Tri-ang Railways was a British manufacturer of toy trains, one of the elements of the Lines Bros Ltd company who traded using the brands Tri-ang, Minic, Pedigree,[1] and Frog. The Tri-ang Railways name was dropped a few years after Lines Bros took over the Hornby name although the majority of the trains were still the original Tri-ang models.

Boxed Tri-ang railway set.

History

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Tri-ang name

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Brothers George and Joseph Lines made wooden toys in the Victorian age, their company being G & J Lines Ltd. Joseph was the active partner while George went into farming. Joseph (or Joe) had four sons. Three of these – William, Walter and Arthur Edwin Lines – formed Lines Bros Ltd shortly after World War I. Three Lines make a triangle, hence the Tri-ang. Arthur's son, Richard Lines, was largely responsible for the Tri-ang Railways system.

Foundation of Tri-ang Railways

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Rovex Plastics Ltd was founded just after World War II in 1946 by Alexander Gregory Vanetzian, who made toys for Marks & Spencer.[2] Venetzian was asked to develop an electric toy train set for Christmas 1950. He delivered the product but, although the company had found larger premises in a former Brewery in Richmond, it was constrained financially. Lines Bros were looking to expand into railways and so they purchased Rovex. Their products would be sold under the Tri-ang Railways name from 1951. To give room for development they moved the company, now Rovex Scale Models Ltd, to a brand new factory built at Margate, in Kent, in 1954.

A battery powered plastic 0 gauge range called the Big Big train was sold from 1966 to 1972. Some, but not all of the moulds from these were later sold and used by other manufacturers including Novo in the USSR and Lima in Italy.

As well as 00/H0 gauge, Tri-ang made TT gauge models from 1957 to at least 1967.[2][3] The 3mm Society supports those who still model Tri-ang TT.

J. H. Doyle, Managing Director of Rovex Scale Models joined Rovex Plastic Ltd in its early days. His responsibilities within Tri-ang were the development of the OO/HO range and he was "a prime mover in starting and promoting" the TT gauge.[4]

Tri-ang also manufactured a garden railway system called Tri-ang Minic Narrowgauge Railway, thus being known as TMNR. This was a 10.25" gauge passenger carrying system using 2 rail electric pick-up with motors running at 40 volts DC. This was produced in the early 1960s and not a commercial success, with less than 90 'sets' being produced.

Expansion and name changes

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The success of Tri-ang meant that British competitors Trix and Hornby Dublo were affected. In 1964, Hornby Dublo, a division of Meccano Ltd, had stopped production and Meccano Ltd invited Lines Bros. Ltd to buy them out. Tri-ang purchased the company including a large amount of stock. The combined toy railway was marketed as Tri-ang Hornby. Production of the Tri-ang models continued and a supplementary catalogue was published in May 1966 to show both Tri-ang and Hornby Dublo items.[5] The Lines Bros empire itself collapsed in 1971 and was broken up. The model railways, then marketed as Tri-ang Hornby, were sold to the Dunbee-Combex-Marx group, but the rights to the Tri-ang brand were sold elsewhere; accordingly, the Hornby name being established and recognised, from 1 January 1972 the model railways were rebranded Hornby Railways.[3][6]

Models

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In April 1963, Railway Modeller reviewed the ex-L.N.E.R. B12 locomotive which had the new Magnadhesion, with magnets close to the wheels, to improve traction with Tri-ang steel track.[7]

Australian and New Zealand models

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A number of Tri-ang models specific to Australia were produced by Moldex in Melbourne during the 1960s, including:

Other models were manufactured in Auckland, New Zealand, and were mainly the same as those made in England, although there were variations.

Some Super-4 track was produced in Australia.

The Australian and New Zealand models were produced in 00 gauge only.

Canadian train sets and models

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Lines Bros. (Canada) Ltd. was originally incorporated on 24 March 1947.[8]  The trademark used in Canada was that of the thistle which had first been registered by Joseph Lines, the co-founder of G. & J. Lines Ltd., in 1910. The main factory and warehouse facility was located at 4000 St. Patrick Street, Montreal, Quebec. The Canadian company struggled to make acceptable profits and it was thought that profits could be increased with a wider range of toys to market. The Tri-ang Railways Transcontinental range of models was devised specifically with this in mind and by Christmas 1954 the first sets began to appear in the shops.

However, the models were produced too quickly, without sufficient attention to detail and lacked realism.  Without proper consideration to what the Canadian market demanded, the models were not popular although they sold well enough in the UK. Historically, standard train sets were imported into Canada from the UK; initially only the Transcontinental range of models. However, between 1957 and 1974, a number of sets were produced exclusively for the general Canadian market as well as some special sets commissioned by department store chains and / or mail order companies; including Simpsons and Simpsons-Sears, Eaton’s, Woodward’s and the Hudson’s Bay Company.[9] No models were made in Canada but the Canadian company assembled a wide range of sets from both boxed and unboxed models sent out to them from the Margate factory.

From 1965 a new full-colour Canadian catalogue was produced, where previously the UK catalogue had been used and supplemented (up until 1962) by an illustrated price list.

Initially, a number of Canadian National Railway (CNR) models were introduced specifically for the Canadian market. Later, in 1967 models representing the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) began to appear. Of note were the representations of the transcontinental passenger trains which have become firm favourites with collectors of Tri-ang Railways.

South African models

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A limited number of models were manufactured in Durban, South Africa.[citation needed] These are very rare.[according to whom?]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Lines Bros. Limited, toy manufacturer: records, 1881 1971" (PDF). Lines Bros Ltd.
  2. ^ a b Hammond, Pat (1993). Tri-ang Railways. The Story of Rovex. Vol. 1 1950–1965. London: New Cavendish Books. ISBN 0-904568-57-1.
  3. ^ a b Hammond, Pat (1998). Tri-ang Hornby. The Story of Rovex. Vol. 2 1965–1971. London: New Cavendish Books. ISBN 1-872727-58-1.
  4. ^ "J. H. Doyle - A Tribute". Railway Modeller. 10: 280. December 1959.
  5. ^ An Amalgamation of Tri-ang Railways and Hornby Dublo. Tri-ang Hornby. May 1966.
  6. ^ Hammond, Pat (2005). Hornby Railways. The Story of Rovex. Vol. 3 1972-1996. London: New Cavendish Books. ISBN 1-904562-00-0.
  7. ^ "News Special". Railway Modeller. 14: 97. April 1963.
  8. ^ "Thistle Bicycle by Lines Brothers Canada". The Classic and Antique Bicycle Exchange. Retrieved 5 January 2020.
  9. ^ "Tri-ang Railways Canadian Sets - The Early Years". Tri-ang Railways in Canada and the USA.
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