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I don't have any pictures from long ago tinplate but my father always told us the story of how shortly after Thanksgiving his father would close the french doors going into the living room and put butchers paper over the windows.  During that time he would put up the train and tree.  The platform sat on beer cases.  Then before Christmas the doors were open and my dad had access to the tinplate train.  His turtles were part of the the layout in their pond.  It was always a good story.

Here is one from a few years back that I "aged" a bit.

Edited BW

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Last edited by MartyE

I've been having a fun time trying to identify all of the trains and Plasticville in the old photos shared here.  These nostalgic pics just make me feel, well, warm! Thanks for the memories guys and MERRY CHRISTMAS!

I wish I had pics of my old trains to share and I'm guessing that others feel the same way.

Perhaps a present for all could be surprise feature published on Christmas eve on www.Warrenvillerailroad.com , if you guys give me permission to post your Christmas train memory photos, both those already shared here and new ones. I'm gonna ask my non-OGR forum friends (yes, they do exist, and I don't understand why they don't participate here despite my encouragement) if they have some to share too.

My email is in my profile

@KOOLjock1 posted:

That's me in the red jacket, and my brother in the blue... Dad in the middle.  I'd love to have the semaphore tower again, but it somehow disappeared.  This must've been 1968 or '69.  The fake tree was where mom would thread cookies and hang them.  The real tree arrived Christmas Eve with Santa!

Great photo, Jon. Love that semaphore! You guys were dressed up, for Christmas photos by order of your Mom, i would guess.

@Scotie posted:

Lead tinsel. I remember running my Christmas train set, turbine, milk car and etc and having the tinsel fall on the track and cause a short.

My Mom was also a stickler for straight and separated also.

I remember removing the lead tinsel shorts and quickly discovering one CAN actually get a shock from powered Lionel track, especially the bottom side! I wonder why the bottom offered more shocks? Anyway, just part of Christmas memories!

@Lionelski posted:

I've been having a fun time trying to identify all of the trains and Plasticville in the old photos shared here.  These nostalgic pics just make me feel, well, warm! Thanks for the memories guys and MERRY CHRISTMAS!

I wish I had pics of my old trains to share and I'm guessing that others feel the same way.

Perhaps a present for all could be surprise feature published on Christmas eve on www.Warrenvillerailroad.com , if you guys give me permission to post your Christmas train memory photos, both those already shared here and new ones. I'm gonna ask my non-OGR forum friends (yes, they do exist, and I don't understand why they don't participate here despite my encouragement) if they have some to share too.

My email is in my profile

Hi guys,

Christmas is getting very close - do any of you guys want to give me permission to use your great photos for the feature noted above?

Thanks in advance,

John

Back when I was a student, I used to build a temporary Christmas layout every year at my parent's house. The layout started as a small Marx and prewar Lionel setup under the tree but eventually got moved to the spare bedroom floor as it grew.

Layout Overall

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I dug through my photo archives and was able to find a video I took of one of the very last iterations of the Christmas layouts from 2013. In 2014 I was too busy working on my parents' third-story attic to build a Christmas layout and in 2015 I finally had a permanent layout in one corner of the now-finished space.

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NYC Fan, last month I  gave my sister a Red Comet set I found a few months ago.  It is the same as your Dad's.  My brother and I had trains, but my younger sister just had 3 beat up old red tin passenger cars (I still have them).  She was delighted (of course) and its even possible she liked the Hallmark Red Comet Christmas Tree ornament just as much.  Great memories!

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