The Museum

The year that Eli Whitney began to construct his Armory here, and English man, Richard Trevethick, sent a steam powered locomotive the size of a tea kettle sputtering across the kitchen floor. When Thomas Davenport built the first electric motor a few years later, he built a table top train track and sent the engine round and round. His invention promised locomotives that would arrive in the next century.

For two centuries, toy trains have educated hands and mines and dreams. They bring to a personal scale a world of power and control. They open empires of adventure, experimentation, and rehearsal.

Toy trains tell stories. They describe near or distant experience, real worlds or fantasy worlds and condense vast technical realms into language that a child can grasp.

The Eli Whitney Museum's Holiday Exhibitions explore the culture of toy trains. They share fine collections with a broad audience and preserve traditions of technology and community.

The Layout

Layout Design .........................................Howard Hebel Technical Supervision ...............................Les Case Curator ..................................................Steve Ebinger Computer Installatio..................................Nick Amento

The 6 track 240ft² layout steps from Lionel's classic Santa Fe Diesel to an American Flyer Royal Blue freight train, to an HO Genesis engine, to small specialty lines. All for visitors to operate along a replica of New Haven's Harbor and a switiching yard. Two lines on a second level run European and Japanese trains. On a third level, freight and passenger trains cross 900 feet of track under internet visitor control.

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