Archive for the ‘Illinois’ Category

Internet Archive Site

Sunday, February 10th, 2008

My wife, Carol, is a member of the Lincoln Highway Association and periodically receives a newsletter from the Illinois chapter, entitled the Land of Lincoln News. The issue that just came in the mail included information about a great Internet resource, the Internet Archive. They included a direct link to a digitized version of a 1919 book, Illinois Highway Improvement Bluebook, by Laura K. Kennedy, published by the Illinois Highway Improvement Association. Here is a page from the book which talks about William G. Edens, for whom the Edens Expressway (I-94) was named.

Also on the Internet Archive site is the 1917 Illinois Road and Bridge Laws, a fascinating resource of information in a transitional phase of road building in the state. Prior to 1913, responsibility for maintaining the public highways of the state resided with townships, county road districts, and municipalities. In 1913, the state created a State Aid program that required each county to take charge of what would be considered the “primary” highways in their jurisdiction and provided that the state would pay half of the cost of construction, as well as the total cost of maintenance of State-Aid “hard roads.” By 1918, the state formally entered into the business of road building, with the passage of the $60 million dollar road bond law. The laws remained relatively unchanged until more roads were added to the State system in 1924, with another bond issue of $100 million dollars.

I have not had the chance to explore the Internet Archive in more detail, but I certainly will. It is a great online resource, and I thank the Lincoln Highway Association for introducing me to it!

Upcoming Presentation at Park Ridge Library

Saturday, January 26th, 2008

Yesterday’s mail brought me this great promotional item for my upcoming presentation at the Park Ridge Public Library. I am looking forward to this event. I will be talking not only about Route 66, but also the history of some of the roads local to Park Ridge. That is a rich history that includes one of Cook County’s earliest thoroughfares, Northwest Highway (U.S. 14), and several State highways, including 72, 171, and 58. Park Ridge is also served by Metra commuter rail on the historic right of way of the Chicago Northwestern Railroad.

The presentation is on February 26th at 7 p.m. The maximum seating in the venue is 90 people, so the library would appreciate that people register for the event by calling 847-825-3123. Admission is Free. You can also register via their online calendar.

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Recap of Crystal Lake Presentation

Saturday, January 26th, 2008

Last week on January 15th, I had the pleasure of presenting my Slide Show on Historic Route 66 at the Crystal Lake Public Library . On a bitter cold evening, we had a standing-room-only crowd show up! Kudos go to the Library staff for their promotional efforts–they got the word out and the results speak for themselves.

The facilities as the Library are modern and functional–It is always a great plus when all the equipment works and a smooth presentation follows. Janet Windeguth of the Library staff asked the guests to fill out comment cards, one of which she shared with me:

"Very enjoyable to see old sights and
relive memories of driving Chicago to LA twice on 66 in 1962 and 1963."

The presentation was followed by a lively Q & A session. Clearly, lots of folks in McHenry Country are interested in the old Mother Road!

I of course would love to bring my presentation to your local library or organization, so check out the info on my presentations page.

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Route 66 Comes to Crystal Lake

Monday, January 14th, 2008

I will be taking to the road on Tuesday, January 15th for a PowerPoint presentation at the Crystal Lake Public Library. The program starts at 7 p.m. and will discuss Historic Route 66, past and present.

The library is located at 126 Paddock Street, Crystal Lake, IL 60014. The phone number is 815-459-1687, and the folks there would appreciate anyone interested to call and register.

I did a little research on Crystal Lake, which is the largest city in McHenry County, Illinois. Its local highways include Illinois 176 and U.S. 14. Illinois 176 was one of the State Bond Issue (SBI) routes created by the $100 Million Dollar Bond Issue of 1926. According to Richard Carlson’s Illinois Highways Page, “SBI Route 176 was Crystal Lake to Lake Bluff. In 1940 it was extended west to Marengo, replacing IL-67. It currently runs Marengo to Lake Bluff in McHenry and Lake Counties.”

U.S. 14 was one of the original U.S. numbered highways, approved on the initial map of November 11, 1926. However, 14 originally ran only from Minnesota to South Dakota. It was extended east to Chicago in 1933 along the general corridor once served by the Black and Yellow Trail. From 1951 until 1979 its eastern terminus was Jackson Boulevard and Michigan Avenue in the Loop, where it intersected with U.S. 34, 54, and 66. Its current terminus is at Broadway and Foster on the north side, where it meets up with U.S. 41.

