fbpx
Wikipedia

Greyhound Lines

Greyhound Lines, Inc. (Greyhound) operates the largest intercity bus service in North America. Services include Greyhound Mexico, charter bus services, and Amtrak Thruway services. Greyhound operates 1,700 coach buses produced mainly by Motor Coach Industries and Prevost serving 230 stations and 1,700 destinations.[2][4] The company's first route began in Hibbing, Minnesota in 1914 and the company adopted the Greyhound name in 1929. The company is owned by Flix North America, Inc., an affiliate of Flixbus, and is based in Downtown Dallas.

Greyhound Lines, Inc.
A Prevost X3-45 operated by Greyhound in New York City, August 2009
ParentFlixbus
Founded1914; 109 years ago (1914) by Carl Wickman in Hibbing, Minnesota, United States
Headquarters350 North Saint Paul Street
Dallas, Texas, United States
Service areaUnited States, Mexico
Service typeIntercity coach service
Routes123 routes[1] (includes Greyhound Express routes)
Stations230 (company operated)[2]
Fleet1,700 motorcoaches[3] mostly Motor Coach Industries 102DL3, G4500, D4505, and Prevost Car X3-45
Fuel typeDiesel
Chief executiveDavid Leach (President and CEO)
Websitegreyhound.com

History

1914–1930: early years

 
An Eastern Greyhound Lines coach depicted at a stop in Conneaut, Ohio, c. 1930
 
1936 stock certificate #0000, specimen

In 1914, Eric Wickman, a 27-year-old Swedish immigrant, was laid off from his job as a drill operator at a mine in Alice, Minnesota. He became a Hupmobile salesman in Hibbing, Minnesota, and, when he could not sell the first seven-passenger Hupmobile that he received, he began using it along with fellow Swedish immigrant Andy "Bus Andy" Anderson and C. A. A. "Arvid" Heed to transport iron ore miners two miles from Hibbing to Alice for 15 cents per ride.[5][6][7][8] Wickman made $2.25 on his first run.[5]

Wickman almost gave up after the first winter due to the harsh driving conditions in Minnesota. However, he agreed to continue on by reducing his driving duties.[9] In 1915, he added a 15-mile route to Nashwauk, Minnesota.[9] In December 1915, Wickman merged his company with that of 19-year-old Ralph Bogan, who was running a similar transportation service from Hibbing to Duluth, Minnesota, to form the Mesaba Transportation Company.[7] By 1918, the company had 18 vehicles and annual income of $40,000.[9]

In 1922, Wickman and Heed sold their interests in the company to Bogan and Anderson. Wickman and Heed then moved to Duluth and acquired White Bus Lines. In 1924, Wickman formed Northland, which acquired the Superior-White Company; its founder, Orville S. Caesar, who had strong business acumen, mechanical skills, and ambition, eventually became president of the company. In 1925, the company completed the $2.5 million acquisition of eight independent bus lines in Minnesota. In 1928, Anderson and Bogan disbanded and sold most of the routes of the Mesaba Transportation Company to Northland.[7]

The company continued to expand and, in 1928, it had income of $6 million and was offering trips all over the United States. In 1929, the company acquired the Yelloway-Pioneer System, which in 1928 made the first transcontinental bus trip,[7][10] and The Pickwick Corporation.[7]

In 1929, the company acquired additional interests in Gray Line Worldwide and part of the Colonial Motor Coach Company to form Eastern Greyhound Lines.[7] It also acquired an interest in Northland Transportation Company and renamed it Northland Greyhound Lines.[7]

1930–1945

 
 
Front view of a Greyhound Lines Super Coach in Maryland (1938 photo) (side view)

By 1930, more than 100 bus lines had been consolidated into the parent company, then called Motor Transit Corporation. Recognizing the need for a more memorable name, the partners of the Motor Transit Corporation changed its name to The Greyhound Corporation after the Greyhound name used by earlier bus lines. According to company lore, that name came from a driver, Ed Stone, who was reminded of a greyhound when he saw a passing bus in a reflection.[11][12]

Also in 1930, the company moved from Duluth, Minnesota to Chicago, Illinois.[13]

The business suffered during the Great Depression, and by 1931 was over $1 million in debt. As the 1930s progressed and the economy improved, Greyhound began to prosper again.[9]

In 1934, intercity bus lines, of which Greyhound was the largest carried approximately 400 million passengers — nearly as many passengers as the Class I railroads. The film It Happened One Night (1934) — about an heiress (Claudette Colbert) traveling by Greyhound bus with a reporter (Clark Gable)[14] — has been credited by the company for spurring bus travel nationwide.[15]

In 1935, national intercity bus ridership climbed 50% to 651,999,000 passengers, surpassing the volume of passengers carried by the Class I railroads for the first time.[16] In 1935, Wickman reported record profits of $8 million. In 1936, already the largest bus carrier in the United States, Greyhound began taking delivery of 306 new buses.[16]

In 1941, the company acquired Greyhound Canada.[15]

Between 1937 and 1945, Greyhound built many new stations and acquired new buses in the period in the late Art Deco style known as Streamline Moderne.[17][18] For terminals, Greyhound retained architects including William Strudwick Arrasmith and George D. Brown.[19] Notable examples of Streamline Moderne stations include the Blytheville Greyhound Bus Station, Cleveland, Ohio Greyhound Bus Station, Columbia, South Carolina Greyhound Bus Station, and Old Washington, D.C. Greyhound Bus Station

Greyhound worked with the Yellow Coach Manufacturing Company for its streamlined Series 700 buses, first for Series 719 prototypes in 1934, and from 1937 as the exclusive customer for Yellow's Series 743 bus (which Greyhound named the "Super Coach"). Greyhound bought a total of 1,256 buses between 1937 and 1939.[20]

By the beginning of World War II, the company had 4,750 stations and nearly 10,000 employees.[21]

1945–1983: expansion, desegregation, and diversification

 
A Greyhound GMC PD-3751 Silversides in the 1950s livery

Wickman retired as president of the Greyhound Corporation in 1946 and was replaced by his long-time partner Orville S. Caesar.[9] Wickman died at the age of 66 in 1954.[22]

 
1954 GM Scenicruiser, designed by Raymond Loewy and manufactured exclusively for Greyhound

Greyhound commissioned industrial designer Raymond Loewy and General Motors to design several distinctive buses from the 1930s through the 1950s.[23][24][25] Loewy's first was the Yellow Coach PDG-4101, the Greyhound Silversides produced in 1940-1941. Production was suspended during World War II. When the "Silversides" buses resumed production in 1947, it was renamed GM PD 3751. PD 3751 production continued through 1948.[26] In 1954, the first of Greyhound's distinctive hump-backed buses was introduced. In 1944, Loewy had produced drawings for the GM GX-1, a full double-decker parlor bus with the first prototype built in 1953.[27] The PD-4501 Scenicruiser was designed Loewy and built by General Motors as model PD-4501. The front of the bus was markedly lower than its rear section.[28]

After World War II, and the building of the Interstate Highway System beginning in 1956, automobile travel became a preferred mode of travel in the United States.[13] This, combined with the increasing affordability of air travel, led to a decline in business for Greyhound and other intercity bus carriers.[13]

In October 1953, Greyhound acquired the Tennessee Coach Company's entire operation, and the negotiations for the Blue Ridge Lines, and its affiliate White Star Lines, that operated between Cleveland and the Mid Atlantic Seaboard.[29]

In 1955, the Interstate Commerce Commission ruled in the case of Keys v. Carolina Coach Co. that U.S. interstate bus operations, such as Greyhound's, could not be segregated by race.[30] In 1960, in the case of Boynton v. Virginia, the U.S. Supreme Court found that an African American had been wrongfully convicted for trespassing in a "whites only" terminal area.[31] In May 1961, Civil Rights Movement activists organized interracial Freedom Rides as proof of the desegregation rulings. On May 14, a mob attacked a pair of buses (a Greyhound and a Trailways) traveling from Washington, D.C., to New Orleans, Louisiana, and slashed the Greyhound bus's tires.[32] Several miles outside of Anniston, Alabama, the mob forced the Greyhound bus to stop, broke its windows, and firebombed it.[33] The mob held the bus' doors shut, intending to burn the riders to death. Sources disagree, but either an exploding fuel tank[33] or an undercover state investigator brandishing a revolver[34] caused the mob to retreat. When the riders escaped the bus, the mob beat them, while warning shots fired into the air by highway patrolmen prevented them from being lynched.[33] Additional Freedom Riders were beaten by a mob at the Greyhound Station in Montgomery Alabama.

 
A GMC PD-4106, ready for boarding in Salem, Oregon, for a trip north to Seattle on the then-new Interstate 5, in the fall of 1965

The Civil Rights Act of 1964's Title II and Title III broadened protections beyond federally regulated carriers such as Greyhound, to include non-discrimination in hotels, restaurants, and other public accommodations, as well as state and local government buildings.[35]

Later in the 1960s, Greyhound leadership ridership declined and Greyhound used the profitable bus operations to invest in other industries.[13]

In 1966, Gerald H. Trautman became president and CEO of the company.[36][37]

In 1970, the company acquired Armour and Company meat-packing company, which owned the Dial deodorant soap brand, for $400 million.[36]

In 1971, Greyhound moved its headquarters to Phoenix, Arizona.[36]

The company also acquired Traveller's Express money orders, MCI and TMC bus manufacturing companies,[38] and airliner leasing.

Greyhound began to hire African American and female drivers in the late 1970s.[39]

 
Greyhound bus ticket from August 1975

In 1972, Greyhound introduced the unlimited mileage Ameripass. The pass was initially marketed as offering "99 days for $99" or, transportation to anywhere at any time for a dollar a day. For decades, it was a popular choice for people traveling across the U.S. on a budget.[40] Over time, Greyhound raised the price of the pass, shortened its validity period and rebranded it as the Discovery Pass, before discontinuing it in 2012.[40]

Greyhound acquired Premier Cruise Line in 1984.[41] Between 1985 and 1993, Premier operated as the "Official Cruise Line of Walt Disney World" with onboard Disney characters.[42]

1983–2001: consolidation, strikes, and bankruptcies

1983 Greyhound drivers' strike

In 1983, Greyhound operated a fleet of 3,800 buses and carried about 60% of the intercity bus-travel market in the United States.[43]

Starting November 2, 1983, Greyhound suffered a major and bitter drivers' strike action.[44][45] A fatality occurred in Zanesville, Ohio, when a replacement driver ran over a striking worker at a picket line.[46][47] A new contract was ratified on December 19, 1983 and drivers returned to work the next day.[48]

1986–1990: spin-off, merger, and first bankruptcy

In early 1987, the bus line was acquired by an investor group led by Fred Currey, a former executive of rival Continental Trailways, who became CEO of Greyhound and relocated its headquarters to Dallas, Texas.[49]

In February 1987, Greyhound Lines' new ownership and the Amalgamated Transit Union (ATU) agreed on a new, 3-year contract.[50]

In June 1987, Greyhound Lines acquired Trailways, Inc. (formerly Continental Trailways), the largest member of the rival Trailways Transportation System, effectively consolidating into a national bus service. Greyhound was required by the Interstate Commerce Commission to maintain coordinated schedules with other scheduled service operators in the U.S.[51][52]

Between 1987 and 1990, Greyhound Lines' former parent continued to be called The Greyhound Corporation, confusing passengers and investors alike. The Greyhound Corporation retained Premier Cruise Lines and ten non-bus subsidiaries using the Greyhound name, such as Greyhound Leisure Services, Inc. (an operator of airport and cruise ship duty-free shops), and Greyhound Exhibits. In March 1990, The Greyhound Corporation changed its name to Greyhound Dial Corporation.[53] Because Greyhound Dial's switchboard continued to get questions from misdirected bus passengers, it changed its name to The Dial Corporation in March 1991, to eliminate any association with bus travel.[54]

1990: Greyhound drivers' strike

In early 1990, the drivers' contract from 1987 expired at the end of its three-year term. In March, the ATU began a strike action against Greyhound. The 1990 drivers' strike was similar in its bitterness to the strike of 1983, with violence against both strikers and their replacement workers. One striker in California was killed by a Greyhound bus driven by a strikebreaker, and a shot was fired at a Greyhound bus.[55] While Greyhound CEO Fred Currey argued that "no American worth his salt negotiates with terrorists," ATU leader Edward M. Strait responded that management's failure to negotiate amounted to "putting the negotiations back into the hands of terrorists."[56] During the strike by its 6,300 drivers, Greyhound idled much of its fleet of 3,949 buses and cancelled 80% of its routes.[57] At the same time, Greyhound was having to contend with the rise of low-cost airlines such as Southwest Airlines, which further reduced the market for long-distance inter-city bus transportation. Without the financial strength provided in the past by a parent company, the strike's lower revenues and higher costs for security and labor-law penalties caused Greyhound to file for bankruptcy in June 1990.[58][59][60][61][62] The strike was not settled until May 1993, 38 months later, under terms favorable to Greyhound. While the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) had awarded damages for unfair labor practices to the strikers, this liability was discharged during bankruptcy reorganization. Greyhound agreed to pay $22 million in back wages to union drivers, recall 550 of the remaining strikers, reinstate most of the 200 strikers who were fired for alleged misconduct, and increase hourly pay for drivers to $16.55 from $13.83 by March 1998.[63][64][65]

Early 1990s: bankruptcy and antitrust cases

In August 1991, Greyhound emerged from bankruptcy by which time it had shrunk its overall workforce to 7,900 employees from 12,000 pre-bankruptcy, and trimmed its fleet to 2,750 buses and 3,600 drivers.[66][67][68][69][70]

In August 1992, Greyhound canceled its bus terminal license (BTL) agreements with other carriers at 200 terminals, and imposed the requirement that Greyhound be the sole-seller of the tenant's bus tickets within a 25-mile radius of such a Greyhound terminal.[71] In 1995, the United States Department of Justice Antitrust Division brought suit to stop this practice, alleging that it was an illegal restraint of trade, bad for consumers, and reduced competition.[71] In February 1996, the DOJ won its case, and Greyhound agreed to permit its tenants to sell tickets nearby and permit its tenants to honor interline tickets with competitors.[72]

Greyhound's total revenues in 1994 were $616 million.[71] At that time, the company was offering $10 fares due to competition.[73]

In September 1998, Greyhound promised to make accommodations for disabled passengers, including equipping most buses with wheelchair lifts.[74][75]

2001: trailways-Laidlaw mergers and bankruptcy

 
Greyhound MCI MC-12 Americruiser number 2119 in Fremont, Indiana headed for Cleveland, Ohio, in August 2003

In the late 1990s, Greyhound Lines acquired two more members of the National Trailways Bus System. The company purchased Carolina Trailways in 1997,[76] followed by the intercity operations of Southeastern Trailways in 1998.[77] Following the acquisitions, most of the remaining members of the Trailways System began interlining cooperatively with Greyhound, discontinued their scheduled route services, diversified into charters and tours, or went out of business altogether.

