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In 1973, the Allman Brothers Band released the song "Ramblin' Man," which states the narrator was "born in the back seat of a Greyhound bus." [180] The 1976 song "The Killing of Georgie" by Rod Stewart states that Georgie leaves home for Manhattan on a Greyhound bus. [180] In 1970, Roy Clark had a Number six country hit with Thank God and ...
Intercity bus lines like Greyhound, Trailways and Megabus, an overlooked but essential part of America’s transportation system, carry twice the number of people who take Amtrak every year.
Greyhound refunded tickets and travel vouchers for travel after May 13. [2] [45] [46] Besides the pandemic, Greyhound also blamed ride sharing and subsidized competition from Via Rail for the shutdown, [47] which affected 400 employees. [44] Greyhound Canada planned to sell its bus stations, [45] and to sell its bus fleet. It placed its fleet ...
Go Greyhound and Leave the Driving to Us; Great Lakes Greyhound Lines; The Grey (restaurant) Greyhound Air; 2001 Greyhound bus attack; Greyhound Bus Depot (Columbia, South Carolina) Greyhound Bus Museum; Greyhound Bus Station (Cleveland, Ohio) Greyhound Bus Station (Portland, Oregon) Greyhound Bus Terminal (Evansville, Indiana) Greyhound Canada
Greyhound and other lines with service in Chicago are part of a web of routes that allow passengers to travel between several thousand stops with a single bus ticket.
Greyhound, the leading provider of intercity bus transportation in North America, resumed its services out of Jackson, with two routes. Greyhound will be located at Jackson Union Station on 300 ...
Within a year, the duo formed Northland Transportation Company. The company formally changed its name to The Greyhound Corporation in 1930. By 1934, he had expanded to 50 buses and had revenues of $340,000. Wickman retired as president of Greyhound Corporation in 1946. In 1952, he sold his interest in the business for $960,000. [6]
The Dixie Greyhound Lines (GL) began in 1925 in Memphis (on the Mississippi River and in the southwest corner of Tennessee) as the Smith Motor Coach Company, when James Frederick Smith, a former (and successful) truck salesman, received a used truck as a gift from his previous employer (John Fisher, a dealer, who owned the Memphis Motor Company).