The Flying Scotsman, the Most Famous Steam Train in the World
Ойын-сауық
In late 1934, a bright green locomotive, the Flying Scotsman, made history and became the most famous steam train in the world. In this richly illustrated documentary, we find out how it came to be, and what happened to it once it passed into private ownership.
Featuring interviews from Alan Pelger, Sir William McAlpine and the engineers who help keep the magnificent machine running today.
Directed by Bruce Vigar
Пікірлер: 200
I do believe it is better to preserve such history on a track - rather than a museum. Great doco'. Thank you.
@LloydieP
2 ай бұрын
Top right! My parents took me on a ride on The Flying Scotsman, when she did a world tour.
@366Gli
23 күн бұрын
Yes.!
Had the pleasure in the 1980's or 1990's in Australia riding this beauty from Melbourne to Geelong & return. I remember looking out of the classroom window at Frankston High School, watching the Frankston to Stony Point line steam freight train being turned on the roundabout in the early 1950's & it often went to Melbourne to pick up freight. The sound of a steam engine pulses through you like a heart beat that diesel or electric trains could never do.💜
What a saga...incredible adventure, a well made documentary that catches the attention and never gets dull, great photography , music, interviews and very well narrated....
We met 4472 when she was in Australia in 1988. We took part in a parallel run into Sydney between 4472 and New South Wales’s prime locomotive 3801. That was a thrilling experience which I still have on film on KZread. It is entitled LNER FLYING SCOTSMAN 4472 ON ITS AUSTRALIAN TOUR 1988. Graham Wilcox
@MySteamChannel
3 ай бұрын
Love that video mate!
My great grand father, a teenage Scotsman, came to California and worked his whole life on trains. He would get angry w my great grandmother and say, "I'm going all the way to Bangor, Maine; I may not be back!" He has a pass that got him on all USA railroads. That was the 1920s, according to family lore.
@YouriCarma
3 ай бұрын
Well at least that sounds much more exciting than: "I'll be out getting some cigarettes." 😆
@johanneswilhelm3318
2 ай бұрын
😂
Frenchman here. No question about how huge the British contribution has been to trains especially in the XIX century. No question about beauties like this Flying Scottsman locomotive absolute beauty, the Mallard which won speed records. No question about wonderful bridges Britain constructed (Firth of Forth, Royal Albert Bridge, etc). There is a little exageration about the Flying Scottsman being the world's most famous train but rather one of the most famous trains. Needless to mention trains like the Orient express, the Train Bleu (Paris to Nice). When it comes to speed, we French mave made some contributions (331 km/h in 1955 and 574 km/h in 2007). So truth is many European countries have made their contribution to inventions and beautiful Engineering.
@peterwilliamallen1063
3 ай бұрын
This is the Worlds most Famouse Locomotive not Train, there is a difference of which Best Documentry got the title wrong
@OTIB1
3 ай бұрын
Thank you for stating locomotive and not train. The train is the locomotive's carriages.
@drstrangelove4998
3 ай бұрын
The British invented trains, it wasn’t just a ‘contribution.’
@TransdermalCelebrate
3 ай бұрын
A gentleman by the name of Denis Papin derives a certain amount of credit, certainly for the use of steam, in defence of our French neighbours and presumably other inventors with less accountable acclaim through history. That’s not to say that the first accredited working engine probably goes to Richard Trevithick through a certain Welsh mining town, that said and to British acclaim, he was born a Cornish man 😊
@myparceltape1169
Ай бұрын
The Serpollet boiler system had me interested. I started wondering if it would be a fast-start power source. You probably saw the Glenfinnan Viaduct. The Flying Scotsman was shown going over it, as was Harry Potter. The builder used a lot of concrete in his constructions. So much so that he was nicknamed Concrete (and a second name which I cannot recall.)
Such a heartwarming story...Thank you.❤❤❤❤
I was very lucky to travel hundreds of miles with Scotsman in Australia 1989.
@sarahhearn-vonfoerster7401
2 ай бұрын
I do so envy you. I am looking forward to riding the new Flying Scotsman this summer...but, it will not have the aura of the original.
I remember seeing Flying Scotsman when it came to North America around 1972, It visited San Francisco at Fisherman's wharf and you could tour it. It was especially memorable because going thru the corridor in the tender I had claustrophobia attack. My first ever so that stood out for me haha.
