Top 10 Hobo Signs: Decoding Secret Symbols from the Great Depression!

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WayPoint Survival

WayPoint Survival

19 күн бұрын

Discover the fascinating world of hobo signs in our latest video, "Top 10 Hobo Signs!" Learn how these secret symbols guided hobos to find food, shelter, work, and safe havens during the 1930s and the Great Depression Era. Uncover the hidden messages that helped countless travelers navigate the hardships of their time and avoid potential dangers.
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@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 17 күн бұрын
Thanks so much for watching! Please leave me a thumbs up and a comment in the section below. Make sure and check out our website at www.waypointsurvival.com where you can sign up for classes and check out the required gear list!
@dyslectische
@dyslectische 17 күн бұрын
I love the show you make Try to get Discovery Channel on your side. So you can make a show on tv .
@TheWanderingFinnegan
@TheWanderingFinnegan 17 күн бұрын
Many years ago, decades, I read that "HoBo" was short for "Homeward Bound". Any truth to that?
@user-by8dr4it8w
@user-by8dr4it8w 17 күн бұрын
As many farmers lost their property due to the Civil War, there was nothing left to do but go to surviving farms and seek work. The most important tool at the time was a hoe which they carried with them. So these drifters became know as hoe boys. When a farmer needed their fields hoed those were the people to employ. As they walked by country roads the farmers would call out " Hobo " a slang term for hoe boys when they needed them. The drifters also worked during Reconstruction to repair the railroads that were destroyed. So riding freights also meant they could seek a steadier job working as section crews on the tracks. So " hobos " riding the freight trains became common.
@user-by8dr4it8w
@user-by8dr4it8w 17 күн бұрын
50 of 74 years a hobo. In my early days the old timers would still use the symbols now and then. In Portland OR in the Burnside area was a cafe where you could work for a meal of chili beans over rice. It has greatly changed, if it still exists at all now. It was started by some female hobos. It was said one was the famous "Boxcar Bertha" of which a Hollywood styled semi true movie was made. The place was called Sisters of the Road Cafe. It used the traditional symbol of a camp for females hobos only A circle with 3 Xs in it.
@GuantanamoBayBarbie3
@GuantanamoBayBarbie3 17 күн бұрын
​@DL_UK I saw a pic of the recent auroras (I can't recall if was one I took, or somebody else's) that looked like it had Hebrew script at the bottom. One(?) of the letters reminded me of that. I so wish I could read and speak Hebrew. After the rapture, maybe? ❤️✝️❤🙏🏼
@badwrench13
@badwrench13 17 күн бұрын
What I have always heard was: A hobo moves around looking for work. A tramp moves around avoiding work. A bum neither moves nor works.
@Boony_34C
@Boony_34C 16 күн бұрын
Yep... Thats it exactly 👍
@AlecSwiftHikes
@AlecSwiftHikes 15 күн бұрын
As utah Phillips said, A hobo works, and wanders. A tramp dreams, and wanders. A bum drinks, and wanders.
@walkertongdee
@walkertongdee 15 күн бұрын
The bulls called them all RR bums
@jedjones9047
@jedjones9047 14 күн бұрын
​@@AlecSwiftHikes which one are you 😅
@arcanondrum6543
@arcanondrum6543 14 күн бұрын
Hmm, not much empathy in this thread. Without health care, I wonder how many of the "bums" were healthy. Probably few knew. It is unwise to show weakness if you are homeless.
@davidrounds3245
@davidrounds3245 15 күн бұрын
My grandmother had a picnic table, and a sink in the backyard so you could wash up. She always had a giant pot of soup/stew going that was refilled from the garden and the leftovers from dinner each night. Anybody who was hungry was welcomed at grandmas backyard table. My dad said the hobos had her house marked in someway because they always stopped to eat. It was during the great depression and many people needed a hand.
@jesusmartinez1358
@jesusmartinez1358 12 күн бұрын
who needs Fort Knox?: your grandparents are the real treasure of our nation❤❤❤❤😊😊😊
@dimitar297
@dimitar297 12 күн бұрын
I thought homo signs were like high voice and lots of gesturing.
@gavinvalentino6002
@gavinvalentino6002 10 күн бұрын
...and handjobs. Grams was a freak.
@NWIHomestead
@NWIHomestead 8 сағат бұрын
Bless your family for being so kind. I hope to do the same in the coming times.
@fjb4932
@fjb4932 17 күн бұрын
My Father grew up on Rosedale, in Kansas City, next to Turkey Ck. and the railroad tracks. Said the side of their fence facing the tracks had symbols on it. They had a horse, a milk cow and a mess of chickens. During the Great Depression hobos would always be stopping in and my GrandMother would put them to work ( mostly splittin' firewood ) to one, see if they'd work (not a bum) and two, allow the man to retain his pride and dignity by working for a meal, not accepting a handout. Being from 🇮🇪 Ireland she knew how important pride was. After they'd worked for awhile she'd bring them out a bowl of soup as well as a sandwich, cut in half and wrapped in newspaper, so they could save half for the next day. Far as i know, they Never had even a chicken go missing. A different time . . .
@tigerguitara
@tigerguitara 15 күн бұрын
Your grandmother is a wonderful person
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Absolutely. People could be more trustworthy back then.
@lynnodonnell4764
@lynnodonnell4764 10 күн бұрын
Incredible story!
@johnblyth9787
@johnblyth9787 16 күн бұрын
My mother went to live with her gradmother during the great depresion. A man knocked and asked if he could do any work for a meal. He split some fire wood. He was given some sandwiches. Mum was then sent to give him sandwiches to take with him. He thanked my mum and said he had not eaten in 3 days, and he was trying to get money to send to his wife and children. Also my grandfather said in the great depresion there was plenty of food and goods, but no money. He also said another depression would come with money but nothing to buy. How true this was. During covid i recieved double unemployment but shelves at supermarkets were empty. No idea how my grandfather could predict this 90 years before it happened.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 16 күн бұрын
Interesting! Thanks for watching sharing!
