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Was in Pittsburgh, Pa. this past week to take the Victorian home Christmas tour. The last home on the tour was that of John DeSantis who owns the largest standard gauge toy train collection. John's collection was documented in the TM video, Tinplate Legends in Action, Part 3. The 18,000 square foot home was impressive enough but the train collection itself is overwhelming. Here are some photos I took the day I was there. I will continue to add more to this thread as we go along. Click on the pictures to enlarge them. Enjoy.

This is the front of John's beautiful home.

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This is as you head up the stairs and at the third floor entrance way.

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Awesome.  I love the videos on the I love toy trains show.  Seems like a great guy too.  He must have been born very wealthy to have had the time and money to amass his great collection.  That isn't a knock, I just don't see any other way he could have done it.  Love the house and all it's opulence and grandeur as well.  Thanks for the pics.  I'm kind of fascinated with this since I saw the shows.

What a wonderful collection. I am afraid however, that this is just a disaster waiting to happen. A big old house, probably with old wiring, many wiring modifications for lighting, and no evidence, ( from the photos), of fire sprinklers. This collection should be in a more secure location for sure.

I can not imagine the time and effort that went into amassing this fine collection.

mowingman posted:

What a wonderful collection. I am afraid however, that this is just a disaster waiting to happen. A big old house, probably with old wiring, many wiring modifications for lighting, and no evidence, ( from the photos), of fire sprinklers. This collection should be in a more secure location for sure.

This house has been completely renovated. The work on the electrical system alone took over a year. This house is very safe and secure.

leapinlarry posted:

Thank You for the pictures as this is a truly one of a kind collection.  He must have started as a young child, and had a lot of help and great jobs along the way!!! Wow..Its just Fantastic...

According to the breathtaking DVD from TM Books, he was given Standard Gauge as a kid, and was able to add to it in the peak of the Postwar era, when people were trading in their tinplate for pennies toward newer Lionel or Flyer trains.

He was able to get a lot of his collection that way, and quite inexpensively because no one wanted the Standard Gauge at the time, combined with his timely friendships with Louis Hertz and Graham Claytor, among others.

From the video, he seems to be an incredibly friendly person, eager to talk about the trains as well as educate on them and the history.

After you tour the third floor, you then walk up to the fourth floor where the layouts are. Everything is original, even the track. Again, similar to the display rooms, each section of the layout represents a particular manufacturer. Under the layout is nothing but original train and accessory boxes.

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Last edited by NJCJOE

Thirty years ago I bought my 1835E from a guy who lived outside of Pgh. in Carnegie. His basement had been full of Standard gauge engines he picked up in trash collections after WW II. He would go through neighborhoods gathering them up and later restoring them.  Zinc pest.  I checked the TCA program and there are day & night tours of his place - 4 days total. 

In the video he has trains running and I was more than pleased to see he had a #10 gray and maroon set on the rails, the same as my dad's set I have.  Needless to say, not one of his high dollar sets, but it was nice to see.  The video is shown on two episodes of I love toy trains and I had it recorded, but I deleted them, otherwise I would watch them again right now.  It's amazing to watch on the tube, in person it must be almost overwhelming.

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