Thanks for your comment, Keith was a friendly guy, back in 1979 when I knew him, he used to pop back in to Stage School to see our agent, who was the singer Phil Colins Mum, used to see him quite often too, fun times.
Ever since I knew of this Wonderful Historic Siite, I have always wanted to visit the place ... 9.am on Wednesday July 19th 2023 ... I am like a kid on Christmas Eve !
a great film. I saw a video which showed a railway engineer from my son's college...unfortunately, that video is no longer up. I really don't know why...it showed how the Chinese built the line to Lhasa in Tibet...a super video. thanks, c.maki
at the end of the film, the credits it show MCMLXXXI 1981, which means that Keith Chegwin was about 24 years old at the time.tell me if I am wrong. geat video.
Well this documentary just randomly popped into my head because we watched it at school and I grew up near the Sankey viaduct. Lo and behold it’s on TH-cam 😂
I worked under the arch running trains round, mainly coal trains coming up from bootle then sent off to fiddlers ferry power station. Great video 😊 RIP kieth 😢
Cheggers was very lucky having access to the historical Moorish Arch site & Wapping Tunnel I'd love to get in there! What a great chappie he was and this shows he could do educational as well !
Access to moorish arch is very easy. Halfway down tunnel road there is a yellow metal door, simply climb over it and voila! You are straight away in moorish arch! And it is such an amazing place to explore. I recently walked the crown street tunneland then the Wapping one. Both are absolutely mind-blowing and oozing history. I highly recommend a trip
Round here we have the Lion works, they built the Lion that went to the US. The works had the record as the oldest factory in continuous use. It's now my local nhs health centre.
Liverpool Road, Manchester was not the first ever terminal station. That goes to Crown St, Liverpool. Why? Because when trains first ran on the 1st day, they started from the Liverpool end. Liverpool Road is the oldest terminal station still in existence. But the Crown St station was of a more advanced design which others followed, using a large train shed.
The oldest working steam train built 1838, that is a quarter of a century younger than the oldest surviving steam train, puffing Billy, built for Wylam Colliery near Newcastle-upon-Tyne. The second oldest survivor is its sister, the Wylam Dilly.
i heard he lived on sheild rd, in the 70's, might be wrong though, in the the old Tudor looking place. Then he moved to Newbury, where i seen him lots on the train and in town over the yrs, along with his wife maggie and his sister janice, all always said hello or chatted.
I remember whatching this in 1986 (I was 21 then) I found it to be very interesting (coming from/living in Liverpool) Even though I knew our history, it was good to see it on National T.V. Just towards the end of the programme when sincronised time was mentioned and the formulation The FOOTBALL League thus travling "working class spectaters" I hated it when Kieth used the word "soccer" ... instead of FOOTBALL I suppose this programme could have been taylored for North America.
@@martinbitter4162 Just to confirm ... our world FOOTBALL governing body "F.I.F.A." meaning the Federation International FOOTBALL Association as the World Name for The Game is FOOTBALL ... Fact!.
Where was the first location at 00:15 anybody know!? Looks ooop north by the style of the Bridge !! And had been closed a few years already ! So what double track mainline closed a few years before 1986 ? The Woodhead route ? March - Spalding ? Any others ?
...you need some sky blue with that claret, then maybe you will cheer up and be a little less morose as you jocks tend to be. my chegg comment was a very accurate observation btw.
Two weeks after I made this twerpish comment, poor Cheggers sadly died, RIP. But, bizarrely my next comment was probably addressed to a Hearts FC fan, his team play in claret shirts... whose own comment seems to have been removed. Very odd as his comment was not all that abusive.. as I now try to recall, yes, very odd indeed.
Why did the 80's feel so much more pleasant than today.
To give an answer - in public - to that question would today probably be a punishable crime.
A blinkered stallion is often a calmer stallion.
@@ethyhayes Tatters hoss round here was blinkered in the 80's.
Because it was more pleasant. Life was harder but there was still a sense of community
@Aussie Pom For ordinary people things improved a lot in the 80's. Small minority rioted. For most life was good.
Thanks so much - keith is astonishingly professional.......
Really good documentary better than most things done on MSM today.
Rip Keith, what a legend.
Thanks for your comment, Keith was a friendly guy, back in 1979 when I knew him, he used to pop back in to Stage School to see our agent, who was the singer Phil Colins Mum, used to see him quite often too, fun times.
@@Cortinaman63 wow, thanks for the reply.
Very thorough, very informative - and very interesting!
7:13 that scene in a recent visitor video on YT shows those steps and area overgrown.
Great documentary and especially the parts in the Liverpool cutting where the Moorish Arch was.
RIP Keith.
That answers my question above !!
What a great presenter he was,first time I’ve seen this
Excellent communicator we do miss him RIP Keith. Legend
Ever since I knew of this Wonderful Historic Siite, I have always wanted to visit the place ... 9.am on Wednesday July 19th 2023 ... I am like a kid on Christmas Eve !
a great film. I saw a video which showed a railway engineer from my son's college...unfortunately, that video is no longer up. I really don't know why...it showed how the Chinese built the line to Lhasa in Tibet...a super video. thanks, c.maki
Good to see Cheggers again - RIP.
