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Naples

Naples panorama


Naples (Italian Nàpoli, Neapolitan Napule, from Greek Νέα Πόλις - Néa Pólis - meaning "New City"; see also List of traditional Greek place names) is the largest city in southern Italy and capital of Campania Region and the Province of Naples. The city has a population of about 1 million, and together with its suburbs, the urban area has 4.4 million inhabitants (Neapolitans). It is located just halfway between the Vesuvius volcano and a separate volcanic area, the Campi Flegrei, all part of the Campanian volcanic arc.

Napoli is where pizza originally came from.

It is rich in historical, artistic and cultural traditions and gastronomy. Neapolitan is a colourful, rich italian dialect- known in Naples as Napulitano.

The metropolitan area of Naples is second in Italy by population, with over 4,400,000 inhabitants.

The city is served by Naples International Airport.

History

see main article History of Naples


Food and drink

Naples is by tradition the home of pizza. It is the birthplace of the Pizza Margherita, which traditionally is made with mozzarella cheese, pomodoro (tomato) and basil - each representing the red, white, and green of the Italian flag. The pizza was named after it was served to Queen Margherita when she visited the city. La vera pizza ("true pizza") should be made in a wood-burning oven similar to a Tandoori oven.

Naples is also famous for its pasta dishes, where spaghetti is often served with sugo di pomodoro, a tomato sauce which gets its full flavour from sun-ripe Campanian San Marzano tomatoes. Another excellent Campanian dish found in Naples is melanzane alla parmigiana, which is fried slices of aubergine (eggplant) gratinéed with tomato sauce and parmesan cheese. Often one can get another version of melanzane alla parmigiana with an addition of mozzarella cheese.

Naples offers several kinds of unique pastry, the most famous of which is perhaps the babà, followed by choux (Neapolitans write it as sciù) and the Pastiera, a cake prepared for Easter. The babà (also known as savarin) is a mushroom-shaped piece of leavend sweet paste, soaked with an orange flavoured mixture of ron|ruhm and water. Choux is a small "bubble" of leavened paste stuffed with light cream, usually coffee or chocolate flavored. The Pastiera is a cake with a complicated recipe, varying by the county in which it is prepared. The ingredients are typically annealed grain, eggs, and sometimes cream. It is always combined with boiled rice. Another typical Neapolitan pastry is the Sfogliatella (riccia or frolla).

Naples is also known for its ice cream (in Italian gelato).

Tourist attractions

Castel dell'Ovo

Naples itself is less visited than some of the surrounding attractions. There are, however, many attractions within the city. La Villa Comunale (formerly a royal park) has been refurbished and stretches along the seafront in the smarter western end of the city. It contains an aquarium which is possibly Europe's oldest and is favoured by the locals for family walks on Sunday mornings. The Museo Archeologico Nazionale Napoli contains a large collection of Roman artifacts from Pompeii and Herculaneum as well as the Farnese Marbles, some of the greatest surviving Roman statues, an amazing numismatical collection; The Museo Nazionale di Capodimonte contains art collections including works by Michelangelo, Raphael, Botticelli and Caravaggio. Naples is the home of the Teatro di San Carlo, the oldest active opera house in Europe, which opened its doors on November 4, 1737.

Other notable monuments are:

Castel Nuovo
  • Castel dell'Ovo
  • Castel Nuovo with the Arch of Triumph of Alfonso I
  • Palazzo Reale
  • Piazza del Plebiscito
  • Cathedral of St. Januarius
  • church of Santa Chiara
  • church of San Lorenzo Maggiore
  • church of Santa Maria Donna Regina
  • church of Gesù Nuovo ("new Jesus")
  • church of San Domenico Maggiore

Under Naples

Piazza del Plebiscito

Guided tours operate around the Stratification of Naples which shows the city through the layers laid down across history. Subterranean Naples consists of old Greco-Roman reservoirs dug out from the soft tufo stone on which, and from which, the city is built. You can visit approximately one kilometer of the many kilometers of tunnels under the city. There are also large catacombs in and around the city.

Also in Naples

Naples is the site of three major military bases. Naval Support Activity Naples, located in Capodichino is a major US Navy base which is responsible for the support and control of US Naval assets in the 6th Fleet area of responsibility, and Bagnoli, known as Joint Force Command South (formerly AFSOUTH, many Sailors still call it this) is a major NATO base, which is responsible for the coordination of NATO forces in the south European Region. There is also the Support Site, which consists mostly of housing and personnel support facilities, located in Gricignano di Aversa.

Capodichino is the site of the Naples International Airport.

Around Naples

The islands of Procida, (famously used as the set for much of il Postino), Capri and Ischia can all be reached quickly by hydrofoils and ferries. Sorrento and the Amalfi Coast are situated south of Naples. The Roman ruins of Pompeii and Herculaneum (destroyed in the A.D. 79 eruption of Vesuvius) are also nearby. As well, Naples is near the volcanic area known as the Campi Flegrei and the port towns of Pozzuoli and Baia, which were part of the vast Roman naval facility, Portus Julius.

Sporting Naples

Naples is the home of the underachieving soccer team Napoli. With the help of Diego Maradona, they achieved rare success in 1987 and in 1990 by winning the Scudetto, the UEFA Cup, Italian Super Cup and the Italian Cup. In 2004 the football team was declared bankrupt and has been subsequently reborn into the lower division of Serie C1 as 'Napoli Soccer'.

The Neapolitan diaspora

Naples has seen many of its children spread throughout the world, setting up 'Little Italies' in many countries. The majority of these Neapolitans who left Italy went to the Americas, especially the United States, Canada, Brazil, and Argentina.

