
All aboard! Thomas & Friends return to Illinois Railway Museum for 25th year
When Illinois Railway Museum welcomed its first Day Out With Thomas weekend a quarter-century ago, the idea was powerful: pair a living piece of railway history with the most beloved storybook engine on earth and let children experience both at full scale.
Parents who once arrived being pushed in strollers now return hand in hand with their own children, embarking on their own first Thomas train ride. In many households, the faded paper ticket from that inaugural visit still lives in a shoebox beside pressed concert stubs and Little League ribbons — a reminder that stories worth telling often involve passing down shared experiences and reliving cherished memories.
The Illinois Railway Museum owes its existence to 10 rail enthusiasts who in 1953 pooled $100 apiece to rescue a single interurban car from the scrapyard. Over the decades, those 10 became thousands of volunteers and donors; the lone streetcar grew into the nation's largest collection of historic railway equipment. Today, 20 structures now stretch across 100 acres, sheltering everything from a 19th-century depot to sleek diesel streamliners.
However, preserving the past was never the sole goal. The founders believed railroading should be felt, heard and — most of all — ridden. Day Out With Thomas perfectly fits that mission, turning preservation into participation for guests who may be stepping aboard a train for the very first time.
For four days (July 12, 13, 19 and 20), the museum grounds transform into a traveling festival of rail-themed play. A 20-minute ride behind Thomas is the headline attraction, joined this year by Percy's emerald-green coaches for guests who want a second spin.
Between departures, families wander Celebration Station, where hopscotch squares share turf with larger-than-life bubbles, and toddlers experiment with Mega Bloks on shaded picnic tables. Sir Topham Hatt poses for photos and high-fives, streetcars rattle past garden-railway dioramas and live musicians invite kids into impromptu conga lines.
It is equal parts family festival and living history lesson — except the star wears a smiling smokebox and a sprinkling of confetti to honor Thomas & Friends' milestone 80th anniversary.
Ask a museum docent why they still volunteer after 25 years, and the answer often drifts back to Day Out With Thomas. They have watched shy preschoolers gain the confidence to shout 'Hey, Thomas!' as their larger-than-life friend approaches the platform. They have seen grandparents, once locomotive firemen themselves, explain how a steam injector works while a 5-year-old listens wide-eyed. Year after year, the event knits generations together with a simple promise: climb aboard and create adventures together.
As the afternoon shadows lengthen on July 20, Thomas will pull into the station for the final time this season in Union. But the tracks at Illinois Railway Museum never truly fall silent, and neither does the friendship at the heart of Thomas & Friends.
Next summer the whistle will sound again, echoing across the soybean fields, calling new engineers — and plenty of returning ones — back to a place where history, imagination and a little blue engine meet. Until then, mementos will wait in scrapbooks and nightstands, keeping the story warm for its next telling.
For parents who once eagerly awaited to board their first train ride with Thomas themselves, watching their own children look out the carriage window can feel like time folding in on itself. And for those parents who just discovered this gem of an event, they're carving new family memories. The peep of the whistle, the puff of steam, the waves to smiling conductors — all become heirlooms of the heart, stitched into family tradition for decades more.
