I wrote this article a number of years ago as part of a publishing class I was taking. I am presenting it here for your enjoyment.
Kids! Here’s Your Electric Train!
“Kids! Here’s Your Santa Fe Super Chief Electric Train” is the headline on the instruction sheet in the box you just got in the mail. This box is the fulfillment of a dream that started maybe months ago when you answered that advertisement. Where was the ad, on the back of a cereal box or maybe in the back of a comic book? It seems so long ago that you don’t remember. But, a complete 60 piece train set in a gift box for only $3.00 postage included. What a deal! Sending off that envelope with the payment started dreams of the shiny passenger train racing around the layout past the many buildings and accessories. You were to be the mogul of a railroad empire. And now, here it is, the dream fulfilled!
But wait, what is this?
How could they get a whole railroad empire into that little box? You excitedly open the box. What emerges is a disappointment to your
railroad empire dreams. The box contains
a small battery powered locomotive and 3 passenger cars that are not even
shiny. They run in the tracks not on the
tracks like a real railroad. The bag of
plastic accessories and people is pretty neat but the cardboard buildings,
yuck. Well, you might as well set it up; you have been
waiting for this a long time. You assemble
the tracks, put a battery in the locomotive and open the bag of plastic
accessories. But, the cardboard
buildings are not worth assembling. You
watch it go round and round for about 30 minutes, get bored, and put the whole
thing back into the box and the box goes on a shelf.
Forty years later and now a train collector, you remember
the little box of trains sitting on a shelf at your parents’ house. As your mother hands you the box, you
remember the day the box arrived. But
now, you take a look at the contents through a collector’s eyes. Hey, this isn’t as bad as you remembered and
it is in excellent condition in the original box. So, what do you really have?
You have a battery powered train set made by Sago Products
Train Miniature Company of Los Angeles, California. The set consists of an F7 type diesel in
Santa Fe silver and red with 3 silver passenger cars all about 2/3rds HO
size. The rest of the set consists of an
oval of track, the unpunched cardboard buildings, the decals for the locomotive
and passenger cars, an instruction sheet, a re-order blank, and the bag of
plastic accessories. The plastic
accessories include telephone poles, people, tiny vehicles; freight station
accessories and a crossing sign which doubles as a train whistle.
You think to yourself, this deserves a better shelf than the
one in my parent’s closet. You take it
home and place it on a shelf with the pride of your train collection. Forty years later, a collector’s spirit turns
disappointment into enthusiasm.
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