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Great Northern O Gauge RailKing Woodsided Caboose

30-77253

List Price:
$59.95

Roadname:
Great Northern
Cab/Car Number:
X704
Scale:
O Gauge
Product Type:
Rolling Stock
Product Line:
RailKing
Delivery Status:
Delivered Jun. 2015

Overview

Before railroads, “caboose” referred to a small cookhouse on the deck of a sailing ship. Nobody knows for sure, but it was likely the 1850s before the first railroad caboose gave a train crew shelte r from the weather. The Civil War era marked the emergence of boxcar-like cabin cars or conductor’s cars with side and perhaps end doors, win­dows, a heating and cooking stove, bunks, and roof lanterns to mark the end of the train.

But management often resisted providing creature comforts to crews, and it would be well into the 1870s before cabooses were widespread on American trains. While the cupola, known then as a “lookout” or “observatory,” first appeared during the Civil War era, flat-roofed cabooses outnumbered cabin cars with cupolas as late as the 1880s. By the turn of the century, however, the cupola caboose had attained its final shape, one it would keep until cabooses be­came extinct in the 1980s.

What did change significantly in the early 20th century was the solid­ity of caboose construction. As with many changes in railroad equip­ment, it was instigated in part by legislators. The end of a train was a particularly dangerous place to be, and numerous wooden cabooses were crushed by rear-end collisions or simply the brute force of the large pusher locomotives then coming into use. State legislators took note — no doubt prompted by constituents who worked for railroads — and began to demand stronger caboose construction. One example was a 1913 Ohio law mandating steel underframes on cabooses used in pusher service. Since many northeastern railroads ran through Ohio, this law had a widespread effect.

Our RailKing model represents a typical woodsided, steel under­frame caboose built in the early 20th century. While new construction generally switched to all-steel by the 1920s, older wood cabooses with steel underframes were still seen on American railroads into the 1960s.

High quality, traditionally sized RailKing Freight Cars provide detailed bodies and colorful paint schemes for the O Gauge railroader. MTH makes an enormous variety of RailKing Freight Cars, including many different car types and roadnames. No matter what era or part of the country you are modeling, RailKing is sure to have something for you.

Features

  • Intricately Detailed Durable ABS Body
  • Stamped Metal Floors
  • Metal Wheels and Axles
  • Die-Cast 4-Wheel Trucks
  • Fast-Angle Wheel Sets
  • Needle-Point Axles
  • Operating Die-Cast Metal Couplers
  • Operating Interior Lighting
  • Near-Scale Proportions
  • Unit Measures:10" x 2 3/4" x 4"
  • Operates On O-27 Curves

Support

Parts:

Available in Stores