| Joshua
L. Cowen, founder of the Lionel Corporation, built
the first toy train. The train was a wooden flatcar
with a small electric motor that ran on a track of brass
strips linked by wooden ties. In 1907, Cowen made history
by selling model trains built after the genuine Baltimore
and Ohio trains. With every passing year, he created
more gadgets for the train set, adding to the infatuation
of model train lovers. The Lionel Corporation owned
the market for these train sets and it became an obsession
to enthusiasts.
With
the war affecting the economy in 1941, Cowen stopped
making model trains and signed a contract with the government
to build gun mounts and various other war materials.
It wasn't until 1945, when the atom bomb hit Hiroshima,
that his contracts were canceled and he began making
model trains again. By Christmas, the Lionel Corporation
hit the ground running with cars that actually mimicked
real trains - smoking smokestacks, whistling whistles,
freight cars that had scale cattle -- you name it. It
seemed as if these model trains not only captured the
hearts of youngsters around the country, but also their
fathers. Fathers and sons now had this captivating pastime
in common.
The
passion began to fade around 1963 with the introduction
of slot cars to the public. Although model trains are
not as popular as they were in the 1940's, Lionel Train
Sets have become a collectors items and remained a fixture
in the hearts of fathers and sons everywhere.
|