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MERTEN MINIATURE ICE SKATERS IN BOX GERMANY MIB

MERTEN MINIATURE ICE SKATERS IN BOX GERMANY MIB

$12.00 20h
MERTEN HO PASSENGERS BOX #818

MERTEN HO PASSENGERS BOX #818

$6.00 1d 10h 30m
MERTEN HO HARVEST WORKERS BOX 920

MERTEN HO HARVEST WORKERS BOX 920

$6.00 1d 10h 31m
MERTEN HO BOX #920 HARVEST WORKERS

MERTEN HO BOX #920 HARVEST WORKERS

$7.25 1d 10h 51m
MERTEN HO BOX #886 TRACK REPAIRMEN

MERTEN HO BOX #886 TRACK REPAIRMEN

$7.25 1d 10h 52m
MERTEN HO BOX #896 FARM WORKERS

MERTEN HO BOX #896 FARM WORKERS

$8.09 1d 10h 53m
MERTEN HO BOX #806 FEMALE PASSENGERS

MERTEN HO BOX #806 FEMALE PASSENGERS

$7.25 1d 10h 55m
MERTEN HO BOX #800 RAILROAD FIGURES

MERTEN HO BOX #800 RAILROAD FIGURES

$7.25 1d 10h 56m
MERTEN HO BOX #891 WOODSMEN FOREST RANGER SHEPHERD

MERTEN HO BOX #891 WOODSMEN FOREST RANGER SHEPHERD

$7.25 1d 10h 57m
MERTEN HO BOX #936 SAILORS IN NAVY-BLUE

MERTEN HO BOX #936 SAILORS IN NAVY-BLUE

$6.00 1d 11h 34m
MERTEN HO BOX #936 SAILORS IN NAVY-BLUE

MERTEN HO BOX #936 SAILORS IN NAVY-BLUE

$6.00 1d 18h 37m
1960's MERTEN HO SCALE TRAIN DRIVER &FIREMEN FIGURES

1960's MERTEN HO SCALE TRAIN DRIVER &FIREMEN FIGURES

- $5.00 1d 23h 21m
MERTEN HO BOX #896 FARM WORKERS

MERTEN HO BOX #896 FARM WORKERS

$8.00 2d 9h 51m
MERTEN HO BOX #891 WOODSMEN FOREST RANGER SHEPHERD

MERTEN HO BOX #891 WOODSMEN FOREST RANGER SHEPHERD

$7.00 2d 9h 53m
MERTEN HO BOX #937 SAILORS IN WHITE

MERTEN HO BOX #937 SAILORS IN WHITE

$7.00 2d 9h 58m
MERTEN HO BOX #933 RAILROAD TRACK TIES

MERTEN HO BOX #933 RAILROAD TRACK TIES

$7.00 2d 10h
MERTEN HO RAILROAD-STAFF BOX 908

MERTEN HO RAILROAD-STAFF BOX 908

$6.00 2d 10h 10m
MERTEN HO RAILROAD-STAFF BOX 914

MERTEN HO RAILROAD-STAFF BOX 914

$6.00 2d 10h 11m
MERTEN HO BOX #920 HARVEST WORKERS

MERTEN HO BOX #920 HARVEST WORKERS

$6.00 2d 10h 49m
MERTEN HO RAILROAD-STAFF BOX 908

MERTEN HO RAILROAD-STAFF BOX 908

$8.00 2d 17h 25m

Lionel news

  • Fascinating facts about the invention of
    Lionel Trains
    by Joshua Lionel Cowen in 1901.

    LIONEL TRAINS AT A GLANCE: Joshua Lionel Cowen was an inventive guy and had always been very interested in trains. In 1901, he fitted a small motor under a model of a railroad flatcar, powered by a battery on 30 inches of track and the Lionel electric train was born. The first Lionel train was designed to attract window-shopping New Yorkers using the power of animated display. Since its humble beginning Lionel has sold more than 50 million train sets and today produces more than 300 miles of track each year. Joshua Lionel Cowen was an inventive guy and had always been very interested in trains. When he was seven, he whittled a miniature locomotive from wood. It exploded, however, when he tried to fit it with a tiny steam engine. Joshua had never forgotten his childhood experiment. In 1901, he fitted a small motor under a model of a railroad flatcar, a battery and 30 inches of track and the Lionel electric train was born. Joshua  was born on Henry St. in Manhattan’s Lower East Side on August 25, 1877. He preferred playing ball, bicycling, hiking and tinkering with mechanical toys to formal education, and soon became fascinated with electricity, its transmission and its storage in batteries. Cowen did so well in school that in 1893 he entered the College of the City of New York. But, he could not adjust to the confines of a formal education. In short order he dropped out, returned, again dropped out, enrolled at Columbia University, and dropped out there to become an apprentice to Henner & Anderson, an early dry cell battery manufacturer. Then he took a job at the Acme Lamp Company in New York as a battery lamp assembler. During his spare time he liked experimenting, one of many mechanically inclined young men who liked to tinker with things. These jobs gave Cowen the experience he needed to launch Lionel. In 1899, he patented a device for igniting photographers’ flash powder by using dry cell batteries to heat a wire fuse. Cowen than parlayed this into a defense contract to equip 24,000 Navy mines with detonators. His ignorance of armament manufacture did not stop him. He used mercuric fulminate, a sensitive and powerful explosive (his supplier’s deliveryman told him, "The company said you should always keep a good deal around. It’s better to be dead than maimed"), and delivered the fuses to the Brooklyn Navy Yard on time by horse-drawn wagon at a gallop. In January 1900, he filed his second patent which improved on the his first design but again failed to give details. On September 5, 1900, Cowen and a colleague from Acme, Harry C. Grant, started a business in lower Manhattan called the Lionel Manufacturing Company, but they had nothing to manufacture. One hot day when Cowen was sitting in his office waiting for a cool breeze he got the idea of an electric fan. He quickly assembled and marketed the electric fan, but the weather soon cooled and so did public interest. Soon after, Cowen was walking through lower Manhattan when he stopped at a toy store window where he saw, among the toys, a push train. He then had the vision of it going around a circle of track without needing attention. This was the vision which started a legend.