Yes good point. It’s one of those things that makes my teeth stand on edge when people refer to a locomotive as a “train” and watching further on, thus sympathetic documentary does refer to locomotives correctly. It’s quite heartwarming to see non-railway minded people holding this locomotive in such high esteem and affection.
Brilliant video production. I never knew Alan Peglar was only able to run the locomotive on BR due to a legal technicality and that he lost his job over the purchase. Nor did I know it was Ted Heath's Government withdrawing support for the American tour that led to Alan Peglar entering bankruptcy.
6:20 Super Awesome Storytelling Baldrick From The Black Adder The Original Series. X
From this to what we have today, somehow seems we have gone backwards in some sense
@dennisstone1542
3 ай бұрын
Wait until you realize mountains are melted cities
Beauty, elegance and power. What engineering eh?
Should have been titled worlds most expensive operating stream locomotive!! Wow thats a labor of love... I'm glad she is still alive and well!!
Fantastic documentary. Thank you for the post
A great story of the Flying Scotsman for me to enjoy. ❤❤❤❤❤
Interesting/informative/entertaining. Excellent still -motion photography pictures 📷. Enabling viewers to better understand what the orator is describing. Along with guest speakers.sharing personal knowledge pertaining to the " Flying Scotsman ". Making this documentary more authentic and possible -!!!😉. Enjoying this presentation from my computer room. Along the " Space Coast "🚀 of Florida 🐊🐊🐊 ( 2-6-24 ). Wishing viewers a safe/healthy/prosperous ( 2024 )🌈🎉..
A rare and very powerful masterpiece that carries the past and dreams of the future 🥰🥰🥰🥰✋✋🙏🙏
@asullivan4047
3 ай бұрын
Documentaries like this one. Are time well spent watching 👀.
It's a very interesting documentary of the flying Scotsman locomotive 🚂
Was on the 2017 UK national tour. In the pullman dining carriage. Absolutely fantastic experience. "LeslieBrandish" xxx
i have a tip for the "steam machinery fans", the "Wouda gemaal" in Lemmer! it is the biggerst steam driven waterworks pumping station in the world... and it still works!! mostly to pleasure visitors, but in time of extreme high water levels it works to pump the water out and keep the feet of our inhabitants dry. a few weeks ago it was in full swing to get the water level down after the excessive rains in early januari.
Very nice documentary. I was part of the US crew from Texas to Kansas. Nice to see it again.
11:37 This LNER Gresley Streamlined A4 Pacific Steam Locomotive Union Of South Africa Is A Bit Like Mallard. Thanks Mate. PS I Reunited With This Locomotive Mallard From The National Railway Museum In York In Yorkshire In England In The United Kingdom Back In May 2018 And It Was Super Awesome. X
Saw her as a Kid in 1988 while she was in Australia one of the reasons I love steam trains.
@myparceltape1169
Ай бұрын
Steam locomotives can appear to be very powerful at low speeds, as if they are showing what they can do if left off the leash.
There were reports that the Pennsylvania Railroad’s S1 might have had beaten Mallard’s world record. But unfortunately I don’t think there’s evidence of that, so Mallard still stands.
It's not a "Train" it's a LOCOMOTIVE!!!
@simontaylor2319
2 ай бұрын
Weel there is also the Flying Scotman Train
@gregoryclark8217
2 ай бұрын
If we want to get really pedantic, The Flying Scotsman was a service. The Flying Scotsman can refer to 3 things, the London-Scotland express service, the train that is fulfilling that service at a particular moment, and the preserved locomotive 4472.
@sarahhearn-vonfoerster7401
2 ай бұрын
@@simontaylor2319 Yes, a fantastic train that I was fortunate enough to ride from London to Edinburgh when I was a graduate student. Spring break...no plans... saw the beautiful green locomotive, and, on a whim, hopped on. Conductor was lovely, gave me a ticket, and placed me in a compartment with 2 elderly Scottish ladies who took over my life for 3 days. The trip,itself, was a learning experience. I will mention two incidents: realizing that my soup was rising up the side of the bowl( train speed 100mph); my two ladies ordered tea sandwiches and hot water; took out their own teabags from a silver reticule, brewed, then replaced the bags into the reticule. Noticing my expression ( unsophisticated youth!), one gently stated, " Waste not, want not, ye ken" . I've never forgotten that journey. Later, my British schoolmates laughed at my vivid imagination!
