading. In my opinion the railroads of that time and earlier had real class. I may have been born a few decades too late, but that doesn't mean I don't know great railroading when I see it.
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