Archive for the 'Pennsylvania Dutch Country' Category

Family Destinations

Saturday, December 29th, 2007

By Gilbert’s Travel


Looking for a great family trip in 2008? One that may be drivable and if not offers domestic travel rates?

Pennsylvania Dutch Country (PA) - Many think of the Amish when the Dutch Country comes to mind and there are ways to learn and explore about them. However there are a bunch of other fun and family friendly activities to do including: Strasburg Rail Road a 45-minute train ride aboard America’s oldest short-line railroad will take you through some of the most beautiful, peaceful and productive Pennsylvania Dutch countryside. Cherry Crest Farm a 5-acre maze, animal farm, pumpkin slinger, guided wagon tour and more; Longwood Gardens has over 1050 acres of gardens, woodlands and meadows.

Steaming in the Snow at Strasburg Rail Road

Friday, December 28th, 2007

Strasburg Rail Road is beautiful during the winter. Authentically restored passenger cars are gently heated with potbelly stoves while a mighty coal-burning steam engine pulls passengers past a landscape of ice and snow.

Watch engine #31 travel the tracks through the snow covered farmland of Strasburg, Pennsylvania.

Watch the Video courtesy of Joseph M. Fusco

Christmas Vacation in Lancaster County

Wednesday, December 19th, 2007

By Liz Jeressi
Liz’s Point Blog
94.3 The Point
December 19, 2007

With the kids off 12 days from school for the holidays, I’m going to break up the week by taking them back to Pennsylvania Dutch Country. Not only does it take care of the usual let-down the day after Christmas when there are no more gifts to look forward to, but there are such fantastic things for the boys to do in Lancaster County even in the winter that it’ll be a guaranteed amazing trip.

We’ll first head right to the Strasburg Rail Road for a cozy steam train ride through the rolling hills of Lancaster County, then head across the street to the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania so the boys can spend three or four hours (seriously!) looking at the huge old steam trains and playing with the hands-on children’s trains and tracks. Then we’ll check in at Willow Valley Resort where we’ll enjoy one of the best buffets in the area, then put on our swimsuits and play in the indoor kiddie water park and pools until well past our bedtime. And if the weather is good, we may even get lucky and be able to spend some time at Dutch Wonderland, where they decorate the whole kiddie amusement park in a holiday theme.

The surprise for my boys this time around is that we’re going at a time of year when Willow Valley holds its indoor winter carnival……picture part of your favorite Jersey Shore boardwalk brought inside so the kids can have fun! Willow Valley will also hold an amazing New Year’s Eve party. With the rooms there being so incredible it’s a great way to ring in the New Year and then just head to your room rather than having to drive home…..then wake up to a great breakfast buffet, brunch, or trip to their incredible bakery.

This time last year I remember checking in at the front desk of the hotel and getting recognized by a listener who was also bringing her family there to enjoy the holiday season. Everywhere I go people tell me it’s a great trip for the kids, or ask me for details on what I do with my kids when I’m there. Each time is different and special, and each time creates memories my children will cherish forever! Whatever you do this season with your family, enjoy it and have a wonderful and safe holiday! I’ll see you in ‘08!

Strasburg Rail Road a Holiday Destination

Sunday, December 2nd, 2007

“I knew exactly what Santa’s elves looked like because I saw them at work in those windows,” Morrison says.

The kid-size monorail and giant tree at Wanamakers, the miniature train set-ups in hardware stores, the department-store Santas who gave out clear toy lollipops - Morrison remembers it all as if it were yesterday. A collector of all things Christmas, he opened the National Christmas Center in Lancaster to showcase a staggering collection of Santas, crèches, ornaments, toys, cards, books and artwork - both his own and items on loan from other Christmas aficionados.

