The outline of United States railway history is as follows:
1810s-1830s: Various inventors and entrepreneurs make suggestions about building model railways in the United States; someone named Stevens[?] builds a test track and runs a locomotive around it in Hoboken[?], New Jersey.
1870s and 1880s: Strikes break out against railroads and the Pullman Palace Car Company[?]. Corporations hire Pinkerton guards to break up the strikes. Nonetheless, much violence occurs in the strikes; folks are shot dead, buildings and rolling stock are burned, and reports of rioting shocks middle-class Americans.
1940s: World War II brings railroads the highest ridership[?] in American history, as soldiers are being sent to fight overseas in the Pacific Theater and the European Theater[?]. However, automobile travel causes ridership to decline after the war ends.
1950s and 1960s[?]: Drastic decline in railroad travel in the United States of America, due to automobiles, trucks[?], and airplanes, as first jetliners take to the air. Railroads respond through mergers[?] and attempts to shut down trains and railroad lines. However, the FCC refuses to let railroads shut down many trains.
1970s and 1980s: Amtrak introduces double-deckSuperliner[?] rolling stock. Auto Train[?] begins running as independent line (is this in the 1960s?) , but fails a few years later; Amtrak later runs Auto Train as one of its more-heavily-promoted lines.
1990s: Amtrak funding comes under heavier scrutiny by Congress, while Amtrak creates new trains such as the Talgo[?] and the Acela.
... nations are 232 for the United Kingdom, 180 for Germany, 121 for Italy, and 87 for Spain.
An extensive overseas sales effort has so far yielded just one firm ...