Neil
Young, the famous Manitoba-born rocker and model railroader, made an appearance
at the 2018 Manitoba Mega Train show.
Well,
not personally. But an O gauge locomotive he once owned was there.
It
was on a table at the Dauphin Railway Museum display,
hosted by the Museum’s genial President, Derm English.
The
pre-production Lionel 6-38150 Clear Shell F-3 A unit was one of 230 items put up for auction by Young last
November.
According to Julien’s Auctions, which sold the
item, it was one of two non-powered clear shell F-3 A units that were used as
samples to determine the best plastic to use for the production run.
One shell was made from ABS
plastic without U.V. stabilizers. The other shell was made from polycarbonate
plastic.
Included with the items was
a copy of a letter dated May 7, 1999, from Director of Engineering Robert A.
Grubba to a Lionel consultant, with a CC to Neil Young.
But how did the unit end up
at the Dauphin Railway Museum?
According to Derm, someone
from the Dauphin area bought the unit at the auction and donated it to the
museum.
So if Neil Young ever returns
home to his birthplace in Winnipeg, he could always take a side trip north and west to
Dauphin to see something he once owned.
Or wait until the next Mega Train show in 2019, and come and see it there.
Bonus information: The second out-of-town gig that one of Neil Young's early groups, the Squires, had was in Dauphin, on Dec. 13, 1963.
The band made the trip to Dauphin, 300 kilometers from Winnipeg, by bus. They were paid $125.