The life-size dioramas and animatronic figures in the Tudor Towne exhibit tell an enchanting children’s story of how a town of animals celebrates Christmas. Another exhibition uses lifelike statues to show Santa Claus figures from around the world. This year, Morrison is adding a “Memories of Philadelphia” display with historical photos - ephemera like a Sealtest paper wreath, and children’s books given out by Gimbels, Lit Brothers and other bygone Philadelphia businesses.

A large, walk-in room re-creates an early Woolworth’s store at Christmastime - the first successful Woolworth’s opened in Lancaster in 1879. The display is a sentimental favorite of Morrison’s; he bought his first Christmas collectibles - three houses for a miniature Christmas village - at Woolworth’s as a 7-year-old. And, yes, those three houses are now part of the exhibition.

“It’s all about preserving the essence of Christmas,” says the man who calls himself Santa Jr. and whose hefty stature and natural gray-white beard make him a Santa look-alike. The same could be said of Lancaster County during the holiday season. Lancaster done right, that is - avoiding the strip malls, outlets and tourist traps on the congested part of Route 30 nearest the city of Lancaster.

The Germans who settled this area contributed some of our more beloved Christmas traditions - decorated evergreens, miniature villages served by toy trains, even candy canes. So it’s not surprising that the county evokes Christmas fantasies - a journey that begins when you pull off the highway and onto the two-lane back roads of this primarily rural area.

Rolling farmlands alternate with small towns where the sidewalks are lined with hundred-year-old homes that have front porches designed for neighborliness. Here, it’s the automobiles that seem out of place, not the horse-drawn carriages of the Amish and Mennonites.

Visitors to the Landis Valley Museum walk through the streets and buildings of a living history village that represents the Pennsylvania German culture of 18th-, 19th- and early-20th century Lancaster County. For years museum volunteers had adorned the village with evergreen branches and other small holiday touches, but only in the last five years has the museum highlighted extensively old local holiday traditions, a mini-lesson in Christmas history.

The museum’s early-1800s tavern, for example, features an evergreen tree hung upside down from the ceiling to prevent mice from nibbling its adornment of edible cookies and dried fruit. The Landis Brothers House incorporates a Victorian-style feather tree and traditional German miniature “putz” nativity scene.

At the museum’s Country Christmas Village (Friday through Sunday and Dec. 14-16 and 26-28) visitors will encounter Belsnickel, a gruff peddler in tattered clothes who carries a switch to punish bad children and candies to reward good ones. The German Belsnickel was a precursor of our Santa.

The pleasant scenery on Route 741 west of Gap evokes Sunday drives of old, when the journey itself was the enjoyment, but a reward lies ahead in Strasburg, where the railroad is still king. Those who grew up with a miniature train layout under the Christmas tree will delight in the oversized display at Choo Choo Barn, the outgrowth of a setup that began about 50 years ago in the basement of the Groff family, which still owns and operates Choo Choo Barn.

The 1,700-square-foot walk-around display features 20 operating O-gauge trains crisscrossing the farms and villages of a miniature Lancaster County, over bridges, through tunnels and past a ski slope. Electricity brings to life more than 150 animated figures, including an Amish barn-raising, dairy farm, three-ring circus, amusement park and baseball game.

The operating layouts at the National Toy Train Museum in Strasburg are neither as large nor as elaborate as Choo Choo Barn’s. This museum instead focuses on the history of toy trains, displaying hundreds of locomotives and cars from the late 1800s to today. Train collectors will be fascinated. A recent visit found numerous families with little boys enjoying the museum, too, but if you go to only one place to see toy train layouts, make it the Choo Choo Barn.

Train lovers can experience the real thing by taking a ride on the Strasburg Rail Road, one of America’s oldest short-line steam railways. Operating hours are abbreviated in December, but special events include the popular Day Out with Thomas and Santa’s Paradise Express.

Across the street, the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania exhibits more than 100 cars and locomotives, including the interiors of sleepers and dining cars.