@simontaylor2319
2 ай бұрын
Actually 4 ----Flying Scotsman was also an Irish racehorse, - there were probably quite a few. No quite as fast as its namesake
@GoldenRing2023
2 ай бұрын
Just like Big Ben, people refer the whole clock tower as Big Ben even though it's bell inside the tower. Trains are the things that are pulled by the locomotive but people call the whole thing a train because it's easier
about 10 years ago i was traveling home by train when we were held up at the "Velserspoortunnel", one of the two railway (spoor) tunnels under the notrhsea channel (channel from the north sea shore at IJmuiden to the harbour of Amsterdam) to wait for the passing of a steam locomotive that had been to a festival based in Alkmaar and returning to it's home somewhere in the provence of Zeeland. i expected it to be towed by another engine through the tunnel (and so did the conductor on the train i was on) but to my surprise it took the 1957 tunnel, never meant to be taken by a steam driven train, under it's own power! it was a marvelous sight, but we had to keep the windows of our train closed in the tunnel because of the smoke it had left behind... 💪❤
Good production!
Very well done👍👍 thank you
A large part of the fun of seeing this was the vintage footage... my question is why isn't the "Flying Scotsman" name plate affixed to the boiler front nowadays? It's Iconic! That was one of the coolest bits..... peace out from TX.
Wonderful video, beautifully narrated. Ime in Australia and my late father and I saw and rode the Scotsman , I still remember my father’s reaction his smile from ear to ear. How lucky we were to have that experience. I do hope it is looked after well now that’s it’s finally at rest in preservation. I will never forget the unique beat of its 3 cylinders as long as I live.
just Great..
I’m an American Blackadder fan and I’m pretty sure the great Tony Robinson is narrating this.
@officialbritishtaxpayer5609
2 ай бұрын
Yes indeed it is he. History is his passion and I’ve met several people in my career who have met and worked with him: all of them tell me he is every bit as kind and pleasant as he appears on screen.
Der berühmteste Dampfzug der Welt ist ja wohl der Orient Express, gefolgt vom Train Bleu und dem Rheingold!!
@andrewyoung749
3 ай бұрын
hardly anyone knows the rhinegold who isnt interested in trains. next you'll b saying bavarian s3/6 locos are more fmous than a4s. and in 2024 i suspect most people would associate the blue train with either the restaurant at paris lyon (without making the connection therein) or the sar train...
Well done, lads.
LNER Class A3 4472 Flying Scotsman Specifications Driver dia. 80 in (2,032 mm) diameter Length 70 ft (21.34 m) Height 13 ft (3.96 m) Loco weight 96.25 long tons (97.79 t; 107.80 short tons) Wheels: 4-6-2 Cylinders: 3 - 20in (508mm) diameter, 26in (600mm) stroke Power: (app) 1500kW Tractive effort as A3: 147kN Thank you for the video, She Has a Story!
Fantastic video! If only it could’ve been less expensive to work and maintain.
Magnifiek ❤❤❤❤❤
Well Done!!!!!
Đầu máy xe lửa hơi nước ra đời đã hàng trăm năm. Thật ngưỡng mộ!
Very nice documentary.I think, I saw the Flying Scotsman in a Cataloque from Märklin? Anywhere , a nice Story.
Gìn giữ được đầu máy hơi nước, đường sắt cổ ....Thật tuyệt vời!
The issue of repeated repairs and renovations often raises the question raised herein in closing...just what of the original is actually left? For those of us caretaking of historical machines, whether cars, trains or airplanes, the concept of originality constantly is raised. The answer for me is that these were machines intended to be run and maintained and only in their continued use can you truly claim to be keeping history alive. As such, repairs and maintenance completed to keep them going is keeping it original to its purpose.
@johnbarrance4926
13 күн бұрын
The rear two thirds of the frames are original and that’s about it. No steam locomotive is original after its first overhaul a spoilers and other parts are swapped
Đầu máy hơi nước, tuổi đời cản trăm năm vẫn hoạt động. Thật tuyệt vời!
Gordon maybe the famous express engine on sodor, but his brother(the Flying Scotsman) is on another level. Jokes aside, the flying Scotsman is definitely a majestic looking engine in history.