Gulf of Naples

  • Ischia
  • Capri
  • Procida
  • Sorrento
  • Positano
  • Pozzuoli

Famous Neapolitans

  • Enrico Alvino architect
  • Thomas Aquinas
  • Giambattista Basile poet, courtier, and fairy tale collector
  • Gian Lorenzo Bernini
  • Libero Bovio
  • Giordano Bruno
  • Al Capone (born in Brooklyn to Neapolitan parents)
  • Battistello Caracciolo
  • Renato Carosone
  • Enrico Caruso
  • Benedetto Croce philosopher
  • Vincenzo Cuoco political philosopher
  • Antonio de Curtis (Totò) writer and actor
  • Eduardo De Filippo writer and actor
  • Peppino De Filippo actor
  • Titina De Filippo actress
  • Enrico De Nicola jurist, journalist and politician
  • Salvatore di Giacomo writer, poet and lyricist
  • Armando Diaz general and politician
  • Gaetano Filangieri jurist
  • Vincenzo Gemito sculptor
  • Luca Giordano
  • Giacinto Gigante
  • Giuseppe Patroni Griffi screenwriter
  • Ruggero Leoncavallo
  • Pirro Ligorio, mannerist architect
  • Alfonso Maria de' Liguori jurist and writer (Catholic saint)
  • Giovan Battista Marino
  • Domenico Morelli painter
  • Giovanni Paisiello
  • Giovanni Battista Pergolesi
  • Giovanni Pontano
  • Basilio Puoti
  • Salvator Rosa poet, satirist and Baroque era painter
  • Ferdinando Russo poet, journalist and writer
  • Vincenzo Russo politcal philosopher
  • Andrea Sabbatini, Renaissance painter
  • Venerable Ludovico Sabbatini, religious teacher and priest
  • Raffaele Sacco poet and lyricist
  • Ferdinando Sanfelice
  • Jacopo Sannazaro
  • Antonio Scarfoglio
  • Edoardo Scarfoglio
  • Domenico Scarlatti
  • Matilde Serao journalist and novelist
  • Massimo Stanzione
  • Massimo Troisi actor
  • Domenico Antonio Vaccaro sculptor, architect and painter
  • Giambattista Vico philosopher
  • Raffaele Viviani
  • Sophia Loren actress
  • Giuseppe Migliozzi General (military)

Community Boards of Naples

Naples is politically divided in 10 Community Boards :

  • 1 : Chiaia, Posillipo and S.Ferdinando
  • 2 : Avvocata, Montecalvario, S.Giuseppe, Porto, Mercato and Pendino
  • 3 : Stella and S.Carlo all'Arena
  • 4 : S.Lorenzo, Vicaria and Poggioreale-Zona Industriale
  • 5 : Arenella and Vomero
  • 6 : Barra, Ponticelli and S.Giovanni a Teduccio
  • 7 : Miano, S.Pietro a Patierno and Secondigliano
  • 8 : Chiaiano, Piscinola-Marianella and Scampia
  • 9 : Pianura and Soccavo
  • 10 : Bagnoli and Fuorigrotta

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Naples is politically divided in 10 Community Boards :. All trainsets were returned to service by September of that year. The majority of these Neapolitans who left Italy went to the Americas, especially the United States, Canada, Brazil, and Argentina. In April 2005, all 20 trainsets were removed from service to repair cracked brake rotors. Naples has seen many of its children spread throughout the world, setting up 'Little Italies' in many countries. However, the innovative service has not been without problems. In 2004 the football team was declared bankrupt and has been subsequently reborn into the lower division of Serie C1 as 'Napoli Soccer'. This service has been so popular, in fact, that the Acela trains even cover their "above the rail" costs (operating expenses, but not capital to maintain infrastructure).

With the help of Diego Maradona, they achieved rare success in 1987 and in 1990 by winning the Scudetto, the UEFA Cup, Italian Super Cup and the Italian Cup. Twenty Acela Express trainsets have been used to provide popular high-speed rail service along the Northeast Corridor between South Station in Boston and Union Station in Washington D.C. Naples is the home of the underachieving soccer team Napoli. These private cars may be used by their owners or chartered by individuals for private travel behind regularly scheduled Amtrak trains. As well, Naples is near the volcanic area known as the Campi Flegrei and the port towns of Pozzuoli and Baia, which were part of the vast Roman naval facility, Portus Julius. Well organized groups such as the American Association for Private Rail Car Owners, Inc., (AAPRC) represent the interest of car owners in dealing with private and public organizations such as Amtrak. 79 eruption of Vesuvius) are also nearby. Private railroad cars may also connect to Amtrak trains if suitably certified and equipped with Head End Power (HEP).

The Roman ruins of Pompeii and Herculaneum (destroyed in the A.D. The original cars that Amtrak inherited from the railroads in 1971 are known as the Heritage Fleet and are almost all retired. Sorrento and the Amalfi Coast are situated south of Naples. Baggage cars, autoracks for Auto Train service, and maintenance of way rolling stock make up the remainder of the fleet. The islands of Procida, (famously used as the set for much of il Postino), Capri and Ischia can all be reached quickly by hydrofoils and ferries. The newest sleeping car in service is the Viewliner. Capodichino is the site of the Naples International Airport. Many are Superliner I and II models, Amfleet I and II, Horizon Fleet.

