Public Transportation

From Cvillepedia
Revision as of 10:52, 24 November 2022 by Seantubbs (talk | contribs) (spun this page off from Charlottesville Area Transit)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
CAT service area for 2017

This page is intended to be a history of transit and bus lines in the Charlottesville.

History

A streetcar network formed in the late 19th century but grew obsolete and was underused by the 1930's. Lines included the Charlottesville City & Suburban Railway Company.

On October 8, 1934, the City of Charlottesville put out a request for bids for a private company to run four buses along the routes that had been covered by the trolley system. [1]

In the late 1940's, bus service was provided by S.A. Jessup.

In March 1948, a petition signed by 300 people was submitted to City Council to bring service to the Belmomt area. [2]

Also that month, members of the Young Men's Business Club backed a proposal in traffic and parking survey that buses only be allowed to stop on every other intersection on Main Street. [3]

In 1980, Albemarle County received a grant to pay for bus service from the Lake Saponi area to Barracks Road Shopping Center. [4]

A ten cent fare increase was before Council on April 4, 1988. [5]

The service changed its name from Charlottesville Transit Service to Charlottesville Area Transit in 2010. [6] [7]


Logo-small25.jpg This article is a stub. You can help cvillepedia by expanding it.


References

  1. Web. City Calls Bus Franchise Bids for November 5, Daily Progress Digitized Microfilm, Lindsay family, October 8, 1934, retrieved October 8, 2022. Print. October 8, 1934 page 1.
  2. Web. Council Enacts Tax Ordinance, Staff Reports, Daily Progress Digitized Microfilm, Lindsay family, March 2, 1949, retrieved December 10, 2016 from University of Virginia Library.
  3. Web. Alternate Street Bus Stops Urged, Staff Reports, Daily Progress Digitized Microfilm, Lindsay family, March 26, 1948, retrieved December 23, 2016 from University of Virginia Library. Print. March 26, 1948 page 3.
  4. Print: Albemarle To Open U.S. 29 Bus Route, Robert Brickhouse, Daily Progress, Worrell Newspaper group January 30, 1980, Page A3.
  5. Web. Charlottesville City Council meeting minutes, .pdf, Council Chambers, City of Charlottesville, April 4, 1988.
  6. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named prohnineridership
  7. Web. CTS becomes CAT, Dave McNair, The Hook, Better Publications LLC, March 3, 2010, retrieved February 23, 2020. Print. March 11, 2010 , 910, .

External Links