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American Heritage MagazineNovember/December 2006    Volume 57, Issue 6
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Cover Story


2006 November/December cover

Around 1900, when electrified toy trains were in their infancy, a battery-powered railroad car appeared in the show window of Robert Ingersoll’s novelty store on Cortlandt Street in downtown Manhattan. It wasn’t intended as a toy. Rather, the little car that tirelessly circled its loop of track was meant to draw attention to the other items on display.

Its purpose says a lot about its creator, Joshua L. Cohen, who would later change his surname to Cowen and whose middle name, Lionel, became a household word. Electric trains probably would have become popular even without him, but Cowen’s skill as an advertiser made them as much a part of Christmas for countless families as the trees under which they circled. “All Aboard, Boys, for a Merry Xmas!” a conductor calls from a circa 1920 advertisement: “Big, sturdy, handsome Lionel ‘Limited,’ complete from Locomotive to Observation Car, standing on its wonderful system of tracks and switches of shining steel… . Wide-eyed, happy boy in a dressing gown reaches out and excitedly throws on the current, from his Lionel ‘Multivolt’ Transformer. Whir-r-r! away bounds his ‘Limited’ from the gaily painted station, past semaphores, through tunnels, around curves and out onto the main line— just like a real train.”

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Feature Stories 
 
History for the Holidays
Editors’ Choice
The Best of the Past From the Year Just Past.
Military Matters
From Saigon to Desert Storm
How the U. S. military reinvented itself after Vietnam.
By Max Boot
How We Live Now
Poker
The very American career of the card game you can learn in 10 minutes and work on for the rest of your life.
By Jack Kelly
The Cost of Living
“I Reckon You’re One of Them New York Doves”
An anti—Vietnam War activist met his new client—Lyndon Johnson.
By Aaron Asher
Painting the Past
Combat Artist
America’s Patrick O’Brian isn’t a writer; he’s a painter.
By Fredric Smoler
 
 
 
Departments 
 
History Now
Mount Vernon’s audacious attempt to bring its illustrious tenant as close to life as possible at three critical moments in his career: frontier soldier, commander of the Revolutionary Army, and President.
The Buyable Past: George Nelson’s exuberant clocks have been bestsellers for more than half a century.
The Gettysburg Gospel: An important new study does the seemingly impossible—sheds new light on America’s most closely studied speech.
By Frederick E. Allen, David Lander, and Harold Holzer
In the News
America’s Revolutionary Party
Republicans often like to speak of their fealty to conservative virtues; but in fact theirs has always been America’s radical party.
By Kevin Baker
Time Machine
The World’s First DJ.
By Frederic D. Schwarz
 
 
 
 
 

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