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I attended the Amherst Railway Society's Railroad Hobby Show in West Springfield, Massachusetts on Saturday and Sunday, January 25/26, 2025. This is an annual two-day show that I first attended in 1998. The attendance on Saturday was 14,123.

As long as I can remember, the New Haven Society of Model Engineers, a model railroad club that originated in 1932, sets up and runs a 2-rail O scale layout at the show every year. The main feature of the layout is the Society's model of the New Haven Railroad's Scherzer rolling lift bridge over the Housatonic River between Stratford and Milford, Connecticut.

The model was built by club member Alfred Schellbach in the 1940s with drawings supplied by the New Haven Railroad. It is made from brass and was assembled using some 33,000 rivets. It's the first thing I go to see when I arrive at the show and the last thing I look at before leaving until the next year. I look forward to the show and seeing the bridge every year.

The real bridge is known as the Housatonic River Railroad Bridge and also as the Devon Railroad Bridge, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The bridge was completed in 1906 and is still in use by Metro-North Railroad and Amtrak. Two side-by-side spans each carry two tracks across the river. The total length including fixed Warren truss sections is 1,072 feet (22 feet 4 inches in O scale) and the draw is 110 feet (27.5 inches in O scale). I've ridden across the bridges hundreds of times.

At the show, the opening and closing of the bridge was demonstrated every 30 minutes by the president of the New Haven Society of Model Engineers, Inc.

Pictures and videos show the model in operation.

MELGAR

MELGAR_2025_0126_01_NHSME_BRIDGEMELGAR_2025_0126_02_NHSME_BRIDGEMELGAR_2025_0126_03_NHSME_BRIDGEMELGAR_2025_0126_04_NHSME_PRESIDENT_BRIDGEMELGAR_2025_0126_05_NHSME_PRESIDENT_BRIDGEMELGAR_2025_0126_08_NHSME_PRESIDENT_BRIDGE_OPENMELGAR_2025_0126_09_NHSME_BRIDGE_ALFRED_SCHELLBACH

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Images (7)
  • MELGAR_2025_0126_01_NHSME_BRIDGE
  • MELGAR_2025_0126_02_NHSME_BRIDGE
  • MELGAR_2025_0126_03_NHSME_BRIDGE
  • MELGAR_2025_0126_04_NHSME_PRESIDENT_BRIDGE
  • MELGAR_2025_0126_05_NHSME_PRESIDENT_BRIDGE
  • MELGAR_2025_0126_08_NHSME_PRESIDENT_BRIDGE_OPEN
  • MELGAR_2025_0126_09_NHSME_BRIDGE_ALFRED_SCHELLBACH
Videos (3)
MELGAR_2025_0126_10V_NHSME_BRIDGE_OPENING_18S
MELGAR_2025_0126_11V_NHSME_BRIDGE_CLOSING_FIRST_45S
MELGAR_2025_0126_12V_NHSME_BRIDGE_CLOSED_TRAINS_RUNNING_LAST_26S
Original Post

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Thank you MELGAR. I saw and enjoyed the layout but somehow didn’t pick up on the significance  of that bridge. I drive by the prototype a couple times a month, too! I will make a special effort to see it in operation at the 2026 show. I appreciate you posting the photos and the story behind it.

Thanks, very impressive.

When I lived in New Haven in the 1970s, I remember the New Haven Society of Model Engineers having a large HO layout, first in Branford, CT., then in Meriden or  Wallingford.  Cannot recall which.  Do I have that right, or is it another group?  Do they still have an HO layout anywhere?



Turns out I can answer my own questions.  They have a permanent home now in Wallingford.  History of the club is also on the website.

https://www.nhsme.org/



https://www.nhsme.org/

Last edited by Landsteiner
@Landsteiner posted:

Thanks, very impressive.

When I lived in New Haven in the 1970s, I remember the New Haven Society of Model Engineers having a large HO layout, first in Branford, CT., then in Meriden or  Wallingford.  Cannot recall which.  Do I have that right, or is it another group?  Do they still have an HO layout anywhere?

Turns out I can answer my own questions.  They have a permanent home now in Wallingford.  History of the club is also on the website.

https://www.nhsme.org/

@Landsteiner,

According to their website, the NHSME began in members' homes. Subsequently, it has been located in New Haven, Branford, Meriden, the New Haven Union Railroad Station, and since 1995 in the railroad station in Wallingford, CT.

In discussing my post with the president of the Society, he told me that they will have to vacate their space in Wallingford. The O scale layout is operated at the West Springfield show but the club's primary layout is HO.

MELGAR

Last edited by MELGAR
@Landsteiner posted:

Thanks, very impressive.

When I lived in New Haven in the 1970s, I remember the New Haven Society of Model Engineers having a large HO layout, first in Branford, CT., then in Meriden or  Wallingford.  Cannot recall which.  Do I have that right, or is it another group?  Do they still have an HO layout anywhere?



Turns out I can answer my own questions.  They have a permanent home now in Wallingford.  History of the club is also on the website.

https://www.nhsme.org/



https://www.nhsme.org/

It was mentioned that it is 2 rail, but is it HO or 2 rail O scale?

I think it’s 2 rail O scale, but I’m not sure.

It was mentioned that it is 2 rail, but is it HO or 2 rail O scale?

I think it’s 2 rail O scale, but I’m not sure.

From the original post…

@MELGAR posted:

As long as I can remember, the New Haven Society of Model Engineers, a model railroad club that originated in 1932, sets up and runs a 2-rail O scale layout at the show every year. The main feature of the layout is the Society's model of the New Haven Railroad's Scherzer rolling lift bridge over the Housatonic River between Stratford and Milford, Connecticut.

Pictures and videos show the model in operation.

MELGAR



Last edited by cta4391

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