GWR man here, not saying a word!!!
@PercyPruneMHDOIFandBars
3 ай бұрын
Not even that the first 100mph loco was GWR?
@12crepello
3 ай бұрын
@@PercyPruneMHDOIFandBars It was Indeed!
I can remember that friend of mine , that when this locko was in Australia, one these loco was in Australia spent it to the UK that was bout fifteen years ago Put on ship back to England.
So the UK is the pioneer in the development of locomotive; in 1964 ( a year of Tokyo Olympic), Japan launched " Shinkansen " or so called a bullet train running from Tokyo to Osaka w/ a distance of a little less than 500km in the record time ( approx. 2 & 1/2 hrs ) at that time. Then about 20 yrs later French established their bullet train from Paris to London ( French engineers came to Japan & asked a lot of questions to Japanese engineers according to the Japanese Shinkansen documentary ). Now Chinese has advanced in the field of train. Enjoyed, admired, & appreciated to the full. (02/06/24)
@vernongoodey5096
3 ай бұрын
We don’t build locomotives any more as there is no profit in it. Pioneering means the beginning 1806 Richard Trevithick first steam locomotive, George Stephensons Works Newcastle supplied Germany, France, USA, Japan, China with their first steam locomotive. You could say that a British invention lost us the Empire because it was only after the USA completed the Trans Continental Railroad and Russia built the Trans Siberian Railway that they became the Superpowers of the world! China was actually a late starter in Railways
@12crepello
3 ай бұрын
And now we're building our own high speed railway.............oh, hang on!!
Do you mean 'train', or 'locomotive? Judging by the picture (I sure ain't going to watch the vid!) you actually mean 'locomotive'.
@AlfieDoug
3 ай бұрын
@gzk6nk Realy ? How childish.
@gzk6nk
3 ай бұрын
@@AlfieDoug You really are a silly billy, aren't you?
@edwardlloyd2430
3 ай бұрын
Correct, only once carraiges are coupled to the locomotive does it become a train.
The "Flying Scotsman" was a rail service that began in 1862 but was first given that name in 1924. It was a steam train until 1962 when steam haulage was replaced by class 55 "Deltic" diesel locomotives. However, I presume that you are referring to the North Eastern Railway (later LNER) steam locomotive named "Flying Scotsman" - that's a locomotive, not a train.
Pity the Evening Star 92220 isn't running anymore, I built its Airfix kit many years ago
Yea,, me being a 40 year Master Auto tech,, & retiring around 7 years ago,, I see these latest Gens. now,, that don't have a frigg'n clue with working on stuff,, regadless what it is.... We never had computers or ''stupid phones'',, but could shure sharpen a pencil ''real good'',, & also dial a rotary phone without even looking @ it !!😉 Pretty much every kid back then,, knew how to use 'Pop's'' tools in his tool box,, even the Girls . 🙂 We also learned ''a lot'' of skills from building models,, which I really think also helped me in later years,, as a career Mechanic ect.. My 2 cents,, Ian, from the USA
I think GWR's 4900 Class 5972 Olton Hall may have a shout for the title as well. Its amazing how many people know the locomotive that drags the Hogwarts Express.
"Flying Scotsman" is her name... She is not "THE Flying Scotsman", which words represent a train (of passenger coaches) carrying that name.
Da war der Rheingold schon 6 Jahre unterwegs und bestimmt berühmter als dieser Zug. Die Loks des rheingold vielleicht nicht, aber der Zug an sich eben und hier wird immer von einem Zug geredet.
Locomotiva a vapor voltará!
Flying Scotsman departed London 30 minutes before Concorde departing London Heathrow every day !!
Perhaps the may famous train in the Anglosphere?
I'd prefer a journey from London to Edinburgh as a passenger on a Steam Locomotive over the same journey in a Tesla. I don't even want the choice, I want these locomotives to be the obvious choice for inter-city travel. I want them back in service.
i was at sydney nsw with the scotsman about to leave, drain cocks opened and every thing disappeared in a cloud of steam, when it cleared the loco had disappeared without a trace.
Flying Scotsman THE LEGEND.
@asullivan4047
3 ай бұрын
Having an interest in steam locomotives. Viewing this presentation rekindled my interest once again -!!!😉.
@gzk6nk
3 ай бұрын
'THE MONEYPIT!'
