The museum was founded in 1975 when a club of local railroad enthusiasts decided to run passenger cars on Amtrak trains.
The tombstone was donated in 1947 by two out-of-town railroad enthusiasts who accidentally got his birth year wrong.
A steam locomotive adorns the Borough seal, and the town is very welcoming to railroad enthusiasts.
Opened in 1875 to carry iron, it been operating as a recreational railway since 1960; a favorite with railroad enthusiasts, it runs all year round.
The new Railfan magazine was established in-house in 1974, dedicated to the railroad enthusiast and the hobby of railfanning.
Known by railroad enthusiasts and historians from around the world, it is unique in design and historic value for its longevity.
The black, gold, and Tuscan red paint job was popular with railroad enthusiasts and photographers.
This locomotive can be rented and operated by the railroad enthusiast.
The final scene on the train also was filmed in San Francisco, where a railroad enthusiast provided a vintage railway car for the setting.
The magazine is read both by railroad enthusiasts, commonly referred to as railfans, and those within the railroad industry.