@blademan175
@blademan175 17 күн бұрын
During the depression my dear sweet grandma set a pie on the windowsill to cool. It disappeared. She got the train schedule and every time a train came to town she would bake extra pies and leave them on the sill to cool. I wonder what symbol was used for her? Thanks James, interesting stuff!
@colleenuchiyama4916
@colleenuchiyama4916 14 күн бұрын
What a generous woman. Hobos had to work for my grandparents for food. Nothing hard, but they had to pull their own weight.
@TheDowntownHermit-xj6rq
@TheDowntownHermit-xj6rq 14 күн бұрын
A smiling cat was used to mean a kind hearted woman.
@1wheeldrive751
@1wheeldrive751 14 күн бұрын
π
@simpletruth9977
@simpletruth9977 13 күн бұрын
​@@1wheeldrive751 😂
@1wheeldrive751
@1wheeldrive751 13 күн бұрын
@@simpletruth9977 only guy that gets it. Sad.
@JugglesGrenades
@JugglesGrenades 17 күн бұрын
The railroad tracks were behind the barn, a short walk through the woods. Men would approach the house, looking for work and grandma would assign chores. Mom said it wasn't uncommon to have two or three strangers join them for supper. After they ate, they would pile straw in one of the empty stalls. Next morning... they would be gone.
@Squirrel200
@Squirrel200 17 күн бұрын
From this old person, thank you for keeping some of the old ways alive. God bless you
@BuddyLee23
@BuddyLee23 14 күн бұрын
Holy smokes! This guy is a 200 y/o squirrel!
@donhippy
@donhippy 16 күн бұрын
My dairy has tracks bordering property and been passed down 100 years. There is several symbols changed over the years I noticed. I remember as a kid coming out to the barn and it was common to find someone sleeping in the hay barn. Or filling their jug with milk . Some would want work others just needed out of the rain. Now days it less and less any want to work and just steal. All the people I remember growing up don't come around anymore. Sad but good memories.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 16 күн бұрын
Yes, people used to regard proper character as important.
@nedporkus8602
@nedporkus8602 14 күн бұрын
About twenty years ago I lived for a time in an older house in Tempe Arizona that was a block away from the railroad tracks. Shortly after moving in I noticed that discreetly penciled on the door frame of the front door were three circles in a row, each with an x inside. As it happened I was studying at the ASU campus nearby, and several weeks before had just read an article about hobo symbols as part of my graduate studies. It was both surprising and exciting to discover such a real world example of what had previously seemed a rather abstract topic. The markings of course meant that the previous resident of that house had been a kind person, a soft touch, someone good for a handout. Ever since then I have looked for such markings when I go someplace new.
@brentwalters8921
@brentwalters8921 16 күн бұрын
Dad owned a apple orchard up in Washington from the 60's till his death in 2022, learned the difference between Hobo's, Tramps & bums (you skipped over Winos). When I was 13 IIRC, we had a Hobo picking apples for us, real nice guy. I noticed some cravings on the outside of the pickers cabins, I asked Dad about it, he told me to ask the guy who did it (Hobo). So I did. Basically he was giving us a 5-star review. We got a Work For Food (we'd give our workers stuff out of the garden, some canned goods (chili, beans, etc) bread, small jar of PB, jam, eggs when they showed up, not uncommon they hadn't eaten in days. Then a Kind/Good Men. Work Available. Good Water. And Good/Safe Campsite. I even helped him pack up his roll when he left at the end of harvest. And this was around 1977, he was 73-74, but in good health, said it was his last trip that far north. Dad had a good idea what those marks were, but wanted me to learn from a real Hobo.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 16 күн бұрын
That's very cool. I generally just consider winos to be the same as bums. Thanks for watching!
@brentwalters8921
@brentwalters8921 16 күн бұрын
@@WayPointSurvival True on the Wino = Bum, but unfortunately they didn't have much of any say about it. Dad had a story about a Wino (early 60's before I was born), he needed pickers and only could find 3 Winos, after getting them a little dried out and they started working, he noticed one of them was a very intelligent man, even calling him the smartest person he'd ever met. Found out he had been a English Lit professor at a big College/University. His family were teetotalers, but he went to a faculty party, was given a cocktail, in no time drunk himself out of a job.
@patriciajrs46
@patriciajrs46 10 күн бұрын
Great story. Thanks for sharing.
@patriciajrs46
@patriciajrs46 10 күн бұрын
​@@brentwalters8921Yikes. That wasn't a great way to end up.
@Jaden48108
@Jaden48108 16 күн бұрын
I think you're the only one on YT doing hobo history. As a historian with a degree in American history all of this is interesting. To some it might represent minutia but to me, who likes to delve deep into the roots of American history, it's a pearl of information. Thanks for doing this.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 16 күн бұрын
You're very welcome!
@garykelly-fx3zi
@garykelly-fx3zi 14 күн бұрын
I am in my eighty's. My dad rode the rails all over the West from 1918 until 1928. He had a million stories to tell. Interesting that he never referred to himself as a hobo. He always used the word 'bum'. He always used the phrases 'On the bum', "Go Bum again', or just plain old 'bumming' He worked many jobs along the so 'bums' do work.
@raydunn2582
@raydunn2582 13 күн бұрын
This is the sort of life detail that is normally lost to history. More's the pity. Our own day-to day lives are enriched by such minutiae. Nobody under 60 is likely to remember home delivery of milk, bread, block ice or coal by horse-drawn buggies. Today's children will never know what it is to be sucking on a fist-sized chunk of ice from the back of the iceman's wagon on a hot summer day. Would any kid today know how to work a rotary telephone?
@HoboRoadrunner
@HoboRoadrunner 4 күн бұрын
Well if James will allow me to do this , I'm the one he mentioned in the beginning and do daily or weekly videos. I ride , I walk and I thumb it and bout as traditional as tradition gets 😂
@Jaden48108
@Jaden48108 4 күн бұрын
@@HoboRoadrunner When I was in my early 20s I hitchhiked across America 2 1/2 times, while working my way across the nation, including Alaska (worked on a fishing boat). The one thing I wasn't good at was riding the rails. Basically, I sucked at it. The thing that changed my mindset was how lonely it got on the road, not to mention exposure to the elements. Especially during tornado season where I walked into an Oklahoma town before three tornadoes blew up all around the town. Has a way of changing one's mind, that hmmm, maybe I should rethink this. Eventually I went back to school and got a degree in History, joined the Air Force, completed medical school and never looked back despite those nostalgic times.
