


© SandmanCnC (CC BY)
1 City Fare - Ohio Valley Bus Company Huntington, West Virginia ND
1937 yearCopper-nickel | 3.87 g | 22.9 mm |
Location | United States |
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Period | Federal republic (1776-date) |
Type | Transportation tokens › Public transportation tokens |
Year | 1937 |
Composition | Copper-nickel |
Weight | 3.87 g |
Diameter | 22.9 mm |
Thickness | 1.3 mm |
Shape | Round with cutouts |
Technique | Milled |
Orientation | Medal alignment ↑↑ |
Updated | 2024-11-14 |
Numista | N#375324 |
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Rarity index | 91% |
Reverse
"O" design in center. Web design throughout token.
Script: Latin
Lettering:
GOOD FOR
ONE CITY FARE
Edge
Plain
Comment
From 1933 to 1971, this was the headquarters of the Ohio Valley Bus Company. The company was established in 1913 as the Ohio Valley Streetcar Company, and its original headquarters was on the corner of 18th Street West and Washington Avenue. The company began offering service to Huntington residents using ten streetcars, and by the 1920s, Ohio Valley Streetcar had built a network of 34 miles of track and connected the cities of Huntington, Ashland, and Catlettsburg. Fred Samworth became the president of the company in 1933, and as the company replaced streetcars with buses, the company's name changed to the Ohio Valley Bus Company four years later. Starting in the 1950s, the proliferation of personal automobiles led to financial difficulties for the bus company. Facing stagnant wages, employees went on strike on October 1, 1971. This strike ended in 1972 with the creation of the Tri-State Transit Authority, a publicly subsidized entity that still operates in Huntington today.-theclio.com