Auto trail

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
1922 map of auto trails
Old style highway markings

The system of auto trails was an informal network of marked routes that existed in 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, although counties and states often prioritized road improvements because they were on trails.

In the mid-to-late 1920s, the auto trails were essentially replaced with the United States Numbered Highway System. The Canadian provinces had also begun implementing similar numbering schemes.

List of auto trails

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 154, US 50, US 85
Aroostook Trail
Old Town, Maine Fairfield, Maine Maine Route 100, US 2
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
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Baltimore, Maryland
Bankhead Highway Washington, D.C.
San Diego, California
US 170, US 29, US 78, US 70, US 67, US 80
Bee Line Highway
Chicago, Illinois
New Orleans, Louisiana
US 51
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 IL 2, IL 251, US 51
Broadway Of America
New York City, New York
San Diego, California
US 80, Arizona 87, Arizona 84, US 80, US 67, US 70, US 41, US 70S, US 70, US 11W, US 11, US 211, US 1, US 40, US 13, US 1 Later addition auto trail, established in 1930. One alignment used Arizona 87 and Arizona 84 between Gila Bend and Tucson, another followed US 80 between both cities.[1][2]
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 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 87E, US 87
Dallas-Canadian-Denver Highway Boulder, Colorado Galveston, Texas US 85, US 50, US 83, US 70, US 77
Daniel Webster Highway
Chartierville, Quebec
Franconia, New Hampshire
Detroit-Lincoln-Denver Highway Detroit, Michigan
Denver, Colorado
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 241
Dixie Overland Highway Savannah, Georgia
San Diego, California
US 366
, US 80
Egyptian Trail
Chicago, Illinois
Cairo, Illinois
Electric Highway (Auto trail)
Forsyth, Montana Helena, Montana US 12, US 89
Evergreen National Highway Victoria, British Columbia El Paso, Texas
US 30N, US 91, US 95, US 66
Florida Short Route
French Lick Route
Cincinnati, Ohio
Evansville, Indiana US 50, State Road 37, US 150, State Road 56, US 231, and State Road 62
George Washington Memorial Highway Cambridge, Massachusetts Agawam, Massachusetts
George Washington National Highway
Savannah, Georgia
Seattle, Washington
Geysers-to-Glaciers Highway
Glacier National Park Yellowstone National Park
MT 213 from Cut Bank to the Canada–US border[3][4]
Glacier to Gulf Motorway Calgary, Alberta
Tampico, Mexico
Glacier Trail
Seattle, Washington
Jacksonville, Florida
Grant Highway
Chicago, Illinois
Portland, Oregon US 20
Great Plains Road Portal, North Dakota Brownsville, Texas
Great White Way Davenport, Iowa Council Bluffs, Iowa US 6 Also known as the White Pole Road
International Peace Highway
Quebec, Quebec, and Rouses Point, New York
Laredo, Texas, and Mexico City, Mexico
Jackson Highway
Chicago, Illinois
New Orleans, Louisiana
US 168, US 68, US 31, US 43, US 45, US 11
Jefferson Highway Winnipeg, Manitoba
New Orleans, Louisiana
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 96, US 277, US 90
King of Trails
Winnipeg, Manitoba Galveston, Texas, and Brownsville, Texas
US 96
Lackawanna Trail
Binghamton, New York Delaware, New Jersey ]
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 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[7]
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, Arizona 86, US 80, , Arizona 84, Maricopa–Casa Grande Highway (Arizona), Gila Bend–Maricopa Highway (Arizona), 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
Mississippi Valley Highway Ely, Minnesota
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
Baltimore, Maryland
Los Angeles, California
National Park-to-Park Highway
Loop connecting
National Parks
US 666, US 66
National Parks Highway
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 40S, US 50, US 6
New Santa Fe Trail
Kansas City, Mo. Los Angeles
US 66
Old Oregon Trail Independence, Missouri Seaside, Oregon, and Olympia, Washington
US 30N
, US 30
Old Spanish Trail St. Augustine, Florida
San Diego, California
US 1, US 90, US 80
Ozark Trails
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
San Francisco, California
)
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 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 295, US 410, US 30
Three C Highway
Cleveland, Ohio
Cincinnati, Ohio
Ohio SR 3
Transprovincial Highway Ottawa Toronto Later Ontario Highway 2 and Ontario Highway 15
Victory Highway
New York, New York
San Francisco, California
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
New York, New York
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
US 22
Yellowstone Highway
Denver, Colorado
Yellowstone National Park
Yellowstone Trail Plymouth, Massachusetts
Seattle, Washington
US 295, US 410, US 97
, US 10

See also

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.[permanent dead link]
  • Auto Road Atlas (Map). Rand McNally. 1926.
  1. .
  2. ^ Broadway Of America (Map). 1:5,300,000. Washington, D.C.: American Automobile Association. 1932. Retrieved March 28, 2023.
  3. ^ Baranowski, Shelley; Furlough, Ellen (2001). Being Elsewhere: Tourism, Consumer Culture, and Identity in Modern Europe and North America. Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan Press. pp. 168–169.
  4. ^ Department of the Interior / National Park Service (1920). "Automobile Highway Information". Rules and Regulations Yellowstone National Park, 1920. Season June 20 to September 15. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office. pp. 21–23.
  5. ^ Kitsko, Jeffrey. "US 11". Pennsylvania Highways. Self-published. Retrieved January 16, 2013.
  6. ^ Kitsko, Jeffrey. "US 611 (Decommissioned)". Pennsylvania Highways. Self-published. Retrieved January 16, 2013.
  7. ^ 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.

External links