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My younger brother (by 18 months) called me earlier this week to wish me a Happy Birthday and the call went to voicemail because I was just on the brink of firing up the 675 freight set we shared (with our Dad) in the early '50's.  Having recently purchased some smoke pellets from Hennings, I was anxious to see if the 675 would smoke.  Got it oiled and the freight cars on the track and moved the D handle on the ZW from childhood.  Wouldn't you know, that 675 moved right out pulling the freight cars and Pennsy caboose and, after a couple of loops around the Christmas tree, was puffing away like it was new instead of 60 or so years old.

 

When I called my brother back, I told him I had forgotten how loud the horizontal motors in the 2356 Southern AA's are (pulling its original consist of baggage, coach, and observation car from the 2500 series cars), and that the 675 was grandly puffing away like we remembered.  He immediately asked for pictures; told him I'd send him a video when I finished the around the tree display.

 

Until my Dad gave me these trains, I never considered them "my" trains; rather, these were the "family" trains, or more accurately, our Dad's trains which he shared with my brother and me. 

 

So, what became of your childhood trains?  Still have them; did a sibling get them; or, better still, your dad and mom are still enjoying them?

 

PS:  My Dad gave me the trains about 30 years ago after I had asked for them.  That was a mild sore spot for my brother even though he'd asked for other things from our childhood and my Dad gave them to him before I asked for the trains.  Heck, even after I gave my brother a beautiful set of PW Santa Fe F-3's and aluminum cars for his 40th birthday (because of a slightly guilty conscience) 25 years ago it still rankled him a bit.  Happily, I didn't detect any of that when we spoke earlier this week.

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my Mom tossed them OUT. back in the 1960s still hurts!! The Good news. I have a picture of my Dad setting up the Marx set under the tree. I could make out the cars and Locomotive.

years ago, I went into Ebay, found all those cars and locomotive. Bid, Won and have that set again to run on my board. Yippee Skippee!!

Last edited by Popi

The trains from childhood, my dad's, are at my brothers currently where is is cleaning, repairing, and generally keeping them in working order.  They are PW so he gets more enjoyment out of them than I do.  I'm confident that they are safe long term and will operate for years to come.

 

The 2356 Southern freight set, 671 Turbine freight set, a Lionelville trolley.

 

Last edited by MartyE

Interestingly enough, I did not have Lionel trains when I was younger...I had all Lego Trains.  

 

My mother would buy me one new set each year, until I effectively had a massive Lego empire. 

 

I am currently 30 years old, and I am proud to say...I still have every single one (in storage obviously).  

 

Perhaps one day I'll pass down to my nephew (he's still a little too young to appreciate them).

 

Best,

Michael

My childhood trains have become the basis do 46 years of collecting and operating which over the years have expanded to two rail O, garden trains, Marklin Gauge 1, and even HO. I consider my official train entry date December 8, 1968 when I drilled my first whole on the family layout in the basement. My dad stood behind me, helping me hold his big Sears all metal, made in the USA, drill, as "I" drilled my first hole. He is long gone, as well as the layout, but I still have all the trains and accessories.

All the best,

Miketg

I run them on my postwar layout. They were my dad's and he passed away when I was five. My mom gave me his trains for my 8th birthday and I took very good care of them. My best memories of my dad are running trains on a 4x8 board and around the Christmas tree. Running these from time to time brings back those memories.

 

Bob

 

My first engine, an American Flyer 283 4-6-2 was cannibalized to make 2 other engines with die-cast boilers run. (A K-5 and a Hudson.) I still have the boiler shell, and tender, and have since bought a running chassis to make it whole. Everything is packed away awaiting The Great Move. (Coming the fall of 2015.) [And people who really know me will say I'm being optimistic on the year.]   

Still have mine, and in pretty good condition. My parents packed up my trains when I left, and several years ago my father was cleaning house and told me that if I wanted them, I'd better take them. So I did. I had always taken good care of them, so when I unpacked them almost everything was complete and in decent shape. I never had anything very high-end, but I'm glad to have gotten them back just for the sake of having them. I mostly don't run them, except for a couple of items that I especially like, such as the 460 Piggyback Platform. 

 

Piggyback Platform 1

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My 2026 Lionel freight set from 1948 is packed up for my first grandson.  It runs just fine with the original 1032 transformer.

 

He just turned 6 and loves trains.  He's learning from the RTR Thomas set at the moment.  He lives 800 miles away but will be here after Christmas when we run a PE, girl's set, and a few locos I bought this year.

