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Orient Express Museum at Sirkeci Terminal in Fatih, Turkey

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Uniforms, plaques and paraphernalia from the Orient Express

The wondrous endpoint of the famed Orient Express exists within an operational train station in the middle of Istanbul. Hidden inside this bustling junction is a tiny, free museum dedicated to this titan of rail transport, from an age when the journey was just as important as the destination. 

Approaching Istanbul's Sirkeci Station is a treat unto itself: the original, colorful stained glass rounds embedded in the building's Oriental-Gothic façade hasn't changed a bit since German architect August Jasmund saw to its completion in 1890. The vaulted ceilings tower above, with chandeliers dangling from their centers. Yet tucked in a corner is a modest one-room museum to one of the most storied rail lines of all time: the Orient Express. 

Transporting the wealthiest, intrepid members of society from Paris to Istanbul starting in the Age of Exploration all the way until 1977, the Orient Express developed a prestigious reputation for luxury and class unmatched by any other train in the world. With fabulous passengers, exquisite journeys, and spectacular destinations, it's no wonder it took juggernauts like high speed rail and modern air travel to fell a giant like the Orient Express. 

When all was said and done, the folks at its former eastern terminus saw fit to build a small temple to the train's greatness. Though only one room large, the Orient Express Museum we see today is a collection of precious baubles, with several lifetimes of stories contained within each and every one. From the history of the line's planning stages – replete with entertaining documents detailing negotiations such as whether the Sultan would be amenable to tracks running through his palace gardens (spoiler: he was!) – to tangible artifacts from the train we'll never get to ride on, the musem covers a lot of ground.

A mannequin sporting an original conductor's uniform greets visitors at the door. To his right, fine silverware graces a faux dining car table with a diorama of European countryside painted out a window, adjacent to furniture (and a piano!) pulled from stations along the route. Displays of signage and markers surround collections of artifacts of old technology – from telegraphs and switchboards, to field telephones and watchman's clocks – illustrating just how laborious and hands-on the process of achieving such a pinnacle of service had once been. A chopped engine has even been placed inside the room, allowing guests to stand at Stand in the engine command, turning the wheel and tinkering with the knobs while gazing out the museum's front door at trains that actually do things. 

The museum's lone attendant is on the reserved side, but full of knowledge and forthcoming once you get him going. After traveling so far in one's mind, round out the museum visit by strolling out the door and down the platform to the Orient Express restaurant, where their traditional Turkish fare hasn't changed a bit since the days when they served actual passengers, weary from long train journeys from Paris. 


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