So This Is Christmas

Merry Christmas is such an infectious feeling I like to feel that way all year around.

So if you are visiting just before Christmas, just after Christmas or even here on Christmas day I am sure you will find something of interest for you and in the spirit of Christmas.

It may be said that Christmas is no longer a celebration but this must be spoken by people that have never had trouble closing their eyes on Christmas Eve in an expectation of what maybe left for them on the carpet under the tree.

I continue to look forward to the surprise on my Grandchild's faces to this day at Christmas events.

Merry Christmas - Merry Christmas - Merry Christmas

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

How Was The Lionel Train Founded - American Flyer Electric

By Edward Rizzo

Soon to follow with his outstanding model trains, Josh came out with a different gauge, and this was a small three rail O gauge. He had rapidly visualise the need for a train that would be more adjustable to home sizes and could generate off the electricity. That is incisively what this gauge provided and is nonetheless a very favourited model now.

Other train manufacturers were fast becoming identified as well. For instance the in 1907, the American Flyer joined the industry. Owned by two friends, William Coleman and William Hafner. They had determined they wanted to experiment with keeping costs down in the lithography region. They tried numerous tin type stuffs but the quality was bad, so they were not favourited. Actually, it was this organisation that originally started making clockwork trains.

Eventually the partnership came to an end and Hafner went on his individual manufacturing the American flyer electric train set. In the beginning, he went with the O gauge, but shortly went into the common gauge that Lionel had set.

Merely before the attack of the war, Hafner sold the American flyer in 1938. This was to A C Gilbert. Once the war started out, all model train making had to stop. Every last the attention had to be put on the war. Prior to this though Gilbert had shifted the gauge from HO to O. And So in 1946, the S gauge was introduced. The Lionel Company had the superior border in the industry and Gilbert was unable to compete. He could not keep up with the mass production and the cost of Lionels. Gilbert stopped production in 1966 and just after this; Lionel took over the ownership of the American Flyer.

The love for model trains exists on today and will no question continue to do so for many years to come. There will never be a toy in the industry that can take the place of the favourited trains in people's heart.

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