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The Cinergy/CSX Holiday Train CINCINNATI, October 13, 2005 — Since 1946, over nine million visitors have entered the lobby of the Cincinnati Gas & Electric Company to see one of the world’s largest model train displays. Many adults who once visited the train as children now bring their children and grandchildren to experience the wonder of the display. The Cinergy/CSX Holiday Model Train Display has truly become an annual Cincinnati tradition for many families. The theme of this year’s display is Enchanted Winter Wonderland. The centerpiece of the display is a snow-covered castle with hundreds of stars sparkling overhead. Outside the castle, the young prince and his subjects patiently await the arrival of the princess in her elegant horse-drawn coach. Kickoff of the display historically begins on the day after Thanksgiving. To meet that date this year, the assembly and testing of the display has already begun. A small group of volunteer Cinergy/CG&E employees and retirees support the display, spending hundreds of hours throughout the year handcrafting replacement parts and adding to the collection of miniature buildings and structures. These volunteers also keep the display running through the holidays until the end of December.
Those Marvelous Miniature Trains The display also features model freight trains with cars capable of carrying almost any cargo imaginable. There are box cars, flat cars, tank cars, low-sided open gondola cars, cattle cars, coal cars, piggy-back cars for hauling trucks, and of course, the ever-popular "little red caboose." As you compare the older cars to their more modern versions, you'll notice important changes in technology. The refrigerator cars, for example, range from the more primitive models that kept perishables cold with giant blocks of ice to newer models with built-in refrigeration systems. To spot one of the work trains, look for the "big hook" car with its large crane. Responsible for railroad maintenance and emergency runs, the work trains even include camp cars with sleeping and cooking facilities for the hard-working crew.
Little Buildings by the Train Tracks Control towers, for example, function much like airport air traffic control towers, acting as the central control points for the railroad. Employees in the towers keep an eye on train traffic, control the signal bridges, and communicate with other towers along the route. Section houses, which are living quarters with tool sheds, function as work locations for railroad crews known as section gangs, responsible for maintenance on specific sections of track. To keep steam-powered locomotives rolling, it takes a lot of coal to fire the boiler and plenty of water to produce the steam. So, all along the railroad, you'll see miniature coal tipples—the coal storage stations with chutes for filling the locomotive's coal tender—as well as numerous water tanks. The sand bins serve an important purpose, too, providing trains with sand to be dumped along the track for traction when the rails get wet or icy. At the railroad terminal, centrally located to serve both the passenger terminal and the freight yards, you'll see additional coal, water, and sand facilities as well as the large roundhouse and turntable. The roundhouse functions as a service garage for locomotives. Within the roundhouse, flues are cleaned, equipment is checked, and the train is prepared for its next run. The turntable swings the iron horses around, sending them out on the proper track for their next journey. Railroad stations, or depots, are also found all along the route—varying in size and scope depending on the size of the town. These are, of course, where passengers boarded the trains and where they met their family and friends when they reached their destination.
What This Miniature World Offers Like the real thing, B&O models were built to last. Always handmade, sometimes from the same materials as their life-size prototypes, the models were hand- painted and hand-lettered with authentic railroad paints. The miniature B&O trains are faithful reproductions of the real trains down to the smallest details. This train display simulates the Cumberland (Maryland) Division of the old B&O, still part of the route traveled by today's CSX Transportation. That's where the main northwest and southwest lines, from Chicago and from St. Louis, come together. While the display doesn't represent any particular point on the line or any specific part of the Maryland countryside, it is designed to demonstrate a variety of actual train operations in a landscape typical of the Cumberland region. The elevated area simulates the "Magnolia Cut-off" which is known as the "High Line" and is used exclusively for freight service.
Location, Dates and Hours of Operation, and Website The train display runs from Friday, November 25 through Saturday, December 31. Normal hours of operation are 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday and noon to 5 p.m. on Sundays. (Closed Christmas day.) More information about the holiday model train display is available on the Cinergy Corp. website at www.cinergy.com/train/ . Digital (JPEG format, 200 ppi) publication quality photographs of last year’s model train display are also available on the website at http://www.cinergy.com/Community/Holiday_Train/news_photos .asp
Cinergy/CG&E Holiday Model Train Display Fact Sheet
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