Featuring Hemmings Motor News
A few of them are still out there. Ghostly. They're among the most
iconic American motor vehicles of the 1950s, but the Scenicruiser has
been gone for so many years now, a casualty of changing public tastes in
long distance travel, that the sight of one on today's highways will
spin heads for sure.
Greyhound commissioned General Motors to build 1,001 examples of the
high-decked, three-axle PD 4501 intercity coach, the bus it named the
Scenicruiser, beginning in 1954. The coach is the long-distance bus
industry's most memorable, and arguably the most successful, effort to
capture riders as the nation's transportation metric was being bent by
unforeseen post-war forces: a gradual erosion of passenger rail service,
the emergence of jet travel, and the hand-in-glove boom of auto
production and the Interstate highway system during the 1950s.
Enduring relics of the grand, but short-lived, age of premium buses
still gather on a not-quite-formal, nearly ad hoc basis. More exist than
you might expect: Tom McNally, who helped put together this spring's
SceniCruise 2010 in Amarillo, Texas, said that about 230 of the old
Greyhound lions still exist. At one time, they could be had for
virtually nothing, which partly explains why many were converted into
homemade RVs. Those who remember spent quality time along old Route 66,
hallowed blacktop ruled by Scenicruisers a lifetime ago.
They visited
highway landmarks, plus the town of Adrian, Texas, located at the
midpoint of 66: It's west of Amarillo, and exactly 1,139 miles from both
Chicago and Los Angeles.
Ten of the Scenicruisers made the trip to Amarillo; their trips
originated in Baltimore, California and the Midwest. Several, as you
might expect, were conversions. Other days-gone coaches also make the
run. These numbered one produced in the 1960s by Prevost of Sainte
Claire, Quebec, Canada; and a later high-deck GM bus, the PD 4107, built
from 1966 through 1969.
One of the Scenicruiser's competitors also
showed up, a three-axle 1971 Silver Eagle once run by Trailways.
Historically speaking, the Scenicruiser was the first significantly
successful 40-foot-long intercity coach before the industry switched en
masse to buses that long.
Tom, who lives in Peoria, Illinois, has traveled an uncommon,
challenging route with his Scenicruiser.
He restored the 1956-built PD
4501 to full Greyhound specifications from that year, including the
proper seats. Tom found it in Weeds-port, New York, having been
converted into a coach for a gospel choir and then, a church bus. ''I
restored the outside and the interior. It still had the correct 8V-71
diesel and four-speed transmission. We had another Scenicruiser at the
meet: Toward the end or their use, Greyhound converted about 100 of them
to what they called combo cars, with an extra partition and an extra
door at the rear, which hauled freight.
They had a rear door on the side
where a conveyor was connected so the packages could be removed.
''I've been into muscle cars for years. I still have two Pontiac GTOs,
but I just wanted something different,'' Tom said. ''I guess it all
started because my wife and I had two former racing greyhound dogs. Then
my wife surprised me with a birthday trip aboard a Greyhound bus, and
gave me a Greyhound book that had a Scenicruiser in it.
On the trip, I
saw that one was for sale in Hemmings Motor News. That was when I started really looking for one.''
That's Tom's first Scenicruiser, 8149, serial 771, during the return from Scenicruise 2010 in Amarillo and Adrian.
ReplyDeleteI had the extreme pleasure of riding that car from Peoria to the meet and back (and driving it part of the way).
The first shot is at the Art Deco neon sign at the Munger Moss Motel, Lebanon, Missouri, where we stayed on the way back; the second shot is at a restored Art Deco service station and former Greyhound agency station in Shamrock, Texas.
Tom also owns the hand-built prototype Scenicruiser, serial 1001, and he plans to restore it to the original livery (rather than the later gold-stripe Super Scenicruiser scheme).
In April 2013 I rode that same car again from Peoria to Blytheville, Arkansas, and back for another antique-coach event.
I got a 1956 PD4501 Greyhound bus that was converted to a motor home back in the 70's looking to sell. So you know anyone interested?
ReplyDeleteDan Cobb 559-577-3787 dcobb53@aol.com