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How your scrap/parts box might save a life!
I grew up in a big city, full of trouble and temptation. It was Lionel trains that kept me out of trouble. Toy Trains taught me virtually ALL of the skills I would later use as a professional Designer.  Without access to Lionel trains, I would have become a statistic.

From this life experience, I have decided to form an “Inner-City Model Rairoad Club” so that city kids have a place to go, and a mechanism to play with, that ISN”T a GUN!

In other words, I plan on combatting inner-city Gun Violence with the use of Lionel Trains.  It is my thinking. that; if I can introduce these kids to the fun, magic, and learning that O gauge trains provide, perhaps a handgun won’t seem as enticing. Plus, for kids who may not like school, it will teach them electrical, architecture, scale model building, historical research, and most of all, how to work together for a common goal.

SO All You O Gaugers! GIve me your junk! Give me your parts boxes, track, broken transformers, cars without wheels, ANYTHING! At this beginning point, we have nothing at all.

I am asking for scrap, so I may teach these kids how to rebuild locos and accesories, giving them another marketable skill. We will gladly provide you with documentation for taxes, if you donate your junk.

I’ve been working on this idea for a year, I have a GoFundMe webpage that describes the project in detail at: http://www.gofundme.com/cehrhw

My qualifications include a BFA in Design, an M.Ed in Instructional Design, 6 years working for Eric Fuchs in Boston, AND I build the South Station Holiday Train Layout each year.

I am what I say, and I do what I promise, so please donate ANYTHING to our cause.

You may send items to:
            Mark D. Carroll
            1515 V.F.W. Parkway, Unit D27
            Boston, MA 02132
            agent001@rcn.com

Here is my work at South Station, Boston if you are interested

http://youtu.be/Kp6qDpb0dps

http://youtu.be/z0LpkoTQPiA
           
http://youtu.be/yVyFlFcVTbU

http://youtu.be/HMHHVkkWjs0
   
http://youtu.be/v78dRUbNmy0

http://youtu.be/ezHBZrsK8kU

Original Post

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Nice idea.  My "spare parts box" is spread across two eight foot shelves and four boxes on the floor, and the source of most of my own entertainment, so it will stay where it is.  I did donate a couple of RTr sets and some spare track, rolling stock, and a K-Line loco to someone I knew at an inner city church here.  They used it for a club/project.

Good luck.  I wish you the best.  I was a project kid and later worked as a Police Officer for 37.5 years.  I know what you are trying to do and although very noble, go into this with your eyes open and your right high.  BTW, great job on the South Station layouts.  I often take the T into South Station to check it out.  Your work on these layouts gives you good credibility as the work is first class.  Looking at your address, we are almost neighbors.  I would be very curious on how things go as not many people are willing to get involved like you are going to do. Again, we will have good thoughts for your project.

 

I am curious what youth base you are going to work with.

 

 

Last edited by Marty Fitzhenry
Thank you for the correct protocol, as you can imagine, I wanted as many people as possible to see it, and didn't know which was best. Hi Rail would be my first chocie.
Originally Posted by OGR Webmaster:

A commendable cause, to be sure, However, you cannot post this same thread in every forum! Pick one and post it.

 

I deleted the cross-posts in the other forums.

 

Mine too! so most of it is going over to Dorchester, MA.  Thanks to EVERYONE for such a positive response, I knew you guys would give a ****. I just don't want any more parents to have to deal with such a preventable event.
 
Originally Posted by palallin:

Lemme see what I can find--my scrap box is simply taking up room.

 

You're taking on a heckuva job here!  I hope it works out.

 

Thanks Marty, Your reputation preceeds you! Maybe I heard it around Fuchs, maybe at shows, but you are held in high regard in the Boston area, so you're praise is extra special.
I never knew you were a policeman, though! Eyes wide open is right, tomorrow I meet a community leader down on Norfolk St. You'll see me walking (unarmed!) around the hood, Geneva Ave, Bowdoin St. I don't give a *****! I've got eyes in the back of my head, and the Gavin House gave me REAL chutzpah, not the 12oz kind.! Yeah, my biggest challenge will be security (theft) and gangs. I'm gonna go right up to a gang leader and ask for his permission! LOL!   (once apon a time I wanted to be a war photographer, I guess I still have the tendencies.)
Thanks again,
Mark
 
 
 
 
 
Good luck.  I wish you the best.  I was a project kid and later worked as a Police Officer for 37.5 years.  I know what you are trying to do and although very noble, go into this with your eyes open and your right high.  BTW, great job on the South Station layouts.  I often take the T into South Station to check it out.  Your work on these layouts gives you good credibility as the work is first class.  Looking at your address, we are almost neighbors.  I would be very curious on how things go as not many people are willing to get involved like you are going to do. Again, we will have good thoughts for your project.

