A Transcontinental Link: The Lincoln Highway
With the
increasing numbers of vehicles on the road, the level of talk concerning
improved interstate roadways intensified. In 1911, Carl Graham Fischer, an
Indianapolis businessman, promoter of the Indianapolis Speedway, and founder of
Presto-Lite Company, first proposed building a hard-surfaced, coast-to-coast
highway that he named the Lincoln Highway. The Lincoln Highway Association was
organized in 1913, and its importance both in the short- and long-run was
significant. Travel literature concerning the Lincoln Highway appeared long
before the highway was completed and certainly became influential in terms of encouraging
the general pubic to hit the road and find adventure.
Effie Price
Gladding’s Across the Continent by the
Lincoln Highway certainly was an
early example of this genre of writing, and provides a colorful travel account
that curiously focuses on California while largely omitting much of the
Midwest. For Price, the road trip had little danger and much romance. Price
concluded that as a result of her trip, “We have a new conception of our great
country; her vastness, her varied scenery, her prosperity, her happiness, her
boundless resources, her immense possibilities, her kindness and hopefulness.
We are bound to her by a thousand new ties of
acquaintance, of association, and
of pride.”12 And while automobile touring temporarily declined
during World War I, it returned to Americans in 1919 who now had a “fever” to
get back on the road. In fiction, Sinclair Lewis wrote of the adventures of
Claire Boltwood in Free Air. Proper
Ms. Boltwood escaped from her respectable life in Brooklyn by taking a cross-country
road trip in a 70 horsepower Gomez-Dep roadster. Similar to Lewis’s fictional
account, Beatrice Larner Massey penned an account of her 1919 tour with the
title It Might Have Been Worse: A Motor
Trip from Coast to Coast. Massey and her husband leased their home, put
family business affairs in order, and left New York City in a Twin-Six Packard.
A total of 4,154 miles and about $1,000 later, Mrs. Massey concluded, “This
trip can be taken in perfect comfort by two people for thirteen dollars a day,
including everything, which means that you are traveling as well as living. Not
bad, considering the “H. C. of L. today!”13
In a sense,
the Lincoln Highway Association marked the emergence of the “road-gang,” an
effective lobby group that for remainder of the twentieth century that shaped
federal highway legislation through political and economic influence. In
addition to Fischer, who later made a fortune in Florida real estate while
promoting the Dixie Highway, other leaders with automobile industry connections
included Roy D. Chapin, John N. Willys, Henry B. Joy, and Frank Sieberling.
With substantial funding from General Motors, the Lincoln Highway Association
was a precursor to the efforts of Alfred Sloan’s Highway Users’ Conference of
the 1930s. Its relationship with the U.S. military during World War I and then
with the First Transcontinental Army Convoy in 1919 ensured that its arguments
for federal road funding in Western states were duly heard. Between 1913 and
1920, more than 2,000 miles of Lincoln Highway links would be built (U.S. 30
later on), but the cost and difficulties of local and state government
jurisdictions led to the disbanding of the association once the landmark
Federal Aid Roadway Act of 1921 was passed.14
A recent novel I have yet to read.
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