There is also the Support Site, which consists mostly of housing and personnel support facilities, located in Gricignano di Aversa. Amtrak operates 425 locomotives (351 diesel and 74 electric), 2,141 railroad cars including several types of passenger cars (including 168 sleeper cars, 760 coach cars, 126 first class/business class cars, 66 dormitory/crew cars, 225 lounge/café/dinette cars, and 92 dining cars). Naval Support Activity Naples, located in Capodichino is a major US Navy base which is responsible for the support and control of US Naval assets in the 6th Fleet area of responsibility, and Bagnoli, known as Joint Force Command South (formerly AFSOUTH, many Sailors still call it this) is a major NATO base, which is responsible for the coordination of NATO forces in the south European Region. [6]. Naples is the site of three major military bases. Also owned by Amtrak is Passenger Railroad Insurance. There are also large catacombs in and around the city. It has a 99.7% interest in the Washington Terminal Company (Washington Union Station) and 99% of 30th Street Limited (Philadelphia 30th Street Station).

You can visit approximately one kilometer of the many kilometers of tunnels under the city. Amtrak wholly owns the Chicago Union Station Company (Chicago Union Station) and Penn Station Leasing (New York Penn Station). Subterranean Naples consists of old Greco-Roman reservoirs dug out from the soft tufo stone on which, and from which, the city is built. Amtrak also owns station and yard tracks in: Chicago, Hialeah (near Miami, Florida) (leased from the State of Florida), Los Angeles, New Orleans, New York City, Oakland (Kirkham Street Yard), Orlando, Portland, Oregon, Saint Paul, Minnesota, Seattle, Washington, DC. Guided tours operate around the Stratification of Naples which shows the city through the layers laid down across history. This line runs from Philadelphia to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and is in the midst of a rehabilitation project that will eventually see 110 mph (about 175 km/h) service. Other notable monuments are:. Amtrak's portion was acquired in 1976 as a result of the Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act.

Naples is the home of the Teatro di San Carlo, the oldest active opera house in Europe, which opened its doors on November 4, 1737. These are combined with those of several state and regional commuter agencies in what amounts to a cooperative arrangement. The Museo Archeologico Nazionale Napoli contains a large collection of Roman artifacts from Pompeii and Herculaneum as well as the Farnese Marbles, some of the greatest surviving Roman statues, an amazing numismatical collection; The Museo Nazionale di Capodimonte contains art collections including works by Michelangelo, Raphael, Botticelli and Caravaggio. and Boston via Philadelphia and New York City is largely composed of Amtrak's own tracks. It contains an aquarium which is possibly Europe's oldest and is favoured by the locals for family walks on Sunday mornings. The Northeast Corridor between Washington, D.C. La Villa Comunale (formerly a royal park) has been refurbished and stretches along the seafront in the smarter western end of the city. [5].

There are, however, many attractions within the city. Amtrak owns and operates the following lines. Naples itself is less visited than some of the surrounding attractions. Along the NEC and in several other areas, Amtrak owns 730 route-miles of track (1175 km), including 17 tunnels consisting of 29.7 miles of track (47.8 km), and 1,186 bridges (including the famous Hell Gate Bridge) consisting of 42.5 miles (68.4 km) of track. Naples is also known for its ice cream (in Italian gelato). Other sections are owned by terminal railroads jointly controlled by freight companies or by commuter rail agencies. Another typical Neapolitan pastry is the Sfogliatella (riccia or frolla). Amtrak operates over all seven Class I railroads, as well as several short lines - the Guilford Rail System, New England Central Railroad and Vermont Railway.

It is always combined with boiled rice. Most tracks are owned by freight railroads. The ingredients are typically annealed grain, eggs, and sometimes cream. On most parts of the few lines that Amtrak owns, it has trackage rights agreements allowing freight railroads to use its trackage. The Pastiera is a cake with a complicated recipe, varying by the county in which it is prepared. Amtrak also hauled mail for the United States Postal Service as well as time sensitive freight shipments, but discontinued these services in October of 2004. Choux is a small "bubble" of leavened paste stuffed with light cream, usually coffee or chocolate flavored. At smaller stations, funeral directors must load and unload the shipment onto and off the train.

The babà (also known as savarin) is a mushroom-shaped piece of leavend sweet paste, soaked with an orange flavoured mixture of ron|ruhm and water. Amtrak Express also offers station-to-station shipment of human remains to many express cities. Naples offers several kinds of unique pastry, the most famous of which is perhaps the babà, followed by choux (Neapolitans write it as sciù) and the Pastiera, a cake prepared for Easter. Amtrak Express provides small package and less-than-truckload shipping services between more than 100 cities. Often one can get another version of melanzane alla parmigiana with an addition of mozzarella cheese. Members can then redeem these points for free or discounted Amtrak tickets and other awards. Another excellent Campanian dish found in Naples is melanzane alla parmigiana, which is fried slices of aubergine (eggplant) gratinéed with tomato sauce and parmesan cheese. Guest Rewards members accumulate points by riding Amtrak and through other activities.

Naples is also famous for its pasta dishes, where spaghetti is often served with sugo di pomodoro, a tomato sauce which gets its full flavour from sun-ripe Campanian San Marzano tomatoes. Amtrak operates a loyalty program called Guest Rewards, which is similar to the frequent flyer programs offered by many airlines. La vera pizza ("true pizza") should be made in a wood-burning oven similar to a Tandoori oven. Amtrak also coordinates Thruway Motorcoach service to extend many of its routes, particularly in California. The pizza was named after it was served to Queen Margherita when she visited the city. In addition, Amtrak serves airport stations at Milwaukee and Baltimore. It is the birthplace of the Pizza Margherita, which traditionally is made with mozzarella cheese, pomodoro (tomato) and basil - each representing the red, white, and green of the Italian flag. Amtrak also code shares with Continental Airlines providing service between Newark Liberty International Airport (via its Amtrak station) and Philadelphia 30th St, Wilmington, Stamford, and New Haven.