Lancaster County offers visitors a chance to shop the way we all once did - strolling the streets of a real downtown, patronizing small, locally owned stores and, best of all, escaping much of the crowds. The little town of Intercourse has more than 30 craft, food, gift and furniture stores within walking distance along Old Philadelphia Pike (Route 340) and East Newport Road (Route 772) and within the Kitchen Kettle Village complex. Among the out-of-the-ordinary gifts available are locally made quilts, traditional folk arts and crafts, and local food specialties.

Downtown Lancaster makes an enjoyable shopping excursion, mostly near Penn Square on Market, Prince, King and Orange. At the heart of the district is Central Market, the oldest continuously operating farmers market in the country. The current building is a modest 114 years old, but the market itself has been operating on this site since the 1730s.

Market stalls offer Pennsylvania Dutch meats, baked goods and preserves alongside Greek specialties and organic foods. Pick up some traditional springerle molded cookies and hand-painted ornaments from the Springerle House market stall.

Numerous art galleries sprinkled throughout the downtown area sell high-quality local crafts as well as fine arts from regional and international artists. Two museum stores worth a look are those at the Heritage Center Museum on King Street and at the Lancaster Quilt and Textile Museum on Market Street.

Visit the Quilt Museum itself to see the “Lancaster Christmas” exhibition introduced last year. The sentimental re-creation of Christmases past was curated by the National Christmas Center’s Morrison. Eight life-size room settings depict Pennsylvania holiday celebrations through the years, from the simpler decor of the 1850s to the 1960s, when aluminum trees lit by color wheels were all the rage. Woolworth’s 5-&-10-cent store makes an appearance here, too.

Downtown Lancaster’s Old Fashioned Holiday Weekends, the first three weekends of December, feature horse-drawn carriage rides, trolley tours, and Santa himself.

Strasburg’s tiny downtown, at the crossroads of Routes 741 and 896, has a few shops worth visiting. Eldreth Pottery specializes in traditional salt-glazed stoneware and Pennsylvania redware pottery. Springerle House has its main store here, and 70 antiques and collectible dealers showcase their wares at the Strasburg Antique Market in a restored tobacco warehouse.

Lancaster County seems to have more than its share of theaters, and their holiday shows tend to cost less than those in larger cities. Sight & Sound Millennium Theatre’s Miracle of Christmas presents a musical rendition of the birth of Jesus with a large cast, live animals on stage, and impressive special effects.

Amish Family Christmas at Freedom Chapel Dinner Theatre depicts the holiday celebration of the fictional King family, and Dutch Apple Dinner Theatre presents Irving Berlin’s White Christmas, a musical based on the 1954 Bing Crosby movie.

American Musical Theatre boasts that its Christmas Show “is constantly compared to Radio City Music Hall.” At $32 for adults and $16 for children, ticket prices for the Lancaster variety show go for considerably less than those to Radio City’s Christmas Spectacular.

Holiday time brings nostalgia for the “good old days,” when to many people, Christmas seemed simpler and more meaningful. Lancaster County in December can’t bring back those days, but it offers a chance to recapture the feeling.



Lancaster County Christmas

Lancaster County, west of Philadelphia, is about a 60- or 75-minute drive. The leisurely trip is along Route 30, also called the Old Lincoln Highway, where traffic can be heavy. The Pennsylvania Turnpike is the fast way to reach the county by car or truck. Amtrak trains and Greyhound buses run between Philadelphia and Lancaster.

Long Weekend

Monday, November 19th, 2007

Windsor-Hights Herald
October 2007

A Tale of Many Cities
Visitors spending a long weekend in Pennsylvania Dutch Country have their choice of several charming hamlets. The village of Bird-In-Hand offers the cozy Bird-In-Hand Village Inn & Suites, a grouping of 24 quaint, country style guest rooms spread over four brick buildings; the oldest, built in 1734, holds court on the National Register of Historic Places. Just across the road, a farmers market beckons with aisle after aisle of fresh meats and produce, unique jarred goodies, candies, jewelry, clothing and souvenirs.