On September 3, 1997, Burlington, Ontario-based transportation conglomerate Laidlaw announced it would buy Greyhound Canada, Greyhound's Canadian operations, for US$72 million.[78]

In October 1998, Laidlaw announced it would acquire the U.S. operations of Greyhound Lines, Inc., including Carolina Trailways and other Greyhound affiliates, for about $470 million.[79][80][81] The acquisition was completed in March 1999.[82]

In June 2001, after incurring heavy losses through its investments in Greyhound Lines and other parts of its diversified business, Laidlaw filed for bankruptcy protection in both the U.S. and Canada.[83][84][85]

2002–2007: Laidlaw ownership

 
A Greyhound MCI G4500 in the early 2000s livery in Atlantic City, New Jersey

Naperville, Illinois-based Laidlaw International, Inc. listed its common shares on the New York Stock Exchange on February 10, 2003 and emerged from re-organization on June 23, 2003 as the successor to Laidlaw Inc.[86][87]

By 2003, Greyhound faced significant competition in the northeast from Chinatown bus lines.[88] More than 250 buses, operated by competitors such as Fung Wah Bus Transportation and Lucky Star Bus were competing fiercely from curbsides in the Chinatowns of New York City, Boston, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C.[88] When operating on inter-city routes, the Chinatown buses offered prices about 50% less than Greyhound's.[88] Between 1997 and 2007, Chinatown buses took 60% of Greyhound's market share in the northeast United States.[89]

In 2003, Greyhound expanded its QuickLink service, Greyhound's brand of commuter bus service that runs frequently during the peak weekday commuting hours.[90] Routes were operated from Sacramento, California to the San Francisco Bay Area and Macon, Georgia to Atlanta.[91]

In 2004, Greyhound dropped low-demand rural stops and started concentrating on dense, inter-metropolitan routes. It cut nearly 37% of its network.[92] In some rural areas, particularly in the Plains states, parts of the upper Midwest (such as Wisconsin), and the Pacific Northwest, local operators took over the old stops, often with government subsidies.[93][94][95][96]

2007–2021: FirstGroup ownership

 
Inside a Greyhound bus station in Nashville, Tennessee, on the morning of May 24, 2010
 
Greyhound buses at the Portland, Oregon, station
 
Inside the Greyhound station in St. Louis, Missouri, on the afternoon of May 26, 2010. A bus in the background on its way to pick up passengers at another gate at this station is bound for Los Angeles, California.
 
Interior of a 2009 Prevost X3-45 with leather seats

On February 7, 2007, British transport group FirstGroup announced the acquisition of Laidlaw International for $3.6 billion, which closed on October 1, 2007.[97][98][99][100]

Almost immediately after acquiring the carrier, FirstGroup sought to improve Greyhound's image by refurbishing many terminals, expanding the fleet with new buses, refurbishing old buses, and retraining customer service staff. Greyhound also started a new advertising campaign with Butler, Shine, Stern & Partners aimed at attracting 18- to 24-year-olds and Hispanics.[101]

Although FirstGroup's interest was primarily the school and transit bus operations of Laidlaw, FirstGroup retained the Greyhound operations and in 2009 exported the brand back to the United Kingdom as Greyhound UK (unrelated to bus operator Greyhound Motors which operated from 1921 to 1972).

In 2008, Greyhound's three regional bus operations (Carolina Trailways, based in Raleigh, N.C., Vermont Transit Lines of Burlington, Vermont, and Texas, New Mexico & Oklahoma Coaches of Lubbock, Texas ["T.N.M.&O."]) were consolidated into Greyhound Lines.[102]

On March 27, 2008, Greyhound launched service under the BoltBus brand.[103] The first buses started running between Boston, New York City, and Washington, D.C. In the Northeastern U.S., BoltBus was originally operated in partnership with Peter Pan Bus Lines, but this arrangement ended on September 27, 2017, with Greyhound continuing the brand alone.[104] BoltBus expanded to the West Coast in May 2012 with a route in the Pacific Northwest between Vancouver, BC, Seattle, and Portland.[105][106] Service was expanded again in October 2013 with a route between the two largest metropolitan areas in California, Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay Area (San Jose and Oakland).[107] A stop in San Francisco was added in December 2013 along with a route between Los Angeles and Las Vegas.[108]

Beginning in 2009, all buses purchased have three-point seat belts installed.[109]

In 2010, in response to competition from Megabus and Chinatown bus lines, the company launched "Greyhound Express", featuring newer buses and fewer stops.[110][111][112][113][114][115][116][117]

In February 2013, in partnership with DriveCam, Greyhound deployed video cameras across its entire fleet to increase safety and driver compliance by combining data and video analytics with real-time driver feedback and coaching.[118]

As of 2014, Greyhound's 1,229 buses served over 3,800 destinations in North America, traveling 5.5 billion miles (8.8 billion km) on North America's roads.[13]

In 2014, the company introduced a refreshed logo and a new navy blue and dark gray livery for buses. Buses were refurbished to add wireless Internet access, power outlets, and leather seating with increased legroom.[119][120][121]

Before 2014, Greyhound was criticized for overbooking, often leaving passengers to wait for the next bus departure.[122] Shortly after the sale to FirstGroup closed, Greyhound began a program in select markets, where riders could reserve a seat for an additional $5. However, only a limited number of seats could be reserved and the fee would have to be paid at the terminal's ticketing counter, even if the ticket was bought in advance online.[123] In 2014, Greyhound rolled out a new yield management computer system, enabling the company to more closely manage the number of tickets sold for each departure and dynamically adjust pricing based on sales.[124] Although the amount of overbooked buses has been sharply reduced with this new system, Greyhound still does not explicitly guarantee a seat to everyone with a ticket (except on Greyhound Express routes).[125]

In 2014, Greyhound reported a profit of $73 million on revenues of $990.6 million, and attributed the company's success to a mix of changing urban populations and a focus on more profitable routes with higher demand.[126]

In 2013-2015, Greyhound expanded its Greyhound Connect service, which operates shorter routes to take passengers from stops in smaller, rural cities to stations in larger, urban cities.[127] Some routes are operated using funds from the "Federal Formula Grant Program for Rural Areas" from the Federal Transit Administration.[128]

In July 2015, the company announced that it would open terminals in Monterrey and Nuevo Laredo, Mexico, and begin service between the two cities and Texas, claiming to be the first American bus company to operate an intra-Mexican route.[129] In September 2015, Greyhound announced expanded service in Missouri and Kansas shortly after Megabus announced that it would be ending service to several cities and college campuses.[130]

The company's Lucky Streak brand is for routes to/from cities with casinos. All fares are sold as open-ended round-trips, with passengers allowed to return to their origin at any time.[131] On the Atlantic City routes, casinos offer special bonuses (gambling credit, room/dining discounts) to Lucky Streak passengers.[131] Lucky Streak routes serve Atlantic City (to/from Baltimore, Brooklyn, New York City, Philadelphia, and Washington, D.C.), Connecticut (Mohegan Sun & Foxwoods Casino) (to/from Boston, Bridgeport, New Haven, New York City, Providence, and Stamford), and Las Vegas (to/from Anaheim, Barstow, Claremont, Compton, El Monte, Hollywood, Long Beach, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, Santa Ana, and Victorville).

In February 2020, the company reversed its position regarding unwarranted searches and notified the Department of Homeland Security that it no longer would allow unwarranted searches on its buses, in areas of terminals, company offices, or any area where a person needs a ticket for access.[132][133]

In December 2020, the company sold the customer terminal facility in Los Angeles, as well as facilities in Denver, Colorado, and Ottawa, Canada for a total of $137 million.[134][135][136] The facility in Denver was sold for $38 million.[137][138]

In May 2021, Greyhound Canada shut down all of its bus routes in Canada. Greyhound Lines continues to operate four cross-border routes that either start or finish in the U.S. from Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver:[139][140] the company also placed 38 buses used by its Canada division up for auction.[141]

In July 2021, BoltBus suspended operations indefinitely and Greyhound took over all routes.[142][143][144]

In July 2021, the bus station in Columbus, Ohio, was sold to the Central Ohio Transit Authority for $9.5 million.[145][146] In October 2021, the bus station in Downtown Louisville was sold for $2.8 million.[147] The bus station in Cincinnati was sold to a real estate company for $4.25 million, with plans to convert it to parking.[148]

In September 2021, the company agreed to pay $2.2 million to settle a lawsuit over its practice of allowing U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents to board its buses in Washington State to conduct warrantless immigration sweeps.[149][150] The company had been criticized for allowing government officials to arrest its customers who were illegally in the country.[151]

2021–present: FlixMobility

On October 21, 2021, Munich-based FlixBus acquired Greyhound for $78 million.[152][153][154][155][156]

In 2022, FirstGroup sold almost all its remaining Greyhound properties to Twenty Lake Holdings LLC for approximately $140 million.[157][158]

Notable incidents and accidents

 
Remains of a crashed Greyhound bus after the 1972 Bean Station bus-truck collision

Below is a list of major incidents and accidents on Greyhound buses and buses of subsidiaries in the United States.

  • August 4, 1952: in Greyhound's most deadly collision two Greyhound buses were in a head-on collision with each other along U.S. Route 81 near Waco, Texas. The fuel tanks of both buses then ruptured, bursting into flames. Of the 56 persons aboard both coaches, 28 were killed, including both drivers.[159][160]
  • May 13, 1972: near Bean Station, Tennessee, between Knoxville and Bristol, a Greyhound Scenicruiser on a scheduled trip from Memphis to New York City collided head-on with a tractor-trailer truck. The driver of the bus had begun to pass a car. Fourteen people, including both the bus and truck drivers, died. The National Transportation Safety Board determined that the cause of the crash was the Greyhound driver's overtaking maneuver and his failure to avoid the truck.[161]
  • May 9, 1980: the cargo ship MV Summit Venture collided with the Sunshine Skyway Bridge, near St. Petersburg, Florida, causing a part of the roadway to collapse and causing several vehicles, including a Greyhound bus, to fall into Tampa Bay. All 26 people aboard the bus died, as did nine others.[162]
  • December 18, 1990: a Greyhound bus left Salt Lake City for Chicago and was caught in a driving snowstorm on I-80. Just short of the Wyoming border, the bus was hit by a semi-tractor trailer that had crossed the median heading in the opposite direction. The force of the collision tipped the bus onto its right side and it fell down a steep embankment. The bus slid for 150 feet and came to rest against a fence, about 35 feet below the eastbound lanes of I-80. Seven passengers were killed and more than 40 injured.[163]
  • June 20, 1998: a Greyhound bus on a scheduled trip from New York City to Pittsburgh ran off a road near Burnt Cabins, Pennsylvania, and hit a truck parked in an emergency parking area. Six passengers and the driver died. The National Transportation Safety Board determined that the probable cause of the accident was the driver's use of a sedating antihistamine and driver fatigue, due to an irregular work-rest schedule.[164]
  • October 3, 2001: in the 2001 Greyhound bus attack, at approximately 4:15 a.m. local time, a passenger, Damir Igric, assaulted the driver of his bus, attempting to slit his throat, and causing the bus to crash near Manchester, Tennessee, killing Igric himself and five other passengers and injuring 32 others. Since the incident occurred three weeks after the September 11 terrorist attacks, Greyhound temporarily suspended all schedules as soon as the company learned of the incident for fear that it may have been part of a larger coordinated attack. After investigation by the company and the FBI, it was confirmed that Igric had acted alone and service resumed later that afternoon.[165] After the incident, Greyhound bus stations increased security, though not nearly to the same level as airports or train stations.[166]
  • September 30, 2002: Arturo Martinez Tapia assaulted a Greyhound driver near Fresno, California, resulting in two passenger deaths after the bus then rolled off an embankment and crashed.[167][168] Following this attack, an aisle gate and driver's shield were installed on most Greyhound buses which prevent passengers from having direct contact with the driver when the bus is in motion, even if the aisle gate is forced open, funded by a $16 million grant from the Transportation Security Administration.[169]
  • January 23, 2014: Maquel Donyel Morris, who was reportedly hallucinating, screamed "everybody's going to die," attacked the driver, and grabbed the steering wheel of a bus traveling on Interstate 10 near Tonopah, Arizona, 50 miles (80 km) west of Phoenix. 24 passengers were injured, including 21 who were airlifted to nearby hospitals. Police credited the driver for keeping the bus upright and preventing it from crossing into oncoming traffic.[170]
  • January 19, 2016: an overnight bus carrying 20 passengers that had departed from Los Angeles the previous night crashed on Highway 101 in San Jose, California, killing two and hospitalizing eight others.[171] The National Transportation Safety Board determined that the probable cause of the crash was the failure of the California Department of Transportation to properly delineate the crash attenuator and the gore area.[172]
  • July 12, 2018: on a bus traveling from Columbus to Cincinnati, Ohio, three Colombian athletes on Comunidad el Oso Ultimate club claimed they were thrown off one of the buses for speaking Spanish. Greyhound indicated the players had become unruly due to them not being dropped off where they wanted to be dropped off, rather than their ticketed destination. The driver left them and all their luggage at a gas station. The players were traveling to the World Flying Disc Federation's World Ultimate Club Championships. They were picked up by the Ohio police soon after, and dropped off at their hotel in Cincinnati.[173]
  • August 30, 2018: a Greyhound bus traveling from St. Louis to Los Angeles was involved in a collision with a semi-truck on Interstate 40 westbound near Thoreau, New Mexico. One of the tires on the eastbound truck blew out and caused the driver to lose control and cross the median, colliding with the bus. Of the 48 onboard, 8 passengers, including the driver, were killed, and several more sustained injuries.[174][175]
  • February 3, 2020: one person was killed and five others were injured when a passenger opened fire on a bus heading from Los Angeles to San Francisco. At the time of the shooting, the bus was travelling northbound on Interstate 5 near Grapevine, California. After the shooting, the driver pulled to the side of the highway and convinced the shooter to get off the bus. The driver then continued down the highway to a gas station to get medical assistance for the injured passengers. The suspect, still on the side of the highway, was later arrested without incident.[176][177]
  • February 2, 2022: one person was killed and four others were injured when a fellow passenger opened fire on them as they exited a Los Angeles-bound bus after it stopped at a convenience store in the city of Oroville, California. Passengers reported that earlier in the trip, the suspect exhibited paranoid behavior and showed the firearm he had in a bag on the bus. After the shooting the suspect dropped the gun, and ran into a Walmart, where he was found naked and arrested after getting into a fight.[178][179]

