On Wednesday, July 23, in the middle of the day, someone came to destroy.
The School Bus Graveyard in Alto, where row upon row of buses have been turned into canvases of color, was struck by what its owners, Debbie and Walter Wade, are calling the worst act of vandalism they’ve ever seen. Windows were smashed out of painted buses, personal cars were damaged, and even grading equipment used to maintain the property was targeted.

The Wades estimate the damage at more than $10,000, and that doesn’t even include customers’ cars. Debbie believes it was no random act.
“These people intentionally came in here to do this,” she said, calling the attack “premeditated.”
From junkyard to landmark
To understand why this vandalism cuts so deeply, you have to understand what the School Bus Graveyard is.
The site began as part of Alonzo Wade Used Cars and Auto Parts, a business Walter’s father started in 1959 in the foothills of the Northeast Georgia Mountains, about an hour northeast of Atlanta. Over the decades, the yard became known for selling and salvaging vehicles, including used school buses.
When metal thefts spiked before the Great Recession, thieves kept stripping the buses. Walter responded with an idea as practical as it was creative: he lined the perimeter of the property with the decommissioned buses to create a wall of steel.

Then something unexpected happened. One day, a graffiti tag of a ghost appeared on one of the buses with a note that read, “Sorry about the bus.” Walter, who drives a school bus, found the culprit — one of his own bus riders.
“It was good. I liked it. I really liked it!” he recalled. That first spark of paint opened the door for something bigger.
By 2010, artists from across the country were asking to paint the old buses. Walter agreed, with two rules: the art had to stay family-friendly, and no climbing on anything. Soon, the graveyard became a living gallery.

Now, more than 120 buses line the Wades’ property along GA Highway 23, their rusted shells covered in murals. Artists have come from Quebec, Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Tampa, and even Ireland. Visitors have traveled from Japan, Iran, Norway, and Ethiopia just to see it.
As Walter puts it, “We’re not trying to make money. We just want people to have a good time and enjoy this art.”
More than metal
The School Bus Graveyard isn’t just an attraction. For Debbie and Walter, it’s home.
“This has always been home,” Debbie said, looking over the rows of buses and art that fill the property.
The couple has opened their gates to everyone from local schoolkids painting donated cars to quinceañera photo shoots and film crews. They’ve seen thousands of signatures left by visitors from all 50 states and dozens of countries.

“My message is, you know, this is artwork. It is for people to enjoy,” Debbie said. “We have kids that come out here. I had a little boy that brought me a school bus he had painted on it. He was like five, and he gave it to me to keep here. I’ve got it in the house.”
The School Bus Graveyard has become a melting pot of art, memory, and community, a place where someone once wrote, “This is a melting pot, don’t extinguish the flame.”
Defiance in the face of damage
The vandalism struck a painful blow, but Debbie’s resolve has not cracked. She’s been asked if this might be the thing that finally shuts the gates for good. Her answer is sharp and unwavering: closing isn’t an option.
“If we close, they win,” she said. “I’m not going to let them win.”
For her, the buses, the paint, and the property represent something worth protecting. “This is what people enjoy, and that’s what I want them to do,” she said. “I want them to bring their kids and grandkids, come out here… just enjoy the art.”
A reward, and a plea
The Wades are offering a $500 reward for information leading to the arrest and conviction of whoever is responsible for the damage. Debbie has been clear about her feelings on the attack, writing on Facebook: “This is no longer just people wanting to destroy everything.”
And while she and Walter continue to clean up and repair, they remain committed to the spirit that turned an old junkyard into an unlikely art landmark.
“You may have destroyed a lot of stuff,” Debbie wrote, “but not my reserve. The School Bus Graveyard will still be open.”














Visiting & supporting the School Bus Graveyard
Visitors can schedule a visit by calling 706-839-5153 or by messaging the School Bus Graveyard on Facebook.
Admission is $10 per person, with children 12 and under free.






