The Lincoln Highway is a 3300-mile long road stretching across
the United States from New York City to San Francisco. Its creation
was the result of the first successful effort to create an all-weather
transcontinental highway specifically for automobiles. Carl Fisher,
Prest-O-Lite headlight manufacturer, launched the idea of developing
a coast to coast highway in 1912. Fisher was soon joined in the
promotion of this road, named the Lincoln Highway, by a cadre of
executives from the automobile, tire, and Portland cement industries
who used patriotic appeal and mass marketing to mastermind a national
"good roads" campaign.
The Lincoln Highway began as a miscellaneous collection of downtown
streets, country lanes, and old trails marked with signs showing
an "L" rectangular graphic emblazoned in red, white, and blue. While
the confusing and haphazardly maintained condition of the early
Lincoln Highway illustrated the long-neglected nature of the American
roads inherited by the automobile, by the 1920s, it had become the
nation's premier cross-country thoroughfare and a testing ground
for new road and bridge-building techniques. A dynamic, commercial
roadside emerged along the Lincoln Highway and other roads of that
era, pioneering the marketing of gas, food, lodging and other motorist
services through innovative architectural form and design.
Today, the roads that comprise the Lincoln Highway approximate
sections of the present day Federal and State Highway System: U.S.
1, 30, 40, 50, and I-80 traversing New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania,
West Virginia, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, Wyoming,
Utah, Nevada, and California. Early in its history, the Lincoln
Highway was also routed through the northeastern corner of Colorado.
In December 2000, a bill was passed by Congress and signed by the
President directing the National Park Service to coordinate a comprehensive
study of the routes of the Lincoln Highway. This Special Resource
Study (SRS) will evaluate the highway and related resources to present
management alternatives for long-term preservation of the highway,
including alternatives involving management as a unit of the National
Park System, and management by state and local governments and private
sector organizations. An environmental impact statement describing
the potential environmental impacts of each management option will
accompany the study.
A team of NPS staff with expertise in history and preservation
of roads and trails, cultural landscapes, and planning from 4 NPS
regions (Northeast, Midwest, Intermountain, and Pacific West), the
NPS National Center for Cultural Resources, the Federal Highway
Administration, and, through cooperative agreement, the Organization
of American Historians and Indiana University of Pennsylvania, will
work together on this Special Resource Study. The Midwest Regional
Office will have the lead for the study, which is expected to take
three years to complete.
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