@rossrossier935
@rossrossier935 17 күн бұрын
Hobo was a great name to hear on your 2way radio especially if we're a downed air man during the Vietnam war, those men were life savers !!!
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 17 күн бұрын
Very interesting! Was it code?
@rossrossier935
@rossrossier935 17 күн бұрын
It was the name given to the Skyraider Pilots who flew rescue missions in N/S Vietnam to support Jolly Greens helicopters to pick up Air men!!!
@GuantanamoBayBarbie3
@GuantanamoBayBarbie3 17 күн бұрын
​@@rossrossier935It might be 50 years late, but welcome home! Thank you for your service and your many sacrifices.
@rossrossier935
@rossrossier935 16 күн бұрын
Hi GB Barbie3 although I never served in àrmed service, I had 2 brothers that served in Vietnam and made it home ok,thanx!!!​@@GuantanamoBayBarbie3
@denniscarroll3164
@denniscarroll3164 15 күн бұрын
​@@rossrossier935 God bless you! 🇺🇸🇺🇸🙏🤝
@williamjarvis3473
@williamjarvis3473 16 күн бұрын
My grandpa showed me a bunch of the signs he knew from his hobo days around 1910 to 1915. It was the highlight of my day to hear him and an old black man called "spitully" talk about the days gone by and the different way the black and white "jungle" was organized. Spitully said he still never trusted white folk, even kids as they could be the worst. I'd set on the riverbank while they fished for hours and listen. Thank you for jogging this old papaw's memory
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 16 күн бұрын
That's awesome! I would love to hear some of those stories!
@cliffordbowman6777
@cliffordbowman6777 12 күн бұрын
Experienced same thing in reverse. Don’t blame him for mistrust, whites are not allowed to be mistrustful
@jesusmartinez1358
@jesusmartinez1358 12 күн бұрын
blessed Grandpa and bless Mr. Spitully , may they wear Heaven's halos and happily hobo together Around Heaven.yes in God's name I pray✝️🛐😊😊😊
@patriciajrs46
@patriciajrs46 10 күн бұрын
Very cool.
@user-rn1hr8em3u
@user-rn1hr8em3u 15 күн бұрын
I'm an old man and grew up near the tracks and had railroad workers in the family. As a boy I remember the bo's as we called them and the old railroad pensioners , they taught me many things that helped me survive to this day. Thank you so much for bringing back these memories. My Grandfather road the rails during the Depression.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
That's so cool! I would love to have a conversation with you about what you learned!
@user-rn1hr8em3u
@user-rn1hr8em3u 15 күн бұрын
@@WayPointSurvival More than happy to talk to you about these things ask and I will be happy to answer.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
@user-rn1hr8em3u If you contact me through my website, we can connect better than here. www.waypointsurvival.com
@dragonslayer7587
@dragonslayer7587 17 күн бұрын
My Irish immigrant Grandad came to the US at age 12 alone during the late 1800's. His trip over as a stowaway is a story in itself... However, he got a job as a break man, swinging a red kerosene lantern from the caboose, to let the engineer know everyone, or everything was off, and they could leave. His train went from NYC to Buffalo NY. Catching Hobos & bums was part of his job... He told stories about the difference between bums and hobos. I think coming from a poor Irish family, and going thru a lot to get to America, made him more sympathetic to their plight. He got to know a few guys, and would ensure they were fed, and safe for the 30+ hour train ride. He gave them his food, and allowed them to ride inside the caboose with him during winter. He was a kind man, and worked hard on a farm on his days off. My Grandma would pack extra for them. This video about the signs they used is REALLY interesting! {I wonder if there were signs left on Grandads caboose}!
@susanpeters4608
@susanpeters4608 17 күн бұрын
There might be but .... often left on trees, bridges, fence posts etc things that were fixed local markers so as to assist the next traveler. Gypsy Moon was a Hobo whom I met after the song Gypsies, Tramps and Theives was released. She and Steam Train Murray came to see Reefer Charlie. All 3 of these Individuals had spent a couple of days in Britt Iowa evey year, they gifted Charlie a painting painted by a fellow Hobo who often sang so his speech impediment was not so obvious ( he also released country music). Born Charles Elmer Fox he published 2 Books ' Tales of an American Hobo' and 'Weeds and other Edibles'.
@GuantanamoBayBarbie3
@GuantanamoBayBarbie3 17 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing your story with us! It is often people who have suffered the most who care the most. They are often the most compassionate and empathetic regarding other people's needs and what they're going through. I wish I could read your grandfather's story of being a stowaway! I encourage you to begin writing, typing, or recording some of your family history stories. My mom died in 2020 at the age of 94. She had a journal of some of her memories from before my sisters and I were born. She never completed it, but we're thankful to have what is there. So many times I've wished I could ask her this or that about our family. She was the keeper of our family history. Please consider leaving your family a compilation of your memories. It's a priceless gift. ❤🎁❤
@jeanadamsick9854
@jeanadamsick9854 16 күн бұрын
YOUR STORY OF YOUR GRANDAD, WAS VERY INTERESTING. THANKS FOR SHARING IT!!!!!
@dragonslayer7587
@dragonslayer7587 16 күн бұрын
@@jeanadamsick9854 Thank you! He had quite a life!
@dragonslayer7587
@dragonslayer7587 16 күн бұрын
@@GuantanamoBayBarbie3 Thank you! My grandma "wrote a book", but it was about her childhood, and our family on her side. My grandpa's side was not mentioned much. I've written down what I remember from him, and my Mom {who is 90, lives with me, and has memory issues} remembers a lot more. Her memories are more about life during the depression. She knows how her dad was a stowaway, and got caught, then, was made to work off his fare. But she's the youngest, and my Aunt who just passed away this January, told me a lot more as I was growing up. Eventually, I will get all these tapes, notes {and the lantern I've still got}, and sit down and get it all together in one place! You are correct. Folks who've had to work hard, many times not seeing much reward immediately, are the kinder people. We could sure use more kindness now!
