Mayflower Transit
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UniGroup | |
Website | www.mayflower.com |
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Footnotes / references [1] |
Mayflower Transit, LLC, a subsidiary of
History
Mayflower was founded in
Baltimore Colts relocation
Mayflower was involved in the highly controversial March 28, 1984 move of the
Mayflower leadership were informed of need for an immediate move on the afternoon of the 28th and began tracking down empty tractor-trailer units that could be sent to the Colts' Owings Mills, Maryland, training facility to facilitate the move. At the time, Mayflower had approximately 3,000 trucks, but it took several hours to find 14 empty trucks, from as far away as northern New Jersey and southern Virginia, that could reach the facility that evening. The company also marshaled 45 packers and movers from their Washington offices and sent them via bus to the Colts' facility.[2]
The bus and trucks arrived at approximately 10 PM on the 28th. The movers and drivers were not told the purpose of the job or the eventual destination and Pete Ward, an administrative assistant with the Colts' at the time, reported that upon arrival several movers asked if the facility was an embassy since the Washington-based crew were familiar with overnight embassy relocations. Trucks left as they were filled with the last truck leaving around 4 AM on the 29th. Drivers were instructed to avoid proximity with each other so as not to appear to be a caravan, drive about 100 miles west, and rest until morning. The next morning at around 9 AM, the drivers were told that their destination was Indianapolis, and all of the trucks arrived by the morning of the 30th.[2]
An Associated Press image of one of Mayflower's trucks leaving the Colts' facility in the snow that night became an iconic representation of the team's move in news coverage following the event.[3]
References
- ^ a b c "Mayflower Leadership & History". www.mayflower.com. Retrieved 2018-09-17.
- ^ a b c Wilson, Phillip B. (29 March 2014). "Thirty years later, remembering how Colts' move went down". USA TODAY. Retrieved 16 August 2021.
- ^ "The New York Times: This Day In Sports". www.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2018-09-17.