To purchase tickets for the 25th anniversary of Day Out With Thomas, visit this link. Illinois Railway Museum is located at 7000 Olson Road, Union, IL, 60180. Advance purchase online is recommended as train times sell out due to demand.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Buzz Feed
7 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
10 Everyday Phrases With Surprising Origins
It goes without saying that language is always evolving, and new words and phrases enter our everyday speech all the time. Often, we start using them without even realizing it, adopting them naturally from friends, media, or, of course, because of online discourse and social media. Many of these expressions have interesting or surprising origins that most of us never stop to think about. So, I decided to put together 10 terms that all of us use, and whose origins you might not know. "Bucket list" first appeared in popular use in 2007 with the release of the Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson film The Bucket List, where the characters set out to do things they'd always wanted before they died (or kicked the bucket). The phrase was coined by the movie's screenwriter, Justin Zackham, who shortened his own "List of Things to do Before I Kick the Bucket" into "Justin's Bucket List." He ended up using "bucket list" as the title when writing the screenplay. It should come as no surprise that the word "binge-watch" was popularized because of Netflix in the early 2010s. But it actually existed a bit before that! People began using the term in the early 2000s, when DVD box sets of TV shows and DVRs allowed you to watch multiple episodes or entire seasons in one sitting. Netflix helped push the term into the mainstream around 2013, when it began releasing entire seasons at once and even used "binge-watching" in its marketing. Of course, before that, the concept existed, but it was just called a "TV marathon." The term "friend zone" comes from a 1994 episode of Friends. In the episode "The One with the Blackout," Joey tells Ross that he and Rachel are never going to happen because he has waited too long to ask her out, and now he has fallen into "the friend zone." The episode's writers, Jeff Astrof and Mike Sikowitz, to this day, have no idea who came up with the phrase. The word "podcast" is a portmanteau — a combination of the words "iPod" and "broadcast." The term itself was actually created by accident in 2004. The term was first coined by journalist Ben Hammersley in an article he was writing for the UK's the Guardian about the new emerging technology of being able to download audio programs and radio. According to Hammersley, he turned in the article, but was told it was a few words too short. In order to pad it out a bit more, he added the line: "But what to call it? Audioblogging? Podcasting? GuerillaMedia?" It being called "podcast" makes sense since listening to podcasts on iPods was the most popular way to consume them. The term "catfish" or "catfishing" didn't come from the MTV show; it actually originated from the 2010 documentary Catfish, which later inspired the series of the same name. However, it was the Manti Te'o scandal in 2013 that helped popularize the phrase. Today, when we say "life hack," we mean any simple tip or trick that helps make life easier. However, the term was first coined by tech journalist Danny O'Brien in 2003, to describe clever shortcuts programmers used to simplify their work life. Ever wonder if "spam email" came from Spam the meat? Well, the answer is yes! During WWII and after, because of rationing, Spam became ubiquitous in England. So much so that in the 1970s Monty Python did a popular sketch where a customer tries to order food without Spam at a cafe that served every dish with it, only to be drowned out by a group of Vikings who keep chanting "Spam, Spam, Spam." The repetition and unavoidable presence of Spam in the skit inspired early internet users (many of whom were Monty Python fans) in the 1980s and 1990s to call excessive and unwanted emails "spam." The term "gaslighting" comes from the 1938 play Gas Light and its two film adaptations in the 1940s — both entitled Gaslight. Set in the 1880s, the story is about a husband who manipulates small elements — like dimming the gas lights — in the house while insisting his wife is imagining things, making her doubt her own perception and to think that she is suffering from a mental illness. Though the term was very sporadically used over the decades, it wasn't until the 2010s that it really took off. We might be able to blame the term "main character energy" on the pandemic. The idea of seeing oneself as the protagonist in a story took off on X (formerly Twitter) and TikTok in 2020, and you might have the posts still up to prove it! And lastly, most millennials know this one, but it might be lost on younger people. The term "stan" comes from the 2000 song "Stan" by Eminem, which tells the story of a creepily obsessed fan named Stan who writes increasingly desperate letters to the rapper. Weirdly, "stan" evolved in internet slang to describe anyone who is an extremely devoted or enthusiastic fan of a celebrity, artist, film series, etc. Of course, today, it's used both as a noun ("I'm a huge stan of that show") and a verb ("I stan that singer"). Okay, did you know this? Or do you know the origin of a term you think I should have included? Let me know in the comments below!