I'm 24, so it probably wouldn't seem like too long ago to you "more experienced" model railroaders, but 4 years in a college fraternity does seem to seperate my childhood pretty well.  Anyway, my early plastic sets are long gone.  still have my wooden brio imitations in a box in the attic.  my first HO set has seen better days and i doubt the engine runs, but i kept them for the shelf.  When I got into O-gauge and got some early postwar from a distant family member, my dad found his original trains, a late lionel postwar.  It didn't work anymore so he sold it and put the money towards my our growing collection. Can't wait to get home for the holidays and run trains with dad again

Mine, went the route of mom giving it away. But more valuable to me was my brothers train set. Just a Sears Allstate set he loved and we had it set up in our bedroom. He was 5 years old when he died. It took over a year for me to pack away. To this day, I still take and run it on my layout occassionaly, and as it run, memories flood back to those day in our bedroom of 1961.

I still have my Dad's set which he purchased in 1948.  It is Lionel set 1423W which is a freight set headed up with a nice little die cast 1655 steam locomotive with a whistling tender.  I still have all of the set components and the engine and whistle tender work just fine. 

I also still have my Grandfather's set which my Grandmother bought for him in 1958.  It is also a Lionel freight set.  The set number is 1590 and it is headed up by a plastic 249 steam locomotive with no headlight or whistle and a two position reverse unit.  However, the engine and its tender have matching orange stripes which gives them a nifty looking appearance.  The engine still runs great. 

As I was growing up I unfortunately trashed both of the set boxes for these sets even though I kept the individual component boxes in decent shape.  However, E-Bay came along and I was able to buy both set boxes which now gives me two fully intact sets which I can pass on to the next generation. 

I still all the Lionel trains I received when I was 1-2 years old. They were un-cataloged outfits and I have been able to identify what engines and cars went together. 

 

X533NAOTASCO1960
 (Christmas Gift) 
   
228Canadian National ALCO A 
6544Missile launching car w/4 missiles 
6844Missile carrying car w/6 missiles 
3419Operating helicopter car 
6017Caboose 
   
   
   
X522NAOTASCO1960
 (Christmas Gift) 
   
220PSanta Fe ALCO A 
220TSanta Fe ALCO A Dummy 
6812Track maintenance Car 
6062NYC Gondola w/3 reels 
6825Flatcar with trestle 
6476Lehigh Valley hopper 
6017Caboose 
   
   
X-639Western Auto1961
 (Gift from my grandfather) 
   
233Steam Locomotive 
1130TTender 
6650ICBM Missile Launching Car 
6470Exploding Boxcar 
6062Gondola w/3 reels 
6017Caboose 
   
   
 Other Rolling Stock 
   
3509Operating Satellite Car 
6465Black 2D Tank Car 
6823Flat Car with 2 Missiles 
6819Flat Car with Helecopter 
3665Minuteman Missile Launching Car 

 

Some wear and tear of course but I've been able to fix and replace broken parts with new old stock parts.

 

I need to post some pix. stay tuned!

 

 

Last edited by Former Member

I stll have my 0-4-0 Scout set from 1958. I still use th loco and slope backed tender t from time to time to check out tranformers under repair. It's pretty much indestrcutable at this point, so if there is something goofy going on with the TXFMR, then no electronics get damaged.  The plastic body is getting a bit rough, but the internals just keep on going. 

 

r0d

I still have the wooden locomotive my dad made for me, it's in the garage. Now that I think on it, I should probably put that on a shelf in the layout room along with the locomotive from my first train set ever, the Lionel 6-1661 Rock Island Line set. I still have the locomotive from that set, though the smokebox face fell off during a move a some point and was later replaced...

1205191907-01

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Last edited by p51

I still have them all: The Skaneateles wooden push train (the Christmas Eve arrival of which is a miracle story in itself!), the 1949 Scout set, the 2343 Santa Fe 2161W set, the 623 Switcher, the 2500-series passenger cars...all of the accessories....everything. 

 

On the other hand, I still have Dad's 'childhood' train...a 366W Lionel Standard Gauge set.  'Childhood' would, perhaps, be a misnomer.  He received it for Christmas in 1935, give or take a year.  He was about 27 years young at the time.   Not the best of times, the mid-30's.  Of course, by then Dad was married and fortunate enough to have a job of his own, so I suppose that enabled Grandma & 'Pops' to finally have the funds to make up where Santa had fallen short about 20 years earlier?!?!  Who knows?