In popular culture

Films

Songs

Other

See also

Former operating subsidiaries
Museums and Preserved Stations

References

  1. ^ "Greyhound Timetables". Greyhound Lines.
  2. ^ a b "Types of stations & stops". Greyhound Lines.
  3. ^ "Our fleet". Greyhound Lines.
  4. ^ "FACTS & FIGURES". Greyhound Lines.
  5. ^ a b Ryan, Colin (July 28, 2016). "Truck Trend Legends: The History of Greyhound". Motor Trend.
  6. ^ Brown, Curt (April 2, 2015). "Minnesota History: Greyhound traces its roots to Hibbing". Star Tribune.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Walsh, Margaret (1985). "Tracing the Hound: The Minnesota Roots of the Greyhound Bus Corporation" (PDF). Minnesota History. Minnesota Historical Society (Winter 1985): 310–321.
  8. ^ "Greyhound Bus Museum". Greyhound Bus Museum. from the original on September 21, 2013.
  9. ^ a b c d e LATIMER, CLAY (June 23, 2013). "Carl Wickman Drove Greyhound All The Way To The Top". Investor's Business Daily.
  10. ^ "Business & Finance: Yelloway-Pioneer". Time. September 24, 1928.
  11. ^ Thompson, Dave (September 1, 2010). Bayou Underground: Tracing the Mythical Roots of American Popular Music. ECW Press. ISBN 9781554906826.
  12. ^ "Era of excellence: The History of Greyhound". Deloitte. 1968.
  13. ^ a b c d e BELSKY, GARY (December 19, 2013). "100 Years on a Dirty Dog: The History of Greyhound". Mental Floss.
  14. ^ Smith Nehme, Farran (November 17, 2014). "It Happened One Night: All Aboard!". The Criterion Collection.
  15. ^ a b Nadkar, Tanishaa (May 30, 2019). "Factbox: British owner puts long-running Greyhound buses up for sale". Reuters.
  16. ^ a b "Transport: Greyhound's Litter". Time. August 10, 1936.
  17. ^ Luther, Roger. "The Greyhound Runs Again: First Impressions at a Streamline Bus Station". Treasures of the Southern Tier. Binghamton Press & Sun-Bulletin. from the original on May 22, 2013.
  18. ^ Wrenick, Frank E. (2011). Streamline era greyhound terminals : the architecture of w.s. arrasmith. McFarland & Company. pp. 112–194. ISBN 978-0-7864-6445-6.
  19. ^ Wrenick, Frank E. (2007). The Streamline Era Greyhound Terminals: The Architecture of W.S. Arrasmith. McFarland & Company. ISBN 9780786425501.
  20. ^ "Yellow Coach Part 2, Yellow Coach Mfg. Co., Yellow Truck and Coach, Yellow Bus, Greyhound Bus, Silversides, GMC Truck, CCKW, DUKW, General Motors".
  21. ^ Cook, Richard (July 7, 2019). "Pittsburgh Then and Now: The Greyhound Bus Station". Pittsburgh Magazine.
  22. ^ "Carl Wickman, Greyhound Bus Founder, Dead". Chicago Tribune. February 6, 1954 – via Newspapers.com.
  23. ^ "Patent USD113009S Design fob a motor coach". November 12, 1938 – via Google Patents.
  24. ^ "Patent USD129411S Design for a motor coach". June 26, 1941 – via Google Patents.
  25. ^ "Patent USD156445S Motor coach". December 29, 1948 – via Google Patents.
  26. ^ Johnson, Gary (1992). "1939 Yellow Coach 1210 parlor coach". Model Coach News. Lynnfield, MA (69): 5–6.
  27. ^ "Double-deck coach". October 13, 1944.
  28. ^ Petrány, Máté (May 2, 2014). "The Greyhound Scenicruiser Was Filled With The American Dream". Jalopnik.
  29. ^ "GREYHOUND BUYS IN STOCK IN TWO UNITS; Obtains Rail-Held Interests in Pacific, Pennsylvania Lines -- Gets Tennessee Coach". The New York Times. Associated Press. October 7, 1953.
  30. ^ Barnes, Catherine (1983). Journey from Jim Crow: The Desegregation of Southern Transit. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 86–107.
  31. ^ "BOYNTON v. VIRGINIA, 364 U.S. 454 (1960)". Supreme Court of the United States. December 5, 1960 – via FindLaw.
  32. ^ ""Freedom Riders," WGBH American Experience". PBS. May 16, 2011.
  33. ^ a b c GROSS, TERRY (January 12, 2006). "Get on the Bus: The Freedom Riders of 1961". NPR.
  34. ^ Branch, Taylor (April 16, 2007). "Baptism on Wheels". Parting the Waters: America in the King Years 1954–63. pp. 412–50. ISBN 978-1-4165-5868-2.
  35. ^ Sandoval-Strausz, A.K. (Spring 2005). "Travelers, Strangers, and Jim Crow: Law, Public Accommodations, and Civil Rights in America". Law and History Review. 23 (1): 53–94. doi:10.1017/s0738248000000055. JSTOR 30042844.
  36. ^ a b c Keoun, Bradley (October 28, 1999). "GREYHOUND'S GERALD TRAUTMAN". Chicago Tribune.
  37. ^ Ravo, Nick (October 28, 1999). "Gerald Trautman, 87, Ex-Chief And Avid Builder of Greyhound". The New York Times.
  38. ^ "TMC - Transportation Manufacturing Corp. - 1973-1994 - Roswell, New Mexico - Subsidiary of MCI/Greyhound". Coachbuilt.
  39. ^ Jackson, Carlton. (1984). Hounds of the Road: a history of the Greyhound Bus Company. Bowling Green, Ohio: Bowling Green University Popular Press. ISBN 9780879722708.
  40. ^ a b Smith, Aaron Lake (December 20, 2013). "Riding the Dirty Dog". Vice.
  41. ^ Lazarus, George (May 30, 1989). "Greyhound Cruise Line Making Waves". Chicago Tribune.
  42. ^ Fritscher, Lisa (April 16, 2018). "How Disney Cruises Started". USA Today. from the original on September 21, 2015.
  43. ^ "Strike Over Pay Cuts Halts Intercity Buses of Greyhound Lines". The New York Times. November 3, 1983.
  44. ^ Townsend, Ed (November 4, 1983). "Strike against Greyhound forces customers to leave driving to somebody else". Christian Science Monitor.
  45. ^ Townsend, Ed (December 5, 1983). "Tentative settlement in Greyhound strike". Christian Science Monitor.
  46. ^ "Greyhound Striker Killed by Training Bus". The New York Times. Associated Press. December 6, 1983.
  47. ^ "Ray Phillips and the 1983 Strike Ray Phillips and the 1983 Strike". Amalgamated Transit Union. December 31, 2011.
  48. ^ "Greyhound Strikers Accept Pact; Immediate Return to Work Urged". The New York Times. Associated Press. December 20, 1983. from the original on April 17, 2014.
  49. ^ "When Fred G. Currey acquired Greyhound three years ago, he". The Times of Northwest Indiana. March 25, 1990.
  50. ^ "Union, Buyers of Greyhound Settle Contract". Los Angeles Times. Associated Press. February 4, 1987.
  51. ^ Hayes, Thomas C. (June 20, 1987). "Greyhound in Deal for Trailways". The New York Times.
  52. ^ "Greyhound Agrees to Buy Ailing Trailways Bus Lines". Los Angeles Times. June 19, 1987.
  53. ^ GORDON, MARCY (February 27, 1990). "Greyhound Changing Name to Disassociate From Bus Company Problems". Associated Press.
  54. ^ "COMPANY NEWS; Greyhound Dial Is Now Dial Corp". The New York Times. Associated Press. March 6, 1991.
  55. ^ Baker, Bob (March 26, 1990). "NEWS ANALYSIS : Greyhound Strike Becomes Fertile Field". Los Angeles Times.
  56. ^ Baker, Bob (April 8, 1990). "Greyhound May Go Way of Eastern : Labor: Financial collapse and hope of a better deal from a new bus company owner could be strategy if strike takes path of the troubled airline". Los Angeles Times.
  57. ^ Swoboda, Frank (May 8, 1990). "GREYHOUND DECLARES STRIKE OVER". The Washington Post.
  58. ^ Hayes, Thomas C. (June 5, 1990). "Bankruptcy Filing by Greyhound". The New York Times.
  59. ^ Swoboda, Frank (June 5, 1990). "GREYHOUND FILES FOR CHAPTER 11". The Washington Post.
  60. ^ Baker, Bob (June 5, 1990). "Strikebound Greyhound Lines Files for Chapter 11". Los Angeles Times.
  61. ^ WILLIAMS, JOEL (June 7, 1990). "Greyhound Given Permission to Pay Salaries, Expenses". Associated Press.
  62. ^ "Greyhound seeks Chapter 11 protection". United Press International. June 5, 1990.
  63. ^ "Greyhound Bus Drivers End 3-Year Strike With New Pact". The New York Times. Associated Press. May 9, 1993.
  64. ^ Weintraub, Richard M. (April 21, 1993). "GREYHOUND, TRANSIT UNION SETTLE 3-YEAR-OLD STRIKE". The Washington Post.
  65. ^ "Greyhound Settles Last Strike Suit". The Spokesman-Review. March 28, 1995.
  66. ^ "Judge approves Greyhound's plan of reorganization". United Press International. August 30, 1991.
  67. ^ KRISHNAN, HARIHAR (October 10, 1991). "Greyhound Lines to emerge from Chapter 11 at end of month". United Press International.
  68. ^ Hayes, Thomas C. (August 31, 1991). "Greyhound Wins Approval for Its Reorganization Plan". The New York Times.
  69. ^ "GREYHOUND'S CREDITORS VOTE TO SUPPORT REORGANIZATION PLAN". Deseret News. Associated Press. August 14, 1991.
  70. ^ Sanchez, Jesus (November 3, 1991). "Greyhound Faces an Uphill Climb". Los Angeles Times.
  71. ^ a b c "Complaint: USA v Greyhound Lines, Inc". United States Department of Justice. September 29, 1996.
  72. ^ "Final Judgment: USA vs Greyhound Lines, Inc". United States Department of Justice. September 29, 1995.
  73. ^ Myerson, Allen R. (January 18, 1994). "Greyhound: The Airline of the Road". The New York Times.
  74. ^ "Guide for Passengers: Accessible Bus Service Under the Greyhound Agreement". United States Department of Justice.
  75. ^ Myerson, Allen R. (September 9, 1998). "Greyhound Unveils Its Plan To Serve the Disabled Fully". The New York Times.
  76. ^ "Greyhound To Buy Carolina Trailways". Associated Press. March 10, 1997.
  77. ^ "Greyhound Lines, Inc., et al.Acquisition of Assets Southeastern Trailways, Inc., and PeoriaRockford Bus Co". Federal Register. August 27, 1998.
  78. ^ "Laidlaw Plans to Buy Greyhound Canada for $72 million". The New York Times. Dow Jones & Company. September 3, 1997.
  79. ^ "Laidlaw to Acquire Greyhound Lines". Los Angeles Times. October 20, 1998.
  80. ^ "Laidlaw buying Greyhound". CNN. October 19, 1998.
  81. ^ De Santis, Solange; Tomsho, Robert (October 20, 1998). "Laidlaw Agrees to Buy Greyhound In Accord Valued at $465 Million". The Wall Street Journal.
  82. ^ "Laidlaw takes over Greyhound". CBC News. March 16, 1999.
  83. ^ "Laidlaw Units File for Bankruptcy Protection". Los Angeles Times. Reuters. June 29, 2001.
  84. ^ "Laidlaw files for bankruptcy protection". CBC News. June 29, 2001.
  85. ^ Carlisle, Tamsin (June 29, 2001). "Laidlaw of Canada Reaches Agreement On Restructuring $3.2 Billion of Debt". The Wall Street Journal.
  86. ^ WEBER, TERRY (June 23, 2003). "Laidlaw emerges from Chapter 11". The Globe and Mail.
  87. ^ Schmeltzer, John (June 23, 2003). "Laidlaw will leave bankruptcy". Corvallis Gazette-Times.
  88. ^ a b c O'Shaughnessy, Patrice (June 16, 2003). "Chinatown Bus War Fuels Probe: Slain businessman tied to mob, cops say". New York Daily News.
  89. ^ Schliefer, Theodore (August 8, 2013). "Bus travel is picking up, aided by discount operators". The Philadelphia Inquirer.
  90. ^ Lentzsch, Craig (March–April 2003). "Making the Connections" (PDF). TR News. No. 225. Transportation Research Board. p. 32.
  91. ^ "Greyhound: 100 years old and acting younger than ever". The Washington Post. July 3, 2014.
  92. ^ Kenworthy, Tom (July 19, 2004). "Some left in lurch as Greyhound cuts stops". USA Today.
  93. ^ Sanders, Eli (September 6, 2004). "As Greyhound Cuts Back, The Middle of Nowhere Means Going Nowhere". The New York Times.
  94. ^ Bucsko, Mike; Lash, Cindi (November 13, 2005). "The Greyhound doesn't stop here anymore". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  95. ^ Lambert, Emily (January 31, 2005). "Doghouse on Wheels". Forbes. from the original on August 22, 2016.
  96. ^ "LAIDLAW INTERNATIONAL ANNOUNCES AGREEMENT TO BE ACQUIRED BY FIRSTGROUP" (Press release). U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. February 9, 2007.
  97. ^ Harrison, Pete (February 8, 2007). "FirstGroup to buy Greyhound bus firm". Reuters.
  98. ^ "FirstGroup completes Laidlaw acquisition". Metro Magazine. October 3, 2007.
  99. ^ "FirstGroup completes Laidlaw acquisition". American City Business Journals. October 1, 2007.
  100. ^ "Greyhound Gets A Makeover". CBS News. Associated Press. November 12, 2007.
  101. ^ EDWARDS, BRUCE (March 29, 2008). "Greyhound puts brakes on Vermont Transit". Rutland Herald.
  102. ^ Hamilton, Anita (June 6, 2008). "Beating $4 Gas with a $1 Bus". Time.
  103. ^ Vacaro, Adam (August 29, 2017). "Greyhound, Peter Pan will split up and be rivals again". The Boston Globe.
  104. ^ Sokolowsky, Jennifer (April 30, 2012). "BoltBus to offer $1 fares between Seattle, Portland". American City Business Journals.
  105. ^ Nolasco, Joanna (May 15, 2012). "BoltBus to launch new Seattle-Vancouver, B.C., service". American City Business Journals.
  106. ^ "BoltBus To Launch Service in California on Oct. 31" (Press release). PR Newswire. October 15, 2013.
  107. ^ "BoltBus Expands From Los Angeles; Adds Las Vegas, San Francisco Service" (Press release). PR Newswire. December 10, 2013.
  108. ^ "Greyhound Applauds National Highway Traffic Safety Administration for Requiring Seat Belts on all New Motorcoaches Starting in 2016" (Press release). PR Newswire. November 20, 2013. from the original on October 19, 2015.
