I remember and the day he wacked his thumb for these who missed red light, 
green light, red was the lead bell which Eng.  Bill will not forget the wack on 
the thumb 
Happy Hi ball engineers 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Scale S Only 
  To: [email protected] ; [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Sent: Saturday, August 16, 2008 1:13 PM
  Subject: {S-Scale List} Engieer Bill


  For those who might have been influenced by Engineer Bill Stulla, this came 
  from another friend of mine..

  Enjoy!
  Bill Winans
  Prescott Valley, AZ

  All,
  Growing up in SoCal, I watched Cartoon Express (Channel 9, KHJ TV)
  from the mid-1950's until the mid-1960's (ages 4 to 16). Despite the
  fact that I wanted to appear on the show during the 1950's, my parents
  never submitted the requisite postcard request which Engineer Bill
  used to receive in the form of the "kicked off" mail bag from a Santa
  Fe streamliner run by by "Casey Jones" (you all might remember the
  great camera shot from a between-the-rails pit shot looking up as a
  passenger train powered by a war bonnet-painted F7, streaked over the
  camera). Those of you who watched the show will remember that you'd
  hear diesel air horns and EMD 567's droning in the background and then
  Engineer Bill would announce that Casey Jones was high-balling through
  to deliver the mail. At that point, an RPO mail bag would "fly"
  (after being tossed by a stage hand) onto the set and Engineer Bill
  would catch the bag (which sometimes was tossed extra hard and would
  knock Engineer Bill off his stool). Bill would then open the mail bag
  and draw out two new postcards for two lucky kids to attend a future
  show; early on, each kid used to receive a freight car kit which they
  would build at home and then bring to the show to run on the layout.
  As a result of poor parenting, I never got to play Red Light, Green
  Light in glorious B&W on kinescope. Probably what is worse, I never
  got the feel the chills running up and down my spine while getting
  rewarded by "The Real Bell for engineers who never run a red light"
  while Engineer Bill (with wet milk still on the bandanna encircling
  his neck) would get "The Lead Bell for me and those who missed".
  Another great game that Engineer Bill had was, "The Big Whistle" which
  was a board with six (if memory serves) numbered valves, one of which
  was connected (out-of-direct-sight) to a real steam locomotive chime
  whistle while the other the other five valves were connected to a
  peanut whistle. The kids had to guess which numbered valve was
  connected to the Big Whistle with the winner(s) getting a prize.
  Personally, I think that "Red Light, Green Light" and/or "The Big
  Whistle" could be made into great reality TV shows - just imagine Ryan
  Seacrest spitting milk out or blowing the Big Whistle - truly
  instances wherein fantasy would recapitulate reality!!! <g>

  The 1950's show had a catchy theme song:

  Engineer Bill's Theme Song

  See her rollin' down the track,
  See her puffin' smoke so black---
  Who's at the throttle?
  (Woo-Woo) that's Engineer Bill!

  See those drivers whirlin' 'round ---
  See that engine cover ground,
  Who's at the throttle?
  (Woo-Woo) That's Engineer Bill!

  From the round-house every day,
  He always get the right of way,
  Folks all know the whistle's cry.
  Means Engineer Bill is passing by.

  See her steamin' into town---
  From the cab who's wavin' down,
  Who's at the throttle?
  (Woo-Woo) That's Engineer Bill!

  When they revamped the show in the early 1960's, they changed the
  opening footage to include the famous chase scene from the D.W.
  Griffith classic: "A Girl and Her Trust", shot in 1912 on the AT&SF
  Redondo Harbor Line (between Inglewood and RR-east of Lairport.
  Lairport is still a Station w/ the old (i.e., really old, jointed
  rail) siding remaining in use and located about 1/2 mile west of El
  Segundo Blvd - if you watch the movie closely you will see station
  hands standing on the station platform watching the camera car running
  on what is now Aviation Blvd (back then, I've heard that it was called
  Redondo Hermosa Road). The huge open field in the back ground is now
  LAX). That great pacing shot is an absolute classic as is the entire
  movie.

  I finally got an opportunity to meet Bill Stulla back in 1993, when I
  was supervising the construction of the Thousand Oaks Civic Arts
  Center. There was a non-profit organization set up to solicit
  contributions for the 2,000 seat performing arts theater; the
  non-profit was run by a gentlemen named Robert Johnson. One day we
  were shooting the beeze during lunch and Robert happened to tell me
  that he was formerly a Stage Manager at KHJ TV. I asked him if he
  ever knew Engineer Bill and he told me that Bill was a close friend
  and lived nearby in Westlake Village. Robert also told me some great
  stories about Flat Car Fred, Tank Car Ted and other behind-the-scenes
  personna who had worked on and contributed so much to the show.

  On friday afternoons after we had shut down for the day, I would give
  special behind-the-scenes construction tours to potential donors to
  the non-profit. One friday afternoon in late August, 1993, I was
  taking Robert and a group of donors on the man-lift twelve-stories up
  to the top of the fly tower, when Robert made a comment: "Eric, we
  know you have a lot of engineers working on this project, but today we
  brought along a real Engineer to meet you!". At that point, Engineer
  Bill stepped out from the back of the group wearing a hickory-stripped
  RR-cap, bandana and bib overalls and introduced himself. I quickly
  sped the group through the rest of the tour and then sat down with
  Bill and talked for about an hour.

  Bill was a very nice gentleman and was very pleased that his old fans
  still remembered him. After leaving television in the mid-1960's, he
  went into stock brokerage and did quite well. He was enjoying a very
  comfortable retirement. Bill confirmed that he was a terrible Red
  Light, Green Light player and that the scenes with him laughing and
  spitting milk out his nose, etc., were the result of Tank Car Ted and
  others playing gags and purposefully distracting him off-camera while
  he was trying to concentrate on the game. Bill gave me a
  hickory-stripped engineer's cap (gee, it only took me 39 years to get
  one after I first started watching the show in 1954) and and we took a
  picture together which Robert later had framed and autographed by
  Bill, and then had presented to me. I still have the picture.

  All in all, Bill Stulla was a very fine gentleman who loved the
  personna of Engineer Bill and loved entertaining kids. People like
  Engineer Bill, Sheriff John, Skipper Frank (Frank Herman left TV and
  opened up a Chicken Delight franchise in Laguna Beach; I went to
  school with his son Greg), Tom Hatten (in 1961, Tom opened the Scoop
  Deck retaurant and ice cream parlor located opposite the Hotel Laguna
  on Coast Hwy), Chucko, Bozo, et al, were all a huge part of the lives
  of those of us who were fortunate to grow up in SoCal in the
  1950's-1960's.

  As Engineer Bill used to say at the close of each show, "Happy
  High-Balling, Engineers!!"

  Eric 



   

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


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