Naples is by tradition the home of pizza. With few exceptions, Amtrak rail stations located in downtown areas have connections to local public transit.
. Intermodal connections between Amtrak trains and other transportation are available at many stations. see main article History of Naples. In the past, Amtrak has operated Metrolink [4], and MBTA Commuter Rail. . Through various commuter services, Amtrak serves an additional 61.1 million passengers per year in conjunction with state and regional authorities in California, Washington, Maryland, Connecticut, and Virginia:.

The city is served by Naples International Airport. Phoenix lost service in 1995 when Southern Pacific (now Union Pacific) abandoned the line from Phoenix to Yuma. The metropolitan area of Naples is second in Italy by population, with over 4,400,000 inhabitants. Others have only indirect service for other reasons, such as Phoenix, Arizona, which is served via Thruway coach from the Southwest Chief train at Flagstaff, Arizona or the nearby, yet remote due to a lack of any public transportation connection, Maricopa, Arizona roughly thirty miles from the city. Neapolitan is a colourful, rich italian dialect- known in Naples as Napulitano. Other cities are not served directly due to inconvenient water barriers including Norfolk (#31) and Virginia Beach in the Hampton Roads area, and San Francisco, where trains stop across the bay in Oakland and Emeryville. It is rich in historical, artistic and cultural traditions and gastronomy. In addition, several major cities and regional business centers (including three with more than a million residents) are not served by Amtrak including:.

Napoli is where pizza originally came from. The only states that are not served by Amtrak trains are Alaska (served by the Alaska Railroad), Hawaii, South Dakota, and Wyoming (lost service in the 1997 cuts; served by Amtrak's Thruway Motorcoaches). It is located just halfway between the Vesuvius volcano and a separate volcanic area, the Campi Flegrei, all part of the Campanian volcanic arc. Likewise, the Keystone Service, operating between Harrisburg, Pennsylvania and Philadelphia (and to New York City), the Hiawatha, with service between Chicago and Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Empire Service between New York City and Albany, New York, the Downeaster between Boston and Portland, Maine, and the Amtrak Cascades (Vancouver, British Columbia - Eugene, Oregon via Portland, Oregon and Seattle) operate more than once daily. The city has a population of about 1 million, and together with its suburbs, the urban area has 4.4 million inhabitants (Neapolitans). On the west coast, San Joaquins (Sacramento/Oakland - Bakersfield, California), Pacific Surfliner (San Luis Obispo - San Diego, California, via Los Angeles), and the Capitol Corridor (Auburn, California - Sacramento - San Jose via Oakland) provide service more than once daily. Naples (Italian Nàpoli, Neapolitan Napule, from Greek Νέα Πόλις - Néa Pólis - meaning "New City"; see also List of traditional Greek place names) is the largest city in southern Italy and capital of Campania Region and the Province of Naples. Most popular routes include those on the Northeast Corridor (Acela Express, Metroliner, and Regional services) that serve Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, New York City, and Boston.


. These names often reflect the rich and complex history of the route itself, or of the area traversed by the route. 10 : Bagnoli and Fuorigrotta. Amtrak gives each of its train routes a name. 9 : Pianura and Soccavo. However, some routes, such as the Pacific Surfliners, use the exact opposite numbering system, which they inherited from the previous operators of similar routes, such as the Santa Fe Railroad. 8 : Chiaiano, Piscinola-Marianella and Scampia. As a general rule, even-numbered routes run north and east while odd numbered routes run south and west.

7 : Miano, S.Pietro a Patierno and Secondigliano. Several states have entered into operating partnerships with Amtrak, notably California, Illinois, Oregon, Washington, North Carolina, and Oklahoma. 6 : Barra, Ponticelli and S.Giovanni a Teduccio. Hoping to spur Congress to overhaul the way Amtrak does business, the budget proposed by the Bush Administration for fiscal 2006 would eliminate Amtrak's operating subsidy and set aside $360 million to run trains along the Northeast Corridor once the railroad ceases operating. 5 : Arenella and Vomero. President to the Congress does not support Amtrak's continued existence in its current form. 4 : S.Lorenzo, Vicaria and Poggioreale-Zona Industriale. As has been the practice in most years, the current budget proposal from the U.S.

3 : Stella and S.Carlo all'Arena. In Congressional testimony, the Department of Transportation's inspector-general confirmed that Amtrak would need at least $1.4 billion to $1.5 billion in fiscal 2006 and $2 billion in fiscal 2007 just to maintain the status quo. 2 : Avvocata, Montecalvario, S.Giuseppe, Porto, Mercato and Pendino. However, the company's board has requested $1.8 billion through fiscal 2006, the majority of which, about $1.3 billion, would be used to bring infrastructure, rolling stock, and motive power back to a state of good repair. 1 : Chiaia, Posillipo and S.Ferdinando. In fiscal 2004 and 2005, Congress appropriated about $1.2 billion for Amtrak, $300 million more than President Bush had requested. Giuseppe Migliozzi General (military). A stalemate in federal subsidization of Amtrak has led to cutbacks in services and routes for the last several years, and some deferred maintenance.

