Leamington Transit

Leamington Transit

Infobox Bus transit
name = Leamington Transit

logo_size =


image_size =
image_caption =
company_slogan = We're Going Your Way!
parent =
founded =
headquarters = 10 Seacliff Drive East
locale = Leamington, Ontario
service_area =
service_type = bus service
alliance =
routes =
destinations =
stops =
hubs =
stations =
lounge =
fleet =
ridership =
fuel_type =
operator = C.A. Bailey
ceo =
website = [http://www.leamington.ca/residents/transportation.asp Municipality of Leamington, Transit]

Leamington Transit is the current mode of public transportation in Leamington, Ontario Canada. It consists of a micro coach that services the town of Leamington making regular routes Monday to Saturday, 9:00 am – 5:00 pm. It stops at all the major areas of Leamington such as the Leamington District Memorial Hospital, the Leamington Library, both high schools, the cultural wedding halls, the police/fire station, the public information booth, the Leamington Kinsmen Recreation Complex and town hall.

The evolution of transportation in Leamington was rapid as the town moved from a colonial town to a more sophisticated town with an uptown business district. According to a population census, in 1876 the population of Leamington included 660 individuals. In 1925 it had grown to 4,351. The first bus driver of a Leamington bus was Driver Oswell Robson, one of the most prominent family names in late 19th century Leamington. This bus serviced the town making frequent stops at homes and the uptown business district.

A major development that occurred that made Leamington a more accessible community was the opening of an electric railway service to Windsor, Ontario via Kingsville, Ontario and Essex, Ontario in 1908. This connection brought Leamington closer together with its county and allowed for more business to occur in Leamington’s uptown district. This was a major feat for a fledging town with a population of only 2,512 residents in 1910. The electric railway system was connected directly to the business district and besides its major use in public transportation; it was used for mass transportation as a troop carrier for World War I.

The electric railway also served as transportation as workers would need to commute to their jobs. For example, many Mennonite individuals who worked at the H.J. Heinz Company would have to commute from the Town of Kingsville to Leamington using the street-cars and then when their shift ended, would have to return home.

As the population of the town grew, by 1950 there were 7,525 residents in the Town of Leamington itself, transportation began to evolve. The street cars were eventually removed as funding was eventually poured into creating more paved roads for the ongoing increase in individual automobile use. As the C.A. Bailey bus company was already making frequent school bus stops, they began to follow the lead of other towns and institute their own bus specific for town transit- also known as Leamington Transit.

The official title of Leamington Transit did not come into use until the bus company C.A. Bailey, named after Clarence A. Bailey, became a company in 1946 with its running of the Mac Leamington High School Bus.

References

1. T.D. Smyth. Leamington Souvenir History and Centennial Program. (Leamington, 1966), 45, 58.

2. Madeline Wallace. Memories of Lake Erie Shores. (Essex: Kerch Publications, 1984), 72.

3. H.J. Lassaline. Essex County Sketches. (Windsor: Herald Press Ltd., 1974), 31.

4. N.N. Driedger. The Leamington United Mennonite Church. (Manitoba: D.W. Friesen and Sons Ltd., 1972), 27.

5. Southway Transportation. C.A. Bailey Ltd. http://www.southwaybuses.com/about.shtml (accessed 15 September 2007)

External links

* [http://www.leamington.ca/residents/transportation.asp Leamington Transit information]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Leamington, Ontario — Leamington   Town   Coat of arms …   Wikipedia

  • List of Metro Transit routes — The following is a list of Metro Transit Routes or routes operated by partners of Metro Transit in the Twin Cities metropolitan area. Bold text indicates EXPRESS routes. Italic text indicates Limited Stop Routes. Routes 5, 16, and 19 run 24 hours …   Wikipedia

  • Toronto Transit Commission — TTC redirects here. For other uses, see TTC (disambiguation). Toronto Transit Commission From top left: An Orion VII TTC bus, a T series TTC subway train, an …   Wikipedia

  • Durham Region Transit — #8172 waits at the Ajax GO Station. Slogan Connecting Communities …   Wikipedia

  • Metro Transit (Halifax) — Founded 1979 Headquarters 200 Ilsley Avenue, Dartmouth, Nova Sco …   Wikipedia

  • Winnipeg Transit — A Winnipeg bus still in the older transit orange and cream paint scheme Founded 1882 …   Wikipedia

  • Oakville Transit — Bus 5103 at Oakville GO Station Founded 1972 …   Wikipedia

  • Milton Transit — Founded 2004 Headquarters 43 Brown St …   Wikipedia

  • Chilliwack/Agassiz-Harrison Transit System — Chilliwack Transit System Locale Chilliwack, BC Service type bus service, paratransit Alliance BC Transit …   Wikipedia

  • Nanaimo Regional Transit System — Founded 1969 Headquarters 6300 Hammond Bay Road Locale Nanaimo Service type …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”