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Media in category "Images of Memphis, Tennessee" The following 2 files are in this category, out of 2 total. Annesdale Snowden District Memphis.png 1,024 × 773; 1.62 MB
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 ...
In the 1930s, the Greyhound Lines bus company built many bus stations in the then-popular Streamline Moderne style. William Nowland Van Powell designed at least four of them. Working with George Mahan, Jr. in 1939, he was the architect of the Greyhound Bus Station in Jackson, Mississippi. [4]
Notable examples of Streamline Moderne stations include the Blytheville Greyhound Bus Station, Cleveland, Ohio Greyhound Bus Station, Columbia, South Carolina Greyhound Bus Station, and the Old Washington, D.C. Greyhound Bus Station. Greyhound worked with the Yellow Coach Manufacturing Company for its streamlined Series 700 buses, first for ...
In 1950, Greyhound Lines retained architect W.S. Arrasmith to build a new bus station in Montgomery, Alabama, to replace an earlier station on North Court Street. Incorporating a streamlined style and vertical "Greyhound" name in neon, it is an unassuming example of Greyhound bus stations in that time, derived from a standard plan and built for ...
The Dixie Greyhound Lines (called also Dixie or DGL), a highway-coach carrier, was a Greyhound regional operating company, based in Memphis, Tennessee, USA, from 1930 until 1954, when it (along with the Teche Greyhound Lines) became merged into the Southeastern Greyhound Lines, a neighboring operating company.
English: Recreation of Greyhound Bus Firebombed in Freedom Rider Campaign - National Civil Rights Museum - Downtown Memphis - Tennessee - USA Date 14 May 2012, 12:15:43
The first station in the district was on Calhoun Street, built c. 1855 by the Mississippi and Tennessee Railroad.It was replaced by a newer Calhoun Street Station that was demolished when Memphis Central Station (originally Grand Central Station) was built on the same site in 1912–1914 by the Illinois Central Railroad and a subsidiary, the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad that ran south ...