Sophia Loren actress. Amtrak's ongoing need for federal government funding leads to recurring budget crises and debates over its possible elimination. Raffaele Viviani. The need to bring fundamental change to Amtrak is greater and more urgent than ever before." The board envisions fundamental changes for the railroad including increasing competition and shared financial responsibilities with states.[3]. Giambattista Vico philosopher. David Laney, Amtrak's chairman, stated "Amtrak's future now requires a different type of leader who will aggressively tackle the company's financial, management and operational challenges. Domenico Antonio Vaccaro sculptor, architect and painter. David Hughes, previously the Chief Engineer of Amtrak, was named as acting president and CEO until a permanent replacement can be appointed.

Massimo Troisi actor. He refused and was terminated. Massimo Stanzione. Gunn to step down as president. Matilde Serao journalist and novelist. On November 9, 2005, Amtrak's board of directors asked David L. Domenico Scarlatti. This improved labor relations to some extent, even as Amtrak's ranks of unionized and salaried workers have been reduced.

Edoardo Scarfoglio. He had stated that continued deferred maintenance will become a safety issue which he will not tolerate. Antonio Scarfoglio. He had been very proactive in reducing layers of management overhead and has eliminated almost all of the controversial express business. Jacopo Sannazaro. Some of Gunn's actions have been seen by many as politically wise. Ferdinando Sanfelice. McCain, usually not at a loss for words when debating Amtrak funding, did not reply.

Raffaele Sacco poet and lyricist. Before a congressional hearing, Gunn answered a demand by leading Amtrak critic Arizona Senator John McCain to eliminate all operating subsidies by asking the Senator if he would also demand the same of the commuter airlines, upon whom the citizens of Arizona are dependent. Venerable Ludovico Sabbatini, religious teacher and priest. Highways, airports, and air traffic control all require large government expenditures to build and operate, although some of those expenditures are not as obvious as Amtrak's direct subsidies, instead appearing as user fees and highway fuel and road taxes. Andrea Sabbatini, Renaissance painter. In a departure from his recent predecessors' promises to make Amtrak self-sufficient in the short term, the Gunn administration took the stance that no form of mass passenger transportation in the United States is self-sufficient as the economy is currently structured, and that Amtrak should not be judged by different standards than other transport modes. Vincenzo Russo politcal philosopher. Perhaps more than any past president of Amtrak, Gunn seemed willing to publicly confront the policy and budget positions of the President of the United States who appointed the board at whose pleasure the Amtrak president serves.

Ferdinando Russo poet, journalist and writer. He was also seen as more credible than some of his recent predecessors by Congress, the media, and many Amtrak supporters and employees. Salvator Rosa poet, satirist and Baroque era painter. Gunn was polite but direct in response to congressional criticism. Basilio Puoti. Graham Claytor came out of retirement by request in 1982. Giovanni Pontano. Supporters consider Gunn's credentials to be the strongest at the head of Amtrak since W.

Giovanni Battista Pergolesi. Navy in the Naval Reserve. Giovanni Paisiello. Before that, he had experience with the U.S. Domenico Morelli painter. Prior to 1974, Gunn also gained private-sector railroad experience with Illinois Central Gulf Railroad, the New York Central Railroad System (before their 1968 merger into Penn Central) and for the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway. Giovan Battista Marino. The two agencies were each the largest transit operations of their respective countries.

Alfonso Maria de' Liguori jurist and writer (Catholic saint). His work as president of the New York City Transit Authority from 1984 to 1990 and as Chief General Manager of the Toronto Transit Commission in Canada from 1995-1999 earned him a great deal of operating credibility, despite a sometimes-rough relationship with politicians and labor unions. Pirro Ligorio, mannerist architect. Years earlier, Gunn's refusal to "do politics" put him at odds with the WMATA (Metro) board, which includes representatives from the District of Columbia and suburban jurisdictions in Maryland and Virginia during his tenure from 1991-1994. Ruggero Leoncavallo. Gunn came with a reputation as a strong, straightforward and experienced operating manager, but his blunt style sometimes put him at odds with others. Giuseppe Patroni Griffi screenwriter. Gunn was selected as Amtrak president in April 2002, Amtrak self-sufficiency had largely fallen out of favor as a realistic short-term goal.

Giacinto Gigante. When David L. Luca Giordano. Warrington also had the burden of delays in implementation of the new Acela Express high-speed trainsets, which promised to be a strong source of income and favorable publicity along the Northeast Corridor between Boston and Washington DC. Vincenzo Gemito sculptor. The express work also brought Amtrak new political enemies in the powerful trucking lobby before Congress. Gaetano Filangieri jurist. The efforts to expand Amtrak's express income were unpopular with the host freight railroads, who did not want the additional Amtrak traffic it brought (or the competition).

Armando Diaz general and politician. Claytor also enjoyed the benefit of serving during the Reagan Administration when increases in federal spending on military items were drawing much of the political attention in Congress. Salvatore di Giacomo writer, poet and lyricist. In fairness, while both Downs and Warrington had extensive experience in government, neither had the non-governmental cost accounting or practical experience in private-sector railroading that Claytor had. Enrico De Nicola jurist, journalist and politician. Finally, at the end of the 5-year period, it became clear that self-sufficiency was an unachievable goal, no matter how much additional express revenue was gained or how many cuts were made in Amtrak services. Titina De Filippo actress. Passengers became "guests" and there were expansions into express freight work.

Peppino De Filippo actor. Under Warrington's administration, Amtrak was mandated by the Administration and Congress to become totally self-sufficient within a five-year period, and all its management efforts were directed to that goal. Eduardo De Filippo writer and actor. When he took the helm of Amtrak in January, 1998, self-sufficiency was still officially a stated goal, although it was becoming elusive in the eyes of Congress. Antonio de Curtis (Totò) writer and actor. He had previously been in charge of Amtrak's Northeast Corridor Business Unit. Vincenzo Cuoco political philosopher. After Downs left Amtrak, George Warrington was appointed by the board as the company's next president.

