Railroading in the New England states during the 20th Century was dominated by two railroads – the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad south of Boston, and the Boston and Maine Railroad north of Boston. A third railroad, the Boston & Albany, a subsidiary of the New York Central after 1900, ran East/West between the two. As a resident of New England, I’m most interested in these railroads, and my O Gauge model trains reflect that. I plan to post pictures of my models of New Haven, B&M and B&A locomotives and rolling stock in this thread, and I also would like to see yours, so please post them here. All New England railroads would be of interest.
The train on my layout today is powered by a model of Boston & Maine 2-6-0 “Mogul” steam locomotive #1455 (Lionel Trains 6-38019). It has TMCC, a Pittman motor, and it appeared in the 2005 Volume 1 catalog at an MSRP of $599.99. The pictures and video show it pulling two recently acquired Lionel wood passenger coaches (Lionel L2227100 Boston & Maine Wood Coach 2-Pack #2) on my 12’-by-8’ layout.
The B&M ran Mogul steam locomotives on branch lines in Massachusetts and New Hampshire, and in Boston commuter service. Locomotive #1455, a member of the B&M’s B-15 class, was built by ALCO in Manchester, New Hampshire in November 1907. After being superheated, the total weight of engine and tender (including coal and water) was 220,890 pounds, with a weight of 128,000 pounds on its 63-inch-diameter driving wheels. It produced about 25,000 pounds of tractive effort at 200 pounds-per-square-inch boiler pressure. The railroad sold it in July 1956. B&M #1455 is preserved at the Danbury Railway Museum in Connecticut.
MELGAR