  109. ^ Austen, Ben (April 7, 2011). "The Megabus Effect". Bloomberg Businessweek.
  110. ^ Brock, Katherine Cromer (October 18, 2012). "Greyhound Express adds cities to Houston route". American City Business Journals.
  111. ^ "Greyhound Marks One-Year Anniversary Of Greyhound Express with Service Expansion To Florida" (Press release). PR Newswire. January 4, 2012.
  112. ^ Hemlock, Doreen (April 11, 2012). "Inter-city bus travel rises in South Florida, with Greyhound Express, RedCoach and other services". Sun Sentinel.
  113. ^ "Greyhound Express adds Miami, Fort Lauderdale". American City Business Journals. January 4, 2012.
  114. ^ "Greyhound's Express service adds Midwest, Southeast routes". Metro Magazine. September 26, 2013.
  115. ^ Erskine, Chris (June 17, 2012). "Greyhound Express: new spin on an old-fashioned ride". Los Angeles Times.
  116. ^ McManis, Sam (November 10, 2013). "Long-distance buses are cheap and surprisingly attractive options for travel". The Sacramento Bee.
  117. ^ Prabu, Karthick (February 22, 2013). "New TSA Pre-check airports, Greyhound goes Big Brother and more travel tech news". Phocuswire.
  118. ^ Jones, Charisse (July 13, 2014). "Greyhound remakes itself for a new generation". USA Today.
  119. ^ Tuttle, Brad (June 10, 2014). "More Millennials Leave the Driving to a 100-Year-Old Bus Company". Money.
  120. ^ PRISCO, JOANNA (July 28, 2014). "Greyhound Bus Fleet Revamps, But Can a 100-Year-Old Dog Learn New Tricks?". ABC News.
  121. ^ Stone, Zara (March 16, 2019). "What To Do When Greyhound Cancels Your Bus". Forbes.
  122. ^ "Travel Briefs: Greyhound reserved seat upgrade for $5". Daily Journal. October 16, 2013.
  123. ^ "Greyhound Modernizes IT Infrastructure to Provide More Pricing Options for Consumers and Optimize Operations" (Press release). PR Newswire. December 9, 2014.
  124. ^ Schwieterman, Joseph P.; Antolin, Brian; Scott, Gary; Sellers, Martin (January 12, 2015). "Adding on Amenities, Broadening the Base: 2014 Year-in-Review of Intercity Bus Service in the United States" (PDF). DePaul University Chaddick Institute for Metropolitan Development. p. 3.
  125. ^ "Greyhound starting to get its stride back". The Dallas Morning News. June 7, 2014.
  126. ^ "Greyhound Connect". Northern Public Radio. June 4, 2015.
  127. ^ "Greyhound to add Mo. to Iowa round trip service". Metro Magazine. March 26, 2013.
  128. ^ Forgione, Mary (July 16, 2015). "Greyhound starts bus service in Mexico, with connecting routes to Texas". Los Angeles Times.
  129. ^ Hudnall, David (September 24, 2015). "Greyhound to expand Kansas City and Columbia services in light of Megabus' departure". The Pitch.
  130. ^ a b "Greyhound Lucky Streak". Greyhound Lines.
  131. ^ Johnson, Gene (February 21, 2020). "Greyhound to stop allowing immigration checks on buses". Associated Press.
  132. ^ "Greyhound bars immigration sweeps". Axios. February 22, 2020.
  133. ^ Aripaka, Pushkala (December 31, 2020). "Transport firm FirstGroup sells three Greyhound facilities for $137 million". Reuters.
  134. ^ Bourke, Joanna (December 31, 2020). "FirstGroup agrees three property disposals from Greyhound division". The Evening Standard.
  135. ^ "FirstGroup sells Greyhound bus facilities for £100m". BBC News. December 31, 2020.
  136. ^ Rodriguez, James (December 28, 2020). "Greyhound Station block in downtown Denver sold to joint venture". American City Business Journals.
  137. ^ GOUNLEY, THOMAS (January 22, 2021). "Fresh off $38M sale, Greyhound looks to unload its other big site in Denver". The Denver Post.
  138. ^ Evans, Pete (May 13, 2021). "Greyhound Canada shutting down all bus service permanently". CBC News.
  139. ^ RAMEY, JAY (May 14, 2021). "Greyhound Shuts Down Permanently in Canada". Autoweek.
  140. ^ Singh, Simran (November 18, 2021). "Fleet of Greyhound buses up for sale after company shut down all Canadian operations permanently". Toronto Star.
  141. ^ Kiley, Brendan (July 1, 2021). "RIP, BoltBus — the affordable, trendy bus company has discontinued service; Greyhound will take over its routes". The Seattle Times.
  142. ^ Wilkinson, Joseph (July 1, 2021). "Discount bus brand BoltBus indefinitely suspended, Greyhound taking over routes". New York Daily News.
  143. ^ Lukpat, Alyssa (July 3, 2021). "BoltBus, Favorite of Frugal Riders, Suspends Service Indefinitely". The New York Times.
  144. ^ Ferenchik, Mark (July 21, 2021). "COTA to buy Downtown Greyhound station for $9.5 million for redevelopment, transit center". The Columbus Dispatch.
  145. ^ Ghose, Carrie (July 21, 2021). "COTA buying downtown Greyhound terminal, seeks redevelopment with 'character and vibrancy'". American City Business Journals.
  146. ^ Green, Marcus (November 11, 2021). "Louisville apartment company buys downtown Greyhound station". WDRB.
  147. ^ Monk, Dan (November 1, 2021). "Greyhound bus terminal sold as company hunts for new service location". WCPO-TV.
  148. ^ "Greyhound Will Pay $2.2 Million To End A Lawsuit Over Warrantless Immigration Sweeps". NPR. Associated Press. September 27, 2021.
  149. ^ Levenson, Michael (September 29, 2021). "Greyhound Agrees to Pay $2.2 Million Over Immigration Sweeps on Buses". The New York Times.
  150. ^ Martyn, Amy (June 28, 2018). "Some passengers learn too late that Greyhound gives easy access to law enforcement". ConsumerAffairs.
  151. ^ "FlixMobility acquires Greyhound to Expand U.S. Intercity Bus Services" (Press release). Flixbus. October 21, 2021.
  152. ^ Lunden, Ingrid (October 21, 2021). "Germany's FlixMobility acquires Greyhound Lines, the iconic". TechCrunch.
  153. ^ "Germany's Flixbus acquires US Greyhound bus company". Deutsche Welle. October 21, 2021.
  154. ^ Shabong, Yadarisa (October 21, 2021). "FlixBus owner hitches ride with Greyhound as FirstGroup exits". Reuters.
  155. ^ O'Donnell, Paul; Walters, Natalie (October 21, 2021). "Dallas-based Greyhound sells to Europe's largest long-distance bus network". The Dallas Morning News.
  156. ^ "FirstGroup Sells Remaining Legacy Greyhound Property Portfolio For Around $140 Mln" (Press release). RTTNews. September 20, 2022.
  157. ^ Goriainoff, Anthony O. (September 20, 2022). "FirstGroup to Sell Most Legacy Greyhound Property Portfolio for $140 Mln". MarketWatch.
  158. ^ Gately, Paul J. (August 3, 2017). "Bus crash 65-years-ago between Waco and Temple was burning hell". KWTX-TV.
  159. ^ RYAN, TERRI JO (August 17, 2013). "Military men who survived a 1952 bus crash crawled through 'hell' to save lives". Waco Tribune-Herald.
  160. ^ "GREYHOUND BUS/MALONE FREIGHT LINE, INC. TRUCK COLLISION" (PDF). National Transportation Safety Board. May 13, 1972.
  161. ^ Hartwood, John (May 10, 1980). "Greyhound, Autos Drop Into Tampa Bay". The Washington Post.
  162. ^ "7 Killed in Collision Of a Greyhound Bus And Trucks in Utah". The New York Times. Associated Press. December 19, 1990.
  163. ^ "National Transportation Safety Board. 2000. Greyhound Motorcoach Run-off-the-Road Accident, Burnt Cabins, Pennsylvania, June 20, 1998". National Transportation Safety Board. January 5, 2000.
  164. ^ Rimer, Sara; Sack, Kevin (October 4, 2001). "6 Killed in Greyhound Crash in Tennessee After Passenger Slits Driver's Throat". The New York Times.
  165. ^ Slevin, Peter; Pressley, Sue Anne (October 4, 2001). "6 Die in Greyhound Bus Crash After Attack on Driver". The Washington Post.
  166. ^ "Knife attack on California bus". BBC News. October 1, 2002.
  167. ^ Murphy, Dean E. (October 2, 2002). "Man Charged in Attack on Driver That Crashed Bus and Killed 2". The New York Times.
  168. ^ "Plastic half-door separates passengers from driver on Greyhound". Arkansas Democrat-Gazette. Associated Press. July 10, 2007.
  169. ^ TANG, TERRY; DAVENPORT, PAUL (January 23, 2014). "Police: 24 hurt after passenger attacks bus driver". Deseret Digital Media. Associated Press.
  170. ^ "GREYHOUND BUS DEPARTS FROM LA, CRASHES IN SAN JOSE; 2 DEAD, 8 HOSPITALIZED". ABC News. January 19, 2016.
  171. ^ "National Transportation Safety Board. 2017. Motorcoach Collision With Crash Attenuator in Gore Area, US Highway 101, San Jose, California, January 19, 2016" (PDF). National Transportation Safety Board. March 28, 2017.
  172. ^ Mitchell, Madeline; Tucker, Randy (July 13, 2018). "Colombian ultimate Frisbee players headed to Cincinnati were kicked off Greyhound for speaking Spanish. Greyhound says otherwise". The Cincinnati Enquirer.
  173. ^ Powers, Martine (August 31, 2018). "'It's an 80,000-pound projectile': Death toll upped to 8 in head-on collision between tractor-trailer and Greyhound bus". The Washington Post.
  174. ^ James, Michael (August 31, 2018). "8 dead, dozens injured after Greyhound bus and truck collide in New Mexico". USA Today.
  175. ^ Chan, Stella (February 3, 2020). "Passengers disarmed gunman in Greyhound bus shooting that left 1 dead, 5 wounded". CNN.
  176. ^ Yuhas, Alan (February 3, 2020). "1 Dead and 5 Injured After Shooting on Greyhound Bus in California". The New York Times.
  177. ^ "Naked man arrested after allegedly opening fire on bus". The Associated Press. February 3, 2022. Retrieved February 5, 2022.
  178. ^ Lenthang, Marlene; Chirbas, Kurt (February 3, 2022). "One dead, four wounded in Greyhound bus shooting in California". NBC News. Retrieved February 5, 2022.
  179. ^ a b c d e "Greyhound buses: in song and on screen". The Guardian. August 19, 2009.
  180. ^ "Best of the Best: the 20 best Oscar winning films ever (and the 10 worst)". The Times. February 23, 2013.
  181. ^ Romanowski, William D. (July 28, 2017). Risky Business: Rock in Film. Routledge. ISBN 9781351492843.
  182. ^ Hicks, Chris (February 8, 1991). "Film review: Sleeping With the Enemy". Deseret News.
  183. ^ Lamberson, Carolyn (December 12, 2018). "'Smoke Signals,' filmed in Spokane and written by Sherman Alexie, named by Library of Congress to National Film Registry". The Spokesman-Review.
  184. ^ "Life (I) (1999) Filming & Production". IMDb.
  185. ^ "1964 New York World's Fair 1965 - Artifacts - World's Fair Legacies - Page Five". 1964 New York World's Fair.
  186. ^ "Greyhound Announces "Next Stop: Tomorrowland" Sweepstakes And Promotion" (Press release). PR Newswire. April 29, 2015.
  187. ^ "Greyhound Bus In Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers (2022)". Retrieved May 22, 2022.
  188. ^ "The Dinning Sisters – Love On A Greyhound Bus / The Iggidy Song". Discogs.
  189. ^ "On Broadway". Genius.com.
  190. ^ Webb, Robert (October 3, 2003). "Story Of The Song: Promised Land, Chuck Berry (1964)". The Independent.
  191. ^ "Promised Land". Genius.com.
  192. ^ "Lodi by Creedence Clearwater Revival". Songfacts.
  193. ^ "Thank God and Greyhound". Genius.com.
  194. ^ "Greyhound". Genius.com.
  195. ^ "Ramblin' Man by The Allman Brothers Band". Songfacts.
  196. ^ "Lonesome On'ry and Mean". Genius.com.
  197. ^ "Once Bitten Twice Shy". Genius.com.
  198. ^ "Readers suggest the 10 best ... Greyhound bus moments". The Guardian. May 9, 2014.
  199. ^ "An Old Greyhound". Shazam.
  200. ^ "Wild Flowers In A Mason Jar". Genius.com.
  201. ^ "Me and the Devil Blues (Take 1)". Genius.com.
  202. ^ "Greyhound Bus". Shazam.
  203. ^ "Pirate Flag by Kenny Chesney". Songfacts.
  204. ^ "I Wish by Skee-Lo". Songfacts.
  205. ^ "Leaving Normal". Genius.com.
  206. ^ "Leaving Town (acoustic)". Genius.com.
  207. ^ Greyhound Bus, retrieved November 5, 2022
  208. ^ "Backseat Of A Greyhound Bus". Genius.com.
  209. ^ "Heads Carolina, Tails California". lyrics.com.
  210. ^ "Ween – Chocolate Town". Genius.com.
  211. ^ "Soul Meets Body by Death Cab for Cutie". Songfacts.
  212. ^ Kimya Dawson – My Rollercoaster, retrieved November 6, 2022
  213. ^ Michael Jackson - Hollywood Tonight (Official Video). Archived from the original on December 12, 2021 – via YouTube.
  214. ^ "Another Day of Sun". Genius.com.
  215. ^ Calpurnia - Greyhound (Official Video). Archived from the original on December 12, 2021 – via YouTube.
  216. ^ "Blues for My Baby and Me". Genius.com.
  217. ^ "Greyhounds". Genius.com.
  218. ^ "EarthBound for Wii U". Nintendo of America. July 18, 2013.
  219. ^ Thomas, Helen (March 6, 2014). "Doris Betts, a Greyhound Bus, and an Academy Award". University of North Carolina.
  220. ^ Library, Mobile (March 23, 2018). Jack Reacher Reading Order: The Complete Lee Child's Reading List Of Jack Reacher Series. ISBN 9788827594018.