 

I am curious what youth base you are going to work with.

 

 

 

Thanks for the good wishes! You may see me out West yet - the plan is to create a program that can be rubber-stamped across the country, in all the poorer neighborhoods. Not everyone is good at basketball.  Baltimore was a national disgrace, so I'm just doing my little part.
 
Thanks again
  Originally Posted by Happy Pappy:

Mark,

You are doing something wonderful. I wish you the best of luck. I'm to far away to do much of anything. (3,350 miles). There are many forum members in the mid-west and east coast. BEST WISHES 

 

Fantastic idea, Agent001.  I just took a look at your GoFundMe page and it brought tears to my eyes (and I'm no sap, believe me).  Sorry I'm just starting out with trains myself and have no spares of anything.  However, given your objectives (and points made in a recent post about opening a store), you may want to consider speaking with a church about space.  You wrote on your page that you are looking to partner with area clergy, and with the right fit, you might be able to negotiate usable space -- at least for the teaching part.  That should reduce the need to spend a lot on a rental space initially.  At the very least, it might be space that you can get at a greatly reduced "donation".  

 

If space is tight initially, think building modular layouts.  (Who am I preaching to the design expert? :-) The kids will develop all those skills that you listed and then can experience putting them all together somewhere else and exciting to run.  That way, it could be portable to inspire youth in other parts of Dorchester.  Who knows?  Some day, the kids may even help with the South Station layout.  Now that would be an accomplishment and great PR.

 

Many years ago my father taught me how to build and paint models, use a variety of basic hand tools, light and electric meters, solder, wear safety goggles, and oh yeah, clean S gauge track!  Skills not necessarily in relation to trains. Looking back as I get into trains and draw on those skills, it is amazing what that trust, generosity, and freedom to be creative has allowed me to accomplish on my own. No doubt your vision will similarily empower kids in all those ways that you mention. Manual, physical, creative, and life skills, and you can't beat the social and community building aspect of model trains.  Ditto intergenerational mentoring opportunities, too. I salute your vision and will look forward to hearing more as it unfolds and becomes reality.

 

Tomlinson Run Railroad

Last edited by TomlinsonRunRR

Some AM brainstorming ideas to share.  MIT has a model train club; unfortunately, their open house was on the 2nd: http://tmrc.mit.edu/.  You might want to contact them to see if there are any enthusiastic college age volunteers -- they might include mechanical or electrical engineering, and architecture/design, or just interested students from any discipline. They may also have unwanted parts/stock/electronics to help get you going.  Not to mention perhaps existing space. Or, they may know of other college groups on the other side of the river.

 

If MIT's too far afield, you could try U. Mass Boston to see whether there's a student group/department that might be interested in helping kids in their own community. And I know that Northeastern takes its community relations and outreach very seriously. Great engineering and social science departments there, too.

 

Tomlinson Run RR

Thank you to all the O gaugers who gave me so much moral support AND wise advice. Mr. Fitzhenry had suggested I go into this with "eyes open". What an understatement!   I live 5 miles from this bad area, go through it driving enough, and used to walk through, 17 years ago.
I THOUGHT I knew what was going on down there, since I was so close and exposed to it, somewhat. NO Freakin' WAY!   What I saw shocked even me.
I WALKED through the dangerous hood from Shawmut Station on the Red Line. No Kidding, it looked like footage I've seen of Belfast or Beirut. Cameras on every corner, pointing every direction. Sound triangulation detectors to pinpoint gunshots, the Gang members were on the main street, in full colors, eyeing this little white boy!  Luckily, I am enough of a city kid, that I showed know fear, and somehow let them know I wasn't a cop, and didn't care what they were doing.
24 hours after I visited the community organizer at Codman Square Neighborhood Development Council, someone was shot on the street I had walked up, and drove into a house. 48 hours later, as I write this, a 7 year old, A SEVEN YEAR OLD, was shot by a stray bullet, while riding his bike, He didn't even come from the hood, was just there visiting Grandma, in broad daylight, they walked up and shot at someone else, but hitting the 7 year old.  SO, I'D say there is definitely a need for such a program. (Although it saddens me a kid can't ride his bike and would have to hide out in a church basement on a nice day, just to reach age 8!)