@colleenuchiyama4916
@colleenuchiyama4916 14 күн бұрын
My grandparents house backed up to the main train track in their small rural town. Up until WWII, they had a lot of hobos visiting them to do work for food. My grandma always had small jobs for them, cleaning downspouts, mowing their lawn, and she fed them really well. When a group of them would visit, she gave them a bigger job-move the outhouse, clean the gutters on the 2nd floor, prune the fruit trees. They would be given a proper farm dinner, and they always got any leftovers. However, when the ‘gypsies’ (sorry for the slur, I don’t know what else to call them) came, she licked up the house, drew the curtains, and locked my mom and uncle in a big wardrobe. Of course, my mom and uncle would sneak out, and my mom learned how to do tarot and read tea leaves from them. What a life, huh?
@tywebbgolfenthusiast8950
@tywebbgolfenthusiast8950 15 күн бұрын
The story goes that during the depression, my grandmother on my mom’s side had a hobo do some chores in exchange for feeding him. Afterwards she caught him leaving hobo signs on the sidewalk, and chewed him out and ran him off. They lived close to the railroad yards and I Guess she didn’t want an endless stream of vagabonds coming to get fed.
@nathanjohnson2329
@nathanjohnson2329 17 күн бұрын
We all love the hobo series please keep the knowledge and shows coming thank you!
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 17 күн бұрын
Will do!
@danfigueroa4124
@danfigueroa4124 17 күн бұрын
I never knew about the hobo cemeteries something that totally I took me by surprise on railroad property
@larryeddings3185
@larryeddings3185 17 күн бұрын
The Hobo series has been fascinating. A great uncle of mine was a hobo. I never knew very much about him.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Glad you are enjoying it!
@billpark8988
@billpark8988 17 күн бұрын
As a kid I remember seeing these symbols on our gate post. My grandmother could be counted on for a sandwich or two.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Excellent!
@sandradunn7547
@sandradunn7547 17 күн бұрын
I had two Great Grandfathers do a little hoboing way back in the day. One Great Grandfather did a little hoboing until he had an accident. He was ran over by one of the steel wheels of a rail car. They where able to reattach his leg which was shorter afterwards. The other Great Grandfather was so taken by the town of El Reno Oklahoma he named my Grandmother after the town with a slight spelling difference, Elrena.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Very interesting! Thanks for sharing the story!
@lonewolfgeoff
@lonewolfgeoff 17 күн бұрын
ive seen these type of symbols over here in the uk! usually in chalk (or sometimes marker!) on trees, walls and paths... more than likely not hobo markings but similar, only seen a few times in big cities and towns. (uk doesnt have hobo's as such to my knowledge!) usually they were near groups of working homeless folks (they have actual paid jobs but are homeless) usually nice folks too, very helpful 😊 the drunks and riff raff tend to avoid these places entirely. 😊 ive always liked this form of signalling... imagine the use in a shtf situation where a group of folks know the signs and meet together at a central point after travelling seperately (for security and safety reasons) the uses are so flexible. i know when i was in the cubs/scouts we had to learn what i'd call "ground signalling" where you would leave signs very similar to the hobo ones on the ground with whatever was nearby... wonder if they are linked? these vids are so interesting 😊 keep them coming 😁🎉🎉
@jasonadams6468
@jasonadams6468 17 күн бұрын
I had an uncle who rode the rails to the gold mines of Northern Ontario from the midwest. Crazy stories he had… One of the greatest movies depicting that time was Emperor of the North. Book read recommendation Ten Lost Years 1929-1939
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching and for the info!
@bluenetmarketing
@bluenetmarketing 16 күн бұрын
My grandmother was very familiar with some of these signs since she often was a source of food for hobo and poor travelers.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 16 күн бұрын
Excellent!
@jeffreysharp8526
@jeffreysharp8526 17 күн бұрын
Thank you for your excellent video. My grandfather worked for UP, living directly next to the tracks. My mother used to tell stories about the Hobos that she dealt with. One sign they used, was an empty pack of Lucky Strike cigarettes which, always seemed to be on the pile of railroad ties. It signified to others that Grandma would give them a bowl of soup. In the Depression, that was a big deal. Thanks again for the video.
@outdoorlife5396
@outdoorlife5396 17 күн бұрын
When I was a child playing on the RR tracks, I used to see these symbols and wonder what they meant. It was kind of like seeing Indian sign language in a cave, with a little imagination. Thanks for the info. I helped out a homeless man a while back. He was telling me about the life, how many thieves lived in the homeless shelter. I helped him out and when I see stuff like this I hope he found a place to stay and thrive.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Yes. It still is pretty rough out there these days.
@kruksog
@kruksog 14 күн бұрын
Boy, thieves in the homeless shelter. I've heard that before when I was in AA and there were the unfortunates who had to live in the local homeless shelter, and what they always had was only a backpack and if you left it unguarded for a moment, you'd come back to find it being rifled through, or worse, already pilfered. Sucks for people just doing their damnedest to get their life together and right.
@outdoorlife5396
@outdoorlife5396 14 күн бұрын
@@kruksog According to this guy it was true. I gave him fast food, offered other things, he was concerned about what would happen to them. He was washing his clothes in a sink. I was thinking how blessed my family is. We were talking about getting some type of tiny home village started for homeless. I know it is being looked at, I hope it goes through.
@kruksog
@kruksog 13 күн бұрын
@@outdoorlife5396 yea Im agreeing if that's not clear. I've heard that a lot is what I'm saying.
@outdoorlife5396
@outdoorlife5396 13 күн бұрын
@@kruksog I didn't mean it ugly, sorry if that was the way it came off. I try to do as the Lord commands us. Sometimes good, sometimes not so good. I was pushing for a homeless shelter type tiny home it's like a we got skin in the game. Teach a few basic skills, hopefully transplant we can move on from this bad situation. Try to give a hand up instead of out. All is good.
@Seawitch907
@Seawitch907 17 күн бұрын
I love your videos. My daddy rode the railroad when going around the country looking for work he was born in 1927. And he had a few good friends who he would travel with. They were great stories ❤
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 17 күн бұрын
Excellent. I would love to hear those stories!