Further reading

External links

  • Greyhound Lines home page
  • "Northland Greyhound Lines" (at Bluehounds and Redhounds), including the early history of The Greyhound Corporation
  • Bluehounds and Redhounds, the history of Greyhound and Trailways
  • "Greyhound Lines after WW2" (at Bluehounds and Redhounds)
  • Greyhound Canada
  • Greyhound Mexico
  • Current Greyhound Lines timetables
  • Greyhound listing of both current and archived schedule changes, updated map of Greyhound routes, and current and archived timetables, along with contact info
  • Greyhound Bus Museum, in Hibbing, Minnesota

greyhound, lines, this, article, about, line, greyhound, lines, other, countries, greyhound, disambiguation, greyhound, operates, largest, intercity, service, north, america, services, include, greyhound, mexico, charter, services, amtrak, thruway, services, g. This article is about the US bus line For Greyhound bus lines in other countries see Greyhound disambiguation Greyhound Lines Inc Greyhound operates the largest intercity bus service in North America Services include Greyhound Mexico charter bus services and Amtrak Thruway services Greyhound operates 1 700 coach buses produced mainly by Motor Coach Industries and Prevost serving 230 stations and 1 700 destinations 2 4 The company s first route began in Hibbing Minnesota in 1914 and the company adopted the Greyhound name in 1929 The company is owned by Flix North America Inc an affiliate of Flixbus and is based in Downtown Dallas Greyhound Lines Inc A Prevost X3 45 operated by Greyhound in New York City August 2009ParentFlixbusFounded1914 109 years ago 1914 by Carl Wickman in Hibbing Minnesota United StatesHeadquarters350 North Saint Paul StreetDallas Texas United StatesService areaUnited States MexicoService typeIntercity coach serviceRoutes123 routes 1 includes Greyhound Express routes Stations230 company operated 2 Fleet1 700 motorcoaches 3 mostly Motor Coach Industries 102DL3 G4500 D4505 and Prevost Car X3 45Fuel typeDieselChief executiveDavid Leach President and CEO Websitegreyhound wbr com Contents 1 History 1 1 1914 1930 early years 1 2 1930 1945 1 3 1945 1983 expansion desegregation and diversification 1 4 1983 2001 consolidation strikes and bankruptcies 1 4 1 1983 Greyhound drivers strike 1 4 2 1986 1990 spin off merger and first bankruptcy 1 4 3 1990 Greyhound drivers strike 1 4 4 Early 1990s bankruptcy and antitrust cases 1 4 5 2001 trailways Laidlaw mergers and bankruptcy 1 5 2002 2007 Laidlaw ownership 1 6 2007 2021 FirstGroup ownership 1 7 2021 present FlixMobility 2 Notable incidents and accidents 3 In popular culture 3 1 Films 3 2 Songs 3 3 Other 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory Edit1914 1930 early years Edit An Eastern Greyhound Lines coach depicted at a stop in Conneaut Ohio c 1930 1936 stock certificate 0000 specimen In 1914 Eric Wickman a 27 year old Swedish immigrant was laid off from his job as a drill operator at a mine in Alice Minnesota He became a Hupmobile salesman in Hibbing Minnesota and when he could not sell the first seven passenger Hupmobile that he received he began using it along with fellow Swedish immigrant Andy Bus Andy Anderson and C A A Arvid Heed to transport iron ore miners two miles from Hibbing to Alice for 15 cents per ride 5 6 7 8 Wickman made 2 25 on his first run 5 Wickman almost gave up after the first winter due to the harsh driving conditions in Minnesota However he agreed to continue on by reducing his driving duties 9 In 1915 he added a 15 mile route to Nashwauk Minnesota 9 In December 1915 Wickman merged his company with that of 19 year old Ralph Bogan who was running a similar transportation service from Hibbing to Duluth Minnesota to form the Mesaba Transportation Company 7 By 1918 the company had 18 vehicles and annual income of 40 000 9 In 1922 Wickman and Heed sold their interests in the company to Bogan and Anderson Wickman and Heed then moved to Duluth and acquired White Bus Lines In 1924 Wickman formed Northland which acquired the Superior White Company its founder Orville S Caesar who had strong business acumen mechanical skills and ambition eventually became president of the company In 1925 the company completed the 2 5 million acquisition of eight independent bus lines in Minnesota In 1928 Anderson and Bogan disbanded and sold most of the routes of the Mesaba Transportation Company to Northland 7 The company continued to expand and in 1928 it had income of 6 million and was offering trips all over the United States In 1929 the company acquired the Yelloway Pioneer System which in 1928 made the first transcontinental bus trip 7 10 and The Pickwick Corporation 7 In 1929 the company acquired additional interests in Gray Line Worldwide and part of the Colonial Motor Coach Company to form Eastern Greyhound Lines 7 It also acquired an interest in Northland Transportation Company and renamed it Northland Greyhound Lines 7 1930 1945 Edit A preserved Streamline Moderne 1939 Greyhound depot in Columbia South Carolina 1986 photo Front view of a Greyhound Lines Super Coach in Maryland 1938 photo side view By 1930 more than 100 bus lines had been consolidated into the parent company then called Motor Transit Corporation Recognizing the need for a more memorable name the partners of the Motor Transit Corporation changed its name to The Greyhound Corporation after the Greyhound name used by earlier bus lines According to company lore that name came from a driver Ed Stone who was reminded of a greyhound when he saw a passing bus in a reflection 11 12 Also in 1930 the company moved from Duluth Minnesota to Chicago Illinois 13 The business suffered during the Great Depression and by 1931 was over 1 million in debt As the 1930s progressed and the economy improved Greyhound began to prosper again 9 In 1934 intercity bus lines of which Greyhound was the largest carried approximately 400 million passengers nearly as many passengers as the Class I railroads The film It Happened One Night 1934 about an heiress Claudette Colbert traveling by Greyhound bus with a reporter Clark Gable 14 has been credited by the company for spurring bus travel nationwide 15 In 1935 national intercity bus ridership climbed 50 to 651 999 000 passengers surpassing the volume of passengers carried by the Class I railroads for the first time 16 In 1935 Wickman reported record profits of 8 million In 1936 already the largest bus carrier in the United States Greyhound began taking delivery of 306 new buses 16 In 1941 the company acquired Greyhound Canada 15 Between 1937 and 1945 Greyhound built many new stations and acquired new buses in the period in the late Art Deco style known as Streamline Moderne 17 18 For terminals Greyhound retained architects including William Strudwick Arrasmith and George D Brown 19 Notable examples of Streamline Moderne stations include the Blytheville Greyhound Bus Station Cleveland Ohio Greyhound Bus Station Columbia South Carolina Greyhound Bus Station and Old Washington D C Greyhound Bus StationGreyhound worked with the Yellow Coach Manufacturing Company for its streamlined Series 700 buses first for Series 719 prototypes in 1934 and from 1937 as the exclusive customer for Yellow s Series 743 bus which Greyhound named the Super Coach Greyhound bought a total of 1 256 buses between 1937 and 1939 20 By the beginning of World War II the company had 4 750 stations and nearly 10 000 employees 21 1945 1983 expansion desegregation and diversification Edit A Greyhound GMC PD 3751 Silversides in the 1950s livery Wickman retired as president of the Greyhound Corporation in 1946 and was replaced by his long time partner Orville S Caesar 9 Wickman died at the age of 66 in 1954 22 1954 GM Scenicruiser designed by Raymond Loewy and manufactured exclusively for Greyhound Greyhound commissioned industrial designer Raymond Loewy and General Motors to design several distinctive buses from the 1930s through the 1950s 23 24 25 Loewy s first was the Yellow Coach PDG 4101 the Greyhound Silversides produced in 1940 1941 Production was suspended during World War II When the Silversides buses resumed production in 1947 it was renamed GM PD 3751 PD 3751 production continued through 1948 26 In 1954 the first of Greyhound s distinctive hump backed buses was introduced In 1944 Loewy had produced drawings for the GM GX 1 a full double decker parlor bus with the first prototype built in 1953 27 The PD 4501 Scenicruiser was designed Loewy and built by General Motors as model PD 4501 The front of the bus was markedly lower than its rear section 28 After World War II and the building of the Interstate Highway System beginning in 1956 automobile travel became a preferred mode of travel in the United States 13 This combined with the increasing affordability of air travel led to a decline in business for Greyhound and other intercity bus carriers 13 In October 1953 Greyhound acquired the Tennessee Coach Company s entire operation and the negotiations for the Blue Ridge Lines and its affiliate White Star Lines that operated between Cleveland and the Mid Atlantic Seaboard 29 In 1955 the Interstate Commerce Commission ruled in the case of Keys v Carolina Coach Co that U S interstate bus operations such as Greyhound s could not be segregated by race 30 In 1960 in the case of Boynton v Virginia the U S Supreme Court found that an African American had been wrongfully convicted for trespassing in a whites only terminal area 31 In May 1961 Civil Rights Movement activists organized interracial Freedom Rides as proof of the desegregation rulings On May 14 a mob attacked a pair of buses a Greyhound and a Trailways traveling from Washington D C to New Orleans Louisiana and slashed the Greyhound bus s tires 32 Several miles outside of Anniston Alabama the mob forced the Greyhound bus to stop broke its windows and firebombed it 33 The mob held the bus doors shut intending to burn the riders to death Sources disagree but either an exploding fuel tank 33 or an undercover state investigator brandishing a revolver 34 caused the mob to retreat When the riders escaped the bus the mob beat them while warning shots fired into the air by highway patrolmen prevented them from being lynched 33 Additional Freedom Riders were beaten by a mob at the Greyhound Station in Montgomery Alabama A GMC PD 4106 ready for boarding in Salem Oregon for a trip north to Seattle on the then new Interstate 5 in the fall of 1965 The Civil Rights Act of 1964 s Title II and Title III broadened protections beyond federally regulated carriers such as Greyhound to include non discrimination in hotels restaurants and other public accommodations as well as state and local government buildings 35 Later in the 1960s Greyhound leadership ridership declined and Greyhound used the profitable bus operations to invest in other industries 13 In 1966 Gerald H Trautman became president and CEO of the company 36 37 In 1970 the company acquired Armour and Company meat packing company which owned the Dial deodorant soap brand for 400 million 36 In 1971 Greyhound moved its headquarters to Phoenix Arizona 36 The company also acquired Traveller s Express money orders MCI and TMC bus manufacturing companies 38 and airliner leasing Greyhound began to hire African American and female drivers in the late 1970s 39 Greyhound bus ticket from August 1975 In 1972 Greyhound introduced the unlimited mileage Ameripass The pass was initially marketed as offering 99 days for 99 or transportation to anywhere at any time for a dollar a day For decades it was a popular choice for people traveling across the U S on a budget 40 Over time Greyhound raised the price of the pass shortened its validity period and rebranded it as the Discovery Pass before discontinuing it in 2012 40 Greyhound acquired Premier Cruise Line in 1984 41 Between 1985 and 1993 Premier operated as the Official Cruise Line of Walt Disney World with onboard Disney characters 42 1983 2001 consolidation strikes and bankruptcies Edit 1983 Greyhound drivers strike Edit In 1983 Greyhound operated a fleet of 3 800 buses and carried about 60 of the intercity bus travel market in the United States 43 Starting November 2 1983 Greyhound suffered a major and bitter drivers strike action 44 45 A fatality occurred in Zanesville Ohio when a replacement driver ran over a striking worker at a picket line 46 47 A new contract was ratified on December 19 1983 and drivers returned to work the next day 48 1986 1990 spin off merger and first bankruptcy Edit In early 1987 the bus line was acquired by an investor group led by Fred Currey a former executive of rival Continental Trailways who became CEO of Greyhound and relocated its headquarters to Dallas Texas 49 In February 1987 Greyhound Lines new ownership and the Amalgamated Transit Union ATU agreed on a new 3 year contract 50 In June 1987 Greyhound Lines acquired Trailways Inc formerly Continental Trailways the largest member of the rival Trailways Transportation System effectively consolidating into a national bus service Greyhound was required by the Interstate Commerce Commission to maintain coordinated schedules with other scheduled service operators in the U S 51 52 Between 1987 and 1990 Greyhound Lines former parent continued to be called The Greyhound Corporation confusing passengers and investors alike The Greyhound Corporation retained Premier Cruise Lines and ten non bus subsidiaries using the Greyhound name such as Greyhound Leisure Services Inc an operator of airport and cruise ship duty free shops and Greyhound Exhibits In March 1990 The Greyhound Corporation changed its name to Greyhound Dial Corporation 53 Because Greyhound Dial s switchboard continued to get questions from misdirected bus passengers it changed its name to The Dial Corporation in March 1991 to eliminate any association with bus travel 54 1990 Greyhound drivers strike Edit In early 1990 the drivers contract from 1987 expired at the end of its three year term In March the ATU began a strike action against Greyhound The 1990 drivers strike was similar in its bitterness to the strike of 1983 with violence against both strikers and their replacement workers One striker in California was killed by a Greyhound bus driven by a strikebreaker and a shot was fired at a Greyhound bus 55 While Greyhound CEO Fred Currey argued that no American worth his salt negotiates with terrorists ATU leader Edward M Strait responded that management s failure to negotiate amounted to putting the negotiations back into the hands of terrorists 56 During the strike by its 6 300 drivers Greyhound idled much of its fleet of 3 949 buses and cancelled 80 of its routes 57 At the same time Greyhound was having to contend with the rise of low cost airlines such as Southwest Airlines which further reduced the market for long distance inter city bus transportation Without the financial strength provided in the past by a parent company the strike s lower revenues and higher costs for security and labor law penalties caused Greyhound to file for bankruptcy in June 1990 58 59 60 61 62 The strike was not settled until May 1993 38 months later under terms favorable to Greyhound While the National Labor Relations Board NLRB had awarded damages for unfair labor practices to the strikers this liability was discharged during bankruptcy reorganization Greyhound agreed to pay 22 million in back wages to union drivers recall 550 of the remaining strikers reinstate most of the 200 strikers who were fired for alleged misconduct and increase hourly pay for drivers to 16 55 from 13 83 by March 1998 63 64 65 Early 1990s bankruptcy and antitrust cases Edit In August 1991 Greyhound emerged from bankruptcy by which time it had shrunk its overall workforce to 7 900 employees from 12 000 pre bankruptcy and trimmed its fleet to 2 750 buses and 3 600 