As a kid one would say to the kids in line that so and so would be the caboose, last in line. The person in the real caboose had a job to signal with certain colored flags to tell the engineer that all was clear behind them or all was going well with all of the cars.
The oldest caboose I have in my collection is this tin one made in the 1950s. I was three or four years old when I received it at Christmas time. The train had a circle track that allowed the train and four cars to travel around and around. It was a wind up engine so it didn't go for very long until one had to wind it up again.
My brother and I were gifted a shared train from Santa. He wrote it on the box for us to be sure who it belong to and there wouldn't be doubt. That was probably in 1958.
My one brother in his adult years decided to send my 60 year old father two different small trains. They were only played with by his grandsons but I guess it was fun for him to look at each of the cars as he took them out of the individual boxes.
My brother went to the toy store and just picked out two different engines and many different cars to go with them. The train cars were really too small of scale and my sons still talk about how difficult it was to keep them on flimsy tracks. I display them like models and never try to run them.
We warmed up to 23 degrees F. today. It helped a little to get the furnace to catch up. The 3 degrees F. is cold and the house may be newer it still gets cold inside. The day has been sunny all day though and it made it look good out there. I guess we have better temps with the chance of snow tomorrow.
Thanks for stopping by today.
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