| Having grown up near Lake Erie, I 
						  was always fascinated by the car ferries, ore boats, 
						  Hulett ore unloaders, and coal dumping machines at 
						  Ashtabula (Ohio) Harbor. I also liked to watch the heavy Pennsylvania Railroad 
						  ore trains, with fivesteam engines, slugging their 
						  way up hill to Carson Yard, where they were made up 
						  into trains headed for Youngstown and the steel mills.
 My childhood ended in 1941 when I graduated from 
						  high school and enrolled at Ohio University. Then 
						  came Pearl Harbor and the Army. I was sent to the 
						  University of Idaho and Washington State where I studied 
						  engineering in the ASTP program. In 1944, as I was 
						  being shipped to Europe with the 11th Armored Division, 
						  I called my fiancé, Eleanor, to meet me in New York 
						  City, where we were married. I fought through the 
						  Battle of the Bulge in Germany and Austria and was 
						  being prepared for shipping to the Pacific when the 
						  war ended. I was discharged in December 1945. As we raised our family of three children, two 
						  boys and one girl, I worked as a rural mail carrier. 
						  I played the saxophone in area bands, and later continued 
						  my education at Kent State University, planning on 
						  a teaching career. However, the U. S. Post Office 
						  then offered an early retirement, so I took that and 
						  became a gentleman of leisure. Needing a hobby, I returned to my childhood interest 
						    trains and shipping. Around 1970 I began model railroading. 
						  I belong to a loose-knit club of about 12 regulars 
						  who meet every Tuesday to run trains at each other s 
						  layouts. To keep our wives happy, we also formed a 
						   Dining Car Club,  for which we took the wives to 
						  dinner once a month. (As we've aged, we have not been 
						  as regular about dining out as we were.) We also have 
						  home parties such as picnics in the summer and a Christmas 
						  party in December. I have given clinics about Hulett ore machines 
						  and modeling at conventions and local division events 
						  and the Industrial SIG group. My layout is based on 
						  the Lake Erie to the Ohio River New York Central System. 
						  I have four Huletts, an ore bridge, three operating 
						  coal dumpers, and five ships, including a seven-foot 
						  scratch-built model of the Edmund Fitzgerald. There 
						  are also an operating coal mine, an oil well, blast 
						  furnaces, and a steel industry, as well as the usual 
						  towns and businesses to be found in real life. I use 
						  scratch-building methods, which I prefer to kits. My railroad has been open to tours for many years, 
						  and we have had probably a thousand visitors. Anyone 
						  wishing to see it may call me at (440) 998-5176, to 
						  set up a time.
 Lawson has earned Achievement 
						  Certificates for
 
							 
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