Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Kids Stuff!
Collapse
X
-
Great Video, looks like tons of fun. I volunteer at the California State Railroad Museum and we have a small scale locomotive that we run at a big event in Reedley California each year. I haven’t been down to see it run, but I think it still looks pretty good just standing still. The only shot I have of it is when I took my father-in-law down to tour the old shops where I volunteer. Someday I’ll ride it just like the guys on the video. Kids’ stuff indeed!
100_1355.jpgEric Olson
Membership #18488
Comment
-
Wow, interesting hobby! Where do these trains come from? Did companies make them or are they home made models fabricated by the hobbiests?Last edited by harleytoprock; 08-19-2012, 03:43 PM.
Comment
-
Originally posted by harleytoprock View PostWow, interesting hobby! Where do these trains come from? Did companies make them or are they home made models fabicated by the hobbiests?
Walt Disney was a famous backyard railroader. The line he built in his back yard in California in the '40s was what eventually led to Disneyland, et. al. Disney himself wasn't a crackerjack machinist, but he employed a few, and he had all the ideas and conveyed them to his employees. Around his head model railroad builder he created "Walt Disney Imagineering," the engineering dept. of Walt Disney Co.
That guy, I forget his name, but it's all on the internet, became "Imagineer Number One," and together, the Imagineers built the rides at Disneyland, and many attractions at the NY Worlds Fair, 1964-65, like audio-animatronic Abraham Lincoln, the Carousel of Progress for GE, and the Highways of Tomorrow for GM, and, of course, "It's a Small World," for Pepsi-Cola. After the fair the rides were taken down and stored in warehouses until he built Walt Disney World (opened in 1971) and most of them have been there, since. Lincoln still hosts "The Hall of Presidents" in the Magic Kingdom.
That's just what grew out of Walt Disney's backyard railroading bug. Of course, in the beginning it was a great way to get a tax write-off for your expensive hobby. He only had to film a couple of scenes used in "The Great Locomotive Chase" about the War Between the States for the "World of Disney" show on TV and it was all a business expense. He even made a TV episode just about his backyard railroad hobby. Smart guy, that Disney.Last edited by Sargehere; 08-19-2012, 03:38 PM.
Comment
Comment