The exterior of the Pullman train car.Courtesy of Brendan Bailey
- Rydel Peterson is selling a 1920s Pullman train car his father gave him.
- His dad turned it into a livable home, but his wife didn't want it parked in their backyard.
It's a gravy train — or could be, if it sells.
Montana lawyer Rydel Peterson is asking $249,000 for a historic Pullman train car that was a gift from his father.
Peterson, 45, said his father, who owned a train repair center, spent $1 million renovating the 1920s train car into a three-bedroom, two-bathroom home with heat, air conditioning, and electricity. (It also has bunk beds and Western-style decor, including antlers.) His dad used it for business meetings and rode it up and down in eastern Washington.
After Peterson's father gave him the train car, it landed in his backyard — but his wife wasn't a fan.
The car, now sitting in an industrial park near Missoula, can be moved wherever the buyer wants — whether it's on or off the tracks.
Here's the history behind it.