So Thanks again, I have met another 'regular guy' Bostonian, Cullen Deas, a community leader, who seems to have as much passion on this idea as I do. When I left him, he was going to talk to the pastors of the 11 churches on Norfolk St. Think about it, 11 churches, on a 1/2 mile street!
To those of you who can send material, thank you, to those who offered advice, it was ALL really good, and taken under consideration. To all who offered good wishes, your belief in me, got me to show up where it was necessary.
So the ball is rolling, I will keep you all posted as to any progress.

Thank you,

Mark

Thank you for the great ideas. The MIT tip would be GREAT for a field trip, but I think UMass and Northeastern would be better for volunteers. The Northeastern Community Outreach was a great idea.
(I used to lay out the MIT paper - they have full page ads promising those kids $200,000+, upon graduation, to join their corporations. Knowing this beforehand, they are less likely to put themselves in a high-risk situation than students from the other colleges,)

Originally Posted by TomlinsonRunRR:

Some AM brainstorming ideas to share.  MIT has a model train club; unfortunately, their open house was on the 2nd: http://tmrc.mit.edu/.  You might want to contact them to see if there are any enthusiastic college age volunteers -- they might include mechanical or electrical engineering, and architecture/design, or just interested students from any discipline. They may also have unwanted parts/stock/electronics to help get you going.  Not to mention perhaps existing space. Or, they may know of other college groups on the other side of the river.

 

If MIT's too far afield, you could try U. Mass Boston to see whether there's a student group/department that might be interested in helping kids in their own community. And I know that Northeastern takes its community relations and outreach very seriously. Great engineering and social science departments there, too.

 

Tomlinson Run RR

 

Mark,

I just saw this topic today for the first time.  What a great idea!  I wish you the best.  I just got into O gauge 3 years ago and love it.  I had been in HO and N scales for over 40 years, and just boxed up the last of my HO and N stuff to send to an organization that gives trains sets and layouts to underprivileged kids in another city.  I don't have much in the way of scrap yet for O gauge, but I will keep you in mind if I recall something!  I wish you the best in changing kids lives!!

 

BTW is your name 'agent001' pronounced Agent Double Aught One?  If so, I like it.

Last edited by Mark Boyce

 I have lived, and worked in "not so nice" areas in my lifetime.

 Some friends and family are still there. Some are missed. And it wasn't even a "war zone" then, just bad.

 I thank you for the caring effort, and wish the best for you.

  One kid makes it worth it, and there's always hope for a little change, if not a movement, with each new attempt.

 I have a million thoughts and concerns about asking on the street vs a meeting.

But both have there own risks and politics, and you're not a total stranger there, so I'll keep it light.

 A building in a bad neighborhood, is not a home. It is a learning experience even if that is where you live. More freaks are attracted to business buildings!

  My buddy has a private art studio, and a private sound studio. Choice of neighborhood allows for this, not big money. He likes it when others work with him, it isn't a classroom, business, or social change driven thing. Its hobby thing for him, and he shares with anyone interested.

 We tore out the innards, and rebuild some Detroit buildings that stood in the 1800's. Three people alone have died right there, literally on his steps (two miles apart), possibly seeking help as our hours were anytime, 24-7, and unpredictable.

  Some folk tried to rob, and intimidate at times. Others, like the real neighbors, the ones that lived right there around us, pitched in without being asked. Other "real" businesses opened around these places within three years concentrating renewal on a strip that really needed it. 

 Keeping it "junky" will help with theft sure too. But I can also remember trashed classes at the actual schools fueled by rage in the success of others projects. Be ready for some of that mentality "teacher".

 Don't accumulate lots of supplies there. I'm thinking of motors, wire, and other copper items. Pack things like transformers up each time, and remove them for a while at least. The first year for sure.

