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W.B. Fishbowl
Age: 58 Joined: 02 Oct 2014 Posts: 4249 Location: New York, New York, USA
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Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2025 6:35 pm Post subject: |
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NEW YORK OMNIBUS 2629 wrote: | On this day in 1989..............
Service on the "M-103" ("stoa") was discontinued (59th Street-Crosstown)
"Soiface" buses replaced TARS streetcars on this line in 1946.....
'NYO"
["TARS"]
["RIDE THE SURFACE WAY"]
["MaBSTOA"] |
Also on that day, many bus routes were changed, consolidated and so on, et alia. For example, while the M103 was discontinued, part of its route was merged into the M28 - 57th Street Crosstown and rebranded as M57, its westernmost terminus shifted to 73d Street and Broadway. The M5's route was shifted, in its transition from Sixth Avenue to Broadway northbound, and Broadway to Fifth Avenue southbound, from 57th Street to 59th Street. The M30 - 72nd Street Crosstown had its route severely truncated whilst a new 72nd Street crosstown, M72, had a more direct route comparatively speaking - going through the 65th Street Transverse at Central Park - and terminating at Freedom Place. There was also another new route, M58, which terminated at Columbus Circle.
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NEW YORK OMNIBUS 2629 BusTalk's Offical Welcoming Committee

Joined: 18 Dec 2007 Posts: 29761 Location: NEW JOISEY
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Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2025 7:28 pm Post subject: |
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W.B.:
As always, greatly appreciate your always "in depth" historical info!
From the information I've read here over the years, courtesy of yourself and our good friend Mr. MaBSTOA 15, I've learned that, over the decades, there have been many bus rout consolidations, abandonments, and re-routings; also, no shortage of traffic flow changes on many thoroughfares, which, of course, caused many roite changes for a number of bus routes.
I've read that, in many cities (late in the streetcar era) many car lines were abandoned outright when two-way streets were converted into one-way thoroughfares; this was especially the case in postwar Baltimore.....
"NYO"
["AVOID TRAFFIC FUSS-RIDE WITH US!"]
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NEW YORK OMNIBUS 2629 BusTalk's Offical Welcoming Committee

Joined: 18 Dec 2007 Posts: 29761 Location: NEW JOISEY
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Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2025 8:36 pm Post subject: |
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Just thinking..........
It is interesting that the "Bee-oh-Tee" never "poichased" any ACF-BRILLs (aka "BRILL-boas") or WHITES.
On the other hand, "Bah-ston's" "Em-Tee-Yay" rostered a substantial number of ACF-BRILL "C-36s" and WHITE "798s", that lasted into the 1960s.
Ditto the "See-Tee-Yay".
Though the ppstwar "Bee-Tee-See" (Baltimore) fleet was virtually all "Gee-Em", even they rostered "C-36s", which weren't retired until 1967..........
"NYO"
["ACF-BRILL"]
["WHITE"]
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NEW YORK OMNIBUS 2629 BusTalk's Offical Welcoming Committee

Joined: 18 Dec 2007 Posts: 29761 Location: NEW JOISEY
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Posted: Wed Sep 10, 2025 9:57 pm Post subject: |
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"Foither"..........
Was just thinking of the old Hudson County "Indy" companies I grew up with, 60-odd years ago; as DIVERSE as their fleets were through the mid-1960s, NOT ONE of these outfits rostered ANY "BRILL-boas", though WHITES were indeed commonplace.
On the other hand, several NJ "suboiban" companies (DE CAMP, INTER-CITY, SOMERSET) operated "C-44s" through much of the 1960s.......
"MYO"
["22 JERSEY CITY"]
["97 PATERSON"]
["148 NEW YORK CITY"]
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NEW YORK OMNIBUS 2629 BusTalk's Offical Welcoming Committee

Joined: 18 Dec 2007 Posts: 29761 Location: NEW JOISEY
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Posted: Thu Sep 11, 2025 9:49 am Post subject: |
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"PATTONS"..........
In my area, well into the 1960s, both prewar and postwar MACKS were commonplace with old Hudson County "indies"; the elderly prewar buses were gone by about 1966; the postwar buses by late 1966/early 1968......
"NYO"
["JERSEY CITY-BAYONNE LOCAL"]
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MaBSTOA 15
Age: 71 Joined: 27 Feb 2013 Posts: 1145
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Posted: Mon Sep 22, 2025 10:57 am Post subject: |
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New York City Omnibus 2629 regarding your Surface Transportation Six Wheel double deck bus.
Surface bought twenty six Six Wheel double deck model 66 in 1927. They were operated in the Bronx on the Concourse routes 1 and 2. They were used till 1933.
In 1933 they were cut down to a single deck and remained in service till 1939 when the first diesel buses arrived. These were Twin Coach, Yellow Coach and White Motors.
By the way at the outset of World War 2 Surface operated the largest fleet of diesel powered buses in the United States.
Surface Transportations initial fleet was composed of the 26 Six Wheel double deck 36 single deck Six Wheel model 64 twenty eight Versares model 6HC37 and fourteen small ACF model 601-2-29.
That leads me to the photo in the scrap yard in Image of Rails Third Avenue Railway book. Look closely and you'll see the fleet number M31 between the hood and the door. M could stand for maintenance. It was common practice back then to cut down used buses and turn them into maintenance trucks. The only bus with the fleet number 31 in the Surface Westchester division was an ACF.
The true idemtity of the vehicle in that photo went up in smoke.
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MaBSTOA 15
Age: 71 Joined: 27 Feb 2013 Posts: 1145
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Posted: Mon Sep 22, 2025 11:36 am Post subject: |
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Information on the Six Wheel buses
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MaBSTOA 15
Age: 71 Joined: 27 Feb 2013 Posts: 1145
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Posted: Mon Sep 22, 2025 11:37 am Post subject: |
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Information on the Versares buses
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NEW YORK OMNIBUS 2629 BusTalk's Offical Welcoming Committee

Joined: 18 Dec 2007 Posts: 29761 Location: NEW JOISEY
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Posted: Mon Sep 22, 2025 11:46 am Post subject: |
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MaBSTOA 15:
Man, you've OUTDONE YOURSELF yet again!!!!!!
I would have PAID tp go back in time and ridden on those truly ungainly (but dang interesting!) buses!
Too bad that one example does not survive today; man, what a museum piece a bus like THAT would have made!
THANK YOU! (again!)
"NYO"
["SURFACE TRANSPORTATION"]
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