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“Warman's Lionel Train Field Guide: 1945-1969”--by David
Doyle
Reviewed by Joseph H. Lechner
Before I saw a copy of David Doyle's latest guide, I had no
idea who Warman was, and I assumed a Field Guide would be a book
from the Audubon Society with pictures of birds, insects, rocks
or trees. It turns out that “Warman's Field Guides” are an established
series of pocket-sized books devoted to various genres of collectibles.
For the record, Edwin G. Warman (1915-1979) was an antiques
collector who first published his price list in 1948 in response
to numerous requests from friends and fellow collectors. “Warman's
Antiques and Their Current Prices” covered such collectibles
as mechanical banks, pattern glass, furniture and silver. This
price guide was well-received and eventually became an annual
publication. After Warman's death, his publishing business was
sold first to Stanley and Katherine Greene (1981), then to Chilton
Books (1989), and finally to Krause Publications (1997). “Warman's
Antiques & Collectibles Price Guide” is currently in its
40th edition.
Meanwhile, the Warman's line has been expanded to include a
series of “pocket-sized” field guides, all of which measure 5¼” tall
by 4¼” wide and are 512 pages in length. I write “pocket” with
a grain of salt. At 1¼” thick, this field guide will not
fit into a shirt pocket, nor into a back pants pocket, where
many “Yorkers” carry their toy train price guides. I suspect
that hundreds of thousands of people keep a “Warman's Field Guide” in
the glove compartment of their automobile. These little books
accompany Saturday-morning adventurers who scour garage sales
and flea markets in search of elusive treasures from yesteryear.
Titles in the “Warman's Field Guide” genre include Barbie dolls;
baseball cards; Beanie Babies; Beatles memorabilia; bobbleheads;
bottles; clocks; Coca-Cola branded merchandise; comic books;
Disney collectibles; Elvis memorabilia; fishing lures; G.I. Joe
dolls; guitars; Hot Wheels; Hummel figurines; jewelry; kitchen
collectibles; Little Golden Books; Matchbox toys; Pez candy dispensers;
phonograph records; Star Wars items; U.S. coins; watches; and
Zippo lighters. This is the first train-related book in the series.
“Warman's Field Guide to Lionel Trains 1945-1969” is divided
into eight sections:
O gauge locomotives and rolling stock (210 pages)
O gauge accessories, including track and transformers (76 pages)
O gauge cataloged sets (94 pages)
Lionel catalogs and paper (66 pages)
HO trains and accessories (19 pages)
Appendix (7 pages)
Glossary (2 pages)
Numerical index (17 pages)
On each two-page spread, the left-hand page contains full-color
photos while the right-hand page lists catalog numbers, brief
descriptions, estimated values, and Doyle's rarity rating on
a scale of 1 (dirt common) to 8 (stratospheric). A typical spread
has three photos and 7-8 listings. It follows that only 40% of
the listed items are pictured. Most of the illustrations previously
appeared in David's excellent “Standard Catalog of Lionel Trains
1945-1969”. Of course, the pictures are necessarily smaller in
this field guide. Nearly all the photos are orthogonal views
of the car or engine's side elevation. This is usually helpful,
although a side view of a two-unit diesel is not very legible
when it has to be shrunk to fit on a 4” wide page. I wish locomotives
could be shown in the “¾ wedge” view that was popular
with photographers of prototype railroads. This was also how
Robert Sherman usually drew Lionel locos in postwar catalogs.
A great advantage of this format is that it would clearly show
details on the engine's nose. This field guide does include at
least one ¾ wedge shot of a pair of #2350 New Haven electrics.
Its caption fails to point out that one model has painted stripes
on the nose while the other has a decal. “Standard Catalog of
Lionel Trains” contains the identical photo, and the different
decorating techniques are explained there.
