Last ‘Freedom Train’ to make its final trip in California

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SAN FRANCISCO — The last of the nation’s "Freedom Train" rides to pay tribute to Martin Luther
King Jr. is set to make its final trip in California after 30 years of operation.
Caltrain, a commuter rail service along the San Francisco Peninsula, says the last "Freedom
Train" ride is scheduled to depart from San Jose to San Francisco Monday morning.
The train service was among more than two dozen "Freedom Trains" launched nationwide by Coretta
Scott King to commemorate the march her husband led from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama nearly 50 years
ago. The march demanding voting rights for African-Americans proved instrumental in passage of the 1965
Voting Rights Act.
Scott chose the San Jose-to-San Francisco route because the distance between the two cities is roughly
equivalent to the 54 miles traveled by King and his fellow protesters.
Organizers said they’re ending the ride because of declining ridership and difficulty obtaining
sponsorship for the chartered ride.
The Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Association of Santa Clara Valley said 1,400 tickets for Monday’s train
ride have sold out.
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