 

All of which is going nowhere while this ol' phart is still around!

 

KD

 

 

Last edited by dkdkrd

still have them all and cost a small fortune to have them all either restored or repaired. All of them now fully functional and restored.

 

HO Lionel numerous engine and freight cars many of them operate. Set up a layout with every piece I own either shown on a siding or on the mainline running.

 

 

O-Gauge lionel scout set with air whistle and freight cars.

 

O-Gauge Marx William Crooks fully restored all new decals, new pick up sliding shoe. Smoke and headlight work. Tin Plate passenger cars fully restored with new chimneys.

 

Although not trains just bought a absolute mint HO Aurora slot car set off ebay. I plan on setting up the slot cars on the HO layout. My Dad bult my very first train table. I had both HO slots and HO trains on that table. I plan on replicating it best i can.

Originally Posted by handyandy:

I still have one. Wish I still had all the track that went with it...

 

I had a number of those 'Child Guidance' train sets as a kid.

A few years ago I decided to find all the CG Trains I had. It was pretty easy to find everything. In fact I found enough to make a complete set for my grandkids to play with too....

I still have my original Lionel 2026 that Santa brought me in 1951 -- and the freight cars that came with it.  A few years later, it was joined by a #41 US Army turbine switcher and still more freight cars.  All of them still run just fine.

 

The 2026 is in a year round place of honor on our coffee table.  Over the years, they've all been joined by a lot more rolling stock, and accessories.  And a lot of scale equipment has taken its place in the roster, lately,

I still have my lionel 2036 freight set that my mom bought from the neighbors around 1963 or so. I had a windup marx set and an electric marx set with plastic engine but my mom , like others here, decided less fortunate kids should have them. For some reason she decided the lionel should stay in the family and kept it when I left home until I rediscovered it in 2006.

Rob

I still have my original outfit that I received on Christmas morning, 1955. I also have a pair of 2023 Alcos, and a few extra cars I received as gifts later. I had a large collection of other engines, cars, track, and accessories, that I added over the years. That stuff all got sold when I was a young, married father of 2 girls, who needed dance lessons, piano lessons, etc. I miss having that stuff, but I am not sorry I sold it, as the funds were certainly put to good use for my girls.

 My remaining Lionel stuff runs great, and is going to be running around the Christmas tree this year for the first time in 16 years. I need to get my 3 year old grandson started on trains.

Jeff

 

I got my first set 1483WS, back in 1952, along with a 2020/2020W, with accessories like the 3472 and 3656 sets, and had a 8'x16' two level layout.  I had a lot of boxcars, gondolas, and the like, that were accumulated over the years when I was young.  Then the "fateful years of teenage" hit, and the trains were no longer an interest.  The train layout got disassembled, and the trains got packed away.  Along about 1961, my mother decided that she wanted to pass the trains off to my Uncle (her brother), who had two sons.  Everything that I had of Lionel trains was gone, but I totally forgot about them.  I thought that I would never see them again.

 

In the middle 1960's, I finished high school, joined the Navy and did my stint for 4 years.  Got out of Navy, married and life was good.  Still no thought of trains in the picture.I did buy an "N" scale set when my son was about 6 or 7, and ran that for maybe 2 years, and then boxed it all up.

 

About 6 years ago, my wife wanted to put a train under the Xmas tree, and we did have her old set from 1955, tucked back in a corner of our attic.  I dug it out, and had to clean it all up, and then find out if it ran.  It missed being under the tree that year, because her request was about 3 weeks before Xmas.  Got it running, and the following year we had a running train.  That is when the "LIONEL BUG" bit me real hard.  I wanted to try and recreate what I originally had, and started to pick thing up on eBay.  I just didn't remember exactly what engines I had, but I knew they were heavy.

 

Then February 2014, my youngest cousin contacts me and asked me if I would like to have my trains back, since they were originally mine.  Couldn't say YES fast enough.  We finally had a chance to get together, and I got the bulk of what I had when I had the layout.  Little did I know that my cousin had taken the trains with every move he made over the years.  He had lived in Missouri, Texas, & Tennessee, and the trains kept going with him.  So 53 years later, I have my original Lionel trains, back in my possession.-----Both engines needed parts, and repairs, my ZW transformer still worked, and the accessories were all checked. 

