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Hello all, I wanted to start a Christmas thread that everyone could post their tinplate Christmas pictures and videos on.  I should have started this on the 1st, I guess better late than ever.  I intend to update this thread throughout the month as I’ll be changing out the trains under the tree, and I encourage others to do the same. Merry Christmas!



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Last edited by John Clifford
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Hi Jim, the pieces are bought separately.  The only sets MTH offered that I can recall had either a 384E or a 10E for the engine and usually only came with a couple of cars, usually passenger cars.  They also offered the coal train set that had a 318E, two coal cars and a caboose.  That set was offered under the Lionel Corporation Tinplate brand.  If you look at the catalogs, there were often pictures of a set of trains but typically the engine and cars were listed as having two different product numbers and were actually sold separately.

I received my first electric train for Christmas 1951, a Lionel Lines O27 set, but I never forgot the real meaning of this special time of year and why Christians around the world celebrate it in the first place.

This Christmas is fast becoming a challenge to all men, women, and children, with the Corona Mess doing it's best to wreck just about everything in it's deadly path.  I hope all model railroaders who can, will run their trains around the tree, while singing Christmas carols with family and friends together.  I wonder if any "Brass Hats" ever considered filling up tank cars full of eggnog for the adults and loading gingerbread cookies in gondolas for the kiddies?

A Healthy & Happy Merry Christmas everyone.

Joe

jhz563, looks great, especially the little tin town.  I found the Tardis but couldn’t find Jar-Jar and I don’t know what DD is.

Why Donald Duck of Course!

If you can't tell, the display is mostly put up by the kids.  I neatened it up a bit for the video.  the train changes all the time as the tree give me an excuse to cycle through them.  So far we have also had some doc Mcstuffins characters, A big hippopotamus-(because that's what everyone wants for Christmas!) , and I think sonic the hedgehog also made a brief appearance. The cookie tin houses are great.  They are about $12 a piece, super colorful and detailed, and if one gets mangled or stepped on, it's okay!   No broken ceramics to worry about and the kids can rearrange them anyway they want.  On Christmas eve the elves usually shove them to the back until them mayhem subsides.  It's not a super fancy setup but letting things actually get played with makes it more fun.  the tinplate trains will disappear for most of the afternoon in favor of a Lion chief Christmas switcher and open top cars for passengers.  I have received a special request to have the Polar Express running on Wednesday since my first grader's teacher will be reading that story in the evening over a google meets video call.  2020 is certainly interesting

Last edited by jhz563

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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Ste 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

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