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Con-Cor - 0001-04021K - Passenger Car, Lightweight, Pullman RPO - American Bicentennial - Benjamin Franklin

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Stock Number 0001-04021K
Secondary Stock Number 4021K
Tertiary Stock Number 01-4021K
Original Retail Price $5.75
Brand Con-Cor
Manufacturer Con-Cor
Body Style Con-Cor Passenger Smoothside RPO PS
Prototype Vehicle Passenger Car, Lightweight, Pullman RPO (Details)
Road or Company Name American Bicentennial (Details)
Reporting Marks Liberty Bell Special
Road or Reporting Number Benjamin Franklin
Paint Color(s) Silver, Blue and Red
Print Color(s) White and Blue
Additional Markings/Slogan Liberty Bell Special
Coupler Type Rapido Hook
Wheel Type Nickel-Silver Plated Metal
Series Name Liberty Bell Special
Ready-to-Run No
Kit Complexity Easy-Build
Release Date 1975-10-01
Item Category Passenger Cars
Model Type Lightweight/Streamlined
Model Subtype Smoothside
Model Variety RPO PS
Prototype Region North America
Prototype Era NA Era III: Transition (1939 - 1957)
Scale 1/160
Model Information: This model was designed by Con-Cor in the 1980s. It is modeled after the Pullman Standard RPO-Baggage built for GN in 1947. It has has 3 double-windows, located at one end of the car, and 2 doors. This model is still produced by Con-Cor.
It is not to be confused with an older RPO designed by Con-Cor and that is no longer produced. The older model has 5 windows in the middle of the car, and 3 doors.
Prototype History: When lightweight cars came to the Pullman fleet in the early 1940s, their smooth sides lent themselves to classy, colorful paint schemes. Baggage cars operated on everything from premier trains to mail runs from coast to coast, normally mixing with the head-end cars of connecting lines.

RPO cars were built to government specifications by the railroads, which owned these cars and were paid by U.S. Post Office contracts per mile of running time. They were staffed by specially-trained, armed U.S. Postal Clerks, who referred to their runs by the cities between which they operated: north to south or east to west, with north-south taking precedence.
Road Name History: The United States Bicentennial was a series of celebrations and observances during the mid-1970s that paid tribute to historical events leading up to the creation of the United States of America as an independent republic. It was a central event in the memory of the American Revolution. The Bicentennial culminated on Sunday, July 4, 1976, with the 200th anniversary of the adoption of the Declaration of Independence.

The plans for the Bicentennial began when Congress created the American Revolution Bicentennial Commission on July 4, 1966. Initially, the Bicentennial celebration was planned as a single city exposition (titled Expo '76) that would be staged in either Philadelphia or Boston. After 6½ years of tumultuous debate, the Commission recommended that there should not be a single event, and Congress dissolved it on December 11, 1973, and created the American Revolution Bicentennial Administration (ARBA), which was charged with encouraging and coordinating locally sponsored events. David Ryan, a professor at University College Cork, notes that the Bicentennial was celebrated only a year after the humiliating withdrawal from Vietnam in 1975 and that the Ford administration stressed the themes of renewal and rebirth based on a restoration of traditional values, giving a nostalgic and exclusive reading of the American past.

From Wikipedia
Brand/Importer Information: Con-Cor has been in business since 1962. Many things have changed over time as originally they were a complete manufacturing operation in the USA and at one time had upwards of 45 employees. They not only designed the models,but they also built their own molds, did injection molding, painting, printing and packaging on their models.

Currently, most of their manufacturing has been moved overseas and now they import 90% of their products as totally finished goods, or in finished components. They only do some incidental manufacturing today within the USA.

Important Note: The Con-Cor product numbering can be very confusing. Please see here in the article how to properly enter Con-Cor stock numbers in the TroveStar database.
Item created by: RoadRailer on 2017-01-27 12:38:50
Last edited by: gdm on 2020-12-18 09:36:59


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