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REVIEW: Choo Choo Barn

By Macaroni Kid Lancaster, PA December 19, 2011

On Wednesday I got the opportunity to visit the Choo Choo Barn for the first time with my husband and my boys. We had an awesome experience! We were not quite sure what to really expect, but were delighted by the whole experience. My husband and myself thought it would basically be all different train sets, set up individually, boy were we wrong! The Choo Barn is one large train setup! So many things move besides just the trains that I think we went around about 10 or more times just to absorb it all. This is definitely a must stop if you are in the Strasburg area.

The display features many scenes from around the area including Strasburg Railroad, where you can actually see the train engine switch tracks just like the real Strasburg Train. Dutch Wonderland is also featured and displayed. The Turkey Hill display has live gas prices on the sign and looks so realistic. There is a whole circus scene going on including a parade and you can watch the moving performers. There is a zoo with moving animals also featured. They actually have a fire alarm go off at the firehouse and the fire truck comes out of the station with firefighters aboard and real water is used to put out the fire on the house. This scene was also very realistic in nature. To top everything off while view the display it will take you from day to night. 

This display was unlike anything my husband and I have ever seen before. It is definitely a great trip for the family this time of year. I would recommend going during the week when not as crowded, but they can definitely accommodate a lot of people within the display so no worries if you can't. Fridays in December are a great time to visit as it is Canned Food Fridays. Visit the Choo Choo Barn in exchange for a can food donation.

Be sure to check out the pictures I have posted on our Facebook Page.

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More Information about Choo Choo Barn: (By: Choo Choo Barn, Inc.)

It all started well before 1961…actually, the Choo Choo Barn was originally born in 1945, in the basement of the Groff home on Franklin Street in Strasburg. George Groff had just returned from World War II, and was looking for a Christmas present for his two-year-old son Gary. He found a $12.50 Lionel train set, and, as any father would do, he helped his son set it up. One thing led to another, and, within a few years, that simple set had begun to take over a larger and larger portion of the family basement.

Word of this train display spread throughout the neighborhood. In the 1950′s, the family began opening their now very elaborate display up for townspeople and local school groups during the Chrismas holidays. And, as the Groff family grew, so did their basement train display.

Then, in the early 60′s, George and Florence needed some extra funds to help pay for college. George noticed a small township maintenance facility — actually, more like a barn — that became available along Route 741, just to the west of the recently reopened Strasburg Rail Road. Perhaps the trains, scenery, buildings, and animated figures in their basement could be used as a part-time business to help with the added financial burden of college expenses. And the rest, as they say, is history.

The Choo Choo Barn, as George decided to call his display, opened on Thanksgiving Day in 1961, and was very quickly a hit with local folks and visitors alike. With over 600 square feet of detailed landscaping, 6 trains, and 6 animated figures, people knew they were seeing something special and unique!

Over the next few years, the display continued to grow, as George added something new each year. In time, his children began to help out, from collecting tickets to adding their own ideas to the growing display. A gift shop was added to the front of the building, and a picnic grove was constructed to the west of the parking lot (free tickets to the grove were available to all Barn visitors). And the display continued to grow…

When the elder Groffs retired in 1979, their youngest son Thomas, and his wife Linda, became the new owners, builders, and operators of the Choo Choo Barn. In 1983, the second generation business owners opened the Strasburg Train Shop, a model train hobby shop catering to the “layout builder”. Tom says that “detail and originality are what has contributed to the Choo Choo Barn’s success and popularity, and other modelers should be able to purchase the same items that are used in the layout.” Due to this credo, their train shop has become known far and wide as the place to locate “oddball” things such as garbage cans and the like.

In 1989, Tom & Linda expanded the Choo Choo Barn into a complex of specialty shops, known as the Shops of Traintown, designed to appeal to everyone. The Groffs opened Railroad Books And Videos, which carries over 600 different books and video tapes devoted to both model railroading and to real trains, along with novelty items, t-shirts, glasses, signs, posters and many other items, all with a train motif. Railroad Books & Videos is also home to a very extensive collection of used trains. Many visitors have commented about being able to find the train they played with when they were young in our cases!

In 1993, the list of specialty shops grew with the addition of Thomas’ Trackside Station, an officially licensed “Thomas The Tank Engine & Friends™” store. This store is made doubly unique by being the only 100% Thomas store in the United States. Over 1200 different items are featured, all involving the little blue engine from the Island of Sodor, and all his friends.

The Shops Of Traintown are also home to Candy Junction (a specialty candy shop), Country Keepsakes (featuring local and national hand crafts, quilts, wall hangings and collectibles), and Isaac’s Restaurant & Deli (with some of the most unique sandwiches you’ll find anywhere). And the picnic grove is still here, but you don’t need a ticket any more!

A lot has changed since the days in the Groff family basement. This train layout has grown into an attraction for all ages and all groups…you don’t need to be a model railroading enthusiast to enjoy the scenery and animations presented on this display. The display continues to re-open each spring, and Tom Groff and his talented team continue to add, update, clean, renovate, and restore the display, so there’s something new to see every year.

Visit the Choo Choo Barn:

2011 Admission Rates:
Adults: $7.00
Children (ages 3-11): $4.00
... Under age 3 admitted free!

Group Rates (for 15 or more people paying together - reservation appreciated):
Adults: $5.50
Children: $3.25

We offer a discount for active members of the military! Please show your card upon arrival.