Greyhound Lines
Greyhound Lines (commonly called Greyhound) is a company in the United States that runs bus services between cities. It was founded in 1914. Its parent company is on the London Stock Exchange. The buses use air brakes and hold over 200 gallons of diesel.
Greyhound Lines Media
A modern Greyhound bus terminal at Washington Union Station
An Eastern Greyhound Lines coach depicted at a stop in Conneaut, Ohio, c. 1930
A preserved Streamline Moderne 1939 Greyhound depot in Columbia, South Carolina (1986 photo)
1954 GM Scenicruiser, designed by Roland E. Gegoux and manufactured exclusively for Greyhound
A GMC PD-4106, ready for boarding in Salem, Oregon, for a trip north to Seattle on the then-new Interstate 5, in the fall of 1965