According to the copyright this is 1981 not 1986. I thought Keith Chegwin looked a bit young!
at the end of the film, the credits it show MCMLXXXI 1981, which means that Keith Chegwin was about 24 years old at the time.tell me if I am wrong.
geat video.
Well this documentary just randomly popped into my head because we watched it at school and I grew up near the Sankey viaduct. Lo and behold it’s on TH-cam 😂
I worked under the arch running trains round, mainly coal trains coming up from bootle then sent off to fiddlers ferry power station. Great video 😊 RIP kieth 😢
This is great thanks!
Cheggers was very lucky having access to the historical Moorish Arch site & Wapping Tunnel I'd love to get in there! What a great chappie he was and this shows he could do educational as well !
Access to moorish arch is very easy. Halfway down tunnel road there is a yellow metal door, simply climb over it and voila! You are straight away in moorish arch! And it is such an amazing place to explore. I recently walked the crown street tunneland then the Wapping one. Both are absolutely mind-blowing and oozing history. I highly recommend a trip
That loco is the lion and my grandfather worked on it cheggers was well lucky to see that steam it no longer runs
Round here we have the Lion works, they built the Lion that went to the US. The works had the record as the oldest factory in continuous use. It's now my local nhs health centre.
@@flybobbie1449 that's so sad its no longer in use
Liverpool Road, Manchester was not the first ever terminal station. That goes to Crown St, Liverpool. Why? Because when trains first ran on the 1st day, they started from the Liverpool end. Liverpool Road is the oldest terminal station still in existence. But the Crown St station was of a more advanced design which others followed, using a large train shed.
@MartinZero have you seen this. Great video from cheggers 🤟🏻🤟🏻
@13:53 - Can you spot anything about the clock that doesn't 'fit'? Out of place perhaps? Leave your answer if you know.
The oldest working steam train built 1838, that is a quarter of a century younger than the oldest surviving steam train, puffing Billy, built for Wylam Colliery near Newcastle-upon-Tyne. The second oldest survivor is its sister, the Wylam Dilly.
Fascinating.
Very good :)
i heard he lived on sheild rd, in the 70's, might be wrong though, in the the old Tudor looking place. Then he moved to Newbury, where i seen him lots on the train and in town over the yrs, along with his wife maggie and his sister janice, all always said hello or chatted.
I remember whatching this in 1986 (I was 21 then) I found it to be very interesting (coming from/living in Liverpool)
Even though I knew our history, it was good to see it on National T.V.
Just towards the end of the programme when sincronised time was mentioned and the formulation The FOOTBALL League thus travling "working class spectaters"
I hated it when Kieth used the word "soccer" ... instead of FOOTBALL I suppose this programme could have been taylored for North America.
Or even Ireland.
@@martinbitter4162 Just to confirm ... our world FOOTBALL governing body "F.I.F.A." meaning the Federation International FOOTBALL Association as the World Name for The Game is FOOTBALL ... Fact!.
Who else is here for a history lesson
The height of the viaducts were dictated by the necessity to keep gradients to a minimum, simply because the early locomotives weren't very powerful!
Why does the title say 1986, when the end credits show it was 1981?
It’s a shame there’s no sub titles:(
Chat moss and sankey viaduct are on our Patch (NWR Warrington depot )
Where was the first location at 00:15 anybody know!? Looks ooop north by the style of the Bridge !! And had been closed a few years already ! So what double track mainline closed a few years before 1986 ? The Woodhead route ? March - Spalding ? Any others ?
108 DMU nice!
1981 not 1986.
Ironically - nowadays trains are making a big comeback
🍺🍺🍺🍺 rip
A man has put a recent visit to the Moorish Arch up on youtube,its a lot more overgrown pure neglect and a national disgrace.
Yes it was Martin Zero
That’s not chisel marks, that’s scratch for render. No way was these cuts built by hand.
I met Cheggers in the 1980s
I met Noel Edmonds around 1979 or 1980, there's the Swap Shop connection!
KEITH WAS A GENUINE FELLA,SO ANYONE SAYING SHIT ABOUT HIM DONT KNOW FUCK ALL>
D8 anyone?
kachigga
1981.
programmes for schools - what happened to those....
Sat morn - open university bbc2
1981, get it right.
ls Cheggers still alive !!?
No he died in 2017
Back when Cheggars would have happily swapped his car keys for a bottle of White Lightning.
karma will be bad on you what a nasty remark disgraceful
#Misto shame on you for a cheap remark.
Prick
The fat Scouser .l liked him
...Cheggers; a girly looking posh Scouser with a bouffant hairstyle !.
...you need some sky blue with that claret, then maybe you will cheer up and be a little less morose as you jocks tend to be. my chegg comment was a very accurate observation btw.
and a tallent for presenting
Two weeks after I made this twerpish comment, poor Cheggers sadly died, RIP.
But, bizarrely my next comment was probably addressed to a Hearts FC fan, his team play in claret shirts...
whose own comment seems to have been removed. Very odd as his comment was not all that abusive..
as I now try to recall, yes, very odd indeed.