barrybailey
New Member
Greetings from Massachusetts. I’m a new member here. Thank you for admitting me to your special grou
Posts: 11
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Post by barrybailey on Oct 24, 2024 19:58:58 GMT
Hello fellow train lovers. I am a new member here and I will attempt to share with you where I am coming from, and where I fit in with this group. As I posted earlier, I am 81 years old, and I am in the process of downsizing. That includes model train items that are both pre and post war. My grandfather began the family tradition with an annual holiday set up in the 1920s or 1930s that grew through the years and was mostly handed down to me, the first grandchild. His layout began with a Lionel train and two houses. A tall house from England had a hinged façade that opened up to reveal a living room and bedroom. The square house my grandfather built. He also began creating a Zoo with animal houses, cages and many animals imported from Europe, mostly Germany. The Zoo also included mechanical items like a fountain that spouted real water and a Merry-go-round. I have included the few photos I have of those early days. The dates written on the photos are not correct. The two similar black and white photos were shot from the same vantage point and show two different year’s layouts. One shot shows the two houses. The second photo features a low mountain with a tunnel. The third B&W photo shows one of the Zoo buildings and some of the animals that made up the Zoo. The photo with dark brown woodwork is dated 1930. I strongly believe this was not the first year of this tradition. If I have posted this in the appropriate place here on the site, I plan to share more photos of the evolution of this family tradition.
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Post by runamuckchuck on Oct 24, 2024 20:07:59 GMT
Hello fellow train lovers. I am a new member here and I will attempt to share with you where I am coming from, and where I fit in with this group. As I posted earlier, I am 81 years old, and I am in the process of downsizing. That includes model train items that are both pre and post war. My grandfather began the family tradition with an annual holiday set up in the 1920s or 1930s that grew through the years and was mostly handed down to me, the first grandchild. His layout began with a Lionel train and two houses. A tall house from England had a hinged façade that opened up to reveal a living room and bedroom. The square house my grandfather built. He also began creating a Zoo with animal houses, cages and many animals imported from Europe, mostly Germany. The Zoo also included mechanical items like a fountain that spouted real water and a Merry-go-round. I have included the few photos I have of those early days. The dates written on the photos are not correct. The two similar black and white photos were shot from the same vantage point and show two different year’s layouts. One shot shows the two houses. The second photo features a low mountain with a tunnel. The third B&W photo shows one of the Zoo buildings and some of the animals that made up the Zoo. The photo with dark brown woodwork is dated 1930. I strongly believe this was not the first year of this tradition. If I have posted this in the appropriate place here on the site, I plan to share more photos of the evolution of this family tradition. Barry, Welcome to the forum. If I am not speaking out of turn you will find the moderating style here is in moderation. While there are sub topic threads from the looks of your post you picked the most logical spot. We look forward to further examples of your history with model trains!
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barrybailey
New Member
Greetings from Massachusetts. I’m a new member here. Thank you for admitting me to your special grou
Posts: 11
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Post by barrybailey on Oct 24, 2024 20:49:29 GMT
Chuck, thank you for your response. I will post additional historic commentary and photos here as I am able. I appreciate receiving the assurance I am following the guidelines of the group. Please do not hesitate to let me know if I am not doing anything correctly. Thanks.
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Post by josef on Oct 24, 2024 21:00:25 GMT
Fantastic. Thanks for sharing and looking forward to more.
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Post by runamuckchuck on Oct 24, 2024 21:09:03 GMT
Chuck, thank you for your response. I will post additional historic commentary and photos here as I am able. I appreciate receiving the assurance I am following the guidelines of the group. Please do not hesitate to let me know if I am not doing anything correctly. Thanks. Barry, That is more in Josef's line of work as moderator, I am just one of the rank and file like you. I will say however with complete confidence that this is not a forum which tries to make its' members neurotics. If you should err in some way, the sword of Damocles will not swoop down and give you a haircut! Browse around the various topics which catch your interest and you will soon become familiar with the cast of characters who frequent the place that is if you have not done so already. This forum is a welcoming bunch, they let me in! I look forward to your future posts and hope that you will find threads which you find informative, useful, and of interest!
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Post by Adam on Oct 24, 2024 21:21:15 GMT
Barry, thanks for sharing and joining us. We are all about friendship and camaraderie, with trains being the common interest. Great first post and although I have seen those photos on Nextdoor (we are neighbors) they still are wonderful to see here.
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Post by atsda on Oct 25, 2024 2:17:07 GMT
Barry, welcome to the OGF. Thanks for giving us your train background. You are one of the few new members who have initially shared their hobby interests. Keep it up. 81? Trains will keep you young. Alfred
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Post by trainman9 on Oct 25, 2024 13:58:32 GMT
Barry, welcome to the forum. Nice photos. Keep them coming.
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Post by healey36 on Oct 25, 2024 14:38:50 GMT
Thanks for the intro, Barry; looking forward to seeing how you continue in the hobby even as you downsize. Hopefully a small layout or seasonal display is part of the plan. Keep us posted.
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Post by david1 on Oct 25, 2024 18:04:08 GMT
Thank you Barry for posting. We have lots of trains here from 1900's to 2024. We like and talk about all era's of trains so post ahead and tell us what interests you.
Dave
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barrybailey
New Member
Greetings from Massachusetts. I’m a new member here. Thank you for admitting me to your special grou
Posts: 11
|
Post by barrybailey on Oct 26, 2024 16:00:04 GMT
Here are a few more photos of the early layout of my grandfather. In the two B&W photos you can see the elephant house he built. I’m told it was inspired by the elephant house at the Washington Zoo. The Cat House he built sits nearby. Obviously these two photos are from two different years even though they are both labeled 1936. In the digitally colored photo you can see the Log Cabin Homestead grouping created as a gift by a relative. On the other side of the track was what was affectionately called “German Town”, an assortment of paper buildings that came in book form and were cut out and assembled and illuminated. Nearly all of these items, minus the two big houses, are now in my possession.
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Post by healey36 on Oct 26, 2024 16:08:42 GMT
The set-up is terrific, and if you have all or most of the stuff, it deserves to be returned to its rightful place under the tree this year (or in another display of your choosing). Just fantastic.
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Post by curtis on Oct 27, 2024 18:25:21 GMT
Welcome and great historic story!
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Post by Country Joe on Oct 27, 2024 19:58:38 GMT
The photos of your grandfather’s Christmas layouts are fabulous!
You can post almost anything here on the main board. The sub-forums are available to focus on specific topics but you are not required to post there. Our moderation style here is, well, moderate.
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Post by runamuckchuck on Oct 27, 2024 20:52:09 GMT
Top notch. The tinsel brings back memories of when our cat ate some. That was quite a treat dealing with the other end if you get my drift. We did not reuse that tinsel!
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