Atlantic and Pacific Highway
The Atlantic and Pacific Highway was an auto trail in the United States, essentially eliminated by the U.S. Highway system in the late 1920s. It connected New York City on the Atlantic Ocean with Los Angeles on the Pacific Ocean.
Routing
Using the present road names, the highway approximately used the following route:
- U.S. Route 1, New York to Philadelphia
- U.S. Route 13, Philadelphia to Wilmington
- U.S. Route 40, Wilmington to Baltimore
- U.S. Route 1, Baltimore to Washington
- U.S. Route 29 and State Route 229, Washington to Culpeper
- U.S. Route 15 and State Route 231, Culpeper to Charlottesville
- U.S. Route 250, Charlottesville to Staunton
- State Route 42, State Route 39, and U.S. Route 220, Staunton to Covington
- U.S. Route 60, Covington to Lewisburg
- WV Route 63 and WV Route 3, Lewisburg to Beckley
- WV Route 16, Beckley to Kanawha Falls
- U.S. Route 60, Kanawha Falls to Huntington
- U.S. Route 52, Huntington to Cincinnati
- State Road 56, State Road 64, and Illinois Route 15, Bedford to St. Louis
- U.S. Route 50, St. Louis to Jefferson City
- U.S. Route 54, Jefferson City to Vaughn
- U.S. Route 60, Interstate 10, and California State Route 60, Vaughn to Los Angeles
gollark: ```Thank you for your request to access the Dragon Cave API from host dc.osmarks.tk. At this time, your request could not be granted, for the following reason: You have, through your own admission on the forums, done the exact thing that got EATW banned from the API. This may be a non-permanent issue; feel free to re-submit your request after correcting any issue(s) listed ```
gollark: I asked, didn't get it, and just decided to try scraping, and THEN got it denied and was IP-banned.
gollark: Yes, but I asked for API access.
gollark: Let me just open my email client and check.
gollark: I mean, there was not really any information provided, I'm filling it in guessily.
References
- Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas, 1926, accessed via the Broer Map Library: shows the route in and west of Kansas, in St. Louis, and in the Mid-Atlantic States
- Charleston Gazette, Charleston to Receive 1925 Tourists, February 1, 1925: lists a number of the cities the highway serves
- Charleston Gazette, Tourists Are Discovering West Virginia's Scenery, June 3, 1927: describes the route in West Virginia
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.