Richard D.
Yelp
Finally! A railroad museum in Fullerton, one of the best train watching spots in the United States.
The caboose collection is great, with four different styles of cabooses from four different railroads.
The former Burlington Northern caboose now operated by Coast Rail Services is clean, modern and still in service, though it lives at the Fullerton Train Museum when not being used by Metrolink, or one of the other railroads as a mobile office.
A Southern Pacific bay window caboose is about 99% restored, all shiny with a new exterior paint job.
The Santa Fe caboose is conserved to its condition when being operated by the ATSF on the inside, while the exterior is the next scheduled paint project by the SCRPA non-profit that operates the Fullerton Train Museum. This caboose currently has the most "charm" of the collection.
New to the collection is a Union Pacific "War Baby" steel caboose built in early 1942 right after the attack on Pearl Harbor and is a good example of mixing modern and old building techniques due to wartime restrictions. The caboose is currently under heavy restoration of its interior.
Two Union Pacific lounge cars are also open for inspection. One is combination lounge and dormitory car where the passenger train crew slept when off duty, and the other is a lounge-cafe with an all stainless steel kitchen featuring a wood burning range and oven. Both passenger cars are original as built and in need of some refreshment of their upholstery, but picture perfect as representations of the age of streamliners.
The crew of docents are very friendly and the visit one of those things worth doing over and over again. The Fullerton Train Museum is definitely for kids of all ages.
After visiting the railroad cars, sit on the train station platform and watch the parade of freight and passenger trains go by.