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Had to go to Elgin for work today so I stopped by the Trolley Museum. Some nice and some dilapidated equipment. I really like the 3 car articulated RTA set. Each car was about 30 feet long. The steeple cab and the small orange diesel were also nice as was the natural weathering on the Wilson and Swift cars.  Here are a few of the pictures I took.32164578910111213141615171819202122CTA1CTA2CTA4

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Great Photos!  As a bit of history, I know the artist who drew the CSS&SB The Little Train that Could artwork.  His Name is Dale Fleming and he is an artist in Indiana (at the time of making the artwork, East of Gary).  I have several other pieces of his.  There is one for sale on Amazon which contains sketches of his layout I saw many times when I lived in upstate Indiana.

Dale Fleming Sketchbook

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  • Dale Fleming Sketchbook

The AE&FRE - RELIC was my first 1:1 railroad.  It was the fertile field from which sprang a long and sometimes illustrious railroad career that took me far from the Fox River Valley home of my youth.

No. 20 is now 116 years old but the photos show that she's been loved and cherished by those who stayed and others who came after me.  Well done!  In memory, I still see RELIC as it was in June of 1967, on my first day as a volunteer, when I helped dig the little foundation for Castlemuir Station.

Some may yet live who were aboard CA&E No. 20 on a run chartered by Maury Klebolt.  The return trip from Coleman to Castlemuir began with a cry from Klebolt: "LARAMIE AVENUE WILL BE NEXT!"  The details of that brief trip must remain behind a veil of secrecy but the then un-bonded rail joints arced and smoked while Old Car 20 proved she still had "IT".  Half a century later, I'll bet she still has "IT".

Founders and volunteers of the Fox River Trolley Museum, I salute you.  Many of the railroad museums established in the '50's and '60's have folded, during the past half century, and their collections have rusted, rotted, been junked or dispersed but "RELIC" keeps rolling along - thanks to your efforts.

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