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I've been riding the Strasburg my whole life...every time I go back to Lancaster. My wife doesn't understand my compulsory haj to Strasburg every single time I'm near. I mean, how could I not already know every tie and every signpost on the route by now? She knows I can lip-synch the entire narration on the eastbound trip. I've not been able to explain it until now.As you said, Strasburg "centers" me.No matter how old I get, no matter how many places I've been or things I've seen, no matter how I may be feeling, returning to Strasburg is returning to the wide-eyed wonder of childhood. The acrid smell of coal smoke and engine grease is a portal to a world where everything is perpetually right and good. It's a promise of a great big dinner with my long-passed grandparents who lived just up the road. It's the excitement of being with my father who I figured must know just about everything there is to know about trains. And the juxtaposition of the train and the surrounding farms is a window into a wonderful, safe, and predictable world that probably never really existed...but should have.You speak the truth.
you need to model that in O scale
Living fairly close, we often take PA 741 to get around the US 30 traffic when shopping at the outlets or visiting the wife's cousin in Pequa. Quite a contrast with the living, breathing Strasburg on one side of the street and the preserved relics of the museum on the other.
Yep.And it's a synergy that's excellent for both.Railroad museums tend to do FAR better when they have a train ride and Strasburg is very clear that it's NOT a museum so by being a single location that has both allows them each to play to their strengths. The museum gets to focus on being one of the (if not THE) best railroad museums in the country because it doesn't have to worry about maintaining a running locomotive and a fleet of cars while the Strasburg gets to focus on maintaining and running a steam railroad without having to worry about things like preserving the historic fabric of its equipment.
I enjoy Strasbourg and visit there often when I see my dad. But I have to say Illinois Railway Museum is hands down the best. Amazing work being done there.
I know IRM has a KILLER collection. How's their interpretive side though? I've never been there to see it.