drivers 66 67 68 69 70 In August 1992 Greyhound canceled its bus terminal license BTL agreements with other carriers at 200 terminals and imposed the requirement that Greyhound be the sole seller of the tenant s bus tickets within a 25 mile radius of such a Greyhound terminal 71 In 1995 the United States Department of Justice Antitrust Division brought suit to stop this practice alleging that it was an illegal restraint of trade bad for consumers and reduced competition 71 In February 1996 the DOJ won its case and Greyhound agreed to permit its tenants to sell tickets nearby and permit its tenants to honor interline tickets with competitors 72 Greyhound s total revenues in 1994 were 616 million 71 At that time the company was offering 10 fares due to competition 73 In September 1998 Greyhound promised to make accommodations for disabled passengers including equipping most buses with wheelchair lifts 74 75 2001 trailways Laidlaw mergers and bankruptcy Edit Greyhound MCI MC 12 Americruiser number 2119 in Fremont Indiana headed for Cleveland Ohio in August 2003 In the late 1990s Greyhound Lines acquired two more members of the National Trailways Bus System The company purchased Carolina Trailways in 1997 76 followed by the intercity operations of Southeastern Trailways in 1998 77 Following the acquisitions most of the remaining members of the Trailways System began interlining cooperatively with Greyhound discontinued their scheduled route services diversified into charters and tours or went out of business altogether On September 3 1997 Burlington Ontario based transportation conglomerate Laidlaw announced it would buy Greyhound Canada Greyhound s Canadian operations for US 72 million 78 In October 1998 Laidlaw announced it would acquire the U S operations of Greyhound Lines Inc including Carolina Trailways and other Greyhound affiliates for about 470 million 79 80 81 The acquisition was completed in March 1999 82 In June 2001 after incurring heavy losses through its investments in Greyhound Lines and other parts of its diversified business Laidlaw filed for bankruptcy protection in both the U S and Canada 83 84 85 2002 2007 Laidlaw ownership Edit A Greyhound MCI G4500 in the early 2000s livery in Atlantic City New Jersey Naperville Illinois based Laidlaw International Inc listed its common shares on the New York Stock Exchange on February 10 2003 and emerged from re organization on June 23 2003 as the successor to Laidlaw Inc 86 87 By 2003 Greyhound faced significant competition in the northeast from Chinatown bus lines 88 More than 250 buses operated by competitors such as Fung Wah Bus Transportation and Lucky Star Bus were competing fiercely from curbsides in the Chinatowns of New York City Boston Philadelphia and Washington D C 88 When operating on inter city routes the Chinatown buses offered prices about 50 less than Greyhound s 88 Between 1997 and 2007 Chinatown buses took 60 of Greyhound s market share in the northeast United States 89 In 2003 Greyhound expanded its QuickLink service Greyhound s brand of commuter bus service that runs frequently during the peak weekday commuting hours 90 Routes were operated from Sacramento California to the San Francisco Bay Area and Macon Georgia to Atlanta 91 In 2004 Greyhound dropped low demand rural stops and started concentrating on dense inter metropolitan routes It cut nearly 37 of its network 92 In some rural areas particularly in the Plains states parts of the upper Midwest such as Wisconsin and the Pacific Northwest local operators took over the old stops often with government subsidies 93 94 95 96 2007 2021 FirstGroup ownership Edit Inside a Greyhound bus station in Nashville Tennessee on the morning of May 24 2010 Greyhound buses at the Portland Oregon station Inside the Greyhound station in St Louis Missouri on the afternoon of May 26 2010 A bus in the background on its way to pick up passengers at another gate at this station is bound for Los Angeles California Interior of a 2009 Prevost X3 45 with leather seats On February 7 2007 British transport group FirstGroup announced the acquisition of Laidlaw International for 3 6 billion which closed on October 1 2007 97 98 99 100 Almost immediately after acquiring the carrier FirstGroup sought to improve Greyhound s image by refurbishing many terminals expanding the fleet with new buses refurbishing old buses and retraining customer service staff Greyhound also started a new advertising campaign with Butler Shine Stern amp Partners aimed at attracting 18 to 24 year olds and Hispanics 101 Although FirstGroup s interest was primarily the school and transit bus operations of Laidlaw FirstGroup retained the Greyhound operations and in 2009 exported the brand back to the United Kingdom as Greyhound UK unrelated to bus operator Greyhound Motors which operated from 1921 to 1972 In 2008 Greyhound s three regional bus operations Carolina Trailways based in Raleigh N C Vermont Transit Lines of Burlington Vermont and Texas New Mexico amp Oklahoma Coaches of Lubbock Texas T N M amp O were consolidated into Greyhound Lines 102 On March 27 2008 Greyhound launched service under the BoltBus brand 103 The first buses started running between Boston New York City and Washington D C In the Northeastern U S BoltBus was originally operated in partnership with Peter Pan Bus Lines but this arrangement ended on September 27 2017 with Greyhound continuing the brand alone 104 BoltBus expanded to the West Coast in May 2012 with a route in the Pacific Northwest between Vancouver BC Seattle and Portland 105 106 Service was expanded again in October 2013 with a route between the two largest metropolitan areas in California Los Angeles and the San Francisco Bay Area San Jose and Oakland 107 A stop in San Francisco was added in December 2013 along with a route between Los Angeles and Las Vegas 108 Beginning in 2009 all buses purchased have three point seat belts installed 109 In 2010 in response to competition from Megabus and Chinatown bus lines the company launched Greyhound Express featuring newer buses and fewer stops 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 In February 2013 in partnership with DriveCam Greyhound deployed video cameras across its entire fleet to increase safety and driver compliance by combining data and video analytics with real time driver feedback and coaching 118 As of 2014 Greyhound s 1 229 buses served over 3 800 destinations in North America traveling 5 5 billion miles 8 8 billion km on North America s roads 13 In 2014 the company introduced a refreshed logo and a new navy blue and dark gray livery for buses Buses were refurbished to add wireless Internet access power outlets and leather seating with increased legroom 119 120 121 Before 2014 Greyhound was criticized for overbooking often leaving passengers to wait for the next bus departure 122 Shortly after the sale to FirstGroup closed Greyhound began a program in select markets where riders could reserve a seat for an additional 5 However only a limited number of seats could be reserved and the fee would have to be paid at the terminal s ticketing counter even if the ticket was bought in advance online 123 In 2014 Greyhound rolled out a new yield management computer system enabling the company to more closely manage the number of tickets sold for each departure and dynamically adjust pricing based on sales 124 Although the amount of overbooked buses has been sharply reduced with this new system Greyhound still does not explicitly guarantee a seat to everyone with a ticket except on Greyhound Express routes 125 In 2014 Greyhound reported a profit of 73 million on revenues of 990 6 million and attributed the company s success to a mix of changing urban populations and a focus on more profitable routes with higher demand 126 In 2013 2015 Greyhound expanded its Greyhound Connect service which operates shorter routes to take passengers from stops in smaller rural cities to stations in larger urban cities 127 Some routes are operated using funds from the Federal Formula Grant Program for Rural Areas from the Federal Transit Administration 128 In July 2015 the company announced that it would open terminals in Monterrey and Nuevo Laredo Mexico and begin service between the two cities and Texas claiming to be the first American bus company to operate an intra Mexican route 129 In September 2015 Greyhound announced expanded service in Missouri and Kansas shortly after Megabus announced that it would be ending service to several cities and college campuses 130 The company s Lucky Streak brand is for routes to from cities with casinos All fares are sold as open ended round trips with passengers allowed to return to their origin at any time 131 On the Atlantic City routes casinos offer special bonuses gambling credit room dining discounts to Lucky Streak passengers 131 Lucky Streak routes serve Atlantic City to from Baltimore Brooklyn New York City Philadelphia and Washington D C Connecticut Mohegan Sun amp Foxwoods Casino to from Boston Bridgeport New Haven New York City Providence and Stamford and Las Vegas to from Anaheim Barstow Claremont Compton El Monte Hollywood Long Beach Los Angeles Phoenix Riverside San Bernardino San Diego Santa Ana and Victorville In February 2020 the company reversed its position regarding unwarranted searches and notified the Department of Homeland Security that it no longer would allow unwarranted searches on its buses in areas of terminals company offices or any area where a person needs a ticket for access 132 133 In December 2020 the company sold the customer terminal facility in Los Angeles as well as facilities in Denver Colorado and Ottawa Canada for a total of 137 million 134 135 136 The facility in Denver was sold for 38 million 137 138 In May 2021 Greyhound Canada shut down all of its bus routes in Canada Greyhound Lines continues to operate four cross border routes that either start or finish in the U S from Toronto Montreal and Vancouver 139 140 the company also placed 38 buses used by its Canada division up for auction 141 In July 2021 BoltBus suspended operations indefinitely and Greyhound took over all routes 142 143 144 In July 2021 the bus station in Columbus Ohio was sold to the Central Ohio Transit Authority for 9 5 million 145 146 In October 2021 the bus station in Downtown Louisville was sold for 2 8 million 147 The bus station in Cincinnati was sold to a real estate company for 4 25 million with plans to convert it to parking 148 In September 2021 the company agreed to pay 2 2 million to settle a lawsuit over its practice of allowing U S Customs and Border Protection agents to board its buses in Washington State to conduct warrantless immigration sweeps 149 150 The company had been criticized for allowing government officials to arrest its customers who were illegally in the country 151 2021 present FlixMobility Edit On October 21 2021 Munich based FlixBus acquired Greyhound for 78 million 152 153 154 155 156 In 2022 FirstGroup sold almost all its remaining Greyhound properties to Twenty Lake Holdings LLC for approximately 140 million 157 158 Notable incidents and accidents Edit Remains of a crashed Greyhound bus after the 1972 Bean Station bus truck collision Below is a list of major incidents and accidents on Greyhound buses and buses of subsidiaries in the United States August 4 1952 in Greyhound s most deadly collision two Greyhound buses were in a head on collision with each other along U S Route 81 near Waco Texas The fuel tanks of both buses then ruptured bursting into flames Of the 56 persons aboard both coaches 28 were killed including both drivers 159 160 May 13 1972 near Bean Station Tennessee between Knoxville and Bristol a Greyhound Scenicruiser on a scheduled trip from Memphis to New York City collided head on with a tractor trailer truck The driver of the bus had begun to pass a car Fourteen people including both the bus and truck drivers died The National Transportation Safety Board determined that the cause of the crash was the Greyhound driver s overtaking maneuver and his failure to avoid the truck 161 May 9 1980 the cargo ship MV Summit Venture collided with the Sunshine Skyway Bridge near St Petersburg Florida causing a part of the roadway to collapse and causing several vehicles including a Greyhound bus to fall into Tampa Bay All 26 people aboard the bus died as did nine others 162 December 18 1990 a Greyhound bus left Salt Lake City for Chicago and was caught in a driving snowstorm on I 80 Just short of the Wyoming border the bus was hit by a semi tractor trailer that had crossed the median heading in the opposite direction The force of the collision tipped the bus onto its right side and it fell down a steep embankment The bus slid for 150 feet and came to rest against a fence about 35 feet below the eastbound lanes of I 80 Seven passengers were killed and more than 40 injured 163 June 20 1998 a Greyhound bus on a scheduled trip from New York City to Pittsburgh ran off a road near Burnt Cabins Pennsylvania and hit a truck parked in an emergency parking area Six passengers and the driver died The National Transportation Safety Board determined that the probable cause of the accident was the driver s use of a sedating antihistamine and driver fatigue due to an irregular work rest schedule 164 October 3 2001 in the 2001 Greyhound bus attack at approximately 4 15 a m local time a passenger Damir Igric assaulted the driver of his bus attempting to slit his throat and causing the bus to crash near Manchester Tennessee killing Igric himself and five other passengers and injuring 32 others Since the incident occurred three weeks after the September 11 terrorist attacks Greyhound temporarily suspended all schedules as soon as the company learned of the incident for fear that it may have been part of a larger coordinated attack After investigation by the company and the FBI it was confirmed that Igric had acted alone and service resumed later that afternoon 165 After the incident Greyhound bus stations increased security though not nearly to the same level as airports or train stations 166 September 30 2002 Arturo Martinez Tapia assaulted a Greyhound driver near Fresno California resulting in two passenger deaths after the bus then rolled off an embankment and crashed 167 168 Following this attack an aisle gate and driver s shield were installed on most Greyhound buses which prevent passengers from having direct contact with the driver when the bus is in motion even if the aisle gate is forced open funded by a 16 million grant from the Transportation Security Administration 169 January 23 2014 Maquel Donyel Morris who was reportedly hallucinating screamed everybody s going to die attacked the driver and grabbed the steering wheel of a bus traveling on Interstate 10 near Tonopah Arizona 50 miles 80 km west of Phoenix 24 passengers were injured including 21 who were airlifted to nearby hospitals Police credited the driver for keeping the bus upright and preventing it from crossing into oncoming traffic 170 January 19 2016 an overnight bus carrying 20 passengers that had departed from Los Angeles the previous night crashed on Highway 101 in San Jose California killing two and hospitalizing eight others 171 The National Transportation Safety Board determined that the probable cause of the crash was the failure of the California Department of Transportation to properly delineate the crash attenuator and the gore area 172 July 12 2018 on a bus traveling from Columbus to Cincinnati Ohio three Colombian athletes on Comunidad el Oso Ultimate club claimed they were thrown off one of the buses for speaking Spanish Greyhound indicated the players had become unruly due to them not being dropped off where they wanted to be dropped off rather than their ticketed destination The