I traded all my PW trains for a hydroplane in high school then went into professional boat racing  over the next 30 years.  

 

A nasty racing accident scared me back into trains and I now have replaced all the early under sized Lionel models with scale length equipment.

 

Same road names, same prototype, just all scale sized.  Reality is now better than the memory!

 

My Marx #25000 set, received for Christmas in 1946/7?, was damaged by a broken

water heater on the floor of my mother's basement after I had left home.  I tossed

the rotted box but kept all the rusty components, and then, when back in three rail

trains, duplicated it several times over.  My brother's #25249 set, that we often ran

together, was high on a shelf and remains in pristine condition.  He later gave it to me when his kids were grown, and I have it and the rusty set still.  (these are both "3/16"

freight sets with different versions of the #999 loco)

Santa brought an American Flyer freight set headed by the PRR K5 No 310 and had it under the tree for Christmas 1949. I was 5 and had had a silver metal pus train before that that I dearly loved. Now we had an electric train!

I still have the 4 cars in a box but they are in poor condition so they remain in a box. The steamer was repainted Brunswick Green and sits on a shelf in my office at home.

DSC06995

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Last edited by c.sam

My dear Aunt Mary gave me a 1060 scout set for Christmas when I was 1-2 years old: 1060 plastic steamer, 1060T tender, unlettered flatcar (brown, 1877-style, with orange spools), 6042 gondola (with red canisters), and an unlettered red caboose.

 

This photo isn't my set, but it's the same thing:

 

 1060set

THANK GOD she also gave me a large circle of her sons' O tubular track which allowed me to build a decent size loop around the tree.

 

I still have that set, including all the pieces.   On the layout I'm building, it will go on a special small 3rd-level loop above everything else.  The unspoken message will be "everything else you see descends from this train".

 

I wouldn't sell it for all the money in the world.

 

SJS

 

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Last edited by Serenska

I still have my 1463w set with 2036 engine that my grandfather set up in his basment as a christmas present in 1971 when I was 9. After a few months he boxed it up and stored it until his passing. My mother gave it to me. I still run the engine. 

 

I don't know where or who my grandfather got it from, but it was like new and still is in pretty good condition for a set that was 21 years old. I always considered it a new when I got it for christmas.

I still have the original engine, a Lionel Minneapolis & St. Louis GP 9 2348, of the Sears set Santa gave the four of us kids for Christmas in 1960.  Most of the original cars and caboose of set were damaged so I replaced them with identical ones.  The consist consisted of an REA Express refer, a Lehigh Valley hopper, a NYC gondola with 3 orange spools, a Lionel Lines operating helicopter car, a Lionel Lines flat car with transformer load and a Lionel Lines caboose.  We also had a lighted rotating beacon. The following November my mother bought for me a used Lehigh Valley 44 ton switcher and some track for cheap that was in a grab bag sale at my grade school's yearly fall carnival.  I still have the 44 tonner.  I also have some of the original O27 track that came with the original set.  The original transformer is long gone.  I tried to upload a pic, but it wouldn't go. 

 

Larry

Last edited by PSAP2010

Well....it's like this. When I was just out of college, and living the single life in LA, I made the mistake of visiting "the Whistle Stop" in Pasadena (yup it's still there) and traded the trains I got for several Christmases, American Flyer 326, 315, 293, U.P. GP-7 and a bunch of cars, track...talking station...etc. for a PFM Tenshodo Pacific Coast Shay, some Labelle, Ambroid and Central Valley "craftsmen kits", code 70 rail, ties...etc. Thus began my journey to the dark world of HO and HOn3.

Now I'm back...but in 3 rail Post War Lionel. I always found the ability to do a reverse loop without pain and suffering a nice feature...kinda whish I still had the Flyer as well though. May have to buy it all back on Fee Pay...

I still have mine:

 

IMG_3076

 

It currently occupies a display track on my bedroom dresser.  My grandfather gave it to me 40 years ago this Christmas.  It was the happiest Christmas of my childhood.  In the years that followed, my dad bought us new MPC era sets:  The Empire State Express freight set, the Southern Crescent set and the Blue Comet Set.  I have the ESE and SC sets and my brother has the BC set.

 

Andy

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A number of them are (as I type this) running under our Xmas tree. The rest are either on my main layout or the shelves around it. I have everything.

