If
you’re looking for family fun as summer wraps up, consider visiting one of
Connecticut’s many living museums celebrating our state’s rail heritage.
The Shore Line
Trolley Museum
in East Haven (www.shorelinetrolley.com) was founded in 1945 and now boasts
more than one hundred trolley cars in its collection. It’s on the National Registry and is the
oldest continuously operating trolley line in the US, still running excursion
trolleys for a three-mile run on tracks once used by The Connecticut Company
for its “F Line” from New Haven to Branford.
You can also walk through the car barns and watch volunteers
painstakingly restoring the old cars.
There’s also a small museum exhibit and gift shop.
The Connecticut Trolley Museum in East Windsor (www.ceraonline.org) began in 1940, making it the oldest
trolley museum in the US. It too was
started on an existing right-of-way, the Rockville
branch of the Hartford & Springfield Street Railway Company. You can ride a couple of different trolleys a
few miles into the woods and back, perhaps disembarking to tour their
collection of streetcars, elevated and inter-urbans in the museum’s sheds and
barns.
If
you’re looking for a day-trip, especially for kids, I can highly recommend
either trolley museum. But if you’re
looking for real trains, you’re also in luck.
The Danbury Railroad
Museum (www.danburyrailwaymuseum.org) is walking distance from the
Metro-North station in “the Hat City”, making this potentially a full-day, all-rail
adventure. They are open seven days a
week and on weekends they offer train rides and, for a premium, you can even
ride in the caboose or the engine. They
have a great collection of old rail cars
and a well stocked gift shop.
For
nostalgia fans, The Essex Steam Train
(www.essexsteamtrain.com) offers not only daily rides on a
classic steam train, but connecting riverboat rides up to the vicinity of Gillette
Castle and back. In addition to coach
seating you can ride on an open-air car or in a plush First Class Coach. There’s also a great dinner-train, “The
Essex Clipper” which
offers a 2½ hour, four-course meal and a cash bar.
In
downtown South Norwalk you can visit what once was a busy railroad switch
tower, now the SoNo Switch Tower Museum
(www.westctnrhs.org/towerinfo.htm) .
Admission is free (donations welcome) weekends noon to 5 pm.
Also
open only on weekends is the Connecticut
Eastern Railroad Museum in Willimantic (www.cteastrrmuseum.org).
In addition to guided tours, visitors can operate a replica
1850's-style pump car along a section of rail that once was part of the New
Haven Railroad's "Air Line".
The Railroad Museum of New England
in Thomaston (www.rmne.org)
offers rail trips on Saturdays, Sundays and Tuesdays along the scenic Naugatuck
River in addition to a large collection of restored engines and passenger cars
including a last-of-its-kind 1929 New Haven RR first class “smoker”, complete
with leather bucket seats.
All
of these museums are run by volunteers who will appreciate your patronage and
support. They love working to preserve
our state’s great railroad heritage and will tell you why if you express even
the slightest interest in their passion.
Bring your kids and let them see railroading history come alive.
Posted with permission of Hearst CT Media
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