@GuantanamoBayBarbie3
@GuantanamoBayBarbie3 17 күн бұрын
​@@WayPointSurvivalMe too!
@xingmenneigong
@xingmenneigong 17 күн бұрын
this one was fun, i need a hat with the symbols for "nothing to gain here, angry man" lol
@paulworgan6599
@paulworgan6599 17 күн бұрын
You could open a Hobo museum.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 17 күн бұрын
They have one in Britt, Iowa!
@LADYMONA
@LADYMONA 17 күн бұрын
@@WayPointSurvival But you should still have your own lol, would be very interesting I'm sure.
@scottdunkirk8198
@scottdunkirk8198 17 күн бұрын
I remember as a kid in the 70s there were still a good amount of hobos
@lauriemclean1131
@lauriemclean1131 17 күн бұрын
An elderly lady I used to help in her home told of a childhood memory. Her mother was one of those kind Christian women who would share food with a hobo and allow him to sleep in an outbuilding if he needed to.
@westtexasprepper
@westtexasprepper 17 күн бұрын
I remember my Granddad telling me about them in the early 70's. He worked for Southern Pacific, out of Reno, as a brakeman and conductor, might have been an engineer as well. Was always fascinated by his stories. Great video!!!
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 17 күн бұрын
Thanks so much!
@jwgbmp40
@jwgbmp40 17 күн бұрын
My Grandad starting around 12yrs old would "jump a train" and ride it across the country. In 1942 he lied about his 15yr old self and joined the army.. but the train stories seemed to really get my attention..
@fuzzlewuzzle9388
@fuzzlewuzzle9388 17 күн бұрын
I thoroughly enjoyed this video. I would love to see more on this topic.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 17 күн бұрын
Thanks for watching and for the suggestion!
@johnthomasjr262
@johnthomasjr262 17 күн бұрын
Thanks, James, for the lesson on "hobo hieroglyphics." This series has been very educational, and the way you have explained the way of the hobo reminds me of the saying,"broke is a financial state, but poor is a mental state. " I appreciate all the videos you put out. Keep 'em coming 👍
@NipkowDisk
@NipkowDisk 14 күн бұрын
Thank you for posting this video- it brought back some good memories. My late Uncle Ray rode the rails regularly until he passed away in the late 1960s from tuberculosis.
@dhession64
@dhession64 17 күн бұрын
Thank you for the hobo education, sir.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 17 күн бұрын
Any time!
@bornbranded29
@bornbranded29 17 күн бұрын
After reading some O'Henry, I fell in love with Hobo lore. It would be great to get a film on Hobos, if there aren't any. You would be a great producer on such a project, Good job,
@alantubbs5113
@alantubbs5113 15 күн бұрын
There is an old movie (with Lee Marvin) called "Emperor of the North" you might want to watch.
@bornbranded29
@bornbranded29 13 күн бұрын
@@alantubbs5113 thanks 🙏
@billpark8988
@billpark8988 17 күн бұрын
You mention the slamming boxcar door. My uncle was trapped for three days in a boxcar when this happened to him. He learned to put his pocket knife in the door track so it couldn't completely shut. Also to sleep on the top of the rail car he said he would put his belt through the walkway so as not to fall off. Once that was done he would pull his cap over his face to keep out the cinders from the engine. These techniques I am sure he was taught by older , more experienced Ho-Bos.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
No doubt.
@NewHampshireJack
@NewHampshireJack 14 күн бұрын
The HOBO seriers keeps on getting better and better! Thank you James for the effort you expend on this important part of history to life.
@ahavekost49
@ahavekost49 17 күн бұрын
Hobo Shoestring would approve of your video.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
I hope so!
@braxtonperry1981
@braxtonperry1981 17 күн бұрын
Thank you for the serious side of Hobology 😊 I have been to Britt Iowa With my good friend Redbird Express several times Since Redbird caught the westbound this Year this note is to grapevine the info To Sunrise and Virginia Slim Penny Pincher and Flatcar Frank Redbird was a true King of the Dream and Road Regards fron Tinker Da Thinker and Bike Week Hobo and Spike 🚲🌴✌️👌
@theoneandonlycarlton
@theoneandonlycarlton 17 күн бұрын
Hobo Time! I Love Learning About The Riders Of The Rails. Thanks James 👍
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 17 күн бұрын
You're welcome! Thanks for watching!
@45035
@45035 17 күн бұрын
-The way things are going. A lot of people are going to need to know these signs soon.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
You might be right!
@rogersmith8480
@rogersmith8480 17 күн бұрын
I have taken this KZfaq channel seriously due to what's happening in Europe, Russia, and The Middle East. Please, everybody, take this show seriously too and learn as much as you can.
@DrexFerguson
@DrexFerguson 16 күн бұрын
Very smart.
@stargazer4683
@stargazer4683 13 күн бұрын
Unless it’s he teach post nuclear war survival skills it’s all uses…….
@GUARDIAN.13
@GUARDIAN.13 13 күн бұрын
​@@stargazer4683its the same thing and being educated on the actual results of nuclear war is important. Most well to do countries have guided systems that destroy nukes while still way up in the sky, this will basically render it to an EMP with some diverse affects. It's not going to be fallout 3
@Blue-Wave-2024
@Blue-Wave-2024 12 күн бұрын
Let us know what changes when you grow up.
@CBe-ot8vu
@CBe-ot8vu 11 күн бұрын
Stfu! 😂 nothing different is happening in Europe Russia and Middle East! Ypu mean war lolol. News flash smart guy all these countries been fighting wars since in time memoriam
@pek5117
@pek5117 17 күн бұрын
I knew if I kept mentioning the symbols you'd do an episode on it! I knew most of these from an American autobiography of a hobo travelling salesman. He didn't like tramps or bums like most hobos. Soon as you drew the circle with the arrows I said get out now! The symbols change cause I've seen others that ment kind people live here aka work a few hours for food and a bed or sometimes just food given here which was a fork and spoon but those seem to be newer symbols, also crossed utensils ment no food here when cross used to mean good or yes and circle bad or no. Thanks as always for the video. Love hearing about these great people.
