Got a wind-up Marx set from Santa in 1944, age 2, while my dad was overseas with WWII. Then a Lionel freight set for Christmas 1947. In 1953, my best friend showed me his 1947 American Flyer passenger set, and I would have traded sets with him for sure. I loved passenger cars, because I could pretend I was in one going places. But Lionel "streamlined" passenger cars, back then, cost $10. each (about $100. in today's money). I never had a actual layout, and my interests changed to cars, girls, and hunting (guns and archery).
Fast forward to 1986 when I decided to build a train layout under the Christmas tree for my 4 kids. My kids thought, yawn, it was just OK. It has continued each year for me to play with. In 2005, my one year-old grandson became my "train buddy" for the next 9 years. I built us a big Lionel size "O" layout in 2005, and a small American Flyer "S" layout a few years ago, just for me. Yes, only passenger cars run on all 3. My dream came true with many Amtrak overnight trips.
Fast forward to 1986 when I decided to build a train layout under the Christmas tree for my 4 kids. My kids thought, yawn, it was just OK. It has continued each year for me to play with. In 2005, my one year-old grandson became my "train buddy" for the next 9 years. I built us a big Lionel size "O" layout in 2005, and a small American Flyer "S" layout a few years ago, just for me. Yes, only passenger cars run on all 3. My dream came true with many Amtrak overnight trips.