San Francisco Chronicle
17 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Richard Thomas dons wig and mustache to play icon Mark Twain in one-man play touring the US
NEW YORK (AP) — Richard Thomas has not one but two big shoes to fill when he goes out on the road this summer in a celebrated one-man show. The Emmy Award winner and Tony Award nominee is portraying the great American writer Mark Twain in a play written and performed for decades by the late Hal Holbrook. Thomas immediately accepted the offer to star in the 90-minute 'Mark Twain Tonight!' that tours more than a dozen states this summer and fall before wondering what he'd gotten himself into. 'I walked down to the street and I said, 'Are you crazy? What are you out of your mind?'' he says, laughing. 'I had to grapple with who's the bigger fool — the man who says, 'Yes, I'll do it' or the man that says, 'No, I won't'?' Holbrook portrayed the popular novelist and humorist for more than a half century starting in 1954, making over 2,300 performances to a collective audience of more than 2 million. He and Thomas were fond of each other and would see each other's work. The show mixes Twain's speeches and passages from his books and letters to offer a multidimensional look at an American icon, who toured the U.S. with appearances. 'I'm going to feel very much like I'm not only following in Hal's footsteps, but in Twain's as well,' says Thomas, who began his career as John-Boy Walton on TV's 'The Waltons' and became a Broadway mainstay. Thomas jokes that Holbrook had 50 years to settle into the role and he has only a year or so. 'I have the advantage on him that he started when he was 30 and he was pretending to be an old man. I'm 74 so I'm right there. That's the one area where I'm up on him.' 'It's time for Twain' The new tour kicks off this week in Hartford, Connecticut — appropriately enough, one of the places Twain lived — and then goes to Maryland, Iowa, Arkansas, North Carolina, Kansas, Tennessee, New York, New Jersey, Utah, California, Arizona, Alabama, Utah and Florida by Christmastime. Then in 2026 — the 60th anniversary of the Broadway premiere — it goes to Texas, Colorado, Wisconsin and Ohio. 'It's time for Twain, you know? I mean, it's always time for Twain, always. He's always relevant because he's utterly and completely us, with warts and all,' says Thomas. The actor will travel with a stage manager and a trunk with his costumes, but all the other elements will be sourced locally by the venues — like desks and chairs, giving each show local touches. 'There's something about doing a show for people in their own community, in their theater that they support, that they raise money for. They're not coming to you as tourists. You're coming to them.' Thomas has done a one-man show before — 'A Distant Country Called Youth' using Tennessee Williams letters — but that allowed him to read from the script on stage. Here he has no such help. 'One of the keys is to balance the light and the shadow, how funny, how outrageous, the polemic and the darkness and the light. You want that balanced beautifully,' he says. Twain represents America Other actors — notably Val Kilmer and Jerry Hardin — have devised one-man shows about the creator of Huckleberry Finn and Tom Sawyer, who still manages to fascinate. A new biography of Twain by Ron Chernow came out this year, which Thomas is churning through. Thomas sees Twain as representing America perfectly: 'He just lets it all hang out there. He's mean-spirited; he's generous. He's bigoted; he is progressive. He hates money; he wants to be the richest man in America. All of these fabulous contradictions are on display.' Thomas has lately become a road rat, touring in 'Twelve Angry Men' from 2006-08, 'The Humans' in 2018 and starring as Atticus Finch in Aaron Sorkin's adaptation of 'To Kill a Mockingbird' from 2022-24. Orin Wolf, CEO of tour producer NETworks Presentations, got to watch Thomas on the road in 'To Kill a Mockingbird' and says having him step into Twain will strengthen the theater community across the country 'It's so rare nowadays to have a true star of the road,' Wolf says, calling Thomas 'a breed of actor and artist that they rarely make anymore.' 'I'm delighted to be supporting him and delighted that he's chosen to do this because I think this is something he could also take on for hopefully many years,' he adds. After Twain, Thomas will next be seen on Broadway this spring opposite Renée Elise Goldsberry and Marylouise Burke in David Lindsay-Abaire's new comedy, 'The Balusters.' But first there's the eloquence and wry humor in a show about Twain that reveals he was often a frustrated optimist when it came to America. 'I think it reflects right now a lot of our frustration with how things are going,' says Thomas. 'Will things ever be better and can things ever better? Or are we just doomed to just be this species that is going to constantly eat its own tail and are we ever going to move forward?'


