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Lauro, Achille
Neapolitans,
however, remember the eponym, himself: Achille Lauro, the shipping
magnate—the
"Neapolitan Onassis," the "King of Naples," the Commandante, they
called him—the wheeler-dealer millionaire and popular
mayor of Naples
in the boom 1950s, owner of the Naples football team, builder of
beautiful
fountains all over town and, alas, overbuilder of row upon row of new,
anonymous flats. (One Lauro defender, Achille della Ragione, author of
a recent
book entitled Achille Lauro, Superstar, reminds
critics, however, that Lauro was not responsible
for one
particularly egregious peoplewarren on the Vomero height overlooking
via
Aniello Falcone, an enormous block of flats so ungainly that to this
day locals
call it "The Great Wall of China.")
Lauro
was born in 1887 in the town of Piano di Sorrento. He attended a
civilian
maritime school and inherited a first small coasting vessel in 1912. By
the
outbreak of the Great War he had a small merchant fleet, the ships of
which
were requisitioned by the state for the war effort. He started anew and
by 1933
had a fleet of 21 ships. He joined the Fascist party in 1933. At the
beginning
of WW II he put his considerable merchant fleet of 57 ships at the
disposal of
the Italian war effort. During the war he acquired 50% share in a
number of
Neapolitan daily newspapers. He was arrested by the Allies in 1943 and
spent 22
months in jail. By the end of the war his fleet had been reduced to
five ships.
He was not found guilty of criminal activity and was released from
prison. In
1949 he went into the true passenger business with the acquisition of a
liner
from the American Grace Lines, renaming the ship Surriento, the
dialect
spelling of "Sorrento." During the 1950s
he rebuilt his fleet to 50 ships.
He
became the mayor of Naples in 1952, winning re-election in 1956 and
again in
1960. In 1972 he was elected to parliament as a member of the
Monarchist party.
(That may seem strange to those unfamiliar with post-war Italy; a
contested
referendum in 1946 narrowly chose to send the monarchy into exile and
turn
Italy into a presidential republic. In Naples, however, the monarchy
carried
the vote by a margin of 10 to 1.) In the
building frenzy of the 1950s, Lauro was responsible for many of the 80,000 new dwellings built in Naples,
the construction of the San Paolo football stadium in Fuori Grotta and
a new
train station at Piazza Garibaldi. In
1973 Lauro went into the oil tanker business with the purchase of two
supertankers, the Coraggio and the Volere. In 1976, at the age of 89, he
founded Canale 21
in Naples, the first private TV station in Europe. He lost his last
electoral
campaign in 1979. In 1981 financial troubles beset his empire. He died
in 1982.
After his death his fleet was broken up and sold. It is hard to
get a
neutral opinion on
Lauro. Like all
self-made millionaires, he was ambitious and knew how to get things
done. He
was mayor at a time when the city was still recovering from the
considerable
urban devastation of WW2. The port and industrial plant of the city
were
ruined, and the population was over a million and climbing. His critics
accused
him of being a "qualunquista," —an Anythingarian— with a too
pragmatic, "whatever-works" approach to urban problems, one that led
to rampant overbuilding and corruption. His defenders claim that he did
what he
had to do to revive the city. Me? I just live here.
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