 

It's sad, but I've heard so many stories from friends who no longer have them because their parents gave them away, donated them or.....threw them out. One of my neighbors came over to see my trains a few years ago and within minutes had tears in his eyes. Reason.....when he moved into his apartment during Law School, he had no room for his trains so.....he sold them for 100 bucks. When he saw my trains, he realized that my original set was the same as the set he sold. He totally regrets it. 

 

Cherish them.....

 

Roger

Originally Posted by Pingman:

My younger brother (by 18 months) called me earlier this week to wish me a Happy Birthday and the call went to voicemail because I was just on the brink of firing up the 675 freight set we shared (with our Dad) in the early '50's.  Having recently purchased some smoke pellets from Hennings, I was anxious to see if the 675 would smoke.  Got it oiled and the freight cars on the track and moved the D handle on the ZW from childhood.  Wouldn't you know, that 675 moved right out pulling the freight cars and Pennsy caboose and, after a couple of loops around the Christmas tree, was puffing away like it was new instead of 60 or so years old.

 

When I called my brother back, I told him I had forgotten how loud the horizontal motors in the 2356 Southern AA's are (pulling its original consist of baggage, coach, and observation car from the 2500 series cars), and that the 675 was grandly puffing away like we remembered.  He immediately asked for pictures; told him I'd send him a video when I finished the around the tree display.

 

Until my Dad gave me these trains, I never considered them "my" trains; rather, these were the "family" trains, or more accurately, our Dad's trains which he shared with my brother and me. 

 

So, what became of your childhood trains?  Still have them; did a sibling get them; or, better still, your dad and mom are still enjoying them?

 

PS:  My Dad gave me the trains about 30 years ago after I had asked for them.  That was a mild sore spot for my brother even though he'd asked for other things from our childhood and my Dad gave them to him before I asked for the trains.  Heck, even after I gave my brother a beautiful set of PW Santa Fe F-3's and aluminum cars for his 40th birthday (because of a slightly guilty conscience) 25 years ago it still rankled him a bit.  Happily, I didn't detect any of that when we spoke earlier this week.

I had 4 sets as a kid. Over 6 years. Original #1589WS. still have.  027 General, still have. Santa Fe Switcher set went to my great nephew. Santa Fe #218 Alcos were sold like an idiot.  I bought another set last month.  They are on the first three shelves in the basement and I tell people they are what started this "sickness" hahaha 

Pre-ramble...

 

As we age I suppose it's typical to lose the memory of a lot of mundane things in our childhood.  But one moment, discussion-in-a-circle, I remember when I was in kindergarten (Ms. Burrows, my teacher) was when we were talking about trees.  The question put to us was 'What keeps a tree standing up?  Why doesn't it fall over?  Why are they so sturdy when the wind blows?'  Well, around the circle she went seeking answers.  To which she got several 'The trunks!', a few 'The branches!',  fewer still 'The leaves!'.  I blurted out 'The roots!', which apparently was the answer she sought.  She then proceeded to tell everyone how and why the roots are so important to a tree.

 

This thread has a lot to do with 'roots', doesn't it? 

 

And when you read other thread responses regarding different facets of the hobby, often from the same respondents answering this particular thread question, you realize how significant, deep, broadly spread those 'roots' have been in our lives, skills, families, imaginations,...hopes. 

 

I read one response where a visitor to a friend's layout became teary-eyed recalling their own lost childhood trains.  Do you suppose that today's youthful generation, immersed more into ephemeral gizmos/games...cell phones, I-pads, I-phones, X-boxes, Grand Theft Auto (), etc., etc., blah, blah, blah...will someday as an adult be as teary-eyed should they spy the digit-widget of their childhood being used?

 

Consider that to be a rhetorical question, NOT intended to hijack this thread's question. 

 

Sorry for Toodling into the field to smell the daisies.  This hobby, those trains, the parental support/encouragement...they're near the top of my own list of 70-years of blessings. 

 

It seems to be a bit more nebulous for today's new generations. 

 

KD

 Well I've retained about 90+% of them since I was 6 years old ,(1975) the  I discovered my late father's old trains in the attic.

 

 I do have my very first train set ,a Lionel Santa-Fe 8351,with only the top part of the set box.

 And I have my dad's first train,an old windup Hafner steam engine,and his first real electric train set ,a Santa-Fe 6220.

 

 My dad regrettably traded around most of his trains from his youth,a bunch of Marx,when he got me started in trains.

 

 I've tried to receptacle the parts of the collection I don't have as much as possible over the years ,but because of my age at the time I'm not 100% sure as to what all is missing.