Benedetto Croce philosopher. Under Downs, Amtrak began to claim that it could achieve operating self-sufficiency, and its leaders seemed to be increasingly misleading as to the prospects of achieving that goal when pressed by Congress and the media. Enrico Caruso. Downs had been city administrator of Washington DC, and oversaw the Union Station project, which had experienced both massive delays and cost overruns. Renato Carosone. Claytor's replacement was Thomas Downs. Battistello Caracciolo. Further, they each inherited the goal of making Amtrak operationally self-sufficient, an idea which began under David Stockman and his successors at the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) while Claytor was Amtrak's president (circa 1986).

Al Capone (born in Brooklyn to Neapolitan parents). Two of the leaders who followed Claytor lacked freight railroad or private-sector experience. Giordano Bruno. [2]. Libero Bovio. According to an article in Fortune magazine, through vigorous cost cutting and aggressive marketing, within 7 years under Claytor, Amtrak was generating enough cash to cover 72% of its $1.7 billion operating budget by 1989, up from 48% in 1981. Gian Lorenzo Bernini. Of course, politics aside, that may have also been because he did a good job.

Giambattista Basile poet, courtier, and fairy tale collector. Claytor seemed to enjoy a good relationship with the Congress for his 11 years in the position. Thomas Aquinas. Secretary of Transportation Elizabeth Dole also tacitly supported Amtrak. Enrico Alvino architect. Riley, an attorney who was the highly-skilled head of the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) under the Reagan Administration from 1983-1989. Pozzuoli. He was recruited and strongly supported by John H.

Positano. Secretary of Transportation in the cabinet of President Jimmy Carter in 1979, and came out of retirement to lead Amtrak after the disastrous financial results during the Carter administration (1977-1981). Sorrento. Claytor had served briefly as an acting U.S. Procida. brought his naval and railroad experience to the job. Capri. Graham Claytor Jr.

Ischia. Secretary of the Navy and retired Southern Railway head W. church of San Domenico Maggiore. For example, in 1982, former U.S. church of Gesù Nuovo ("new Jesus"). However, Amtrak has also benefited from both highly skilled and politically-oriented leaders. church of Santa Maria Donna Regina. Because Amtrak's board and president are all political appointees, some have had little or no experience with railroads.

church of San Lorenzo Maggiore. Congress. church of Santa Chiara. presidencies and major shifts of power in the U.S. Januarius. Both congressional funding and appointments of Amtrak's leaders are subject to political considerations, which have varied widely during its existence through seven U.S. Cathedral of St. government.

Piazza del Plebiscito. Without a dedicated source of capital equipment and operating funding (except for competitive passenger fares and even less express income), Amtrak's continued operation has always been dependent upon the Executive and Legislative branches of the U.S. Palazzo Reale. As it owns little track, it must rely on maintenance done by the freight owners, and sometimes has to cancel service over routes taken out-of-service by the host freight railroad (as occurred recently with service to Phoenix, Arizona) or pay to maintain the tracks. Castel Nuovo with the Arch of Triumph of Alfonso I. Amtrak is in many ways dependent on freight railroads. Castel dell'Ovo. The concept of Amtrak as a for-profit business was fatally flawed before the first passenger boarded.

Even highly efficient private-sector railroads such as the Norfolk and Western Railway could not earn a profit, or even recover operating expenses for passenger service. There have been few times in history when any intercity rail passenger operation in the world has been profitable, even with respect to only its operating costs, and passenger trains have never brought in enough revenue to pay their infrastructure costs. From the outset, Amtrak was expected to pursue conflicting goals: Amtrak was supposed to continue providing a national rail passenger service in the face of significantly diminished demand while simultaneously operating as a commercial enterprise. This was causing increasingly large financial losses for the railroads as the networks of federally-funded highways and airports expanded.

Amtrak was established to relieve railroads of their federally-mandated responsibility to transport passengers as a priority over freight. Another rebound occurred after the September 11, 2001 attacks. Consequently, Amtrak's ridership began to increase. Given that railroads use fuel very efficiently, passenger rail travel no longer seemed quite so outmoded.

The fuel shortages of the mid-1970s on the nation's highways and increased air fares which also resulted in creating a renewed interest in passenger rail travel. Today, Amtrak trains are staffed by Amtrak employees but, other than on the routes that Amtrak owns outright, are dispatched by the host railroads on whose tracks these trains operate. Amtrak soon purchased the best of the railroad equipment and subsequently has purchased new equipment. At the beginning in 1971, the host railroads supplied the rolling stock and operating crews.

However, the majority of Amtrak's routes are hosted by private railroads, to which Amtrak pays the costs of adding its passenger trains to the freight trains of the host railroad. In subsequent years, various short route segments needed for passenger operations but not for freight were transferred to Amtrak ownership. As part of this legislation, the vital Northeast Corridor passenger route was transferred to Amtrak, and the corporation became a true railroad for the first time. Following the bankruptcy declaration of several northeastern railroads in the early 1970s — particularly that of Penn Central, which owned and operated the Northeast Corridor, Congress passed the Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976 to create a consolidated, federally-subsidized freight network called Conrail.

