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CTA Holiday Train

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Holiday Train alongside a Brown Line train at the Kimball station in 2012

The CTA Holiday Train is a Chicago 'L' train which traditionally runs during the winter holidays, from November to December.[1] Six cars are traditional passenger cars adorned with seasonal decorations and bright lights. The interior of these cars are adorned with multi-color lights, red bows, garland, and red and green overhead lighting. The hand poles are transformed into inedible candy canes. Santa Claus rides on an open-air flatcar and waves to the passengers coming aboard from his sleigh.

History

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Train with Santa Claus in 2001
The CTA Holiday Train in 2011
The open-air flatcar
Interior of the CTA Holiday Train

The CTA Holiday train began in 1992. That first year, employees posted a sign on the front of the train that read, "Seasons Greeting from the CTA." The train delivered food to various charities around the city. Since then, the decorations have become much more elaborate. Now, there is a flatcar for Santa and his reindeer, and the interior is covered with lights, paper, streamers and decorative signs.[2] The train Is stored in the Skokie Shops yard when not in use.

Schedule

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The Holiday Train visits every Chicago 'L' station on every line throughout its run during November and December. The train operates from about 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. on weekends and 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. on select weekdays and makes all scheduled stops at stations along the line.[3]

Charity run

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Over the period of five days a week, the CTA Holiday Train delivers food baskets to local community organizations at various stops. Food baskets contain various foods for a complete meal; these include canned ham, potatoes, mixed vegetables, fruits and a dessert.[3]

Reception

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The song "CTA X-mas Train",[4] describing the Holiday Train, by the Snow Angels was the winner of the Chicago Tribune's New Holiday Classics Christmas song contest in 2009.[5]

It narrowly avoided being shut down by CTA president Frank Kruesi after the budget cuts of 2004. A spokesman said, "It didn't seem appropriate to devote resources to this project when 1,250 positions are being eliminated". He was, however, overruled by CTA board chair Carole Brown.[6]

Today the cost to the CTA to run the train is minimal. Decorations are reused from year to year or donated by CTA employees. As the trains run regular service, most workers are either on their regular schedules or volunteering their time.[2]

References

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  1. ^ "Next Stop, North Pole. Doors Open on the Left..." Life in Chicago. November 25, 2008. Retrieved December 3, 2011.
  2. ^ a b Meyerson, Ben (December 1, 2009). "CTA holiday train coming to a platform near you". Chicago Current. Archived from the original on May 25, 2011.
  3. ^ a b "CTA Holiday Train & Bus". CTA.
  4. ^ superwesman (November 23, 2009). "CTA X-Mas Train". YouTube.
  5. ^ "Best holiday song heralds CTA Holiday Train; Thanksgiving caption contest". CTA Tattler. December 14, 2009.
  6. ^ "CTA derails Santa Train". CTA Tattler. December 2, 2004.
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