 But the memories of the trains I do have ,is all I need to keep my dad's memory alive when we enjoyed model trains together,truly a lifetime of happiness 

 

 

I had Lionel trains since I was10 in 1947.   I had 3 engines, a 726, a 681 and a Santa fee AA set. I also has the Lionel Lines aluminum cars, milk car, cattle car, coal ramp, etc.  When I was 17 I wanted a car so I sold them thru a newspaper ad.  -  What a mistake.

 

The chap I sold them to paid by cheque. 10 days later it came back NSF.  He had left town.  So, no trains and no car.  Got  back into trains in  1995.

This afternoon I was looking at a 3-ring binder with clear pocket pages that hold a bunch of PW instruction sheets, catalogs, etc.  On the very first page I saw when opening the binder was this note (written in the early '50's) I had forgotten my Dad had made, presumably after that first Christmas with LIONEL trains:

Dad's Train List 001

 

Have them all, tattered OB's and running this Christmas.

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I was a lucky kid when it came to my trains.  My first one was a Marx Commodore Vanderbilt freight set which I received in 1938 when I was 3.  Next year I got a Marx M10,000 set and I thought I was the big shot of the neighborhood.  Two years later I received all the trains from a cousin that had passed away at an early age.  So I had about seven trains, lots of track, stations, elevated tracks, accessories, etc.

 

But I played with my trains and literally wore them out or beat them up.  When I was about 15 I fell in with the "wrong crowd", a bunch of HO gaugers and I sold all my trains to buy some HO stuff.  Years later I discovered the error of my ways, sold off my HO and got back into trains that I could actually see and work on; "0" gauge, of course.

 

But those early memories remained and I have since purchased a replacement for each one of the trains I had as a kid.  I proudly display them now on a wall of my basement, close to my layout.

 

Paul Fischer

I still have all mine, packed away, all in original boxes, with also outside cartons. My dad wanted to give them to his nephews at one point, after he thought I was getting too old I guess. Thanks to mom, she put a stop to that, and was ready with a rolling pin in her hand . She said the trains were too valuable to just give away, and worked hard to buy them. I guess she had a vision of the future.

Originally Posted by fisch330:

I was a lucky kid when it came to my trains.  My first one was a Marx Commodore Vanderbilt freight set which I received in 1938 when I was 3.  Next year I got a Marx M10,000 set and I thought I was the big shot of the neighborhood.  Two years later I received all the trains from a cousin that had passed away at an early age.  So I had about seven trains, lots of track, stations, elevated tracks, accessories, etc.

 

But I played with my trains and literally wore them out or beat them up.  When I was about 15 I fell in with the "wrong crowd", a bunch of HO gaugers and I sold all my trains to buy some HO stuff.  Years later I discovered the error of my ways, sold off my HO and got back into trains that I could actually see and work on; "0" gauge, of course.

 

But those early memories remained and I have since purchased a replacement for each one of the trains I had as a kid.  I proudly display them now on a wall of my basement, close to my layout.

 

Paul Fischer

I rather hear that some kid played with the trains until they wore out than given away or simply trashed.

Last edited by Steamer
Mine started in the early 70's with my first HO set and stuff from my dad's old UP Athern set that was left after they split. Had a 4x8 board in the living room for years before moving to Tucson in 79. All of it somehow "disappeared" during the move. Guess my mom thought it was too much extra stuff to pack in the small u haul. Spent many an hour just sitting in one spot at track level waiting for the train to go by, or driving my matchbox and hot wheels cars all over town. Still wish I still had them. Got back into it again in N, had to sell all of it off a few years ago when I was laid off from work (had to pay bills some how), now into it again with N, until the wife and I got our first Lionel Polar Express set about 3 years ago now. Now just waiting for things to settle down after a horrible year so I can get the plywood and start setting up. She keeps bugging me about it to get it started. This time I refused to sell any of the train stuff. I miss my old sets from childhood, I still regret having to sell the sizeable collection I had years ago, and not going through it again.

I can't recall the set number, but I had a low-cost set from around 1954 with the Erie 610 switcher. That was always set up around the tree; I was too young to know when it first appeared (born in '54), but it was always there. And always went back into the attic.  That was it - no accessories, no switches, nothing.  Then when I was about 8, it was decided that I could have control of the trains year-round. Also appearing at that time was a box full of trains. My dad had horse-traded with someone unknown to me, and I received a 4' tall by 3' wide box about 12" deep - but it was bulging with stuff just thrown in helter-skelter.

