The following videotapes are now available. All prices include shipping and handling.    
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The Katy Railroad (this page)

Farmall

Bridges

Other Videos

   
"The Katy Flyer"
3 Volume Set
Individual Videos are listed below:
$65
"Katy-Gateway to the Southwest"
  $28
120 Min  Occasionally, a railroad video will come along that truly qualifies as educational, and this Katy program is one. This bargain tape is a must for Katy fans.  A unique documentary filled with historic, never before seen film, photos and video of an American classic - the Missouri Kansas & Texas Railroad. Featured: the last trip of the Katy Flyer, from Parsons, KS to MacAllister, Texas; a ride in the cab from the Franklin Yards, Franklin, Missouri to St. Louis; an inspection tour of the Katy 311 (the only surviving Katy steam locomotive), with Conductor J.B. Garrett; a close-up look at the old Boonville Katy Bridge with its operator, C.D. Gregory ushering the last Katy freight across the Missouri River. And, much, much more!   
   
"Katy Remembered" 
  $28
110 Min A sequel, this video continues to show the Farmall and IH icons as they perform the jobs they were designed to do, in the fields and on the farms. From the wheat lands of Kansas to the cotton fields in Missouri's Boot-heel, this action packed video captures the sights and sounds of our golden IH past.  This video is a time-line of IH history, from horse-drawn mowers to state of the art computerized cotton pickers. Lammers interviews owners about what it's like using these antique machines and they share their stories. Makes a great gift - for oldsters and youngsters, alike.   
   
"A Katy Disaster-50 Years After"
  $28
85 Min   If you're a Katy fan, you'll lik'em·I plan to view [the tape] again just to make sure I didn't miss anything.   Don Banwart, Editor, Katy Flyer It was 1941, just ten days after Pearl Harbor, when two Katy trains, each with two locomotives, rushed head on into one another at Jefferson City, the capital of Missouri. Nationally renowned railroad author and historian Raymond B. George interviews the last surviving crewmen about that horrible day. Historic photos and video footage punctuate this one of a kind interview as the survivors tell of both the heroic and the humorous happenings at the crash site. This program pursues the investigation and reveals, for the first time, the four fatal words left out of a telegrapher's train order that resulted in the collision.            CONTINUE  


 
 
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this page was created on April 17, 1999 and last updated on May 11, 1999 

Copyright 1999 Lammers Video Productions