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JOHN GREENWOOD (BUS OPERATOR)

(Redirected from John Greenwood d.1851)

'John Greenwood' (died 1851), transport entrepreneur, was the keeper of a toll-gate in Pendleton on the Manchester to Liverpool turnpike. In 1824 he purchased a horse and a cart with several seats and began an omnibus service, probably the first one in the UK, between Pendleton and Manchester. His pioneering idea was to offer a service where, unlike with a stagecoach, no prior booking was necessary and the driver would pick up or set down passengers anywhere on request. Later on he added daily services to Buxton, Chester, and Sheffield.
John Greenwood, and a number of competitors, created a network of omnibus services, often acting as feeders to the railways. When he died in 1851 he left a flourishing business to his son, also named John.

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References

References



Rails of Manchester, , Charles, Hulme, John Rylands University Library, 1991,

Greater Manchester's Museum of Transport

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