driver left them and all their luggage at a gas station The players were traveling to the World Flying Disc Federation s World Ultimate Club Championships They were picked up by the Ohio police soon after and dropped off at their hotel in Cincinnati 173 August 30 2018 a Greyhound bus traveling from St Louis to Los Angeles was involved in a collision with a semi truck on Interstate 40 westbound near Thoreau New Mexico One of the tires on the eastbound truck blew out and caused the driver to lose control and cross the median colliding with the bus Of the 48 onboard 8 passengers including the driver were killed and several more sustained injuries 174 175 February 3 2020 one person was killed and five others were injured when a passenger opened fire on a bus heading from Los Angeles to San Francisco At the time of the shooting the bus was travelling northbound on Interstate 5 near Grapevine California After the shooting the driver pulled to the side of the highway and convinced the shooter to get off the bus The driver then continued down the highway to a gas station to get medical assistance for the injured passengers The suspect still on the side of the highway was later arrested without incident 176 177 February 2 2022 one person was killed and four others were injured when a fellow passenger opened fire on them as they exited a Los Angeles bound bus after it stopped at a convenience store in the city of Oroville California Passengers reported that earlier in the trip the suspect exhibited paranoid behavior and showed the firearm he had in a bag on the bus After the shooting the suspect dropped the gun and ran into a Walmart where he was found naked and arrested after getting into a fight 178 179 In popular culture EditFilms Edit The 1934 film It Happened One Night shows the main character on a Greyhound bus from Florida to New York City 180 The 1961 film Breakfast at Tiffany s shows the main character seeing her ex husband off from New York City 180 The 1969 film Midnight Cowboy shows the main character in the final scene holding his hustler friend on a New York City to Florida bus 180 The 1974 film Harry and Tonto shows the main character played by Art Carney traveling cross country with his cat aboard a Greyhound bus 181 The 1976 fil The Baby Blue Marine includes a sequence in which the title character travels in a late 30s or early 40s Silver Side The 1988 film Cocktail includes the main character and his friends catching up to a Greyhound bus bound for New York City 182 The 1991 film Sleeping with the Enemy sees the main character escape from Cape Cod Massachusetts to Cedar Falls Iowa on a Greyhound bus 183 The 1998 film Smoke Signals includes the main characters traveling from Coeur d Alene Idaho to Phoenix Arizona via a Greyhound bus 184 The 1995 film Boys on the Side shows one of the main characters traveling to Pittsburgh on a Greyhound bus citation needed The 1999 film Life has a scene of one of the main characters at a Greyhound bus station 185 The 2015 film Tomorrowland has several scenes featuring Greyhound including a character traveling to the 1964 New York World s Fair on a historic bus a 1969 GMC a Greyhound Glide a Ride trackless train on the World s Fair midway 186 and the main character traveling on a Greyhound bus in 2015 a MCI 102DL3 from Cape Canaveral Florida to Houston Texas Greyhound also sponsored a sweepstakes tied in with the film wrapped several Greyhound buses with imagery from the film placed promotional items inside terminals and sponsored the film s Los Angeles premier 187 The 2022 film Chip n Dale Rescue Rangers sees one of the main characters on a Greyhound bus going to Los Angeles while another main character chases the bus trying to catch up 188 Songs Edit 1945 song Love on a Greyhound Bus lyrics by Kay Thompson and Ralph Blane and music by George Stoll 189 1956 song Cash on the Barrelhead by The Louvin Brothers The Barry Mann Cynthia Weil 1963 song On Broadway remade most famously by The Drifters and later George Benson mentions I ll catch a Greyhound bus for home 190 Chuck Berry rides a Greyhound bus from Norfolk Virginia to Birmingham Alabama in his 1964 song Promised Land 191 192 Simon and Garfunkel referred to Greyhound Lines in their 1968 song America 180 Creedence Clearwater Revival mention Greyhound in their 1969 song Lodi 193 Country singer Roy Clark sang about a romantic breakup in his 1970 song Thank God and Greyhound 194 Folk singer songwriter Harry Chapin song about taking the Greyhound in his 1972 song Greyhound 195 The Allman Brothers Band referenced Greyhound Lines in their 1973 song Ramblin Man 196 Country singer Waylon Jennings s 1973 song Lonesome On ry and Mean begins with the lyrics On a Greyhound bus Lord I m traveling this morning I m going to Shreveport and on down to New Orleans Been driving these highways Been doing things my way It s been making me lonesome on ry and mean 197 The Ian Hunter 1975 song Once Bitten Twice Shy contains the lyrics You didn t know what Rock n Roll was Until you met a drummer on a Greyhound bus 198 The 1976 song The Killing of Georgie by Rod Stewart states that Georgie leaves home for Manhattan on a Greyhound bus 199 In 1976 country singer Hoyt Axton released the song An Old Greyhound about his tour bus a retired GMC PD 4501 Scenicruiser 200 Billy Joel s New York State of Mind from the Turnstiles album released on May 19 1976 refers to taking a Greyhound on the Hudson River Line 180 John Denver mentions riding a Greyhound bus at the beginning of Wild Flowers In A Mason Jar the Farm a song from the 1981 album Some Days Are Diamonds 201 John Mellencamp in his 1985 song Minutes to Memories starts with the lyric On a Greyhound thirty miles beyond Jamestown In his song Me and the Devil Blues blues singer and guitarist Robert Johnson expresses a wish that his body be buried beside a road so that his old evil spirit can catch a Greyhound bus and ride 202 On indie rock band The Hang Ups album So We Go the last song is called Greyhound Bus 203 American rock band The Mountain Goats references the narrator being headed for the greyhound in See America Right off of the album Tallahassee citation needed Kenny Chesney s song Pirate Flag describes the singer s escape from a small mountain town by taking a Greyhound bus to what is implied to be Key West Florida 204 Los Angeles based rapper Skee Lo recites Greyhound s advertising slogan in his 1995 hit single I Wish Cause if you don t want me around see I go simple I go easy I go Greyhound 205 The Cowboy Junkies 1999 song Leaving Normal contains the lyric Funny how the smell of a Greyhound bus now smells like a fresh start to me and how the sound of the steel belts on the blacktop is now the sound of breaking free 206 Dexter Freebish s 2000 hit Leaving Town mentions Greyhound Take a drag and wait for the Greyhound the world is your playground 207 On The Moldy Peaches eponymous album there is a track titled Greyhound Bus 208 Country star Sara Evans 2003 song Backseat of a Greyhound Bus describes a pregnant woman who escapes the confines of a small town and gives birth in a Greyhound bus 209 Country star Jo Dee Messina s 1996 song Heads Carolina Tails California describes a couple spontaneously traveling to somewhere better mentioning Greyhound during its bridge We re gonna get outta here if we gotta ride a Greyhound bus Boy we re bound to outrun the bad luck that s tailin us 210 Ween s 2003 song Chocolate Town contains the lyric Greyhound bus to chocolate town 211 Death Cab for Cutie s 2005 song Soul Meets Body contains the lyric Cause in my head there s a Greyhound station 212 Kimya Dawson s song My Rollercoaster from her 2006 album Remember That I Love You contains the lyric And before I had a minivan I rode the Greyhound bus My mom would say I hope some day you get paid for being Kimya Dawson 213 Michael Jackson s posthumously published 2011 song Hollywood Tonight contains the lyric West bound Greyhound 214 From the soundtrack of La La Land 2016 the song Another Day of Sun contains the lyric I left him at a Greyhound station west of Santa Fe 215 Calpurnia s 2018 song Greyhound is named after Greyhound Lines 216 Elton John s 1973 song Blues for Baby and Me contains the lyric There s a Greyhound outside in the lane it s waiting for us 217 De La Soul s 2016 album and the Anonymous Nobody contains a song titled Greyhounds In it Posdnuos and Trugoy the Dove each rap a verse where they recount a tale about somebody attempting to discover their way throughout everyday life and taking a greyhound bus to discover it 218 Other Edit The SNES video game EarthBound released in 1995 in North America features a bus resembling a Greyhound bus that is used to travel between destinations 219 The musical Violet like the short story The Ugliest Pilgrim on which it is based follows the title character on a Greyhound Bus trip from Spruce Pine North Carolina to Tulsa Oklahoma and back 220 Monessen High School in Monessen Pennsylvania has a running greyhound mascot based on Greyhound s logo In the Jack Reacher novels by Lee Child Jack Reacher is a regular Greyhound passenger 221 See also EditList of Greyhound Bus stationsFormer operating subsidiariesAtlantic Greyhound Lines Capitol Greyhound Lines Dixie Greyhound Lines Florida Greyhound Lines Great Lakes Greyhound Lines Greyhound Canada Southeastern Greyhound Lines Teche Greyhound LinesMuseums and Preserved StationsFreedom Rides Museum Montgomery Alabama Greyhound Bus Museum Hibbing Minnesota Old Greyhound Bus Station Jackson Mississippi private office Old Greyhound Terminal Washington D C incorporated into building built on site References Edit Greyhound Timetables Greyhound Lines a b Types of stations amp stops Greyhound Lines Our fleet Greyhound Lines FACTS amp FIGURES Greyhound Lines a b Ryan Colin July 28 2016 Truck Trend Legends The History of Greyhound Motor Trend Brown Curt April 2 2015 Minnesota History Greyhound traces its roots to Hibbing Star Tribune a b c d e f g Walsh Margaret 1985 Tracing the Hound The Minnesota Roots of the Greyhound Bus Corporation PDF Minnesota History Minnesota Historical Society Winter 1985 310 321 Greyhound Bus Museum Greyhound Bus Museum Archived from the original on September 21 2013 a b c d e LATIMER CLAY June 23 2013 Carl Wickman Drove Greyhound All The Way To The Top Investor s Business Daily Business amp Finance Yelloway Pioneer Time September 24 1928 Thompson Dave September 1 2010 Bayou Underground Tracing the Mythical Roots of American Popular Music ECW Press ISBN 9781554906826 Era of excellence The History of Greyhound Deloitte 1968 a b c d e BELSKY GARY December 19 2013 100 Years on a Dirty Dog The History of Greyhound Mental Floss Smith Nehme Farran November 17 2014 It Happened One Night All Aboard The Criterion Collection a b Nadkar Tanishaa May 30 2019 Factbox British owner puts long running Greyhound buses up for sale Reuters a b Transport Greyhound s Litter Time August 10 1936 Luther Roger The Greyhound Runs Again First Impressions at a Streamline Bus Station Treasures of the Southern Tier Binghamton Press amp Sun Bulletin Archived from the original on May 22 2013 Wrenick Frank E 2011 Streamline era greyhound terminals the architecture of w s arrasmith McFarland amp Company pp 112 194 ISBN 978 0 7864 6445 6 Wrenick Frank E 2007 The Streamline Era Greyhound Terminals The Architecture of W S Arrasmith McFarland amp Company ISBN 9780786425501 Yellow Coach Part 2 Yellow Coach Mfg Co Yellow Truck and Coach Yellow Bus Greyhound Bus Silversides GMC Truck CCKW DUKW General Motors Cook Richard July 7 2019 Pittsburgh Then and Now The Greyhound Bus Station Pittsburgh Magazine Carl Wickman Greyhound Bus Founder Dead Chicago Tribune February 6 1954 via Newspapers com Patent USD113009S Design fob a motor coach November 12 1938 via Google Patents Patent USD129411S Design for a motor coach June 26 1941 via Google Patents Patent USD156445S Motor coach December 29 1948 via Google Patents Johnson Gary 1992 1939 Yellow Coach 1210 parlor coach Model Coach News Lynnfield MA 69 5 6 Double deck coach October 13 1944 Petrany Mate May 2 2014 The Greyhound Scenicruiser Was Filled With The American Dream Jalopnik GREYHOUND BUYS IN STOCK IN TWO UNITS Obtains Rail Held Interests in Pacific Pennsylvania Lines Gets Tennessee Coach The New York Times Associated Press October 7 1953 Barnes Catherine 1983 Journey from Jim Crow The Desegregation of Southern Transit New York Columbia University Press pp 86 107 BOYNTON v VIRGINIA 364 U S 454 1960 Supreme Court of the United States December 5 1960 via FindLaw Freedom Riders WGBH American Experience PBS May 16 2011 a b c GROSS TERRY January 12 2006 Get on the Bus The Freedom Riders of 1961 NPR Branch Taylor April 16 2007 Baptism on Wheels Parting the Waters America in the King Years 1954 63 pp 412 50 ISBN 978 1 4165 5868 2 Sandoval Strausz A K Spring 2005 Travelers Strangers and Jim Crow Law Public Accommodations and Civil Rights in America Law and History Review 23 1 53 94 doi 10 1017 s0738248000000055 JSTOR 30042844 a b c Keoun Bradley October 28 1999 GREYHOUND S GERALD TRAUTMAN Chicago Tribune Ravo Nick October 28 1999 Gerald Trautman 87 Ex Chief And Avid Builder of Greyhound The New York Times TMC Transportation Manufacturing Corp 1973 1994 Roswell New Mexico Subsidiary of MCI Greyhound Coachbuilt Jackson Carlton 1984 Hounds of the Road a history of the Greyhound Bus Company Bowling Green Ohio Bowling Green University Popular Press ISBN 9780879722708 a b Smith Aaron Lake December 20 2013 Riding the Dirty Dog Vice Lazarus George May 30 1989 Greyhound Cruise Line Making Waves Chicago Tribune Fritscher Lisa April 16 2018 How Disney Cruises Started USA Today Archived from the original on September 21 2015 Strike Over Pay Cuts Halts Intercity Buses of Greyhound Lines The New York Times November 3 1983 Townsend Ed November 4 1983 Strike against Greyhound forces customers to leave driving to somebody else Christian Science Monitor Townsend Ed December 5 1983 Tentative settlement in Greyhound strike Christian Science Monitor Greyhound Striker Killed by Training Bus The New York Times Associated Press December 6 1983 Ray Phillips and the 1983 Strike Ray Phillips and the 1983 Strike Amalgamated Transit Union December 31 2011 Greyhound Strikers Accept Pact Immediate Return to Work Urged The New York Times Associated Press December 20 1983 Archived from the original on April 17 2014 When Fred G Currey acquired Greyhound three years ago he The Times of Northwest Indiana March 25 1990 Union Buyers of Greyhound Settle Contract Los Angeles Times Associated Press February 4 1987 Hayes Thomas C June 20 1987 Greyhound in Deal for Trailways The New York Times Greyhound Agrees to Buy Ailing Trailways Bus Lines Los Angeles Times June 19 1987 GORDON MARCY February 27 1990 Greyhound Changing Name to Disassociate From Bus Company Problems Associated Press COMPANY NEWS Greyhound Dial Is Now Dial Corp The New York Times Associated Press March 6 1991 Baker Bob March 26 1990 NEWS ANALYSIS Greyhound Strike Becomes Fertile Field Los Angeles Times Baker Bob April 8 1990 Greyhound May Go Way of Eastern Labor Financial collapse and hope of a better deal from a new bus company owner could be strategy if strike takes path of the troubled airline Los Angeles Times Swoboda Frank May 8 1990 GREYHOUND DECLARES STRIKE OVER The Washington Post Hayes Thomas C June 5 1990 Bankruptcy Filing by Greyhound The New York Times Swoboda Frank June 5 1990 GREYHOUND FILES FOR CHAPTER 11 The Washington Post Baker Bob June 5 1990 Strikebound Greyhound Lines Files for Chapter 11 Los Angeles Times WILLIAMS JOEL June 7 1990 Greyhound Given Permission to Pay Salaries Expenses Associated Press Greyhound seeks Chapter 11 protection United Press International June 5 1990 Greyhound Bus Drivers End 3 Year Strike With