The Pennsylvania Urban Legend That Will Make Your Skin Crawl
By Beth Price-Williams|Updated on January 09, 2023(Originally published January 04, 2023)
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Beth Price-Williams
Author
A professional writer for more than two decades, Beth has lived in nearly a dozen states – from Missouri and Virginia to Connecticut and Vermont – and Toronto, Canada. In addition to traveling extensively in the U.S. and the U.K., she has a BA in Journalism from Point Park University (PA), a MA in Holocaust & Genocide Studies from Stockton University (NJ), and a Master of Professional Writing from Chatham University (PA). A writer and editor for Only In Your State since 2016, Beth grew up in and currently lives outside of Pittsburgh and when she’s not writing or hanging out with her bunnies, budgies, and chinchilla, she and her daughter are out chasing waterfalls.
Sit back. It’s one of those days where you would love to just run away to a deserted island or jump in the car and drive with no plan in mind. Now imagine a bus – destination unknown – that brings downtrodden passengers closer to those who share in their hopelessness. This Pennsylvania urban legend tells the story of dejected souls on a bus to nowhere.
Countless buses traverse the city of Philadelphia day and night. All have destinations, pick-up and drop-off times, and regular passengers...except one.
If you've been a passenger on one of these Philadelphia buses, perhaps you've passed by the mysterious bus to nowhere.
One bus, at least if you believe the local urban legend, has and displays no destination. It has no route number nor does its unknown route appear on any known transportation maps.
Yet, if you ask some Philadelphians, they'll tell you they’ve seen this bus winding its way through the city streets. Some call it the bus to nowhere. Others call it the wandering bus. And for some it’s merely zero.
Despite what you call this bus to nowhere, one thing is certain. Its passengers are those who suffer from incurable hopelessness, at the bottom of one of their very worst days in memory.
You don’t want to suffer the type of despair of the bus’s passengers but, if you do, you mustn’t wait for the bus to slow down to let you on. You must chase after it and…
You’ll look out the window, no idea as to the final destination, and wrapped in your thoughts, desperate only to get far away – anywhere – from the pain and despair.
Your fellow passengers share the same desire and, like you, sit in the silence of their thoughts and hope to travel to a destination where their problems no longer exist.
Perhaps you'll find that peace as the bus wanders aimlessly. Then you will be ready to get off of the bus and return to the bustling real world.
Pull the cord when you’re ready to disembark. As you step off of the bus, you leave your memories of the ride – which could have lasted minutes or years – behind.
You may not even remember the experience at all - or will you?
The faces of the bus driver and the passengers. Your thoughts and feelings as you watch the landscape pass by. Your final destination. All wiped from your memory as you finally find yourself where you’re supposed to be.
Count yourself as lucky if you’ve never been a passenger on the bus to nowhere. But, if you find yourself in the depths of despair, wait for the bus to nowhere to appear for only those at their lowest points can see it.
Have you heard of this Pennsylvania urban legend? Or, perhaps you’ve taken a ride on this mysterious bus to nowhere? Have you heard of these Pennsylvania urban legends?
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Beth Price-Williams|January 09, 2023
Are there any other urban legends in Pennsylvania?
The bus to nowhere, although chilling, isn’t the only urban legend in Pennsylvania that is sure to stir emotions. Here are several other urban legends in Pennsylvania:
Blue Mist Road in Irwin is said to be haunted by a half-dog, half-deer, half-human.
Fairies are said to dance at Wildwood Cemetery in Williamsburg at night, but some also hear the sounds of residents banging to get out of their coffins once the sun goes down.
A green man is said to wander a tunnel in Pittsburgh.