Lionel Model Trains
69Vintage Lionel Model Trains from the pre- and post-war era up to 1957.
Lionel Model Trains: Pennsylvania to Hogwart's
During their heyday, Lionel model trains were famed the world
over for their attention to detail and the quality of manufacture. They
still are: from Hogwart’s Express for Harry Potter fans to the Polar
Express or just the simple Pennsylvania steam freight train, Lionel
offers a wide range of trains that are true to the originals, real or
imaginary.
In fact, a Lionel electric train was one of the first
two electric toys to be inducted into the National Toy Hall of Fame
(the other was the Easy Bake Oven). This was a great honor for a
company that was started up in the latter part of 1900 by Joshua Lionel
Cowen, an engineer with an incredible penchant for skillful marketing.
It was his marketing expertise that gave rise to the phenomenon of
model train collecting at the very beginning of the 20th century.
His
idea began when he devised moving marketing gondolas using a small
electric motor he had developed, and when he found that people were
more interested in the gondolas than in the products they were carrying
around he got the idea of using his electric motor in toy trains. By
means of fabulous department displays at Christmas time Cowen gave rise
to a public interest in toy trains, and soon they were among the
country’s most popular toys.
Cowen’s introduction of the 2 1/8”
gauge three rail track became the standard, and signaled his dominance
of the toy train market. This was known as the Standard Gauge, and
subsequently Lionel model trainswere
also made in O-gauge, which was 1:48 of the real railroad standard 4ft
8.5”. A curious innovation of the O-scale track was the O27. The
standard O makes a circle 31 inches in diameter when the curved rails
are put together, while the O27 was only 27”. The O27 could run OK on
O gauge track, but not vice versa, because the 27” curve was too sharp
for ordinary O scale trains.
After Lionel’s golden decade
covering 1946 – 56, the company declined as an increasing number of
people switched to the smaller HO scale (that Lionel eventually adhered
to) and children’s interests switched from toy trains to toy cars. This
was only to be expected since the age of the car had arrived, and
although cars had been in existence for many decades, it was only now
that the number of models had proliferated to the extent that toy
manufacturers considered it worth producing them. Toy cars were less
expensive to parents than trains that needed rolling stock and tracks
to go with them.
The company was eventually sold to a business
known as General Mills who ran it from 1969, although it never hit the
heights of earlier years. Then in 1986 it passed on to Lionel
collector Richard Kughn, and became known as Lionel Trains. Quality
rapidly rose again but in 1995 the company was sold to a consortium
known as Wellspring Associates LLC. One of its investors was Neil
Young, who was a model train enthusiast as well as a rock musician. The
company now trades under the name Lionel LLC, but will always be known
to enthusiasts as Lionel Toy Trains.
Genuine vintage Lionel
trains can be identified from the couplings. Prior to the Second World
War, Lionel couplings looked like hooks, while after the war there were
two types of coupling: the Scout series couplers and the more modern
peg couplers. The Scout series were the entry-level series with G
shaped couplings that don’t open. The more advanced couplings have
pegs that can be pulled on the bottom to open them.
Post-war
also saw the introduction of electric couplers. The early version,
immediately post-war, was operated by two extra rails either side of
the middle rail. Each truck is in contact with these rails using
contact shoes, and when a switch is thrown the power operates a
solenoid in the coupler. The later type involved an inductive coil in
the middle of the third rail reacting with a corresponding coil in the
truck to provide electricity to the coupling. This was better than the
first version since there were no contact shoes to get snagged with
switch points.
The Lionel toy trains are normally stamped with
four numbers, identifying each item. These can be found either
underneath or on the side of each car and locomotive. Genuine Lionel
trains sell for from under $100 to over $1,000, so make sure the stamp
is there when you buy one and check the coupler because than can give
you a rough indication of its age.
The company now operates
from Ohio, and the new 2009 catalogue offers many new items including
the New York Transit Subway set, and the Dewitt Clinton Heritage Steam
Passenger set, and there is also a large number of new rolling stock.
Lionel toy trains are still live and kicking, and the new catalogue
proves that it has not lost its penchant for innovation.
Lionel Model Train Videos
Lionel Model Trains on Amazon
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Lionel Trains Polar Express Train Set - O Gauge
Price: $225.00
List Price: $329.99 |
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Lionel Pennsylvania Flyer O Gauge
Price: $149.99
List Price: $229.99 |
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Lionel Polar Express Train Set - G-Gauge
Price: $110.00
List Price: $139.99 |
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Lionel North Pole Central Christmas Train
Price: $191.00
List Price: $249.99 |
Lionel Model Train News
- Lionel Model Trains: Pennsylvania to Hogwart’s
by Oscar Salcedo During their heyday, lionel model trains were famed the world over for their attention to detail and the quality of manufacture. - 3 months ago
- will you please help me?? I’ll give you 10 pts. for a complete answer! part 2?
6. - 28 hours ago
- ho model trains Where can I buy the rubber pieces that go on the whells of my engine for traction?
Here’s a model and train shop just up the street from me. - 28 hours ago
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