 

There were some brass HO freight cars, a bunch of HO track, but more to my interests there was a KW transformer, milk car, cattle car, a Scout loco & tender, a bunch of track, an operating box car where the door would open and the man would appear in the doorway. Also was the double-hopper side side dump coal car and some generic low-budget freight cars.  I literally wore out that stuff. Of course, enquiring minds....understand that at age 8 my parents got me a 3/8" electric drill that I have to this day. I was the one who always took stuff apart and always broke off those tin "tangs" that held the parts together. Of course, today I'm an engineer so I guess it was just in the cards.

 

Some stuff got broken, some burnt out, some, I just don't know where it went. BUT, I still had that 610 freight set.

 

In the mid 70's I worked part-time for a local NJ Lionel Service Station; got paid in trains. They'd also take me to area train shows and help me select good pieces for the "right" prices.  I ended up with (remember, all original PW) Virginian FM, 671 turbine, 2343 ABA Santa Fe's, the Erie AA Alco's with the cast frames, culvert loader/unloader pair, a 2340 GG-1, a General set, 2368 B&O F3 AB, some then-current MPC, etc.

 

Well, after the starter marriage failed (we were both young and stupid), I had to sell the trains.  Was no longer working at the SS, and was embarrassed to tell them I had to sell. I called a local "I buy trains" guy.  Back then (young and stupid), I didn't know about negotiating and that the guy would come in with a low-ball offer. Was not a steal, but I probably could have doubled my money if I'd only known.

 

And, yes, the 610 set went with the rest.

 

Man, I miss that set. Have thought about putting a replacement set together; nothing in the set was hard to find, but still, it wouldn't be MY train....

The 2025 engine from the set Santa brought Christmas 1947 is packed in the closet behind me, should take it out this year.  I sold off most all my Lionel stuff to buy HO Bowser Pennsy steam engines kits in the 60/70s. 

 

And regrettably a few years back my EX failed to live up the property agreement after divorce and my 1959 Super-O General set went missing!

 

Ron 

Last edited by PRRronbh

I'm an only child so I still have the original first [Marx & Lionel] trains of my childhood. I have acquired my cousin's trains also. Also through marriage I have acquired my wife and brother-in-law's train [her brother got Dad's Gun]. My second Marx [military] train I gave to my wife's half brother since I had her's and her older brothers original train.

  These threads never get old for me. Not just because it gets me thinking about "good times", but because all the little common experiences we share separately really interests me. So different, yet so similar.

Floods took care of the boxes, I remember drying the trains in the warm sun on the porch, branches and trees everywhere. The fire brigade critter, a hopper(had nice ladders? early le high?), sd tank car (nice ladders too), and gang car rusted out. Plus a few others already "weak", or delicate.

 My Mom would go on frantic cleaning binges, and purges lasting weeks.  One day I came home from school, to find all my WW I & II items from my fathers side, gone from my top drawer! Looking for the box I had hoped the stuff was in now, I noticed, two boxes of carefully selected, and cared for golden age, and #1-4 of many silver age comics were gone too. I knew right away they had been thrown out by my Mother, and Step-father Who have no respect for others "silly" belongings (but are mild collectors themselves. Dolls & John Deer ). Uh oh! Trains!  The first thing I did was check on cubby for the "dirty old trains"(her term). Moving them to my closet, because that was "safer", i.e. cleaned already. I then called Dad, and Gramps  They helped me establish a guaranteed true ownership of all my things from that day on. Once I was grown and leaving, the trains came with me on the first moving trip, they still cant be trusted(my siblings agree).

 My #2037 Adriatic still sticks like glue, and I still run it most often.

My lil' bro' let me "borrow" his "Santa fe Hudson" #665 with me when he went command years ago. 

Mines waaaaay faster, out of the hole or at speed. His is stronger but has some wheel slip earlier, mine has Magne-traction! 

Lots of controls, power, engines, and rolling stock were destroyed, but lots survived

My favorites did!

  The geared "cowboy-vs-gunfighter" car..Click!Bang!Click!

The #6650 rocket launcher has nearly as many miles on it as the #2037.

and the Blue/yellow Giraffe car modified to "raise up & look" around off a #90 & Un-couple track.

 Oh! The Gantry & Rocket Launcher survived too! (most of it anyhow, not many rails left, but works)  

 

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