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Gray Coach was a Canadian inter-city bus line based in Toronto, Ontario, from 1927 to 1992.It was founded and initially owned by the Toronto Transportation Commission, until sold to Stagecoach in 1990.
A route map of Via Rail frequencies from 2013. Via Rail operates 497 trains per week over nineteen routes. Via groups these routes into three broad categories: [1] "Rapid Intercity Travel": daytime services over the Corridor between Ontario and Quebec. The vast majority of Via's trains–429 per week–operate here.
From the 1970s to the 1990s, the Toronto hub for GO Transit bus services was the Elizabeth Street annex to the Toronto Coach Terminal at Bay and Dundas Streets, with some routes also stopping curb-side at the Union Station train terminal, or the Royal York Hotel opposite it, from the inception of the GO Bus service on September 8, 1970. [8]
It is at the split between the routes of Amtrak's Blue Water and Wolverine passenger trains. The International Limited, which had started in 1982 as joint operation by Via Rail and Amtrak between Chicago and Toronto, was discontinued in 2004. [3] The intermodal facility reopened in 2012 following an extensive renovation.
Atlanta Bus Station, 232 Forsyth St SW, Atlanta, GA 30303; Athens Bus Station, 4020 Atlanta Hwy Athens, GA 30606; Augusta Bus Station, 1546 Broad St, Augusta, GA 30904 ...
The Maple Leaf operated on a daytime schedule between Chicago and Toronto in the 1950s. It carried a Chicago–Montreal through sleeper, a Chicago–Detroit through coach, a Port Huron–Toronto cafe/parlor car, parlor cars, and coaches. A dining car operated between Chicago and Lansing, Michigan. [3] The Montreal sleeper ended in 1958. [1]: 191
Between 1982 and 2004, the Central station was served by the International Limited, a train service between Chicago and Toronto that was then operated jointly by Via Rail and Amtrak. [ 7 ] Guelph was also served by GO Transit trains between 1990 and 1993, when it served as the terminus of the then Georgetown line .
The Chicago Tribune columnist Bob Wiedrich wrote in 1977, “If you want to break your heart, pay a visit to the downtown Greyhound Bus terminal in Chicago. Spend a few hours watching the kind of human scum that drifts through its waiting rooms in search of easy prey.” [ 3 ] Greyhound sold the site in 1986, and began looking for a site for a ...