4-4-0 American locomotive with operating headlight and tender
Old-time water car (Manassas Gap)
Old-time box car (Savannah, Albany & Gulf)
Old-time gondola (Fredericksburg & Potomac)
Old-time flat car (Mississippi Central & Louisiana)
Old-time bobber caboose (Atlanta & West Point)
56 x 38 in oval of E-Z Track® including 12 pieces of curved track, three pieces of straight track, and one plug-in terminal rerailer
Power pack and speed controller
Illustrated instruction manual
With the shots fired at Fort Sumter on April 12, 1861, the War Between the States officially began. Railroading would play a key role in the Civil War, providing logistical support and carrying munitions, supplies and troops to each side's respective armies in the field. Lacking the financial power and the more standardized rail system of their Northern counterparts, Southern-held railroads relied heavily on the ingenuity of their railroad men to support the troops. A typical Confederate consist featured an assortment of commandeered railing stock bearing the names of a variety of Southern railroads.
Old-time water car (Manassas Gap)
Old-time box car (Savannah, Albany & Gulf)
Old-time gondola (Fredericksburg & Potomac)
Old-time flat car (Mississippi Central & Louisiana)
Old-time bobber caboose (Atlanta & West Point)
56 x 38 in oval of E-Z Track® including 12 pieces of curved track, three pieces of straight track, and one plug-in terminal rerailer
Power pack and speed controller
Illustrated instruction manual
With the shots fired at Fort Sumter on April 12, 1861, the War Between the States officially began. Railroading would play a key role in the Civil War, providing logistical support and carrying munitions, supplies and troops to each side's respective armies in the field. Lacking the financial power and the more standardized rail system of their Northern counterparts, Southern-held railroads relied heavily on the ingenuity of their railroad men to support the troops. A typical Confederate consist featured an assortment of commandeered railing stock bearing the names of a variety of Southern railroads.
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