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Challenger (passenger train) : ウィキペディア英語版
Challenger (train)

The ''Challengers'' were named passenger trains on the Union Pacific Railroad and the Chicago and North Western Railway (which was replaced in 1955 by the Milwaukee Road). The economy service ran between Chicago, Illinois and the West Coast of the United States. The trains had full Pullman service and coach seating and were an attempt to draw Depression-Era riders back to the rails. Food service was advertised as "''three meals for under a dollar a day''."〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The Challenger ) (PDF)〕
During the late 1930s the ''Challenger'' fleet was among the highest-patronized of American trains, and the best revenue producers of the UP passenger fleet. Discontinued in 1947, the ''Challenger'' name reappeared in 1954 on a streamliner. When Amtrak took over the nation's passenger service in 1971 it ended the ''Challenger'' once and for all.〔
==History==
In early June 1935 the Union Pacific transferred the heavyweight coaches and tourist sleeping cars of its ''Los Angeles Limited'' to a second section, the ''Challenger''. The new train met with such success that the UP ordered 68 cars rebuilt, including 47 coaches, 16 Pullman sleeping cars, and 5 dining cars. The coaches had large reclining chairs and a new color scheme to make the interior more attractive, especially to women passengers. A lounge car was added in April of the following year.
In May 1936 the train commenced operation between Chicago and Los Angeles, California on its own schedule. 1937 saw the UP partnering with the Southern Pacific Railroad to add a train from Chicago to Oakland, California, a line that would take the name ''San Francisco Challenger'' (the original then became the ''Los Angeles Challenger'').
Lounge cars were designed for single, double, and table seating. Porter service was available throughout the train, and most stations had agents on duty to assist passengers. Rare in the railroad industry, two coaches at the head of the train carried only women, one of these tailored for women with children. A registered nurse-stewardess was carried, another first. The women received $125 per month plus expenses.〔
Coach passengers had free pillows and tickets were pouched to avoid having to waken passengers during the night. Station calls were eliminated during sleeping hours, and short-haul passengers were wakened by train crews before their destinations. All bright lights were extinguished during the night (only blue lighting was used after 10:00 p.m.). Lounge rooms at the ends of the coaches were provided for those who wished to remain awake.
Increased traffic during World War II led the UP to add the ''Furloughee Challenger'' to its roster on December 31, 1944; the train's name was changed to ''Military Challenger'' on December 23, 1945 and then to ''Advance Challenger'' on April 14, 1946. The train was discontinued on June 2, 1946; the entire ''Challenger'' fleet would be taken out of service the next year after the establishment of daily service for the entire ''City'' fleet. On December 8, 1953 the C&NW and UP announced that a ''Challenger'' between Chicago and Los Angeles would return with all-streamlined equipment, and on January 10 the first lightweight trainset hit the rails. The westbound ''Challenger'' completed its run in 39 hours 30 minutes, while eastbound ran 39 hours 45 minutes. Train 107 departed Chicago at 9:00 a.m. CST and arrived Los Angeles at 10:30 p.m. PST the next day; train 108 left L.A. at 2:00 p.m. PST and arrived Chicago 7:45 CST on the morning of the second day. In February 1955 dome coaches were added to the ''Challenger'', the first on any UP train.
Disagreement with CNW over divisions of passenger revenues led UP to switch to the Milwaukee Road (MILW) for service to Chicago's Union Station (the trains had terminated at North Western Station) beginning November 1955. The Milwaukee Road embarked upon a repainting program and all its passenger rolling stock received Union Pacific's ''Armour Yellow'' and ''Harbor Mist Gray'' colors (the MILW retained its traditional orange-and-black livery for freight units). The Milwaukee Road received that portion of the operating revenue generated between Omaha and Chicago, and furnished 25% of the equipment used on the line.
The ''Challenger'' was combined between Chicago and Omaha with the Milwaukee Road's ''Midwest Hiawatha'' and appeared in timetables as the ''Challenger-Midwest Hiawatha''; the departure from Los Angeles switched to 10 PM to allow a day trip east of Omaha. This ended in Spring 1956 when, in a cost-cutting measure, the ''Challenger'' and the ''City of Los Angeles'' were combined on the ''City of Los Angeles'' schedule. The ''Challenger'' reappeared as a separate train (with its morning departure from Chicago and 2 PM departure from Los Angeles)) in the summer and holiday seasons of 1957 and 1958, but after summer 1960 it ran on the CoLA schedule year-round.
Further consolidations occurred in the 1960s and by 1970 the ''Challenger'', ''City of Denver'', ''City of Los Angeles'', ''City of Portland'', and ''City of San Francisco'' were combined into one giant train for much of their runs. Critics called the train the "City of Everywhere."
Circa 1970 the dome diners were withdrawn from all UP trains, although the dome coaches and dome lounge cars remained until the turnover of passenger service to Amtrak. Amtrak discontinued all UP trains, save for a modified ''City of San Francisco'' (via BN to Denver, thence via UP's Overland Route to Ogden and SP to Oakland/San Francisco), when it assumed long-distance passenger rail service throughout the United States on May 1, 1971.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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