[PRCo] Re: Transit evolution

Fred Schneider fwschneider at comcast.net
Fri Mar 9 20:42:35 EST 2007


ONLY 25 MINUTES BETTER THAN THE 1930 TRAIN SCHEDULE!

I guess I need to research the legislation that created the  
Interstate Highway System that Dwight Eisenhower signed into law in  
1954.   Without any additional background information, I cannot help  
but be lead or mislead to conclude that Ike's military convoy by  
truck across the United States that took two months in 1919 and was  
done to demonstrate a need for good highways stuck with him lock  
afterward and may have lead him to support the Federal Interstate  
Highway Program.

I can remember numerous family vacations in the 1940s and 1950s when  
we averaged 30 miles per hour.   I can remember one incredibly long  
day when we left a cousin's home in Palos Park, Illinois, just off  
route 30 southwest of Chicago, early one morning and dragged into the  
grandparent's home in Marietta, Ohio at 2 AM the next morning, having  
inched along route 30 through Fort Wayne and Lima and then down to  
Columbus and Zanesville and then down along the Muskingum River after  
midnight.    And then I think after Interstate Highways, driving from  
Palo Alto CA to Salt Lake City in the same time and from Grand Island  
NE to Lancaster PA from 9 AM one day to lunch time the next day.

On Mar 9, 2007, at 8:17 PM, Bill Robb wrote:

> My next memories are that Lake Shore Coach Company, the successor to
> Lake Shore Electric Railway had traded franchises with Central
> Greyhound.  CG ended up with the Cleveland - Toledo route and LSC got
> the Cleveland to Marietta service.  In the 1950s I remember Lake
> Shore Coach Company's PG 3701 buses in Marietta painted brown and
> orange ... the orange probably a leftover from the interurban car
> livery.    I don't have any schedules but I suspect they might have
> averaged 25 to 30 miles per hour, which would have required 5 hours
> 30 minutes to 6 hours 45 minutes for the Marietta - Cleveland run.
> Driving it in an automobile in those days would have taken at least
> five hours.
> So why doesn't public transportation work today?
>
> Because I can get in my Volkswagen and drive the 168 miles on
> Interstate 77 in 2 hours 30 minutes in spite of Ohio's overly
> aggressive State Troopers.
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------- 
> -------
>
> I have a timetable for Feb 1946 when the bus line was still Penn  
> Ohio which was later taken over by Greyhound.  Cleveland-Marietta  
> was 7 hours then. But you stopped at every place along the way.   
> And the bus ran everyday.  People still worked 6 days a week.
>
>
>
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