Railroad History in Miniature | God's World News

Railroad History in Miniature

11/27/2018
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    A man on a dock gets ready for a swim in the ocean in Todd Gieg's diorama of 1895 Lynn, Massachusetts. (AP)
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    Model craftsman Todd Gieg makes this gritty dock scene look almost real. (T. Gieg)
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    The Narrow Gauge Railroad, which started in Lynn, fascinated Mr. Gieg. He couldn’t resist recreating it in miniature. (T. Gieg)
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    In 1895, the corner of Market and Broad Street was at the edge of the city’s busy waterfront. (T. Gieg)
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    Todd Gieg is surrounded by the glues, paints, brushes, knives, and myriad other tools and materials of the model making craft. (T. Gieg)
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By his own admission, Todd Gieg is obsessive. He’d have to be. The professional photographer is recreating about 10 miles of train track and every town along it in miniature. It’s part-education, part-community, part-labor of love—a project he hopes will figuratively bring the 1895 Massachusetts North Shore back to life.

Shortly after moving to Lynn, Massachusetts, Gieg bought a basic model railroad kit for his son. At the same time, he began delving into the history of Lynn and the surrounding area. He found that a now-defunct narrow-gauge railroad had once carried freight and passengers along the area’s Atlantic Ocean waterfront.

Narrow-gauge tracks are narrower than standard train tracks. They were (and in some cases still are) often used in areas where money was scarce and potential riders few: the Maine woods, the Rocky Mountains, the Swiss Alps.

The Boston, Revere Beach, and Lynn Narrow Gauge Railroad was an exception. In its heyday, the railroad carried over seven million passengers a year. From 1875-1940, the railroad carried Bostonians from bustling Beantown to several seaside resorts—Point of Pines, Revere Beach, and others—known together as the North Shore.

Soon Gieg went from building a simple model railroad to constructing a scale diorama, or model. “I believe a sense of one’s community is enhanced by an awareness of its history,” he says.

Instead of building an imaginary railroad, he decided to take the historic route. He began attending miniature model shows. He learned about the detailed, ultra-realistic models crafted by George Sellios. (Sellios’ Franklin & South Manchester Railroad is the gold standard for model railroad enthusiasts.)

Gieg’s website calls the Boston, Revere Beach, and Lynn Narrow Gauge “Boston’s forgotten railroad.” But if Gieg has anything to say about it, this railway will be remembered for a long time.

With nearly endless patience, Gieg began recreating a miniature 1895 Lynn, Massachusetts. He includes details down to faux ivy crawling up buildings, tufts of grass sprouting under porches, and meticulously recreated storefronts, houses, and factories. Gieg’s plans include 10 four-by-four-foot modules—the entire distance from Boston to Lynn.

Gieg studies old maps, books, and photographs. He interviews folks who rode the railroad as children. Many of the diorama’s structures, ships, and trains are assembled from kits. But Gieg “scratch built” almost a third of the buildings, relying on research and makeshift materials to reproduce 120-year-old homes and shops.

Gieg mixes special paints, carves fenceposts, strings wires, and constructs warehouses. Signs and billboards advertise “Toilet Masks” and “Fels-Naptha Soap” from the rooftops. Gieg experimented with coloring and texture until he was satisfied he’d crafted realistic-looking water. Jars marked with granular mixtures are labeled “fine turf green” and “coarse turf.” They provide him with the material he needs to fashion grass.

“My desire is to have the craftsmanship evident in the diorama inspire kids to put down their phones and rediscover the pleasure of doing something with their hands,” he says.

Over several years, Gieg has built more than 50 models for the diorama. They range from small boats and coal barges to a “gasometer” storage tank and rows of buildings lining Market Street. He insists on precision and detail. He relies on maps and plot plans to achieve historically exact placement.

Imagine making each board, tree, fence post, brick, and rail of a 40-foot diorama by hand. Then think of what a tiny part of the world Todd Gieg is copying—not creating from nothing! God the Creator planned the details of every cell in the universe. He spoke them into being without consulting a single book, website, map, or photo.

“I have been successful at this because it is pleasurable,” Gieg says. God took pleasure in His creation too. He called it “very good.” (Genesis 1:31) It is right and good to use God-given creativity and intelligence to build and teach and delight and communicate—so long as we remember from whom all blessings flow.

Gieg plans to donate the completed diorama to the Lynn Museum. In January, he’ll deliver the first three modules. He envisions them as teaching tools that will fascinate adults and children alike—and educate them about a time and an all-but-lost way of life. Gieg estimates the project will take “several more years” to complete. There are backdrops, brass engines, and hundreds of people and structures still to go. In a video made in his workshop, Gieg tells viewers “I’ve got a lot of track left to lay.”