When the North Pole Express chugs into its station, the ground outside the Museum trembles. A cloud of billowing steam whooshes by as a whistle announces the engine鈥檚 grand entrance.
All at once, the blur of motion comes to a halt, and this train is ready to take a crew of passengers through the twinkling lights of Findlay, Ohio鈥檚 very own North Pole.
鈥淭he entire quarter mile track is completely decorated with Christmas displays,鈥 said Jim Gabriel, the organization鈥檚 vice president and one of the people who organizes this attraction each year.
Gabriel loves trains, and this one is extra special.
鈥淭his is a quarter-scale coal-fired steam engine,鈥 he said.
It鈥檚 a fraction the size of a real train 鈥 each car seats just one adult, plus perhaps a child. But it鈥檚 no toy.
Engineer Nick Taylor steps out from behind the driver鈥檚 seat. The white in his Santa hat is blackened with soot.
鈥淲e're putting fire in with our shovel and we're building the fire and running the blower to regulate how the fire is burning,鈥 Taylor said. He鈥檚 been operating this train since he was a little kid. 鈥淓ssentially what you鈥檝e got going on is a big teakettle that's on wheels.鈥
And this is just one of the trains here.
Another quarter-sized train runs on a parallel track, and next to that are full-sized rail cars 鈥 a boxcar, caboose and diesel switcher 鈥 decked out in colorful lights.
Inside, there are even more trains, albeit much smaller. Model engines run loops around tiny Christmas villages bustling with miniature townspeople.
These trains are part of a longstanding holiday tradition.
The train tradition
Around 1900, manufacturer Lionel released its : The Electric Express.
鈥淚n the big cities, a lot of the department stores would set up their Christmas windows and many of them would feature a model train in some fashion,鈥 Gabriel said.
Over time, the gadget made appearances on wishful Christmas lists, and when kids opened up gifts of trains on Christmas morning, they鈥檇 set up their brand new models around the tree.
The tradition took off, picking up steam when the popular story, The Polar Express, was published in 1985 and later adapted into a film.
Now, towns all over Ohio celebrate the holiday with scenic train rides.
- In Nelsonville, takes passengers through the Hocking River Valley while Santa visits each child on board.
- Storytellers on at the Dennison Depot reenact the well-known holiday tale to pajama-clad passengers.
- The Cuyahoga Valley Scenic Railroad鈥檚 brings visitors on a journey to the North Pole.
- And the Lebanon, Mason and Monroe Railroad in Warren County hosts a too, complete with visits from Santa and his elves.
Sharing Christmas memories
In Findlay, the magic of the North Pole Express is thanks to dozens of volunteers, like Gabriel, who are driven by a shared passion for locomotives.
鈥淢y grandfather got me involved with trains,鈥 Gabriel said. 鈥淗e had wind up trains. And whenever I went over to visit my grandfather, we would always get out the trains and play with them.鈥
That鈥檚 a common story among the volunteers: dads and grandpas passing on their love of the transportation technology.
Now, those volunteers are sharing their enthusiasm with today鈥檚 kids.
Onboard the North Pole Express, a whistle sounds and the train starts to pick up speed.
鈥淲e believe this gives our riders an opportunity to experience rail transportation, much like probably their grandparents or potentially even their parents did when they were younger,鈥 Gabriel said.
So, this train ride isn鈥檛 just a trip to the North Pole 鈥 it鈥檚 a trip through time, a way to share love and Christmas memories across generations.