Auto trail
The system of auto trails was an informal network of marked routes that existed in the United States and Canada in the early part of the 20th century. Marked with colored bands on telephone poles, the trails were intended to help travellers in the early days of the automobile.
Auto trails were usually marked and sometimes maintained by organizations of private individuals. Some, such as the Lincoln Highway, maintained by the Lincoln Highway Association, were well-known and well-organized, while others were the work of fly-by-night promoters, to the point that anyone with enough paint and the will to do so could set up a trail; trails were not usually linked to road improvements, though counties and states often prioritized road improvements because they were on trails.
In the mid-to-late 1920s, the auto trails were essentially replaced in the United States with the system of numbered U.S. Highways. Similar numbering schemes had begun to be implemented in the Canadian provinces as well.
List of auto trails
- This transport-related list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Name | North or east end | South or west end | U.S. Highways (approximate, based on 1926 plan and later additions) | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Albert Pike Highway | Hot Springs, Arkansas | Colorado Springs, Colorado | US 270, US 64, US 183, US 154, US 50, US 85 | |
Arrowhead Trail | Salt Lake City, Utah | Los Angeles, California | US 91 | |
Atlantic Highway | Calais, Maine | Miami, Florida | US 1, US 25, US 17, US 1 | |
Atlantic-Pacific Highway | New York, New York | Los Angeles, California | US 1, US 211, US 15, US 33, US 60, US 52, US 460, US 50, US 54, US 70, US 60 | |
Atlantic Yellowstone Pacific Highway | Chicago, Illinois | Sioux Falls, South Dakota | US 20, US 218, US 18 | |
Baltimore Pike | Baltimore, Maryland | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | ||
Bankhead Highway | Washington, D.C. | San Diego, California | US 1, US 15, US 70, US 170, US 29, US 78, US 70, US 67, US 80 | |
Bee Line Highway | Chicago, Illinois | New Orleans, Louisiana | ||
Ben Hur Highway | St. Louis, Missouri | Fort Dodge, Iowa | ||
Black and Yellow Trail | Chicago, Illinois | Yellowstone National Park | US 41, US 16, US 14, US 16, US 20 | |
Blackhawk Highway | Dixon, Illinois | Beloit, Wisconsin | ||
California-Banff Bee Line | ||||
Cannon Ball Route | Chicago, Illinois | Hannibal, Missouri | ||
Capital Route | Omaha, Nebraska | Austin, Texas | ||
Chicago, Kansas City and Gulf Highway | Chicago, Illinois | Galveston, Texas | ||
Colorado to Gulf Highway | Denver, Colorado | Galveston, Texas and Brownsville, Texas | US 85, US 385, US 370, US 81, US 181 | |
Columbia River Highway | Pendleton, Oregon | Portland, Oregon | US 30 | |
Cooley Highway | Grand Rapids, Minnesota | Sisseton, South Dakota | ||
Cornhusker Highway | Sioux City, Iowa | Oklahoma City, Oklahoma | ||
Custer Battlefield Highway | Omaha, Nebraska | Glacier National Park | US 75, US 16, US 116, US 87E, US 87 | |
Dallas-Canadian-Denver Highway | Boulder, Colorado | Galveston, Texas | US 85, US 50, US 83, US 70, US 77 | |
Daniel Webster Highway | ||||
Detroit-Lincoln-Denver Highway | Detroit, Michigan | Denver, Colorado | US 12, US 32, US 38 | |
Dixie Highway | Chicago, Illinois and Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan | Miami, Florida | Illinois 1, US 136, US 31, Indiana 37, US 150, US 31W | |
Dixie Bee Line | Chicago, Illinois | Nashville, Tennessee | US 41, US 241 | |
Dixie Overland Highway | Savannah, Georgia | San Diego, California | US 80, US 84, US 380, US 366, US 80 | |
