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LME, Inc. was a less than truckload (LTL) carrier located in Minnesota which served ten states in the Midwestern US. [2] LME, Inc. was founded in the early 2010s as a successor to Lakeville Motor Express to take over Lakeville's non-union regional freight business when its owners split this segment from their unionized business The unionized business remained with Lakeville which became a ...
Mayflower leadership were informed of need for an immediate move on the afternoon of the 28th and began tracking down empty tractor-trailer units that could be sent to the Colts' Owings Mills, Maryland, training facility to facilitate the move. At the time, Mayflower had approximately 3,000 trucks, but it took several hours to find 14 empty ...
MSAZ - National Motor Freight Traffic Association MSC - Illinois Central Gulf Railroad (Mississippi Central, Hattiesburg to Natchez) MSCI - Mississippi Central Railroad (Oxford to Grand Jct)
Contract Freighters, Inc. (CFI), a subsidiary of Heartland Express, is an American truckload freight carrier headquartered in Joplin, Missouri with operations in the continental US, Canada, and Mexico. Easily recognizable on the highway by their iconic bright red Kenworth trucks.
The company's direct LTL service area is the Mid-Atlantic and Midwest US. The company is under shared ownership with LTL carriers Dorhn Transfer, US Special Delivery, US Cargo, and Ross Express with which it interlines freight. [1] Its interline agreements with other carriers in the US and Canada provide LTL services across both countries. [27]
In January 2022, the company expanded its LTL footprint with the acquisition of Midwest Motor Express. In July, 2023 Knight-Swift acquired truckload carrier US Xpress. In July 2024, Knight-Swift acquired less than truckload (LTL) carrier Dependable Highway Express from Dependable Supply Chain Services.
Bettenhausen was killed in a May 12, 1961 crash at Indianapolis while testing a Stearly Motor Freight Special vehicle for Paul Russo. The car smashed into the outside wall of the track and then rolled 325 feet (99 m) along the barrier. The car came to rest in a grassy plot between the wall and Grandstand A, with the tail of the car on fire.
This pushed Arkansas-Best's operations all the way to California and increased its rank from the 25th largest interstate motor freight carrier in the US to ninth. [7] Arkansas-Best changed its name to ABF Freight System Inc. in 1980 [7] and, by 1981, was the eighth largest trucking company in the US operating 106 terminals. [6]