After almost a century in Nelson, B.C., the last Greyhound rolls through - Action News
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British Columbia

After almost a century in Nelson, B.C., the last Greyhound rolls through

A Nelson resident was instrumental in bringing Greyhound bus service to the B.C. Interior.

End of the line

The last Greyhound bus is scheduled to pull out of Nelson, B.C., on Sunday. (Bob Keating)

Seventy-five-year-old Helena Petkau waits patiently for the Greyhound to roll into Nelson B.C.'s bus depot at the back of a shopping mall.

Petkau is from Richmondand takes the Greyhound to see her daughter in Kelowna and grandson in Nelson every couple of months.

She's not sure what she'll do when the bus service ends.

"I am shattered by it. I can't believe they are actually doing it. I don't know how I will get back here to see my grandson," saidPetkau.

Helena Petkau has been taking the Greyhound bus for years. She says it will be missed. (Bob Keating)

The last Greyhound is scheduled to pull out of Nelson onSunday. A handwritten sign in the depot reads"last bus east October 27, last bus west October 28."

It's the end of a vital service for people like Petkau and theculmination of 100 years of history in Nelson, where Canadian Greyhound CoachesLtd. began.

The story opens with John Learmonth, a businessman who built all sorts of things in his shop just outside Nelson. As the First World War ended in 1918,Learmonth saw the need for a bus service to ply the rutted wagon track between Nelson and nearby Balfour.

So,Learmonth modified a one tonne Oldsmobile building seats in the back for passengers. His grandson, Vic Learmonth, has a working model of the century-old bus.

Vic Learmonth poses for a photo in front of models of his grandfather's buses. (Bob Keating)

"He'd haul freight by day and then had a passenger service, morning and night, from Balfour," saidLearmonth.

The service proved to be so popular thatLearmonth built a second, larger bus on the frame of a Packard automobile. With that, Learmonth Motor Coach was born, and it ran from 1925 until 1929 whenthe company was bought by Barney Olson and incorporated as Canadian Greyhound Coaches with Learmonth's Packard continuingthe run between Nelson and Trail.

Learmonth's modified version of a Packard automobile. (Burt Learmonth)

"He seemed pretty proud of it.I was awfully young then, but I know he was strict about how people drove and the whole professional attitude of his people.So I would think he had a lot of pride in doing it," saidVic Learmonth.

In 1930, Greyhound set up shop in Calgary, building one of the most ornate terminals in North America, and, in 1940, the company sold to the Greyhound Corporation in the United States. The new transcontinental service grew in the 1950s when tourism and long distance travel began to take off.

Greyhound flourished until the beginning of this century when flying became more affordable, vehicle ownership went up and travellers stopped seeing the bus as an option. This summer, the company announced the cancellation of almost all its service to western Canada, ending passenger and freight service in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba, and cancelling all but one route in B.C. therun between Vancouver and Seattle.

The changes make Ontario and Quebec the only regions where the familiar Greyhound logo will continue to roll across Canadian highways.

"It's been run into the ground by management from Dallas, Texas," saidTom Lymbery, ahistorian who's written extensively about Greyhound.

Learmonth's buses were loaded on ferries during the early 20th century. (Burt Learmonth)

Lymbery can remember when Greyhound buses were loaded on a paddlewheeler to cross Kootenay Lake outside his home. This summer, he celebrated his 90th birthday with a trip to the Yukon where he interviewed retired Greyhound bus drivers and workers.

"And all of the depot people blamed Texas for the disaster," says Lymbery.

Lymbery has organized one final trip on the last Greyhound on Saturdayfrom Nelson to Grand Forks. He says it will be a sad journey.

Vic Learmonthwill be onboard, remembering how his grandfather helped start the company a century ago. Helena Petkau won't be making the trip and says she may never get on another Greyhound again.

"I'm really gonna miss it," she said. "It's deteriorated over the recent past, andso, that was sad, but it's a great ride."

With files from Bob Keating