The nearby city of Lancaster, the county’s hub, boasts rows of antique shops, art galleries, restaurants, outdoor cafes and the region’s most popular farmers market. Vacationing families should check out Dutch Wonderland, an amusement park featuring more than 30 rides, games and coasters for kids. History buffs can stop by the Landis Valley Museum, the largest authentic Pennsylvania Dutch Country Living History Village, where 19th – century German life, customs and artifacts unfold before you. And if you’re in the mood for an old-fashioned constitutional stroll around the manicured grounds, it’s a real treat on a sunny fall day.

If you’re looking for some upscale charm, spend an afternoon in Lititz, Lancaster County’s own version of New Hope, PA. With its trendy shops and chic restaurants, it promises visitors a little cosmopolitan-meets-old-country charm. Feeling twisted? Stop into the historic Julius Sturgis Pretzel Bakery, America’s first commercial bakery.

Seasonal Availability
Pennsylvania Dutch Country shines during late autumn, when barns, silos, covered bridges and farmland compose the panorama.
Soak it all in with a horse-and-buggy ride; while you’ll cover limited ground, Amish buggy drivers reveal their deep sense of regional pride and knowledge of the countryside.

Another don’t-miss option? The Ride to Paradise on an old-time train departs from Strasburg Rail Road – America’s oldest short-line railroad – and takes guests on a 45-minute jaunt through several miles of farmland. On the return trip, passengers can disembark at a scenic spot to enjoy picnics, hayrides, apple cider, as well as the Amazing Maize Maze in the aptly named township of Paradise. Then, hop another returning train and, upon arriving at the station, visit the Choo Choo Barn and National Toy Train Museum.

A Lancaster County Vacation

Monday, November 5th, 2007

By Liz - Liz’s Point Blog
Lou & Liz in the Morning - WJLK - FM
94.3 The Point

November 5, 2007

I’ve taken the trip to Lancaster plenty of times…..a very kid-friendly vacation. And I’ve gotten so many listeners requesting details when I mention it on the air that I thought I’d give you a quick overview in case you haven’t yet taken your children to Lancaster County, PA.

My boys adore every detail of our trip. I must say that it almost rivals Disney for younger kids. So let me make a couple of recommendations: Try for at least three days if you’re doing it between Memorial Day and Labor Day to get in all the major attractions. My boys’ favorites: The Strasburg Railroad and Train Museum….two separate attractions. Go for a ride on a steam train through the Amish farmland…..Thomas The Train even stops by on occasion!

My kids will spend three to six hours at the train museum across the street climbing onto the real trains and playing with the toy train displays. There are also two other toy train museums within blocks of the big train museum. You can stay in a real train hotel (the Red Caboose) and eat in a train restaurant. Our favorite hotel is Willow Valley Family Resort, where the boys will swim ’till 11pm every night in the indoor kiddie water park and five pools. They also love the numerous buffets around the county, especially Miller’s and the one at Willow Valley, where they can eat all they want without having to wait. There are also some wonderful family-style restaurants like Good And Plenty.

Dutch Wonderland is a fantastic kiddie amusement park for the little ones. That’ll take up a whole day, too. Then there are the numerous Amish farms where you can get horse and buggy rides through covered bridges and interactive life-on-the-farm activities. You can even stay at some of these farms and get up to feed the chickens and milk the cows, then eat Amish meals with the family you’re staying with. I love the smell of a farm, the beautiful rolling hills, and the feel of being someplace so different than the Jersey Shore without having to get on a plane. The boys just beg to go back time and time again.

Railroad Supports Farmland Preservation

Monday, October 29th, 2007

By Ryan Robinson
Lancaster New Era
Oct 29, 2007

LANCASTER COUNTY, Pa. - Here’s a scoop: Ice Cream is helping to save a 63-acre Amish farm in Fulton Township.