In its original conception, Amtrak did not own any track and thus was not a true railroad. That route was inaugurated September 29, 1972 along Boston and Maine Railroad and Canadian National Railway track that had last seen passenger service in 1966. The first all-new Amtrak route, in other words a route that had not been operated immediately prior to Amtrak, was the Montrealer/Washingtonian. Except for the joining of routes through Oakland, California to create the continuous Coast Starlight, all Amtrak services on day one were continued from pre-Amtrak operations.

Both the Reading and CSS&SB operations qualified as intercity passenger service, but were fundamentally longer-than-average distance commuter train operations. CSS&SB trains still operate, now by the Northern Indiana Commuter Transportation District. The Reading Philadelphia-Newark Penn Station service stayed around into Conrail and was discontinued in 1983. The last Georgia Railroad mixed train was operated May 6, 1983 by the Seaboard System Railroad.

The bankrupt CRI&P ran its last intercity passenger trains (the Chicago-Peoria Peoria Rocket and the Chicago-Rock Island Quad Cities Rocket) on December 31, 1978. The Zephyr's rerouting onto the scenic D&RGW was delayed by a mudslide and did not take place until July 15, 1983. The D&RGW last operated its Rio Grande Zephyr April 25, 1983, and Amtrak's San Francisco Zephyr was renamed the California Zephyr. The Southern joined on February 1, 1979, when its Southern Crescent became Amtrak's Crescent.

Louis Abraham Lincoln and Prairie State. Another barrier, at Chicago, was broken with the Milwaukee-St. New numbers were also assigned to all trains. The first all-new timetable was dated November 14, 1971, and included several name changes and names for most of the formerly unnamed trains.

Due to pressure from Senator Mike Mansfield of Montana, the North Coast Hiawatha was implemented as a second route to the Pacific Northwest. By the July 12 timetable, service had returned to the Water Level Route with the Lake Shore (named November 14), and the Northeast Corridor received an Inland Route via Springfield, Massachusetts, thanks to money from New York, Ohio and Massachusetts. Former names were kept, and some trains were unnamed at first. The first timetable was compiled from former Official Guide of the Railways schedules with only minor changes.

On the other hand, Amtrak's Coast Starlight (named November 14) was a first, running along the west coast from San Diego to Seattle, combining three separate trains operated by three railroads into one. A 19-hour layover at Cincinnati was necessary for eastbound Chicago-Newport News travelers on the James Whitcomb Riley and George Washington. Several major corridors, including the New York Central Railroad's Water Level Route across Ohio and the Grand Trunk Western Railroad's Chicago-Detroit line, became freight-only in favor of parallel lines. Amtrak began operations May 1, 1971 on a system of about half the size of that operated the previous day.

In addition, the Canadian Pacific Railway's Atlantic, taken over by VIA Rail in 1978, crossed northern Maine until 1994. The Alaska Railroad provided long-distance service, but was already owned by the federal government. The Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad, Chicago South Shore and South Bend Railroad, Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad, Georgia Railroad, Reading Company and Southern Railway continued to run their own intercity trains after the Amtrak startup date. At Amtrak's startup, 20 out of the 26 eligible railroads had elected to join the Amtrak system:.

However, while Amtrak's political and financial support have often been shaky, popular and political support for Amtrak has allowed it to survive long past its expected lifetime. At the time, many Washington insiders, including President Nixon and his aides, viewed the corporation as a face-saving way for the President and Congress to give passenger trains the one "last hurrah" demanded by the public, but expected that the NRPC would quietly disappear in a few years as public interest waned. The original working brand name for NRPC was Railpax, but shortly prior to the company's assumption of intercity rail passenger operations, the name was changed to Amtrak. While it appeared for some time that President Nixon would veto the legislation, ultimately it was signed into law on October 30, 1970.

The Act provided that. Under the Rail Passenger Service Act of 1970, Congress created the National Railroad Passenger Corporation (NRPC) to subsidize and oversee the operation of intercity passenger trains. The urgency of the need to solve the passenger train problem was heightened by the bankruptcy filing of the Penn Central, the dominant railroad in the Northeast U.S., on June 21, 1970. The proponents were aided by the fact that few in the federal government wanted to be held responsible for the seemingly-inevitable extinction of the passenger train, which most regarded as tantamount to political suicide.

Its lobbying efforts were hampered somewhat by Democratic opposition to any sort of subsidies to the privately-owned railroads, and Republican opposition to nationalization of the railroad industry. The National Association of Railroad Passengers (NARP) was formed in 1967 to lobby for the continuation of passenger trains. The final blow came with the loss of railway post offices in the 1960s. Meanwhile, companies who were interested in using railroads for profitable freight traffic were looking for ways to get out of those legal obligations, and it looked like intercity passenger rail service would soon become extinct in the United States outside a few highly-populated corridors.

Soon, the only things keeping most passenger trains running were legal obligations. There was little point in operating passenger trains to advertise freight service when those who made decisions about freight shipping traveled by car and by air, and when the railroads' chief competitors for that market were interstate trucking companies. As early as the 1930s, automobile travel had begun to cut into the rail passenger market, somewhat reducing economies of scale, but it was the development of the Interstate Highway System and of commercial aviation in the 1950s and 1960s that dealt the most damaging blows to rail transportation, both passenger and freight. But on routes where two or three railroads were in direct competition with each other for freight business, such railroads would spare no expense to make their passenger trains as fast, luxurious, and affordable as possible, because it was considered to be the most effective way of advertising their profitable freight services.

