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The Circumvesuviana Railway
In those days, of
course, you couldn’t really go anywhere by train. If
you wanted to go from Naples out to one of the towns
around Vesuvius or along the coast to Pompei and then
along the Sorrentine peninsula, that was a pretty
tough coach—and even horseback—ride in parts,
particularly along the cliffs approaching Sorrento. If
you really wanted to go from Naples to Sorrento, the
practical way was by boat. The Circumvesuviana
is one of the two busy narrow-gauge railways that
provide important service in Naples. (The other is the
Cumana line that serves the area to the west (that is,
towards Cuma). Transportation to the east into the
densely populated towns around Vesuvius would be
unthinkable without the Circumvesuviana. The
Circumvesuviana railway currently has almost 200
stations along 138 Km (86 miles) of tracks. The original
company was called the Società Anonima
Ferrovia Nola Ottaviano; it inaugurated service
on February 9, 1891, from Naples to Ottaviano, a
single narrow-gauge track for a stretch of some 23 km
(14 miles), using steam locomotives. In the first
decade of the 20th century, service was
extended towards Sarno, and a new stretch started to
move out along the coast towards Pompei and from Torre
Annunziata inland towards Poggiomarino, thus
encircling Vesuvius, putting the “Circum-” in Circumvesuviana.
At that stage, there were 64 km (40 miles) of track
serving 23 towns with a total of some 300,000 persons
(excluding the population of Naples, proper). The line
carried about 3 million passengers a year. Main station in Naples
Sooner or later,
the Circumvesuviana (and the Cumana) will link into
the vast Naples metropolitana subway line (which
should be finished by about the time that “beaming”
around the galaxy becomes feasible, thus rendering
travel by choo-choo obsolete).
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