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Model railroaders set show for Sequim Grange Saturday and Sunday

Published 1:31 am Wednesday, October 12, 2016

John Kumparak

John Kumparak

North Olympic Peninsula Railroaders

What: 17th annual Train Show and Swap Meet

Where: Sequim Prairie Grange, 290 Macleay Road

When: 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 15; 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 16

Cost: Free entry

Featuring: model train items and memorabilia, door prizes, children’s trains, and more.

More info: Call 582-1316 or email stevenstripp@juno.com

Trains may be gone on the Olympic Peninsula but long live the love of locomotives among local hobbyists.

For the 17th year, members of the North Olympic Peninsula Railroaders, a miniature railroad collectors’ club, present their annual show on Saturday-Sunday, Oct. 15-16, at the Sequim Prairie Grange.

The club makes itself visible with booths and train displays at the Dungeness River Festival and Clallam County Fair but in recent years the group began its biggest project yet.

John Kumparak, club vice president, said in 2013, they started intensely researching the former railway so they could recreate it in miniature form and as mobile sections from Discovery Bay to Joyce.

“We want to mimic the peninsula as much as possible,” Kumparak said.

They’ve been researching through the Clallam County Historical Society, North Olympic Library System and in discussions with former railroad employees.

Each section will be an area with landmarks such as the Joyce General Store.

Steve Stripp, president of the club, said as they progress they’ll begin researching additional areas and creating new modular sections such as for Port Townsend.

Club members also plan to only run replica trains of what actually ran through the area such as Seattle and North Coast F7s.

They’ve taken replicating the railway so far as to photograph the Johnson Creek Trestle’s individual sections to ensure their model is accurate.

“It began with basic research and we found more facts on top of facts, which led to more discussions about accuracy,” Kumparak said.

“We’re finding that we’re expanding our knowledge and it definitely gives us an idea of what was where.”

In the club’s findings, they continue to investigate some discrepancies about the former railway, but club members hope to have the layout finished by next year, or at minimum a complete section so that they can travel with it and possibly give lessons for classrooms.

One of the more meticulous aspects is creating handmade trees for the layouts, which could require hundreds, possibly more, to help envision the local landscape.

Kumparak said he’s still surprised every year that a few students who visit the Dungeness River Festival don’t know trains used to run through Sequim or the Railroad Bridge’s purpose.

If you’re out of the loop, the Milwaukee Railroad ran across it from 1915-1980 for timber until it was sold to the Seattle and North Coast Railroad and abandoned five years later.

Last year commemorated the 100th anniversary of the bridge.

About the show

While work continues on the historical replica of the local railways, club members look to bring their biggest show yet to the Sequim Prairie Grange over the weekend.

Stripp said it features at least 25 vendors, their most yet, and model trains of most sizes and makes.

Club member Hank Sampson plans to display his replica of Dolores, Colo.’s train station while other members like Dick Wolf run his garden scale railway and the club’s traveling display.

Kumparak said they’ll see at least 11 different types of trains on the tracks of the main layout and other types will be on hand such live steam model engines.

This year, organizers added an hour on Saturday and subtracted an hour on Sunday due to a dance that night. As is tradition, club members raffle off full train sets for children 14 and under, and there will be raffle drawings every hour. Children also can try their train skills with a Brio wood set and a Thomas the Tank Engineer set.

For more information on the show, call 582-1316 or email stevenstripp@juno.com.

Reach Matthew Nash at mnash@sequimgazette.com.