Evergreen National Highway | Victoria, British Columbia | El Paso, Texas | US 99, US 10, US 97, US 410, US 95, US 30, US 30N, US 91, US 95, US 66 | |
Egyptian Trail | Chicago, Illinois | Cairo, Illinois | ||
Florida Short Route | ||||
George Washington National Highway | Savannah, Georgia | Seattle, Washington | ||
Geysers-to-Glaciers Highway | Glacier National Park | Yellowstone National Park | US 89 W from West Yellowstone to Shelby, Montana; US 2 from Shelby to Cut Bank, Montana; and MT 213 from Cut Bank to the Canadian border[1] | |
Glacier to Gulf Motorway | Calgary, Alberta | Tampico, Mexico | ||
Glacier Trail | Seattle, Washington | Jacksonville, Florida | ||
Grant Highway | Chicago, Illinois | Portland, Oregon | ||
Great White Way | Davenport, Iowa | Council Bluffs, Iowa | ||
International Peace Highway | Quebec, Quebec and Rouses Point, New York | Laredo, Texas and Mexico City, Mexico | ||
Jackson Highway | Chicago, Illinois | New Orleans, Louisiana | US 152, US 52, US 31, US 168, US 68, US 31, US 43, US 45, US 11 | |
Jefferson Highway | Winnipeg, Manitoba | New Orleans, Louisiana | US 59, US 2, US 71, US 10N, US 10, US 65, US 69, US 71/US 73E, US 73, US 75, US 69, US 67, US 271, US 80, US 171, US 71, US 61 | |
Jefferson Davis National Highway | Washington, D.C. | San Diego, California | US 1, US 278, US 29, US 80, US 43, US 90, US 96, US 277, US 90 | |
King of Trails | Winnipeg, Manitoba | Galveston, Texas and Brownsville, Texas | US 75/US 81, US 75/US 77, US 75, US 73, US 73E, US 50, US 73W, US 75, US 77, US 81, US 181, US 96 | |
Kings Transcontinental Highway | Ottawa | Toronto | ||
Lackawanna Trail | Binghamton, New York | Delaware, New Jersey | US 11,[2] US 611[3] | |
Lakes to Gulf Highway | Duluth, Minnesota | Galveston, Texas | ||
Lakes-to-Sea Highway | Atlantic City, New Jersey | Erie, Pennsylvania | US 30, US 120, US 22, US 322, US 19 | |
Lee Highway | New York, New York | San Francisco, California | US 1, US 211, US 11, US 72, US 70, US 366, US 80, US 180, US 80, US 101 | |
Lewis and Clark Highway | Missoula, Montana | Lewiston, Idaho | ||
Liberty Highway | New York, New York | Cleveland, Ohio | New Jersey 4, New Jersey 17, New York 17, New York 430, New York 394, US 20[4] | |
Lincoln Highway | New York, New York | San Francisco, California | US 1, US 30, US 40, US 93, US 50, US 99, US 48 | |
Logan-Lee Highway | Rock Island, Illinois | Paducah, Kentucky | US 67, Illinois 3 | |
Lone Star Route | Chicago, Illinois | Lake Charles, Louisiana (earlier Brownsville, Texas) | US 66, US 67, US 63, US 165 | |
Lone Star Trail | St. Augustine, Florida | Los Angeles, California | US 1, US 90, US 84, US 67, US 290, US 80 | |
Magnolia Route | ||||
Meridian Highway | Winnipeg, Manitoba | Mexico City, Mexico | US 81 | |
Mississippi River Scenic Highway | Winnipeg, Manitoba and Port Arthur, Ontario | Fort Myers, Florida and Port Arthur, Texas | US 75, US 2, US 71, US 10N, US 10, US 61, US 55, US 61, US 90; US 49E, US 49, US 98, US 90, US 19, US 41 | |
Mississippi Valley Highway | Ely, Minnesota | Gulfport, Mississippi (earlier New Orleans, Louisiana) | US 53, US 61, US 55, US 161, US 67, US 51, US 45, US 11, US 49 | Earlier known as the Burlington Way |
National Old Trails Road | Washington, D.C. and Baltimore, Maryland | Los Angeles, California | US 240/US 40, US 40, US 50N, US 50, US 350, US 85, US 70, US 66 | |
National Park-to-Park Highway | Loop connecting National Parks | US 99, US 48, US 40, US 99E, US 99, US 10, US 195, US 95, US 2, US 87, US 87W, US 20, US 185, US 85, US 50, US 285, US 450, US 550, US 64, US 666, US 66 | ||
National Parks Highway | Boston, Massachusetts and New York, New York | Seattle, Washington | Also known as the Northwest Trail | |