Welcome ....

 We would put a table outside with things on it, and/or open doors and a nice home-style welcome mat out often during the day. Bored and curious, people (and freaks) will come to see what is going on, talk, ask questions, and while looking in, and they will, they will see there isn't really anything worth taking inside, other than the things they see you pack all the time. Word will travel, soon they will forget you did that, you can close the door more, and less packing will be needed, but one of the same boxes should always go with you, even if it holds the days empty burger bags.

 

 An incredible challenge, and opportunity, I hope you have a chance to experience all the fun possible there ahead of you.     

   

Kudos to you sir for starting down this road.  I've lived and worked in Chicago's Inner city (K-Town, North Lawndale) for the better part of a decade now and it's great to see folks who are looking to give back.

 

Very glad to see that you have connected with a local organizer and other community officials. The #1 mistake that outsiders make when they come into the community is thinking they know the needs of the community and how best to do things.  I've lived here for almost 10 and I still routinely find major blind spots in my understanding.  Your community contacts will be invaluable.  Not only in finding you a constituency, but also in helping you to set realistic expectations and goals for the program.

 

For 4 years I ran a program here in the neighborhood using LEGO to teach 3rd graders math skills and it took a while for me to re-callibrate my expectations for participation, enthusiasm, attendance, ability, etc. with the reality of the situation in which my students exist.

 

I don't have anything to send over and it sounds like you have a good team, but if you need someone to bounce ideas off of or some moral support let me know.

 

Sincerely,

Karl

First, THANKS for taking on this much-needed task! 

 

I have owned guns, both rifles and handguns in my younger years, and have even been a member of the NRA as a Boy Scout. Never have been a hunter, but always enjoyed target shooting with both pistols and rifles, and occasionally with a Thompson machine gun, and occasionally still do!

 

Unfortunately, poverty, lack of parental guidance, and failure of our schools to provide meaningful VOCATIONAL/TECHNICAL programs, plus a plentiful supply of mostly illegal handguns, continues to proliferate violence in these desperate inner-city areas. 

 

I sincerely wish you the best in your endeavor!

Last edited by Tinplate Art

 The vocational funding began being funneled into computers at my old school while I was still there. Three years later hands on vocational was gone. There were what I call "demonstration classes". Vocational from books, no supplies.

 I don't think apprenticeships are honored as credits any longer either.

  I know almost a dozen 20yr olds(ish) that don't even drive because that is no longer taught in Michigan schools. With no reliable wide spread interurban, nor a decent job nearby. What are the real chances of them ever making a better life for themselves.

 Only the best kids gets their scholarship.

Many very good ones are just plain left out now

Excellent advice, some of which I already employ. (Keeping a mess) This is not my first bad neighborhood, but certainly the most dangerous. I've had design studios before, with crack addicts for neighbors (I like old industrial buildings) so I have some experience, still your pointers were valuable and informative.
Once I was a counselor at Bostons Long Island Shelter, one day a guy asked to borrow a bic pen for a minute, he gave it back, without the cap!! I looked at him with a wise *** grin and said, "cmon, give me the cap" He knew he didn't get over on me and promptly gave it back. I also put up framed photo prints in the shelter, knowing they would be stolen, I used reversible screws and secured it well. Still, a week later, a morning counselor caught a guy boarding the bus to the city - he was being blown of the island by the 3 foot poster he had managed to steal, despite every effort. LOL! I took it as a compliment, since I took the pic. But your right, some steal to survive. Thats why I didn't ask for anything too good. Thanks for the reply!
-Mark

 I have lived, and worked in "not so nice" areas in my lifetime.

 Some friends and family are still there. Some are missed. And it wasn't even a "war zone" then, just bad.

 I thank you for the caring effort, and wish the best for you.

  One kid makes it worth it, and there's always hope for a little change, if not a movement, with each new attempt.

 I have a million thoughts and concerns about asking on the street vs a meeting.

But both have there own risks and politics, and you're not a total stranger there, so I'll keep it light.

 A building in a bad neighborhood, is not a home. It is a learning experience even if that is where you live. More freaks are attracted to business buildings!

