Markham Transit

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Markham Transit
Markham Transit logo.png
Founded1973
Defunct2001
HeadquartersMiller Transit, 8050 Woodbine Avenue
LocaleMarkham, Ontario
Service typeBus based public transit municipally owned with services contracted out
AllianceToronto Transit Commission (opand GO Transit erating routes within Markham)
Routes14
DestinationsMarkham, Toronto
Fleet58 (2000)
Fuel typeDiesel
OperatorTravelways (1973–1984)
and Miller Transit Limited (1984–2001)

Markham Transit was a public transit system for the town of Markham, Ontario, Canada. It was created in 1973 and operated by Travelways and Miller Transit Limited after 1984 on behalf of the then Town of Markham. The service was merged into York Region Transit in 2001 with Miller Transit continuing to operate most Markham routes.

History[]

Prior to 1973 public transit system were a patchwork of routes by various operators.

In the early 1800s stagecoaches or omnibuses ran along Yonge to hotels in Richmond Hill to York (Toronto) beginning from the 1820s.[1]

Markham Village also had stagecoaches but from 1871 to 1980 it had passenger rail serivces by various operators (Toronto and Nipissing Railway, Midland Railway of Canada, Grand Trunk Railway, Canadian National Railway and VIA Rail) before GO Transit began commuter rail serivce in 1982 as the Stouffville line.

In Thornhill privately owned Metropolitan Street Railway or Metropolitan line ran streetcars on Yonge Street serving Markham on the eastside from 1897 to 1930. Publicly owned (via TTC) North Yonge Railways provided radial electric railway service on Yonge Street from 1930 to 1948. From 1948 to 1977 Toronto Transit Commission (Toronto Transportation Commission before 1954) ran North Yonge (later as 59 North Yonge) bus route on Yonge. From 1977 to 2001 GO Transit Yonge C bus route provided suburban bus service.

Routes[]

Regular service[]

  • 1 North Trunk – ran along Highway 7
  • 2A – ran along 14th Avenue
  • 2 South Trunk – ran along Yonge Street, Doncaster Avenue, Henderson Avenue, John Street, Esna Park Drive, Denison Street, Elson Street, Middlefield Road (did not have stops from Finch Station to Steeles Avenue)
  • 3 Thornhill Local (Merged with Vaughan Transit route 8 to form existing YRT route 3 in 2002)
  • 4 Unionville/Markham Local (now YRT route 40 & 41)
  • 5 Buttonville North (merged with route 4 in 1998)
  • 7 16th Avenue (1998–1999, merged with Richmond Hill Transit Route 5 (now YRT route 16)
  • 8 Kennedy (since 1998)
  • 9 Markham Road (1998–2002, merged with TTC route 102)

Express / rush hour[]

  • 6 Brimley (rush hour service from Steeles Avenue East to 14th Avenue was cancelled circa 1997; this service was provided by TTC route 128A in the early 1990s)
  • Unionville Express
  • Markham Express
  • Sunday and Holiday Express – ran along Yonge Street, John Street, Leslie Street and Highway 7

Contracted routes[]

There were a number or north–south routes operated for Markham Transit by other operators:

The Toronto Transit Commission's 53 Steeles East was never operated on behalf of Markham Transit and did not require additional fares when the bus ran within Markham. (53B/E used Middlefield Road, Elson Street and Markham Road from 1994 to 1999; after 1999 the route turned at McCowan Road north of Steeles, along Elson Street to Markham Road.)

Park 'n' ride[]

This service allowed patrons to park cars at select locations and board buses without paying for parking.

Park 'N Ride Locations included:

  • Markham Village Community Centre
  • Knob Hill Farms - northeast corner of Woodbine and Highway 7
  • Former Fortinos store (now Denison Square Mall) – Denison Street and Kennedy Road
  • Denison Square – Highway 48 and Denison Street
  • Thornhill Community Centre
  • First Markham Place

Additional services[]

Mobility Bus Service

Markham Transit provided specialized services for the disabled and was similar to the TTC's WheelTrans. Separate wheelchair accessible vehicles were operated for this service. It also included Taxi Scrip, service for unplanned trips using contracted taxi operators.

Request Stop program

Similar services offered by the TTC for female patrons at night. This excluded routes from contractors (namely TTC and GO Transit), whom dictated their own Request Stop program.

Faster to Finch

Offered express connection between Markham Transit and GO Transit and 407 ETR to Finch Station.