The early days of of high speed railway service, Actually maybe it goes back further than 1934
очень интересный фильм, насыщеная и сложная биография паровоза,
"but my glucose is low..." 😅
Iconic locomotive especially in LNER livery not BR livery ..👍🏻
ЧТО ЗА МУЗЫКА ЗВУЧИТ В РОЛИКЕ? СПАССИБО.❤.
Muy buen canal ....lo malo 😡 no hay audio en español
Pedant alert! "Flying Scotsman" is possibly the most famous steam LOCOMOTIVE but is not a steam Train. "The flying Scotsman" train was originally pulled by this locomotive or others of its class but went on through A4s and into the diesel era. This account mentions that the flying Scotsman had to be rebuilt to a higher boiler pressure and longer valve travels but doesn't mention this was only after the class had been whipped by the GWR Pendennis Castle in the locomotive exchanges. Sir Nigel Presley was a great enough man to acknowledge his mistakes and immediately set about upgrading the A1s to A3's. However no credit is given to G K Churchward of the GWR who establish these principles. Also an overseas reader would be surprised to learn that there are many other large great locomotives pulling special trains and clocking up impressive mileages on Britain's railways - although it may be the oldest express locomotive still going.
The Gresley Mallard was the fastest steam train at 128 MPH 1936.
🤩
29:56 That is incorrect. Flying Scotsman's first actual major USA stop is at Hartford, Connecticut. Penn Station in NJ was the second stop.
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
This Locomotive is in my view , The Greatest train, That was ever built !!
What should of been a most enjoyable watch, Wasn't, due to the background music being far too loud,,sorry had to turn off.
4-6-2の綺麗な均整の取れた個体ですね、標準規格なら100マイル出ても不思議ではないですが、日本ならC57辺りがこの個体に相当しますかね。
4472 is NOT a train, it is a locomotive. A train is what it is attached behind it.
So nice to see.........................................
It's a locomotive.
The one guy that said well things dont always fit the way you think they will. He was probably the reason it took an extra 750 thousand pounds..😮
Ascoltare la musica di "Pacific 231" di Arthur Honegger.
You need to differentiate between the Flying Scotsman train, and the Flying Scotsman engine. They are poles apart. The Train began running in 1862 between London and Edinburgh. The Engine was built in 1923, and did often haul the train of the same name, but they are not the same thing. So 4472 may be the most famous engine in the world but it is not a train. e world
Most second famous, Big Boy in USA currently on first place🤠
I gave up at 2:35 as I can't stand the stupid music behing the narration. Tony Robinson does a good job as usual but I find it difficult to hear him clearly.
Damned advertisment 08:17
Im now living in Germany. Nobody has ever heard of 4472. Strange that.
@alexsidoroff4084
2 ай бұрын
@DaiElsan, have they ever heard about UP Big Boy?
I should point out that the Flying Scotsman is a locomotive: it is not a train.
フライングスコッツマンと言えばゴードンのモデルになったともいわれて後に兄弟としてトーマスにも登場した伝説の機関車。
Strictly, a train is a locomotive plus its load not the locomotive on its own.
My Daughter fired on the Scotsman in 2023 up in Scotland.
Can someone stop the Americans commenting about the big boy locomotive like I know that they like being patriotic but is the bigboy 100 years old and still running at 75 mph?
hey shaniqua music is too loud you NEED to correct that crap
Beautiful train but most famous? I'd say if you asked folks outside Britain : Was he a famous runner/sailor/boat/plane?
🇬🇧STEAM❤
A "Orient Express" ?
39 steps
The America🎉n tour succeeded despite the good doctor, pettyfogging politicions and terrorism.
Gordon is sad
How much of the locomotive that ran at 100mph is still left?
@12crepello
3 ай бұрын
A few of the frames perhaps?
@SethyReach
3 ай бұрын
We have the side rods the cab the tender the the whistle the smoke box and the nameplate
@johnmurray8428
2 ай бұрын
@@SethyReach I live in Canada, I was told that Pegler sold off the name plates in the US to stave off the ultimate financial disaster.
Is the grandad that is talking here still alive or not this is a video from a long time ago😢😢
@PercyPruneMHDOIFandBars
3 ай бұрын
The video is not that old, 100yrs from 1923 is 2023. She celebrated her centenary just last year!