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I collect many things railroad related, mostly dealing with paper. I concentrate on the ACL, SAL, Southern, Clinchfield and other lines from North Carolina. I also like to collect depot images and items relating to depots. The Railway Express Agency is fun to collect, especially their paper and advertising items. Here is an LP in my collection from 1967 covering the first forty years of Air Express, beginning in 1927. A total of 10 songs cover this period, and the inside has an overview of major events for this time period. I love how they planned to use helicopters and VTOL aircraft to deliver packages in the future (imagine an Osprey delivering your packages)! Too bad the REA only lasted until 1974. I have some drink glasses for this anniversary as well. Enjoy!20160727_18305220160727_18312720160727_18315720160727_183244

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One more from the Pennsylvania Railroad...a very, very heavy box (a Weston Current Transformer) with paperwork inside dated 1916 that someone believed was used by the Pennsy in some sort of laboratory environment to test electrical or communications equipment. The posts/plugs can be removed and inserted into alternate holes.

Tom 

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CNJ 3676 posted:

Following on Joe's and Tom's Pennsylvania items, here is the sole surviving train indicator from the original New York Pennsylvania Station. It is now in the collection of the Whippany Railway Museum and displayed at the point at which visitors enter the main grounds. 

imageimage

Actually, that's not the sole survivor. There is one in the current Penn Station tucked away in a corner somewhere. It's not in great shape.

I also know of another one in a private collector's hands. I even had a chance to buy it.

Last edited by NJCJOE

A little something for the narrow gauge enthusiasts.  For some reason my 92-year old mother had these (Portland) Maine Narrow Gauge Railroad tickets tucked away in her dining room buffet, so I naturally snagged them.  They are interesting because one says "Founding Member" and the other says "Very Important Person".  I wonder if my parents contributed to the railroad's initial startup and got these as a result?  They were friends with the couple whom I believed owned the building where the cars are stored and I see that the husband signed one of them.   I got to ride this short narrow gauge railroad with my parents and extended family in 1995 and hope to get back soon before they move inland and further north to Gray.

Too bad. It's presently at a great location.  Anybody been a "guest engineer" on their 23-ton switcher?

http://mainenarrowgauge.org - Maine Narrow Gauge RR Co. and Museum

Tomlinson Run Railroad

MaineNarrowGaugeRR-tickets-frontMaineNarrowGaugeRR-tickets-back

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  • MaineNarrowGaugeRR-tickets-front: Front of Founding Member and VIP tickets
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First of all, NJCJOE is definitely the railroadiana collectibles champ, no contest!    I do own my own railroad depot on the  former Graham County Rail Road in Western North Carolina, and also a pre-WW I solid oak  ticket box complete with ten metal chutes and ceramic balls. It has a rolltop cover with a lock, and has a number of original tickets in the dispensing chutes! The tracks were removed in 1987, but the abutments for the bridge over Bear Creek are still on my property. The depot is known as Bear Creek Junction and that it how it reads on my deed.

Last edited by Tinplate Art
Tinplate Art posted:

First of all, NJCJOE is definitely the railroadiana collectibles champ, no contest!   

 

.......Says the guy that owns a depot and RR land.

That's pretty modest

 

   .(....."I do own my own railroad depot on the  former Graham County Rail Road. in Western North Carolina, and also a pre-WW I solid oak  ticket box complete with ten metal chutes and ceramic balls. It has a rolltop cover with a lock, and has a number of original tickets in the dispensing chutes! The tracks were removed in 1987, but the abutments for the bridge over Bear Creek are still on my property. The depot is known as Bear Creek Junction and that it how it reads on my deed.")

 

TomlinsonRunRR posted:

A little something for the narrow gauge enthusiasts.  For some reason my 92-year old mother had these (Portland) Maine Narrow Gauge Railroad tickets tucked away in her dining room buffet, so I naturally snagged them.  They are interesting because one says "Founding Member" and the other says "Very Important Person".  I wonder if my parents contributed to the railroad's initial startup and got these as a result?  They were friends with the couple whom I believed owned the building where the cars are stored and I see that the husband signed one of them.   I got to ride this short narrow gauge railroad with my parents and extended family in 1995 and hope to get back soon before they move inland and further north to Gray.

Too bad. It's presently at a great location.  Anybody been a "guest engineer" on their 23-ton switcher?

http://mainenarrowgauge.org - Maine Narrow Gauge RR Co. and Museum

Tomlinson Run Railroad

 

Ahh, The Maine Narrow Gauge Railroad and Museum. I was lucky to be there in the 1990's and got a grand tour of the equipment. Great little steam locomotives. 

I picked up this boxcar seal from the Wiscasset, Waterville and Farmington Railway a few years ago. That narrow gauge line ran from 1895 to 1933, finally abandoned in 1936. More recently, approximately 2 miles of track have been restored with the non-profit Wiscasset, Waterville and Farmington Railway Museum which operates near Alna, Maine.

Tom 

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Last edited by PRR8976

Reason number 116 to have children:

Can be used to help increase your duty free liquor shipped back to the US!

Check this 1950s era Railway Express Agency brochure I just picked up. Each member of the family (adults and children) were allowed up to 5 bottles of liquor each! You did have to be either 18 or 21 to receive the package (depending on what state you lived in). 

Attached are scans of bother sides of the brochure. Nice prices too!s-l1600s-l1600 [1)

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Finally got around to polishing my PRR bell. The bell was originally installed on an E6 Atlantic and was later moved to a B6 switcher. This is what it looked like before I started.

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This is what it looked like after I finished the sanding process.

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After the final polishing she was back to being shiny.

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And here it it is clear coated and back in the repainted stand.

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Last edited by NJCJOE

I first sanded the bell with various grades of sandpaper, 220 to 1000 gtit, with a DA sander. I then buffed it with a angle grinder with a buffing wheel attached. I used three different buffing wheels with three grades of buffing compound.

Most steam bells were made of brass/bronze. There were some made of steel during the war due to the shortage of brass.

This is probably one of the more esoteric pieces of memorabilia I have. On the left is a Western Cullen Hayes electronic highway crossing bell, and on the right is a battered Lionel #154 Automatic Road Crossing Signal that I've had for 60 years or so. The crossing bell is marked W-C-H 110-A-16, and operates on 6 volts DC. I don't know what amperage it draws. The friend I got it from operated it using a 6 volt garden tractor battery. I plan on mounting it under the layout and operating it in conjunction with the Lionel crossing signal. (It always bugged me that the Lionel signal didn't have its own ringer, unlike the #155 I have.) I'll need to figure out the circuitry for that. railroad crossing dinger WCH

Alternatively, my wife said I could wire it into the doorbell circuit, but our current doorbell drives the cats wild as it is, so I don't think that would be wise. 

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Last edited by jay jay

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