Transcab

Introduced in 1990s when Markham Transit did not operate night services. The hours of operations was after 7 p.m. Monday to Saturday. By the late 1990s, Markham Transit offered evening and weekend services; this has been continued under YRT. Transcab was replaced by school bus shuttles in 1997.

Fleet[]

Many of Markham Transit's vehicles were second-hand, but more recent buses were new purchases. They were maintained by the contractor.

Current YRT status (2005):

  • 1977, 1979, 1981 General Motors Diesel Division Buses T6H-4523N (#2001–#2006, #2014) – Retired in 2009.
  • 1979–1984 Ontario Bus Industries Orion I 01.501 (#2007–#2013, #2015–#2020) – Retired.
  • 1985–1988 Ontario Bus Industries Orion I 01.508 (#2021–#2025, #2027–#2030, #2033–#2036) – Retired.
  • 1966 General Motors Diesel Division Buses T6H-5303 (#2025) – Ex-Toronto Transit Commission #3758, retired
  • 1966 General Motors Diesel Division Buses T6H-5303 (#2026) – Ex-Toronto Transit Commission #3746, retired
  • 1971 General Motors Diesel Division Buses T6H-4523N (#2031) – Loaned Brampton Transit #9724, acquired in 1988
  • 1974 General Motors Diesel Division Buses T6H-4523N (#2032) – Loaned Brampton Transit #9741, acquired in 1988
  • 1967 General Motors Diesel Division Buses TDH-5303 (#2037) – Ex-Toronto Transit Commission #7113, acquired in 1989, retired
  • 1963 General Motors Diesel Division Buses TDH-4519 (#2038) – Ex-London Transit Commission #81-3, acquired in 1989, retired
  • 1969 General Motors Diesel Division Buses T6H-5305 (#2039) – Ex-Toronto Transit Commission #7371, acquired in 1989, retired
  • 1969 General Motors Diesel Division Buses T6H-5305 (#2040) – Ex-Toronto Transit Commission #7338, acquired in 1989, retired
  • 1969 General Motors Diesel Division Buses T6H-5305 (#2041–2042) – Ex-Toronto Transit Commission #7372–7373, acquired in 1989, retired
  • 1970 General Motors Diesel Division Buses T8H-5305A (#2043) – Ex-GO Transit #1015, acquired in 1989, retired
  • 1989 Motor Coach Industries TC-40102N Classic (#2044–#2047) – Retired in 2009.
  • 1990 Motor Coach Industries TC-40102A Classic (#2048–#2052) – Retired in 2009.
  • OBI Orion V 05.501
  • 1998 OBI Orion VI 06.501 (#2061–#2067)Disabled access – Retired in 2011.
  • Champion Bus Incorporated Solo – sold to BusAdvertising (DPI Transit Media) of Ajax ON Disabled access (#2055–#2060) – All retired
  • 1991 New Flyer Industries D40S (#2068–#2072) – Ex-GO Transit, all retired
  • General Motors Diesel Division Buses T6H-XXXX – NG demonstrator from FIBA Canning, Scarborough

Past fleet[]

  • GMC Flexette (#505)

Disabled access Denotes wheelchair-accessible vehicles.

Under Travelways the paint scheme used a olive/gold large arrow pointing to the front on a white background. A triple "m" logo on the front and sides. The word "Markham Transit" in black was found on both sides in front of the arrow.

With Miller the fleet replaced the colour scheme with reddish-brown and yellowish-gold on a white background with the town's word mark "Markham" on the sides near the rear.

Facilities[]

Markham Transit buses were stored at Miller Transit yard on Miller Avenue (Woodbine Avenue and Highway 407). The buses were stored in an outside area on the east side of Woodbine.

Loops[]

  • Middlefield Road and Denison Street – shared with the TTC
  • McCowan Road and Steeles Avenue (at Calvary Manor and shared with the TTC)
  • Thornhill Town Centre
  • Brimley Road north of Steeles Avenue East

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Public Transportation: History of Yonge Street: Richmond Hill Public Library Digital Collections".
  • Markham Transit 1990 Rider's Guide
  • Markham Transit Fall 1994 Rider's Guide
  • Markham Transit Fall 1999 Rider's Guide
  • Markham Transit 2000 Rider's Guide
  • Transit History...Markham
Preceded by
None
Public transit in Markham
1973–2001
Succeeded by
Retrieved from ""