The sleeping car or sleeper is a railroad passenger car that can accommodate all its passengers in beds of one kind or another, primarily for the purpose of making nighttime travel more restful. The first such cars saw sporadic use on American railroads in the 1830s. and could be configured for coach seating during the day. Some of the more luxurious types have private rooms, that is to say fully- and solidly-enclosed rooms that are not shared with strangers.
In the United States today, all regularly-scheduled sleeping car services are operated by Amtrak. Amtrak offers sleeping cars on most of its overnight trains, using modern cars of the private-room type exclusively. In Canada, all regularly scheduled sleeping car services are operated by VIA Rail Canada, using a mixture of relatively-new cars and refurbished mid-century ones; the latter cars include both private rooms and "open section" accommodations (described later in this article).
An example of a more basic type of sleeping car is the European couchette car, which is divided into compartments for four or six people, with bench-configuration seating during the day and "privacyless" double- or triple-level bunk-beds at night. Even more basic is the Chinese "hard" sleeping car in use today, consisting of fixed bunk beds, which cannot be converted into seats, in a public space. Chinese trains also offer "soft" or deluxe sleeping cars with two beds per room.
Pullman cars were normally a dark "Pullman green," although some were painted in the host railroad's colors. The cars carried individual names, but usually did not carry visible numbers. In the 1920s the Pullman Company went through a series of restructuring steps, which in the end resulted in a parent company, Pullman Incorporated, controlling the Pullman Company (which owned and operated sleeping cars) and the Pullman-Standard Car Manufacturing Company. In 1947, in consequence of an antitrust verdict, a consortium of railroads bought the Pullman Company from Pullman Incorporated, and from then on railroads owned and operated Pullman-made sleeping cars themselves. Pullman-Standard continued in the manufacture of sleeping cars and other passenger and freight railroad cars until 1980.
As the 20th century progressed, an increasing variety of private rooms came to be offered. Most of these rooms provided significantly more space than open-section accommodations could offer; some of them, however, such as the rooms of the misleadingly named "Slumbercoach" cars manufactured by the Budd Company and first put into service in 1956, were triumphs of miniaturization.
A particularly interesting practice in sleeping car operation, one that is not currently employed in North America, is the use of "set-out" sleepers. Sleeping cars are picked up and/or dropped off at intermediate cities along a train's route so that what would otherwise be partial-night journeys can become (in effect) full-night journeys, with passengers allowed to occupy their sleeping accommodations from mid-evening to at least the early morning.
One possibly unanticipated consequence of the rise of Pullman cars in the United States in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries was their effect on civil rights and African American culture. Each Pullman car was staffed by a uniformed porter. These were almost always African-Americans and, by convention, were often addressed as "George" by passengers. Although this was servant's work, it was relatively well-paid and prestigious, and so "Pullman porters" were in a position to become leaders in the black communities where they lived, contributing to the nucleus of the nascent black middle class. And, like all the other railroad trades, the porters came to be unionized. Their union, the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, became an important source of strength for the burgeoning civil rights movement in the early 20th century, notably under the leadership of A. Philip Randolph. Because they moved all about the country, Pullman porters also became an important means of communication for news and cultural information of all kinds. The African-American newspaper the Chicago Defender gained a national circulation in this way. Porters also used to re-sell phonograph records bought in the great metropolitan centers, greatly adding to the distribution of jazz and blues and the popularity of the artists.
Another of the more substantial examples of current-day European sleeping car service is the Train Bleu, an all-sleeping-car train that has the longest-distance run of any train in France, from Paris to Nice. The train leaves the Gare d'Austerlitz in mid evening and arrives in Nice about 8 in the morning; it provides both first-class rooms and couchette accommodations. The train's principal popularity is with older travelers; it has not won the same degree of popularity with younger travelers, who, perhaps not fully appreciating the time-saving advantages of comfortable overnight sleeping car travel, are strongly drawn to budget flights or the daytime TGV.
Railroad sleeping cars, though reduced in prevalence in recent decades, retain a powerful ability to provide travel that is both exceptionally comfortable and remarkably time-saving, especially between points that are between 400 miles (600 km) and 1,000 miles (1,600 km) apart, distances that one can travel in a simple overnight trip, perhaps with dinner at the beginning of the journey and/or breakfast at the end. Persons traveling in this way, engaging in activities on board the train that are little more than the activities they would normally engage in at their home or in a hotel during the same hours, can annihilate time and distance more effectively than most high-speed day train travelers or air travelers on the same route could ever hope to.
Even overnight sleeping car trips that also take up several hours of the preceding and/or following day can in many cases compare favorably with travel by high-speed day train, conventional-speed day train, or airplane, particularly when the origin and/or destination is a smaller community that is hard to reach by air. It is ironic that the airlines, with their increasing offers of bed-like accommodations for overnight flights, are only now beginning to permanently recognize the value of true rest during nighttime travel, and to permanently embrace standards of comfort comparable to those that railroads having been embracing for more than a century. Airlines did offer sleeping-car-like accommodations on some planes in the mid-20th century, but those services were rare and short-lived. On certain trips, the use of sleeping car accommodations also offers the possibility of obviating one or two nights of hotel stay at the destination.
Schlafwagen | Longdistanca vagono | Voiture-lits | 寝台車 (鉄道) | Wagon sypialny | Sovvagn
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