  My buddy has a private art studio, and a private sound studio. Choice of neighborhood allows for this, not big money. He likes it when others work with him, it isn't a classroom, business, or social change driven thing. Its hobby thing for him, and he shares with anyone interested.

 We tore out the innards, and rebuild some Detroit buildings that stood in the 1800's. Three people alone have died right there, literally on his steps (two miles apart), possibly seeking help as our hours were anytime, 24-7, and unpredictable.

  Some folk tried to rob, and intimidate at times. Others, like the real neighbors, the ones that lived right there around us, pitched in without being asked. Other "real" businesses opened around these places within three years concentrating renewal on a strip that really needed it. 

 Keeping it "junky" will help with theft sure too. But I can also remember trashed classes at the actual schools fueled by rage in the success of others projects. Be ready for some of that mentality "teacher".

 Don't accumulate lots of supplies there. I'm thinking of motors, wire, and other copper items. Pack things like transformers up each time, and remove them for a while at least. The first year for sure.

Welcome ....

 We would put a table outside with things on it, and/or open doors and a nice home-style welcome mat out often during the day. Bored and curious, people (and freaks) will come to see what is going on, talk, ask questions, and while looking in, and they will, they will see there isn't really anything worth taking inside, other than the things they see you pack all the time. Word will travel, soon they will forget you did that, you can close the door more, and less packing will be needed, but one of the same boxes should always go with you, even if it holds the days empty burger bags.

 

 An incredible challenge, and opportunity, I hope you have a chance to experience all the fun possible there ahead of you.     

   

 

Thank you for the good wishes, Karl. Teaching Math with legos? Brilliant! Wish we had you in the Boston Public Schools! Maybe I wouldn't need an accountant!  You are right on about the community organizers. I once thought I knew what a poor black man experienced, since I lived close, went to school with them, worked with them.....boy was I mistaken! I didn't have a clue, and even with knowledge and experience, I now know I can never truly know what it's like. Doesn't mean I can't care or help though!
BTW since I started this post three more people were shot, one was a 7 year old boy riding his bike! He was visiting his Grandma, didn't even live there. So far NO ONE has come forward to ID the culprit. Broad daylight, plenty of witnesses. But this "no snitch" thing is big in Boston. (and unfortunately, I think it was started by us Irish guys in Charlestown years ago) Sad. But BPD will find him, I'm sure, this is very high profile in the news. Thanks again, Mark

Kudos to you sir for starting down this road.  I've lived and worked in Chicago's Inner city (K-Town, North Lawndale) for the better part of a decade now and it's great to see folks who are looking to give back.

 

Very glad to see that you have connected with a local organizer and other community officials. The #1 mistake that outsiders make when they come into the community is thinking they know the needs of the community and how best to do things.  I've lived here for almost 10 and I still routinely find major blind spots in my understanding.  Your community contacts will be invaluable.  Not only in finding you a constituency, but also in helping you to set realistic expectations and goals for the program.

 

For 4 years I ran a program here in the neighborhood using LEGO to teach 3rd graders math skills and it took a while for me to re-callibrate my expectations for participation, enthusiasm, attendance, ability, etc. with the reality of the situation in which my students exist.

 

I don't have anything to send over and it sounds like you have a good team, but if you need someone to bounce ideas off of or some moral support let me know.

 

Sincerely,

Karl

 

I couldn't agree more! My 5th grade shop class taught me nearly everything I know about hand tools, and began my love of wood..
When I met with the community organizer, THAT'S exactly what we talked about! " Yeah man! I had shop class too! It was great...they don't have that stuff in school anymore." " Yeah and they took out the Music programs too, I used to have a cool jazz drummer for a teacher, God I loved that Ludwig snare drum....."
Actually the whole reason I thought this up was because I, personally was lousy at sports. I tried hard, but had the wrong physique. A lousy coach made me hate sports forever with his comment "Carroll I don't know why you even try!!"  
Thats what I was thinking of when I thought this up - not everyone is good at basketball!
Thank you for your kind words,
Mark


Originally Posted by Tinplate Art:

As a former public school teacher (23-years) and college professor (3-years), I can accurately state that the removal of vocational and technical programs from our high schools was an enormous blunder!

 

 

My type of humor Gary, (the Woolworths line).... Stay cool!
-M  
 
Originally Posted by overlandflyer:
Originally Posted by Agent001:

..., and a mechanism to play with, that ISN”T a GUN!...

really?