The section on cataloged sets does contain new photos that have
not previously been published elsewhere to my knowledge. These
illustrations show both the contents of the set and also the
packages (both individual item boxes and set cartons) in which
they were sold. The sets that are illustrated cover the full
range of box styles issued by The Lionel Corporation between
1945 and 1969. Collectors will welcome the increased emphasis
on cataloged sets for two reasons. First, an estimated 60% of
Lionel's total sales were boxed train sets. When postwar trains
emerge from the attics or basements of their original owners
and first come to the attention of the collecting fraternity,
most of what we discover in the hinterland will be complete sets.
Second, pristine train sets in their original packaging are commanding
unheard-of prices at train meets, on eBay and in other resale
venues. I personally know of individuals who have paid $2,000
or more for an empty cardboard box. In this day and age, one
cannot be a knowledgeable train collector without knowing what
the carton is supposed to look like.
The rolling-stock, accessories and sets sections of this field
guide are arranged strictly by catalog number. Other Lionel guides,
including Doyle's “Standard Catalog of Lionel Trains”, are organized
into smaller sections by body type: all cabooses together; all
diesels together; etc. In a field guide, numerical organization
makes sense, because the first piece of information one usually
ascertains about a piece is its cab number. On 98% of postwar
Lionel trains, the catalog number was printed on the side; but
not always. The ubiquitous Lehigh Valley twin hopper was cataloged
under five different numbers (2456, 6076, 6176, 6456 and 6476),
but the number actually printed on the car was always 25000.
The most common two-dome Sunoco tank car (2465, 6465) bore no
number at all. For collectors who are accustomed to seeing similar
locomotives or cars grouped together, this field guide's organization
can be disconcerting. “O” and 027 versions of otherwise-similar
locomotives (e.g. 2020 and 671 steam turbines; 2046 and 646 Hudsons;
622 and 6220 switchers) will be found many pages apart in this
guide. One of the most awkward sequences is the catalog numbers
from 2550-2560. Within a page or two, one finds four 16” aluminum
Canadian Pacific passenger cars; two Budd RDC cars, a Sunoco
tank car, and a sheet-metal operating crane car.
According to the publisher, prices in “Warman's Lionel Train
Field Guide” have been updated since “Standard Catalog of Lionel
Trains” was published in 2004. To explore the changes, I looked
up representative pieces in several “pricey” genres such as F3s,
6464 boxcars and boxed high-end train sets. Among F3s that I
checked, prices for 2240 Wabash; 2242 New Haven; 2243 Santa Fe
and 2363 Illinois Central had not increased; while prices for
2356 Southern; 2368 Baltimore & Ohio; 2373 Canadian Pacific;
2378 Milwaukee Road and 2379 Rio Grande did increase. In almost
all cases, only the “Like New” price went up, while “Very Good” and “Excellent” prices
remained the same. Prices for six representative 6464 boxcars
(-1; -25; -325; -350; -825 and -900) did not change between 2004
and 2006. Finally, I looked at prices for five of the most highly-regarded
cataloged postwar sets (1464W Golden Anniversary Union Pacific
passenger train; 2148WS Hudson with Madison cars; 2270W Jersey
Central Trainmaster passenger set; 2296W Canadian Pacific F3
passenger set; and 13150 Super “O” freight set with 773 Hudson).
Only one price had been revised: the value for 2296W in “Excellent” condition
went up by $1000, but the same set in “Like New” condition did
not increase.
I could have done without the two-page, fourteen-term Glossary.
A few of its entries (Magne-traction, heat stamping) are pertinent
to Lionel trains, but others (AAR, hotbox) have no relevance
to toy train collecting. The seven-page appendix titled “How
to clean and prepare trains for use” is excerpted from two larger
chapters in “Standard Catalog of Lionel Trains”. It only covers
cleaning track and connecting the lockon. This information might
be helpful to novices once they get their trains home, but a
collectors' field guide is not really the place for it. In any
event, those who actually do need step-by-step instructions for
setting up an electric train would also want the information
on cleaning, lubrication, transformers, and E-unit operation,
which is found in “Standard Catalog of Lionel Trains” but is
not duplicated in this field guide.
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