@peterott-tn6pf
@peterott-tn6pf 17 күн бұрын
Yes!! Another installment in the hobo series!!! Absolutely fascinating James! Thank you very much for sharing this! God bless and take care my friend!!
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 17 күн бұрын
You're welcome and God bless you too!
@NatsariymDefender
@NatsariymDefender 16 күн бұрын
I was a teenage run away; bad home. So I became a homeless hobo for a while. Hated drugs and alcohol and stayed away from those that did them. Traveling, sleeping here or there and usually but not always found enough to eat out of the garbage or hunted small game, rabbit, squirrel turkey, quail and quail eggs, water out of the creeks for boiling in an aluminum pot I found. Quart size, metal and wood handle. Carried my spoon, knife, and fork. Had many ways of starting fire for cooking food, boiling water, and warmth. I would bury the red hot coals underneath the dirt. Heat would keep me warm most of the night. Ahhh, life. When you grow up in the 70’s with unloving, uncaring, selfish, hateful parents you run away and try to make things better for yourself and or others around you. And try and surround yourself with positive loving caring people. You make the best of things as you can. And someone told me once...forgive.....always forgive those that sin against you or hurt you. Love your neighbor as yourself and always love and obey God. I tried to remember that when at times I was hungry and found nothing to eat...do not steal...would come to mind. He wrote His law in my heart. The next day or so I would find food or whatever the need may have been. I learn to cope I learn to deal and work with what I had available at the time. So I know if and when things go bad again in my heart I’m prepared and I know exactly what to do to survive and thrive. If you need to get right with God, submit their forward to him resist the devil and the devil will flee from you. Read. Obey. Trust. And never forget to Love.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 16 күн бұрын
Indeed. Thanks for sharing!
@Ghredle
@Ghredle 13 күн бұрын
Amen❤
@libertypastor1307
@libertypastor1307 12 күн бұрын
Simple life. Thanks for sharing. Many more will be made homeless in the coming years. Many more! So learn to live by biblical principles, and above all, make sure your soul is saved through faith in Jesus Christ's payment for your sins. Failure to live by biblical principles is why America is going downhill so fast.
@kevinpritchard3592
@kevinpritchard3592 12 күн бұрын
Amen all around. Thanks for sharing
@jesusmartinez1358
@jesusmartinez1358 12 күн бұрын
you're a fine man,and a credit to heaven😊, I will pray to the Lord God to bless you and keep you,in His holy name continue to be blessed👍🎆🎇✨✝️🛐↖️!!!
@cybersean3000
@cybersean3000 17 күн бұрын
I had a grandfather and a great-grandfather who were hobo's as younger men.
@coryparni3620
@coryparni3620 17 күн бұрын
Gypsies did something similar when they left town . 'Patrins' is the word for this . They left markers for family to follow .
@mistervacation23
@mistervacation23 17 күн бұрын
Oh the old Wellington Cipher. The Wellington Cipher, a lesser-known historical encryption method, was named after Arthur Wellesley, the 1st Duke of Wellington. Used in the early 19th century, this cipher was employed during the Napoleonic Wars for secure military communications. The cipher itself hasn't been in use for around 100 years, largely due to advancements in cryptographic techniques and technology.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Indeed.
@user-mg6il8uk3t
@user-mg6il8uk3t 17 күн бұрын
Very educational. Thank You, James.
@KevinsCampingAdventure
@KevinsCampingAdventure 17 күн бұрын
I actually used one of these symbols for an area that I have camped once. I go back from time to time and I can tell when someone has been there. Thanks for the video series. ✌️👍
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Interesting!
@melindaroth5796
@melindaroth5796 17 күн бұрын
Oh my goodness I would have never made it. WOW no way anyone would let you do some work around your home these days. Thank you Brother James. I Love your teachings.😊❤
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 17 күн бұрын
You're welcome!
@Blrtech77
@Blrtech77 17 күн бұрын
Thanks for the amazing history and video of the hobo symbols. Keep up the great work and God Bless.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 13 күн бұрын
Thanks, you too!
@user-jk2hb5qq8r
@user-jk2hb5qq8r 14 күн бұрын
A friend of mine grew up in a small town, next to the R.R. tracks, in Ohio. He said hobos/bums often cane to their back door. His Mom would tell them to sit on tge steps and she'd give the food out the back door. And if she had extra food , some to take, 😊 they were slways polite to her and thankful!! She was a very caring person!
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 14 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing, that's a wonderful, heart-warming story!
@carle8608
@carle8608 15 күн бұрын
My mom told stories of my grandmother feeding the odd transient hobo here in Canada during the Great Depression. These folks were said to be polite and looking for work. They tended to get a sandwich and ate it on the back porch.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Very cool!
@terribelle3
@terribelle3 17 күн бұрын
So much wondeful history of hobos ❤ I'm excited for each new video! 😍
@sunny1433
@sunny1433 13 күн бұрын
I just love the style of the man’s fedora hat. My Dad wore one when I was growing up 50’s-60’s. I hope they make a comeback one day.
@user-hx9tp9cn2h
@user-hx9tp9cn2h 17 күн бұрын
Thanks for reminding today's world that hoboes were men of integrity who courageously faced the challenges in their day while maintaining a good work ethic in their endeavors to provide for their families. "Man looks upon the outward appearance, but God looks upon the heart." Generally speaking, I see the hobo as a person of Faith & Fortitude! I find it very interesting that, just as hobos had their communication symbols, when early Christianity was under persecution, believers often used the symbol of the FISH to identify themselves & their faith. Thank you, James, & may God bless you & yours.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 16 күн бұрын
Thanks so much and may God bless you and yours as well!
@apocosy
@apocosy 17 күн бұрын
Love the hobo history, appreciate it.
@senorsenior9546
@senorsenior9546 17 күн бұрын
My grandparents had a place on the RR tracks near a siding. About a quarter of a mile from there was a "jungle" and they often had hobos come by.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Very cool!