Turkey Hill Dairy in 2005 began giving a portion of the proceeds from sales of its All Natural Recipe ice cream to the nonprofit farmland preserver, Lancaster Farmland Trust.

Through the end of 2006, that effort amassed $51,000, which will pay for most of the $60,000 cost of preserving a dairy farm at 115 Arcadia Trace Road, Peach Bottom.

Turkey Hill and trust officials planned to be at the farm today when the farmer signs the conservation agreement, which prohibits future development of the farm.

“Look what one locally based business has done to help save farmland in Lancaster County,” Karen Martynick, executive director of the trust, said in a press release. “Turkey Hill wisely understands the importance of farmland preservation to the success of their products, and so they’ve made this wonderful commitment.”

“Lancaster County farmland is truly a national treasure,” Quintin Frey, president of Turkey Hill Dairy, said in the release. “We believe it’s critical to preserve this irreplaceable resource and to preserve what is so special about Lancaster County.”

Previously, Turkey Hill donated funds to support the trust in general, not to preserve a specific farm.
Turkey Hill also gives considerable in-kind gifts to the trust such as products and sponsorship of events including the Turkey Hill Classic bike race.

In a similar partnership, Strasburg Rail Road in 2005 began giving five cents from each ticket it sells — excluding Thomas the Tank Engine events — to the trust to help preserve farms in the railroad’s viewshed.

That was thought to be the first arrangement of its kind between a business and a private farmland preserver in Pennsylvania, and perhaps in the country.

The Strasburg Rail Road has given the trust a total of $30,516 in 2005 and 2006.

The trust is still pursuing other such arrangements with area companies in an effort to raise more money for preserving farms.

More than 15,000 acres of farmland have been preserved by the trust, which receives more than 85 percent of its funding from private donations.

Out of the Shadows

Friday, July 20th, 2007

Past Players visit local sites to share ‘their’ Civil War-era tales
By Larry Alexander
Lancaster Intelligencer Journal
July 20, 2007

STRASBURG, Pa. - Stepping out from behind the veil of time, Pennsylvania Past Players spent Thursday mingling with modern-day visitors at two county tourist attractions.

The Past Players, 18 actors and Civil War re-enactors dressed in period attire, spent Thursday afternoon in Strasburg, strolling the grounds of Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania and riding the rails at Strasburg Railroad.

Each actor has adopted the persona of a mid-19th-century Pennsylvanian to educate modern Americans about the state’s past.

“We have come back and stepped out of the pages of history to walk the trails and to tell our stories and inform today’s people of life in our time,” said the group’s leader, “Mary Bennett.”

Three members of the Past Players took part in Thursday’s visit to Strasburg. They were “Bennett” and “Mary S. Beatty,” both of Harrisburg and dressed in hoop dresses and bonnets, and Hanover entrepreneur “J.W. Gitt,” in a low top hat and swallow-tailed coat.

Like the other members of the group, Bennett, Beatty and Gitt are not their real names. The Past Players do not step out of character to divulge their true identities.

The 18 members of the Pennsylvania Past Players, which includes several Lancaster County residents, were recruited earlier this summer and underwent extensive training to prepare for their roles as guides and interpreters of the state’s Civil War and Underground Railroad history.

They began their duties July 5.

Pennsylvania Past Players is part of the state’s Civil War Trails/Prelude to Gettysburg and Pennsylvania’s Quest for Freedom programs, all of which will lead up to the 150th anniversary commemoration of the Civil War, which begins in 2011.

The group is jointly sponsored by the Pennsylvania Department of Community & Economic Development’s Cultural & Heritage Tourism program and the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, which owns the Railroad Museum of Pennsylvania.

“This is one example of two state agencies working together to improve the visitors’ experience at all of the different historical sites across the state,” said David W. Dunn, executive director at the Railroad Museum.

“It’s fun to see the people in character and the visitors’ reactions to them.”