New Pact The New York Times Associated Press May 9 1993 Weintraub Richard M April 21 1993 GREYHOUND TRANSIT UNION SETTLE 3 YEAR OLD STRIKE The Washington Post Greyhound Settles Last Strike Suit The Spokesman Review March 28 1995 Judge approves Greyhound s plan of reorganization United Press International August 30 1991 KRISHNAN HARIHAR October 10 1991 Greyhound Lines to emerge from Chapter 11 at end of month United Press International Hayes Thomas C August 31 1991 Greyhound Wins Approval for Its Reorganization Plan The New York Times GREYHOUND S CREDITORS VOTE TO SUPPORT REORGANIZATION PLAN Deseret News Associated Press August 14 1991 Sanchez Jesus November 3 1991 Greyhound Faces an Uphill Climb Los Angeles Times a b c Complaint USA v Greyhound Lines Inc United States Department of Justice September 29 1996 Final Judgment USA vs Greyhound Lines Inc United States Department of Justice September 29 1995 Myerson Allen R January 18 1994 Greyhound The Airline of the Road The New York Times Guide for Passengers Accessible Bus Service Under the Greyhound Agreement United States Department of Justice Myerson Allen R September 9 1998 Greyhound Unveils Its Plan To Serve the Disabled Fully The New York Times Greyhound To Buy Carolina Trailways Associated Press March 10 1997 Greyhound Lines Inc et al Acquisition of Assets Southeastern Trailways Inc and PeoriaRockford Bus Co Federal Register August 27 1998 Laidlaw Plans to Buy Greyhound Canada for 72 million The New York Times Dow Jones amp Company September 3 1997 Laidlaw to Acquire Greyhound Lines Los Angeles Times October 20 1998 Laidlaw buying Greyhound CNN October 19 1998 De Santis Solange Tomsho Robert October 20 1998 Laidlaw Agrees to Buy Greyhound In Accord Valued at 465 Million The Wall Street Journal Laidlaw takes over Greyhound CBC News March 16 1999 Laidlaw Units File for Bankruptcy Protection Los Angeles Times Reuters June 29 2001 Laidlaw files for bankruptcy protection CBC News June 29 2001 Carlisle Tamsin June 29 2001 Laidlaw of Canada Reaches Agreement On Restructuring 3 2 Billion of Debt The Wall Street Journal WEBER TERRY June 23 2003 Laidlaw emerges from Chapter 11 The Globe and Mail Schmeltzer John June 23 2003 Laidlaw will leave bankruptcy Corvallis Gazette Times a b c O Shaughnessy Patrice June 16 2003 Chinatown Bus War Fuels Probe Slain businessman tied to mob cops say New York Daily News Schliefer Theodore August 8 2013 Bus travel is picking up aided by discount operators The Philadelphia Inquirer QuickLink Greyhound Lines Lentzsch Craig March April 2003 Making the Connections PDF TR News No 225 Transportation Research Board p 32 Greyhound 100 years old and acting younger than ever The Washington Post July 3 2014 Kenworthy Tom July 19 2004 Some left in lurch as Greyhound cuts stops USA Today Sanders Eli September 6 2004 As Greyhound Cuts Back The Middle of Nowhere Means Going Nowhere The New York Times Bucsko Mike Lash Cindi November 13 2005 The Greyhound doesn t stop here anymore Pittsburgh Post Gazette Lambert Emily January 31 2005 Doghouse on Wheels Forbes Archived from the original on August 22 2016 LAIDLAW INTERNATIONAL ANNOUNCES AGREEMENT TO BE ACQUIRED BY FIRSTGROUP Press release U S Securities and Exchange Commission February 9 2007 Harrison Pete February 8 2007 FirstGroup to buy Greyhound bus firm Reuters FirstGroup completes Laidlaw acquisition Metro Magazine October 3 2007 FirstGroup completes Laidlaw acquisition American City Business Journals October 1 2007 Greyhound Gets A Makeover CBS News Associated Press November 12 2007 EDWARDS BRUCE March 29 2008 Greyhound puts brakes on Vermont Transit Rutland Herald Hamilton Anita June 6 2008 Beating 4 Gas with a 1 Bus Time Vacaro Adam August 29 2017 Greyhound Peter Pan will split up and be rivals again The Boston Globe Sokolowsky Jennifer April 30 2012 BoltBus to offer 1 fares between Seattle Portland American City Business Journals Nolasco Joanna May 15 2012 BoltBus to launch new Seattle Vancouver B C service American City Business Journals BoltBus To Launch Service in California on Oct 31 Press release PR Newswire October 15 2013 BoltBus Expands From Los Angeles Adds Las Vegas San Francisco Service Press release PR Newswire December 10 2013 Greyhound Applauds National Highway Traffic Safety Administration for Requiring Seat Belts on all New Motorcoaches Starting in 2016 Press release PR Newswire November 20 2013 Archived from the original on October 19 2015 Austen Ben April 7 2011 The Megabus Effect Bloomberg Businessweek Brock Katherine Cromer October 18 2012 Greyhound Express adds cities to Houston route American City Business Journals Greyhound Marks One Year Anniversary Of Greyhound Express with Service Expansion To Florida Press release PR Newswire January 4 2012 Hemlock Doreen April 11 2012 Inter city bus travel rises in South Florida with Greyhound Express RedCoach and other services Sun Sentinel Greyhound Express adds Miami Fort Lauderdale American City Business Journals January 4 2012 Greyhound s Express service adds Midwest Southeast routes Metro Magazine September 26 2013 Erskine Chris June 17 2012 Greyhound Express new spin on an old fashioned ride Los Angeles Times McManis Sam November 10 2013 Long distance buses are cheap and surprisingly attractive options for travel The Sacramento Bee Prabu Karthick February 22 2013 New TSA Pre check airports Greyhound goes Big Brother and more travel tech news Phocuswire Jones Charisse July 13 2014 Greyhound remakes itself for a new generation USA Today Tuttle Brad June 10 2014 More Millennials Leave the Driving to a 100 Year Old Bus Company Money PRISCO JOANNA July 28 2014 Greyhound Bus Fleet Revamps But Can a 100 Year Old Dog Learn New Tricks ABC News Stone Zara March 16 2019 What To Do When Greyhound Cancels Your Bus Forbes Travel Briefs Greyhound reserved seat upgrade for 5 Daily Journal October 16 2013 Greyhound Modernizes IT Infrastructure to Provide More Pricing Options for Consumers and Optimize Operations Press release PR Newswire December 9 2014 Schwieterman Joseph P Antolin Brian Scott Gary Sellers Martin January 12 2015 Adding on Amenities Broadening the Base 2014 Year in Review of Intercity Bus Service in the United States PDF DePaul University Chaddick Institute for Metropolitan Development p 3 Greyhound starting to get its stride back The Dallas Morning News June 7 2014 Greyhound Connect Northern Public Radio June 4 2015 Greyhound to add Mo to Iowa round trip service Metro Magazine March 26 2013 Forgione Mary July 16 2015 Greyhound starts bus service in Mexico with connecting routes to Texas Los Angeles Times Hudnall David September 24 2015 Greyhound to expand Kansas City and Columbia services in light of Megabus departure The Pitch a b Greyhound Lucky Streak Greyhound Lines Johnson Gene February 21 2020 Greyhound to stop allowing immigration checks on buses Associated Press Greyhound bars immigration sweeps Axios February 22 2020 Aripaka Pushkala December 31 2020 Transport firm FirstGroup sells three Greyhound facilities for 137 million Reuters Bourke Joanna December 31 2020 FirstGroup agrees three property disposals from Greyhound division The Evening Standard FirstGroup sells Greyhound bus facilities for 100m BBC News December 31 2020 Rodriguez James December 28 2020 Greyhound Station block in downtown Denver sold to joint venture American City Business Journals GOUNLEY THOMAS January 22 2021 Fresh off 38M sale Greyhound looks to unload its other big site in Denver The Denver Post Evans Pete May 13 2021 Greyhound Canada shutting down all bus service permanently CBC News RAMEY JAY May 14 2021 Greyhound Shuts Down Permanently in Canada Autoweek Singh Simran November 18 2021 Fleet of Greyhound buses up for sale after company shut down all Canadian operations permanently Toronto Star Kiley Brendan July 1 2021 RIP BoltBus the affordable trendy bus company has discontinued service Greyhound will take over its routes The Seattle Times Wilkinson Joseph July 1 2021 Discount bus brand BoltBus indefinitely suspended Greyhound taking over routes New York Daily News Lukpat Alyssa July 3 2021 BoltBus Favorite of Frugal Riders Suspends Service Indefinitely The New York Times Ferenchik Mark July 21 2021 COTA to buy Downtown Greyhound station for 9 5 million for redevelopment transit center The Columbus Dispatch Ghose Carrie July 21 2021 COTA buying downtown Greyhound terminal seeks redevelopment with character and vibrancy American City Business Journals Green Marcus November 11 2021 Louisville apartment company buys downtown Greyhound station WDRB Monk Dan November 1 2021 Greyhound bus terminal sold as company hunts for new service location WCPO TV Greyhound Will Pay 2 2 Million To End A Lawsuit Over Warrantless Immigration Sweeps NPR Associated Press September 27 2021 Levenson Michael September 29 2021 Greyhound Agrees to Pay 2 2 Million Over Immigration Sweeps on Buses The New York Times Martyn Amy June 28 2018 Some passengers learn too late that Greyhound gives easy access to law enforcement ConsumerAffairs FlixMobility acquires Greyhound to Expand U S Intercity Bus Services Press release Flixbus October 21 2021 Lunden Ingrid October 21 2021 Germany s FlixMobility acquires Greyhound Lines the iconic TechCrunch Germany s Flixbus acquires US Greyhound bus company Deutsche Welle October 21 2021 Shabong Yadarisa October 21 2021 FlixBus owner hitches ride with Greyhound as FirstGroup exits Reuters O Donnell Paul Walters Natalie October 21 2021 Dallas based Greyhound sells to Europe s largest long distance bus network The Dallas Morning News FirstGroup Sells Remaining Legacy Greyhound Property Portfolio For Around 140 Mln Press release RTTNews September 20 2022 Goriainoff Anthony O September 20 2022 FirstGroup to Sell Most Legacy Greyhound Property Portfolio for 140 Mln MarketWatch Gately Paul J August 3 2017 Bus crash 65 years ago between Waco and Temple was burning hell KWTX TV RYAN TERRI JO August 17 2013 Military men who survived a 1952 bus crash crawled through hell to save lives Waco Tribune Herald GREYHOUND BUS MALONE FREIGHT LINE INC TRUCK COLLISION PDF National Transportation Safety Board May 13 1972 Hartwood John May 10 1980 Greyhound Autos Drop Into Tampa Bay The Washington Post 7 Killed in Collision Of a Greyhound Bus And Trucks in Utah The New York Times Associated Press December 19 1990 National Transportation Safety Board 2000 Greyhound Motorcoach Run off the Road Accident Burnt Cabins Pennsylvania June 20 1998 National Transportation Safety Board January 5 2000 Rimer Sara Sack Kevin October 4 2001 6 Killed in Greyhound Crash in Tennessee After Passenger Slits Driver s Throat The New York Times Slevin Peter Pressley Sue Anne October 4 2001 6 Die in Greyhound Bus Crash After Attack on Driver The Washington Post Knife attack on California bus BBC News October 1 2002 Murphy Dean E October 2 2002 Man Charged in Attack on Driver That Crashed Bus and Killed 2 The New York Times Plastic half door separates passengers from driver on Greyhound Arkansas Democrat Gazette Associated Press July 10 2007 TANG TERRY DAVENPORT PAUL January 23 2014 Police 24 hurt after passenger attacks bus driver Deseret Digital Media Associated Press GREYHOUND BUS DEPARTS FROM LA CRASHES IN SAN JOSE 2 DEAD 8 HOSPITALIZED ABC News January 19 2016 National Transportation Safety Board 2017 Motorcoach Collision With Crash Attenuator in Gore Area US Highway 101 San Jose California January 19 2016 PDF National Transportation Safety Board March 28 2017 Mitchell Madeline Tucker Randy July 13 2018 Colombian ultimate Frisbee players headed to Cincinnati were kicked off Greyhound for speaking Spanish Greyhound says otherwise The Cincinnati Enquirer Powers Martine August 31 2018 It s an 80 000 pound projectile Death toll upped to 8 in head on collision between tractor trailer and Greyhound bus The Washington Post James Michael August 31 2018 8 dead dozens injured after Greyhound bus and truck collide in New Mexico USA Today Chan Stella February 3 2020 Passengers disarmed gunman in Greyhound bus shooting that left 1 dead 5 wounded CNN Yuhas Alan February 3 2020 1 Dead and 5 Injured After Shooting on Greyhound Bus in California The New York Times Naked man arrested after allegedly opening fire on bus The Associated Press February 3 2022 Retrieved February 5 2022 Lenthang Marlene Chirbas Kurt February 3 2022 One dead four wounded in Greyhound bus shooting in California NBC News Retrieved February 5 2022 a b c d e Greyhound buses in song and on screen The Guardian August 19 2009 Best of the Best the 20 best Oscar winning films ever and the 10 worst The Times February 23 2013 Romanowski William D July 28 2017 Risky Business Rock in Film Routledge ISBN 9781351492843 Hicks Chris February 8 1991 Film review Sleeping With the Enemy Deseret News Lamberson Carolyn December 12 2018 Smoke Signals filmed in Spokane and written by Sherman Alexie named by Library of Congress to National Film Registry The Spokesman Review Life I 1999 Filming amp Production IMDb 1964 New York World s Fair 1965 Artifacts World s Fair Legacies Page Five 1964 New York World s Fair Greyhound Announces Next Stop Tomorrowland Sweepstakes And Promotion Press release PR Newswire April 29 2015 Greyhound Bus In Chip n Dale Rescue Rangers 2022 Retrieved May 22 2022 The Dinning Sisters Love On A Greyhound Bus The Iggidy Song Discogs On Broadway Genius com Webb Robert October 3 2003 Story Of The Song Promised Land Chuck Berry 1964 The Independent Promised Land Genius com Lodi by Creedence Clearwater Revival Songfacts Thank God and Greyhound Genius com Greyhound Genius com Ramblin Man by The Allman Brothers Band Songfacts Lonesome On ry and Mean Genius com Once Bitten Twice Shy Genius com Readers suggest the 10 best Greyhound bus moments The Guardian May 9 2014 An Old Greyhound Shazam Wild Flowers In A Mason Jar Genius com Me and the Devil Blues Take 1 Genius com Greyhound Bus Shazam Pirate Flag by Kenny Chesney Songfacts I Wish by Skee Lo Songfacts Leaving Normal Genius com Leaving Town acoustic Genius com Greyhound Bus retrieved November 5 2022 Backseat Of A Greyhound Bus Genius com Heads Carolina Tails California lyrics com Ween Chocolate Town Genius com Soul Meets Body by Death Cab for Cutie Songfacts Kimya Dawson My Rollercoaster retrieved November 6 2022 Michael Jackson Hollywood Tonight Official Video Archived from the original on December 12 2021 via YouTube Another Day of Sun Genius com Calpurnia Greyhound Official Video Archived from the original on December 12 2021 via YouTube Blues for My Baby and Me Genius com Greyhounds Genius com EarthBound for Wii U Nintendo of America July 18 2013 Thomas Helen March 6 2014 Doris Betts a Greyhound Bus and an Academy Award University of North Carolina Library Mobile March 23 2018 Jack Reacher Reading Order The Complete Lee Child s Reading List Of Jack Reacher Series ISBN 9788827594018 Further reading EditSchisgall Oscar 1985 The Greyhound Story From Hibbing to everywhere Chicago J G Ferguson Publishing Company Doubleday ISBN 9780385196901 ISBN 0 385 19690 3External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Greyhound Lines Greyhound Lines home page Northland Greyhound Lines at Bluehounds and Redhounds including the early history of The Greyhound Corporation Bluehounds and Redhounds the history of Greyhound and Trailways Greyhound Lines after WW2 at Bluehounds and Redhounds Greyhound Canada Greyhound Mexico Current Greyhound Lines timetables Greyhound listing of both current and archived schedule changes updated map of Greyhound routes and current and archived timetables along with contact info Greyhound Bus Museum in Hibbing MinnesotaPortals United States Transportation Companies Buses Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Greyhound Lines amp oldid 1153906199, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.