@mannihh5274
@mannihh5274 17 күн бұрын
Very interesting - quite similar to the 'gypsy'-signs used here in Europe. The meaning of a cross is the same, but a circle most of the time ment money and a fence getting arrested. They were common until the 1970s and I used them to keep them off my door. Thanks for sharing.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 16 күн бұрын
Very interesting. Thanks for watching!
@Starphot
@Starphot 16 күн бұрын
My grandparents lived by the tracks and raised 7 kids during the Great Depression. My grandparents would feed them for menial jobs in the yard such as repair work to the shed/ chicken house when needed. They knew they were marked, but could not find any symbols close to the property. The hobos disappeared around 1940 when the economy got better. 4 generations of my family lived in that house. Me and my brother played around the tracks and never found anyone riding the trains like the hobos in the 1960s except a few hippies that got stupid and got injured or dead.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 16 күн бұрын
Very interesting! Many of the classic hobo train riders just found jobs and settled down after WW2.
@crazygrandmaweaz8942
@crazygrandmaweaz8942 17 күн бұрын
This is interesting. My Grandma that was born in 1917 would tell of putting a red handkerchief on the door handle so gentlemen knew they could get a meal there that day.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Interesting!
@HoboRoadrunner
@HoboRoadrunner 4 күн бұрын
Yep was primarily a South Western thing to do .
@crazygrandmaweaz8942
@crazygrandmaweaz8942 2 күн бұрын
@@HoboRoadrunner must have been a very northern Indiana thing too. My grandmother lived within a 20 mile radius here her whole life.
@moorshound3243
@moorshound3243 17 күн бұрын
James if you haven't read it check out " dairy of a Welsh swagman" it's the dairy of a hobo from Wales who travelled to Australia way back in 1869. Wonderful book detailing all the hard time and the work the man William Evans did during his stay in Aus. Another wonderful video thank for posting.
@coryparni3620
@coryparni3620 17 күн бұрын
That's my ex family , I was over ther a while from Australia, I been round at the house that man lived , an old lady give me a copy of the book but it was in welsh so I never read it lol . He was quite the character I believe.
@coryparni3620
@coryparni3620 17 күн бұрын
It was near Tregaron
@moorshound3243
@moorshound3243 17 күн бұрын
@@coryparni3620 wow that is amazing. If you ever get a copy in English it's a super read.
@georgerector9252
@georgerector9252 17 күн бұрын
Love the Hobo series. Back in the 50s in the 1st grade I was asked what I wanted to be, Hobo. Life of freedom. Ended up doing 40+ years as a LEO. Ironic.
@DeeMoback
@DeeMoback 17 күн бұрын
there was a story book.....a little boy's uncle came to visit (he was a hobo)...... maybe it was "encyclpedia Brown" ......anyway I am 70 and still remember it
@afternoobtea914
@afternoobtea914 17 күн бұрын
Hobo signs is a topic that has interested me for a long time. Here in Sweden we had our own culture of hobos and they also used hobo signs. The interesting thing is that many of the symbols in the USA and Sweden are the same.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Interesting Indeed!
@brentwalters8921
@brentwalters8921 14 күн бұрын
No doubt there was some crossover, with Swedes immigrants.
@brett76544
@brett76544 17 күн бұрын
We had two hobows hung from the second story balcony of the hotel on Kilrow St. Ya, interesting name for that street. They took advantage of a young girl, no trial, just hung. Some of those marks were on the old train station in the borough. The one with the two arrows and the circle, police and judge. They were eched into the bricks on the southern and northern ends of the station. The only marks left are on the concrete posts north of the borough
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Interesting. Thanks for watching and sharing the story!
@codysden1
@codysden1 17 күн бұрын
Fantastic........ Waiting for the series A day in the life of a hobo, or adventures of a Hobo
@HoboRoadrunner
@HoboRoadrunner 15 күн бұрын
Well I do vlogs and other videos of your into that 😀
@ecttreker9816
@ecttreker9816 17 күн бұрын
Can't help but wonder.........was there any such thing as a Hobo's symbol handbook? I for one would never remember all those! 👍👍
@bobg.8954
@bobg.8954 17 күн бұрын
Awesome video James, enjoyed it as always! God Bless Sir.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 17 күн бұрын
Thanks, you too!
@daveburklund2295
@daveburklund2295 17 күн бұрын
Glad for this video! Been waiting for more hobo symbols! Thanks.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 17 күн бұрын
You're welcome!
@jojor9766
@jojor9766 14 күн бұрын
An interesting movie about hobos is Emperor of the North. Ernest Borgnine's character was absolutely brutal.
@TOMG12XU
@TOMG12XU 14 күн бұрын
A#1
@thereckoning5488
@thereckoning5488 16 күн бұрын
I know a bunch of hobos. Through my travels i have encountered many. I have traversed The US mexico and Canada and those guys are the greats.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 16 күн бұрын
Excellent. Thanks for watching!
@TheWtfnonamez
@TheWtfnonamez 16 күн бұрын
You are such a legend mate. Something tells me that the skills that you teach might come in handy for many of us over the next decade. All the best to you Sir.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 16 күн бұрын
Thanks so very much!
@bkheaney
@bkheaney 17 күн бұрын
Fantastic videos as always, James! Thanks for the info! As a traveler myself, I take in all this great information and apply it to my own modern kit.
@randy-9842
@randy-9842 17 күн бұрын
Thanks, James - I've been waiting and hoping for this one!
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 17 күн бұрын
You're welcome!
@kenmarshall9907
@kenmarshall9907 17 күн бұрын
In the early '50s there was a cat symbol on the Sycamore tree in front of our house. My father said it was a hobo sign that meant a kind woman lived here. I have always wondered whether or not that was true.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
That is indeed true!
@akathecops
@akathecops 14 күн бұрын
Armona ca. fruit packing plant. We traded canned food for old knives or books. Loved the summer. Learned to play guitar and harmonica at the old camp from mellow old fellows. Grandma would tell her friends that she would put 2 cans of beans on the front porch for me. It got rid of me for the rest of the day. Life was so much better back then. We always had plenty to do.
@paulworgan6599
@paulworgan6599 17 күн бұрын
I think I’ll put the ill tempered man symbol outside my door 😂😂😂😂😂
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 17 күн бұрын
Lol. Right?