 

AA & field guns

sort of sad that the days are gone when a kid could ask his mom to pick up a box of ammo at Woolworth's.

 

good luck...gary

 

Hi Mark,

 

The advice that keeps coming here plus your own experience is just amazing.  I get it about the MIT students being better for a field trip than volunteers. It's too bad, I work with a lot of MIT grads and they are really down to earth (and I doubt they make $200K, but let's just say they aren't suffering either :-).  So, yeah the other colleges closer to your community might be better bets.  Speaking of which, are there any community colleges around? As you probably know, community colleges area seen as picking up the educational slack these days and a great alternative for some one who may not be up to a 4-year program for various reasons.  I don't know if they would be able to provide volunteers/sponsorships to fill in any needs/gaps left by the lack of shop and related high school classes but they may also have students closer to your target group and/or faculty sensitive to the educational needs and challenges you face. Bunker Hill CC might make for a nice field trip if they are near that Chelsea switching area. Don't know where Nazarene CC is but it's another name that came to mind that I think is in Boston, too.

 

Out of curiosity, if you have some time, can you share why you choose O-gauge (if in fact that is your only focus).  I like it because it's easy to work with, tactile in a satisfying way (think, thud factor :-), detailed, more like what I imagine running the real thing would be, etc.  HO is more fussy to work with and so may frustrate some but it occurred to me that there might be more examples out there for donations and if you got any money for supplies and could risk having some shiny new stuff around, it would be much cheaper to buy.  Additionally, it would require much less storage and layout space.  Again, just curious - you've cleary been working many details out and are "on track".

 

Lastly, after your first posting of it, I happened to catch the news story about the boy who was shot out riding his bike. Unfortunately, senseless shootings are what comes up when Dorchester is in the news, and likewise Brockton, which it turns out is where he was visiting from. It leaves me without words, except that I too am hopeful that the Boston Blue will find who ever did it.  It may take a couple of years, but they are persistent and have recently been successful in another apparently similar case.

 

In the meantime, wishing continued support to you and your project,

 

Tomlinson Run RR

Last edited by TomlinsonRunRR
Thanks Mark,
       The LEGO program was alot of fun, but when I became an at-home dad I just didn't have the time anymore. I'm hoping to restart it next year as one-off events in the classroom (formerly a weekly program in a community center) based around the requests/needs of teachers.
 
As for your program, have you considered recruiting your help from the locals?  It's probably not the majority, but there are likely some interested folks who would like such an outlet.  They aren't going to be immediately obvious, but your local organizers and pastors could point you in the right direction.  An outside volunteer will almost never be as committed as a local stakeholder.
 
Lastly, it's hard, but try not to let yourself get to focused on the shootings and other problems.  Not to deny they exist, but to deny them the ability to distract you from all the resources and strengths that exist within even the most blighted of inner city neighborhoods.  Not only will dwelling on them bring you down emotionally, but focusing too much on neighborhood needs to the exclusion of community assets of the biggest factors that lead to "charity" rather than "development".
 
Though I no longer work for a member organization, one of my guiding lights is a (possibly modified) Lao Tzu quote and one of the guiding  philosophies of the CCDA movement.
 
Go to the people
Live among them
Learn from them
Love them
Start with what they know
Build on what they have
But of the best leaders
When their task is done
The people will remark
"We have done it ourselves.
 
Hope I'm not being too preachy here. I am very impressed with your grasp of the local situation and your overall approach.
 
All the Best,
Karl
 
quote:
Originally Posted by Agent001:
Thank you for the good wishes, Karl. Teaching Math with legos? Brilliant! Wish we had you in the Boston Public Schools!...
 
….I now know I can never truly know what it's like. Doesn't mean I can't care or help though!
BTW since I started this post three more people were shot, one was a 7 year old boy riding his bike! He was visiting his Grandma, didn't even live there. So far NO ONE has come forward to ID the culprit. Broad daylight, plenty of witnesses. But this "no snitch" thing is big in Boston. (and unfortunately, I think it was started by us Irish guys in Charlestown years ago) Sad. But BPD will find him, I'm sure, this is very high profile in the news. Thanks again, Mark

 

Last edited by Eilif

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