The group, which includes Union soldiers and civilians, covers Lancaster, Dauphin, York, Adams, Franklin and Cumberland counties. Some days the group works together, such as Wednesdays at the National Civil War Museum in Harrisburg and Saturdays in Gettysburg.

Other times the Players operate in teams and hold simultaneous programs in places such as York, Columbia, Mechanicsburg, Carlisle and center city Harrisburg.

The players will be at the Railroad Museum on Thursdays from 11 to 11:45 a.m. and from 2 to 3 p.m., through Sept. 13.

“In each of the locations, we share stories, just as we are doing here today,” Bennett said.

While the characters are supposed to be inhabitants of the 1860s, they are aware of their modern surroundings.

Bennett said what astounds her most about Pennsylvania in 2007, aside from women’s clothing which, in her day, would have been deemed highly immoral, is the role women play in modern society.

“The thing that fascinates me the most on coming back is seeing the power women have gained since our time,” she said, staving off Thursday’s humidity with a hand-held fan. “We have women who fight in wars. We have women who run for Congress and even run Congress. That is unheard of in our time. I am very pleased about that.”

Beatty said what surprised her most was the state of communication, a far cry from the telegraph system of her day.

“With what you call a cell phone, I can speak with anyone in the world,” she marveled.

Most of all, the two women were happy to see the state has prospered and grown since they walked the earth some 140 years ago.

“I am so happy to be in this time period, to see the progress of this wonderful state of Pennsylvania,” Bennett said.

To read the entire article please visit Lancaster Online.

Split Holiday

Tuesday, July 3rd, 2007

When July 4th falls on a Wednesday, where’s the holiday weekend?
By Chad Umble
Lancaster New Era
July 3, 2007

LANCASTER COUNTY, Pa - The last of the local fireworks are set for tomorrow evening, but for some people they’ll only mark the beginning of the Fourth of July holiday.

With the Fourth falling on a Wednesday this year, people have the option of slicing their week to take a vacation before or after the actual holiday.

For local tourist sites, a mid-week break presents the risk of diluting business, but also a chance of multiplying visitors with two consecutive holiday weekends.

“All things being equal, it is possible to have a good opportunity,” said Chris Barrett, president and CEO of the Pennsylvania Dutch Convention & Visitors Bureau.

Barrett added that this year visitors may be tempted to take a mini-vacation instead of just a long weekend.

“When people can swing it, they’ll definitely take a shorter-term vacation, which is good for us,” he said.

Strasburg Rail Road works under the assumption that the mid-week holiday creates two holiday weekends, according to spokeswoman Hope Banner.

“We knew some people were going to front-end their vacation and some people were going to back end it,” she said.

Last weekend, the tourist railroad braced for a holiday crowd by beginning to run trains every half hour instead of every hour, Banner said. They anticipated correctly and saw strong crowds, she said.

Nationally, an estimated 41.1 million Americans will leave home between June 29 and July 8, a slight increase over last year, according to AAA estimates.

Of those planning vacations, 70 percent said they planned to leave over the past weekend, with 16 percent saying they’ll leave Wednesday, according to AAA.

“Most of them have considered the weekend we just passed through as their July 4th weekend,” said Cindy Brough, spokeswoman for AAA Central Penn.

However, Brough added that many travelers who have already left are using a Wednesday off as an excuse to take a week’s vacation, helping push the average vacation to nearly five days.

Brough said travelers are helped by the fact that while average gas prices are higher than they were last year, they’ve dropped nearly 15 cents from the $3-range of late May.

The average price of a gallon of regular unleaded gas today in the Lancaster area was $2.84, up 5 cents from a year ago, according to the AAA Daily Fuel Gauge Report.

Locally, the weather is another plus.

Last weekend’s high temperatures were in the upper-70s under mostly clear skies. The forecast for this weekend calls for high temperatures in the low-80s, again under mostly clear skies, according to the Millersville University Weather Information Center Web site.