@randy-9842
@randy-9842 17 күн бұрын
Paul, I think I'm going to check my front door and mailbox tomorrow in the sunlight. I might already have that symbol! :)
@paulworgan6599
@paulworgan6599 17 күн бұрын
@@randy-9842 😂😂😂😂😂😂
@BuddyLee23
@BuddyLee23 14 күн бұрын
Not a bad idea, but you may have missed your time window by a CENTURY or so…
@paulworgan6599
@paulworgan6599 14 күн бұрын
@@BuddyLee23 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@jddonaldson931
@jddonaldson931 17 күн бұрын
I have a friend of mine who has the nickname Hobo, he was a nuclear grade welder who helped build Grand Gulf nuclear power plant. He's been a great mentor in torch/welding etiquette many years ago.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Excellent. Sounds like a great guy to know!
@jddonaldson931
@jddonaldson931 15 күн бұрын
@@WayPointSurvival He has been a great friend and confidant! His wife Ms. Charlotte and him are still some of my best friends! They are both in their late 70's, but I'm so blessed to have them in my life!
@atheistpower5659
@atheistpower5659 17 күн бұрын
I like this channel because I was the kind of person who had a low opinion of Hobos till I saw videos like this one .
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Thanks so much!
@atheistpower5659
@atheistpower5659 15 күн бұрын
@@WayPointSurvival Keep up the Good work !
@GabriellyC25
@GabriellyC25 17 күн бұрын
is super cool the way simple signs and symbols can say so much if you know how to read them; and for those who played skyrim the thieves guild use signs called shadowmarks pretty much the same way
@krishoogstraat6866
@krishoogstraat6866 17 күн бұрын
Good stuff as always my friend!
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 17 күн бұрын
Much appreciated, my friend!
@johnelliott7375
@johnelliott7375 14 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing this with us and the people who remember these people are disappearing daily and not many left of them.
@hernansasso9444
@hernansasso9444 17 күн бұрын
Gracias por tomarte el tipo para hacer otro video de hobo ,acá en Argentina eran llamados cortos o linyeras,saludos desde La Pampa ,Argentina, Dios te bendiga
@kristenvincent3622
@kristenvincent3622 17 күн бұрын
Appreciate the great video. It’s amazing how well the signs are able to communicate the important information about the location and environment for a transient working hobo.
@stankormy5717
@stankormy5717 17 күн бұрын
This is Hobo 101- This should be taught at every school in the country!
@user-vj7bw9uh2h
@user-vj7bw9uh2h 15 күн бұрын
I'm a retired Locomotive Engineer and was forced to Mason City, IA, in the late 80's. On a trip West, we were doing some switching at Britt, IA. Just happened to be the Hobo Convention at the local park there. Two guys with an elderly woman between them approached the engine asking if they could put her on the engine steps and have me bring her to the park. Turned out she was the Hobo Queen that year and they wanted her to make a splashy entrance. The guys were holding her up as she was very drunk. I couldn't take a chance of her falling off and declined, telling them I couldn't even take my wife on the engine, which was untrue as I had done that before. Also, there was a hobo that was putting on a show going from one grain hopper to the ones next to it. I could have easily wiped him off the side of the hoppers but decided not to.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Very interesting. Thanks for sharing the story!
@Srulio
@Srulio 16 күн бұрын
This is an interesting video. The Great Depression was a big event in the lives of the affected people. Even though we haven't seen economic crisis on this scale since then, the increasing interest in Survival topic show many people are unhappy with the management of the economy and secretly feel the return of this dire conditions.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 16 күн бұрын
Yes. Thanks for watching!
@justinvermilyea9535
@justinvermilyea9535 17 күн бұрын
“Not Everybody was honest…”back then””….😫 Oh how things have NEVER changed…..
@bdickinson6751
@bdickinson6751 16 күн бұрын
Yeah, now the bums have just become politicians! NO JOKE!
@tylerfoss3346
@tylerfoss3346 16 күн бұрын
Thank you for another excellent, informative video! It's a sad commentary on these times in which we live that so many people know absolutely nothing about generations past when economic times were very hard. The worst of today deny that these times past even existed. The hardened ignorance of these people frightens me. That's why videos like this are a light in the darkness of our times. Keep up the good work and light the campfire.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 16 күн бұрын
Thanks, will do!
@billsmlth3900
@billsmlth3900 15 күн бұрын
Back in the 50’s there was a wooded area off Kirk avenue that was called Hobo jungle. You would find empty food cans and what was left of camp fires. This was in Baltimore Maryland 😮
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Very cool! If only places like that could talk!
@ax2usn
@ax2usn 13 күн бұрын
Circa 1950s, lived near Santa Fe rail yards in San Bernardino. Family often helped those in need, and symbols like those were in neighborhood. Never any trouble from those old hobos and their stories fascinated me. Thank you for documenting their history.
@stevew6138
@stevew6138 17 күн бұрын
During the depression my Dad wasn't a hobo per se, but when the harvest was on and he had no other way to travel than on foot, he rode the rails. The few stories he told me were about when there was trouble and a couple men died. Accident or murder, it happened.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Yes. It was a difficult time.
@keithmoore5306
@keithmoore5306 17 күн бұрын
trust me James Barney ain't changed any from back then!!! all badges are about as useful as tits on a boar hog and still prone to pocket things they take a liking too!!! you forgot one of the most important symbols that even hillbilly's were taught though the 2 side by side touching circles meaning shotgun on the property!! most of the stories i've heard a graveyard is not all that common most just got a shallow grave where they were found if that!!
@garysheets7816
@garysheets7816 15 күн бұрын
Hobos of the by gone days reminded me of explorers. They kept pressing on no matter the weather or the opinions of other people thanks again GOD BLESS
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Indeed. God bless you too!
@Booger414
@Booger414 17 күн бұрын
Cool video. I have looked up hobo signs for a project once and found them fascinating. For a while in the early days of wi-fi it was common for people to put a symbol in front of benches that were within reach of a free signal. I always thought of that as a sort of modern-day hobo sign.
@WayPointSurvival
@WayPointSurvival 15 күн бұрын
Yes. Good observation!
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