New York Post
18 hours ago
- New York Post
Halle Berry fires back at David Justice over marriage comments: ‘Cooking, cleaning and mothering'
Halle Berry heard the comments made by her ex-husband, David Justice, on the demise of their marriage, saying he left her in 1996 because 'she don't cook, don't clean, don't really seem motherly.' The Academy Award-winning actress seemingly trolled the retired MLB player in a post on Instagram Thursday, which included a carousel of snapshots showing her laughing and vacationing with her boyfriend, Van Hunt. 'Phew…! cooking, cleaning and mothering,' wrote Berry, who turned 59 on Thursday. Advertisement 7 Halle Berry seemingly responds to comments made by her ex-husband David Justice, who said she 'didn't seem motherly' during their marriage in the 1990s. Instagram/Halle Berry Other snapshots showed the actress laughing and lounging on an outdoor bed in the middle of the ocean while holding a wine glass in between her toes. One photo showed her holding a card that said, 'Mom' with a hearts on it. Advertisement 7 Halle Berry and boyfriend Van Hunt getting cozy on vacation amid her ex-husband David Justice's comments about their marriage. Instagram/Halle Berry 7 Halle Berry seemingly responds to comments made by her ex-husband David Justice, who said she 'didn't seem motherly' during their marriage in the 1990s. Instagram/Halle Berry 7 Halle Berry celebrates her 59th birthday while on vacation with Van Hunt. Instagram/Halle Berry Berry shares a daughter, Nahla, 17, with ex-boyfriend Gabriel Aubry, and a son Maceo, 11, with ex-husband Oliver Martinez, to whom she was married from 2013-16. Advertisement The caption seemingly referenced her ex Justice's recent comments made during an Aug. 7 appearance on former NBA star Matt Barnes' 'All the Smoke' podcast — when Justice discussed his four-year marriage to Berry before their divorce was finalized in 1997. 'There really wasn't a lot of negative attention until I decided to leave her in 1996,' the ex-Yankees star said. '… She asked me to marry her after knowing me for five months. I said, 'OK' because I couldn't say no … but I don't know if my heart was really into it. '… My knowledge and wisdom around relationships wasn't vast. So I'm looking at my mom, and I'm a midwest guy, so in my mind I'm thinking, a wife at that time should cook, clean — and then I'm thinking, 'OK if we have kids, is this the woman I want to have kids with or a family with. Advertisement 'And at that time, as a young guy, she don't cook, don't clean, don't really seem like motherly and then we start having issues.' 7 David Justice and actress Halle Berry attend the 25th Annual NAACP Image Awards on January 16, 1993 at Pasadena Civic Auditorium in Pasadena, California. Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images Justice added that he was 'footing everything' at the time because Berry 'didn't have any money.' Halle and Hunt went public with their relationship in 2020. During a joint interview on 'TODAY with Jenna & Friends' in June, the music artist joked that he proposed to the 'Monster's Ball' actress. 7 Former MLB player David Justice discusses his marriage to Halle Berry during an appearance on the 'All the Smoke' podcast on August 7, 2025. All the Smoke 'So I put out the proposal, and it's still on hold as you can see,' Hunt, 55, said as Berry laughed. 'It's just out there floating. You know, maybe you can encourage her.' Berry explained why things have been on hold in terms of getting married. Advertisement 'Well, I've been married three times. Van has been married once, and so, no, we don't feel like we have to get married to validate our love in any way. We don't,' Berry said. 7 David Justice and Halle Berry during MTV's 7th Annual Rock 'n Jock Softball in 1996 in Los Angeles, California. FilmMagic, Inc 'But I think we will get married just because, out of the people I've been married to, this is the person I should have married. And I feel like I should, we should get married, but it's not because we feel like we have to. I think it's something that we would like to do just because we want that expression.' Berry was married to her second husband, musician Eric Benét, from 2001-05.