But for some, good weather and falling gas prices can’t totally compensate for the awkward Wednesday holiday.

“The Fourth of July, because it is in the middle of the week, seems to have diluted things a little bit here,” said Stephen Sikking, general manager of the Eden Resort Inn near Route 30.

Sikking said that while the hotel had a strong weekend, the overall number of Fourth of July guests would probably be down this year.

At Kitchen Kettle in Intercourse, the mid-week holiday will likely cancel out any holiday boost, according to spokeswoman Lisa Horn.

“Normally when it falls in the middle of the week, we don’t see a big effect,” she said.

However, Horn said Kitchen Kettle saw a holiday bump last year when the Tuesday Fourth of July made it easier for vacationers to take a long weekend.

This year, Horn said the two weekends sandwiching the Fourth would likely be “just two typical weekends.”

To read the entire article, please visit Lancaster Online.

Special Song Marks Railroad Anniversary

Tuesday, June 5th, 2007

Special song to mark RR anniversary
By Cindy Hummel
Lancaster New Era
June 5, 2007

LANCASTER COUNTY, Pa - Bill Grager has been working as a conductor on the Strasburg Rail Road for a third of a century.

Grager, now an assistant principal of Lampeter-Strasburg High School, also served as music conductor at the district’s Martin Meylin Middle School for more than 20 years.

In 1986, his dual conducting skills played a role in the development of a song, “The Strasburg Railroad,” by a New York composer who rode the rails.

“It seemed like a natural fit,” Grager explains, “being a conductor there (the railroad) and here (the school district.)”

The song can be heard live during the Strasburg Rail Road’s 175th anniversary celebration, which begins at 11 a.m. Wednesday at the railroad, along Route 741 east of Strasburg. Hans Herr Elementary School’s fourth-grade band will perform the piece.

Although Gov. Ed Rendell had been slated to read a proclamation at the event, a high-raking official from his office will now take his place, explains Hope Banner, Strasburg Rail Road spokeswoman.

Grager recalls that the song was born from New York composer Joe Ambrosio’s memories of a ride on the railroad during a vacation here. Upon returning home, Ambrosio contacted the late Ellis Bachman, then the railroad’s stationmaster and vice president of administration.

Bachman provided information on the narrative told to riders and served as a contact between Ambrosio and Grager as the song was written. The song’s world premier took place at Martin Meylin Middle School on May 5, 1987.

Students begin the song by making a sound to represent a steam whistle, Grager explains. Then brass players open up a valve for condensation and blow through their instruments.

The conductor, to be played on June 6 by Hans Herr Principal Andrew Godfrey, calls “all aboard,” and welcomes visitors to the Strasburg Rail Road.

Ambrosio’s arrangement replicates the sound of the train starting slowly and gaining speed. The conductor announces a Cherry Hill stop as the tempo slows down. The brass section again replicates steam.

Students recreate a whistle sound on their instruments as the conductor relates the story of another line called, “The Little Old and Slow (Lancaster­Oxford & Southern), which once passed just over the hill from the train’s next stop. A ghost train from that line, the conductor explains, can still be heard today.

Again students make a whistle sound on their instruments. Three muted horns respond with the sound of the ghost train. The music continues to replicate a steam train until it reaches the end of the line in Paradise.

Hans Herr fourth-grade band teacher Robert Shaubach explains his students had been learning the song before plans for the celebration began.

“I do not teach it every year,” Shaubach says, “but I do have the beginners perform it from time to time.”

The song has become a staple of Shaubach’s music library. The song matches beginning students’ abilities, he explains, and the kids enjoy playing it because of the local interest and special effects.

“Third, and of least importance by far,” Shaubach says, “I’m a huge railroad fan - both full size and model. So it is a good fit for the kids, and I enjoy it as well.”

To read the entire article, please visit Lancaster Online.