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  2. Sleeping car - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sleeping_car

    Pullman sleeping car, original to the William Crooks locomotive, on display in Duluth, Minnesota. The sleeping car or sleeper (often wagon-lit) is a railway passenger car that can accommodate all passengers in beds of one kind or another, for the purpose of sleeping. George Pullman was the American innovator of the sleeper car. [citation needed]

  3. Webster Wagner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Webster_Wagner

    After serving as an employee for the New York Central Railroad, Wagner invented the sleeping car and luxurious parlor car. He also perfected a system of ventilating railroad cars. His inventions were first used on the NY Central and later spread to other lines. He founded the Wagner Palace Car Company, located in Buffalo, New York.

  4. Pullman Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pullman_Company

    Pullman-Standard built its last sleeping car in 1956 [17] and its last lightweight passenger cars in 1965, an order of ten coaches for Kansas City Southern. [18] The company continued to market and build cars for commuter rail and subway service and Superliners for Amtrak as late as the late 1970s and early 1980s.

  5. George Pullman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Pullman

    The sleeping cars proved successful although each cost more than five times the price of a regular railway car. They were marketed as "luxury for the middle class". In 1867, Pullman introduced his first "hotel on wheels," the President , a sleeper with an attached kitchen and dining car.

  6. Victorian Railways sleeping cars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victorian_Railways...

    The cars were numbered as sleeping cars numbers 11 to 14, previously Allambi, Tantini, Weroni and Dorai. The New Deal in 1983 resulted in the four Victorian Railways sleeping cars renumbered to SJ 281 to 284, and the carriages were repainted again, this time with orange replacing the blue, with V/Line logos on plates fitted to the left ends.

  7. Pullman (car or coach) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pullman_(car_or_coach)

    Pullman VRIC7 rail car sponsored by Kitchi Gammi Club. Pullman is the term for railroad dining cars, lounge cars, and especially sleeping cars that were built and operated by the Pullman Company (founded by George Pullman) from 1867 to December 31, 1968.

  8. Theodore Tuttle Woodruff - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theodore_Tuttle_Woodruff

    On December 2, 1856, Woodruff received two patents for a convertible car seat, which led to his invention of the sleeping car for railroads. He also helped to manage the Pennsylvania Railroad through its general manager Andrew Carnegie. Woodruff also invented a coffee-hulling machine, a surveyor's compass and a steam plow.

  9. Superliner (railcar) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superliner_(railcar)

    The order consisted of 55 sleeping cars, 38 coaches, 20 dining cars, 15 lounges, and 12 transition-dormitory cars. The initial order cost $340 million. [ 35 ] In late 1993 Amtrak exercised the option for 55 cars at a cost of $110 million, bringing the total order of Superliner II cars to 195. [ 36 ]