Historically, on routes where a single railroad has had an undisputed monopoly, passenger service was as spartan and as expensive as the market and Interstate Commerce Commission regulation would bear, since such railroads had no need to advertise their freight services. . In fiscal year 2004, Amtrak routes served over 25 million passengers, a company record. The nationwide network of 22,000 miles of routes serves 500 communities in 46 of the United States, with some of the routes serving communities in Canada.

Amtrak employs over 19,000 people. Though Amtrak stock does not pay dividends and is not routinely traded, a small number of private investors have purchased Amtrak stock from its original owners. Some common stock is held by the private railroads that transferred their passenger service to Amtrak in 1971. The members of Amtrak's board of directors are appointed by the President of the United States, and are subject to confirmation by the United States Senate.

Nominally, Amtrak is an independent for-profit corporation, but all of its preferred stock is owned by the federal government. Officially known as the National Railroad Passenger Corporation, the name "Amtrak" is the blending of the words "American" and "track.". Amtrak, is the brand name of the intercity passenger train system created on May 1, 1971 in the United States. URL accessed on November 23, 2005..

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^  Railway Age: Connex to take over Metrolink operations. Retrieved November 9, 2005. ^  Amtrak (November 9, 2005), Amtrak Board Releases Gunn. URL accessed on November 23, 2005..

Graham Claytor Jr.) (Fortune People) (column) @ HighBeam Research. (W. ^  Fortune : Still chugging. URL accessed on November 23, 2005..

^  RailNews Story: New Amtrak logo. URL accessed on November 23, 2005.. ^  GAO-06-145 Amtrak Management: Systemic Problems Require Actions to Improve Efficiency, Effectiveness, and Accountability. ISBN 0-937658-06-5..

Amtrak at Milepost 10, PTJ Publishing (Passenger Train Journal), Park Forest. (1981). Zimmermann, Karl R. ISBN 089024023X..

Journey to Amtrak - The year history rode the passenger train, Kalmbach Books, Milwaukee, WI. (1972). Edmonson, Harold A. ISBN 0-7603-1765-8..

Paul, MN. Amtrak, MBI Publishing Company, St. Solomon, Brian (2004). Amtrak financial reports.

Amtrak System Timetable, Fall 2004/Winter 2005. Post Road Branch - 12.42 miles (20 km), Post Road Junction to Rensselaer, New York (Lake Shore Limited). Chicago-Detroit Line - 4 miles (6 km) in Detroit, Michigan, CP Townline to CP West Detroit (Wolverine). Chicago-Detroit Line - 98 miles (158 km), Porter, Indiana to Kalamazoo, Michigan (Wolverine).

60.5 mi (97.4 km), New Haven to Springfield (Regional and Vermonter). 8.5 miles (13.8 km), Schenectady to Hoffmans, New York. 35.9 miles (57.8 km), Stuyvesant to Schenectady, New York (operated and maintained by Amtrak, but owned by CSX). 11 miles (18 km), New York Penn Station to Spuyten Duyvil, New York.

104 miles (167 km), Philadelphia to Harrisburg (Pennsylvanian and Keystone Service). 240 miles (386 km), New Rochelle, New York to Washington, D.C. 118.3 miles (190.4 km), Massachusetts/Rhode Island state line to New Haven, Connecticut. Boston to the Massachusetts/Rhode Island state line (operated and maintained by Amtrak but owned by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts).

Virginia Railway Express (VRE). Shore Line East (Connecticut). MARC (Maryland). San Diego Coaster (San Diego).

Sounder Commuter Rail (Seattle, Washington and the Puget Sound area). CalTrain (San Francisco and San Jose). Billings, Montana (pop 127K). Green Bay, Wisconsin (pop 230K).

Boise, Idaho (pop 430K) (also ended in 1997). Colorado Springs, Colorado (pop 500K). Tulsa, Oklahoma (#59 pop 800K). Dayton, Ohio (#53, pop 950K).

Louisville, Kentucky (#50, pop 1M). Nashville, Tennessee (#39, pop 1.3M). Columbus, Ohio (#33, pop 1.5M). Las Vegas, Nevada (#32, pop 1.6M) (lost service in the 1997 cuts).

Union Pacific Railroad. Southern Pacific Railroad. Seaboard Coast Line Railroad. Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad.

Penn Central Transportation. Northwestern Pacific Railroad (has never hosted Amtrak service). Norfolk and Western Railway (no Amtrak service until the Mountaineer began March 25, 1975). Missouri Pacific Railroad.

Louisville and Nashville Railroad. Illinois Central Railroad. Gulf, Mobile and Ohio Railroad. Grand Trunk Western Railroad (no Amtrak service until the Blue Water Limited began September 15, 1974).

Delaware and Hudson Railway (no Amtrak service until the Adirondack began August 6, 1974). Chicago and North Western Railway (never had any service). Paul and Pacific Railroad. Chicago, Milwaukee, St.

Chesapeake and Ohio Railway. Central of Georgia Railway (has never hosted Amtrak service). Burlington Northern Railroad. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad (no service until the West Virginian began September 8, 1971).

Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway. Railroads who chose not to join the Amtrak system were required to continue operating their existing passenger service until 1975 and thenceforth had to pursue the customary Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) approval process for any discontinuance or alteration to the service. Any participating railroad was freed of the obligation to operate intercity passenger service after May 1, 1971, except for those services chosen by the Department of Transportation as part of a "basic system" of service and paid for by NRPC using its federal funds. The purchase price could be satisfied either by cash or rolling stock; in exchange, the railroads received Amtrak common stock.

Participating railroads bought into the new corporation using a formula based on their recent intercity passenger losses. Any railroad operating intercity passenger service could contract with the NRPC, thereby joining the national system.