National Roosevelt Midland Trail | Washington, D.C. and Newport News, Virginia (earlier Oyster Bay, New York) | Los Angeles, California | US 60, US 150, US 50, US 40, US 40N, US 40, US 40S, US 50, US 6 | |
National White Way | ||||
New Santa Fe Trail | Kansas City, Mo. | Los Angeles | US 50, US 350, US 85, US 66 | |
Old Oregon Trail | Independence, Missouri | Seaside, Oregon and Olympia, Washington | US 40, US 30, US 26, US 20, US 87E, US 30N, US 30 | |
Old Spanish Trail | St. Augustine, Florida | San Diego, California | US 1, US 90, US 80 | |
Ozark Trails | Kansas City, Missouri, Hannibal, Missouri, St. Louis, Missouri, and Memphis, Tennessee | Denver, Colorado, Las Vegas, New Mexico, and El Paso, Texas | ||
Pacific Highway | Vancouver, British Columbia | San Diego, California | US 99, US 40, US 101 | |
Pershing Way | Winnipeg, Manitoba | New Orleans, Louisiana | ||
Pikes Peak Ocean to Ocean Highway | New York, New York | Los Angeles, California (earlier San Francisco, California) | US 22, US 250, US 36, US 136, US 36, US 40N, US 40S, US 50, US 91 | Also known as the Pershing Transport Route |
Puget Sound-to-Gulf Highway | ||||
Red Ball Route | ||||
River-to-River Road | Davenport, Iowa | Council Bluffs, Iowa | ||
Southern National Highway | ||||
Southwest Trail | Chicago, Illinois | El Paso, Texas | US 32, US 65, US 50S, US 81, US 160, US 281, US 60, US 366 | |
Susquehanna Trail | Buffalo, New York | Washington, D.C. | US 20, US 15, US 111/US 240 | |
Theodore Roosevelt International Highway | Portland, Maine | Portland, Oregon | US 302, US 2, US 11, US 104, US 23, US 2, US 95, US 195, US 295, US 410, US 30 | |
Three C Highway | Cleveland, Ohio | Cincinnati, Ohio | US 42 | |
Victory Highway | New York, New York | San Francisco, California | US 1, US 40, US 40S, US 83, US 40N, US 40 | |
White River Trail | Springfield, Missouri | Ponca City, Oklahoma | ||
White-way 7 Highway | Chicago, Illinois | Omaha, Nebraska | US 32 | In Iowa, created from segments of the River to River Road from Davenport to Redfield, and the Great White Way from Dexter to Council Bluffs. |
William Penn Highway | US 22 | |||
Yellowstone Highway | Denver, Colorado | Yellowstone National Park | ||
Yellowstone Trail | Plymouth, Massachusetts | Seattle, Washington | US 20, US 30, US 41, US 110, US 10, US 212, US 12, US 10, US 195, US 295, US 410, US 97, US 10 |
See also
- List of U.S. Routes
- U.S. Highway association
References
- American Automobile Association (1922). Highways Green Book (3rd ed.). Washington, DC: American Automobile Association. pp. 418–20.
- United States Touring Map (Map). Automobile Club of America and National Highways Association. 1924.
- Midget Map of the Transcontinental Trails of the United States (Map). Clason Map Company. 1923.
- Touring Atlas of the United States (Map). Clason Map Company. 1925.
- Auto Road Atlas (Map). Rand McNally. 1926.
- ↑ Baranowski, Shelley and Furlough, Ellen. Being Elsewhere: Tourism, Consumer Culture, and Identity in Modern Europe and North America. Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan Press, 2001, p. 168-169; National Park Service. Rules and Regulations. Yellowstone National Park, 1920. Season June 20 to September 15. U.S. Department of the Interior. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1920, p. 21-23, accessed 2013-01-23.
- ↑ Kitsko, Jeffrey. "US 11". Pennsylvania Highways. Self-published. Retrieved January 16, 2013.
- ↑ Kitsko, Jeffrey. "US 611 (Decommissioned)". Pennsylvania Highways. Self-published. Retrieved January 16, 2013.
- ↑ Johnston, R. J. (April 4, 1918). "The Liberty Highway: Touring and Driveaway Route Between Cleveland and New York". Motor Age 33 (14): 72–75. Retrieved January 16, 2013.