Again according to Richard Carlson, within Illinois “US-14 runs from the North Side of Chicago to the WI line at Bigfoot. In the Suburban Chicago area this is called Northwest Highway due to its beeline northwest from Chicago, and due to the parallel Chicago & NorthWestern Railroad (Now Union Pacific).”

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Where Chicago Architecture and Route 66 Meet…

Friday, January 11th, 2008

On Thursday night, January 10th, I had the pleasure to present a short talk and slide show about Route 66 to the volunteer docents of the Chicago Architecture Foundation. Ever since I moved to Chicago over 25 years ago, I have learned more about the city and its famous buildings through the programs of this fine organization than from any other resource. They offer the very best walking tours of Chicago’s Loop and neighborhoods, emphasizing the built environment yet always providing contextual background of the people and history involved.

The tours are led by volunteer docents who receive extensive training. The program is so popular that there is often a waiting list of people who would like to become volunteer docents!

The CAF also offers exhibits in the atrium lobby of the Santa Fe building, located at the northwest corner of Jackson Boulevard and Michigan Avenue (the intersection that was the original starting point of Route 66 and a crossroads for such famous highways as the Yellowstone Trail, the Dixie Highway, the Pontiac Trail, and U.S. 12, 14, 20, 32, 34, 41, and 54). Their store at the same location offers the best selection of architecture related items and books on Chicago.

I encourage anyone coming to Chicago to take one of MY tours, but to take as many tours with the CAF as you can as well!

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Flooding in Pontiac, Illinois

Thursday, January 10th, 2008

The recent snow melt and rain is causing flood conditions in central Illinois along the Kankakee and Vermilion rivers. The Route 66 town of Pontiac is affected by the flooding on the Vermilion, although it seems that most of the damage is on the east side of town. I just got off the phone with Jim Jones at the Route 66 Hall of Fame Museum, and he said that the Museum and downtown Pontiac are not affected. Livingston County has been declared a state disaster area, and unfortunately some light rain is expected later today.

Stinson Airport

Saturday, January 5th, 2008

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Originally uploaded by daveandcarol.geo

In response to a query on the American Road Magazine Forum from Denny Gibson, I have posted up to my flickr gallery a set of 18 images about Stinson Airport. Stinson was located on Route 66/Illinois Route 4 from the 1920s until 1958. It was started by Arthur Killups, the owner of Lyons Motor Sales in nearby Lyons, Illinois. The dealership was located on original IL 4 and 18, on a stretch of Ogden Avenue that was also Route 66 from 1926-1928. It was also U.S. 32 as of 1926, and has been U.S. 34 from the early 1930s to the present.

Killups was a barnstorming pilot himself, and he also was a dealer at his airport for the Stinson Aircraft Company, owned by Eddie Stinson. Stinson was a member of the Flying Stinson Family, famous in the early 20th century because four siblings were all pilots, including Eddie’s two older sisters.

Stinson Airport shut down when the neighboring rock quarries bought the land and expanded their operations into the airfield’s former site. The stretch of Joliet Road where Stinson once was located has been closed since the 1990s due to unsafe road conditions. Currently, the Illinois Department of Transportation is suing the quarry company, alleging that their operations have damaged the state’s right-of-way. There is a detour around Joliet Road from 55th Street to East Avenue, and there is no current information as to whether the road will ever re-open.

Later this year, Route 66 Magazine will be running an article I wrote that has a section in it about Stinson Airport. In the meantime, please take a look at the photos in my flickr gallery!

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My thanks to American Road

Saturday, January 5th, 2008

American Road Magazine CoverI was pleased to be perusing the Winter 2007 issue of American Road Magazine–always a pleasure when they show up in my mailbox–when I turned to page 60 and came across a review of my book! The review was written by Jon P. Callender, and it is a happy day when this struggling author sees something to boost the spirit!

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Thinking about Iowa

Friday, January 4th, 2008

DSC_0191
Originally uploaded by daveandcarol.geo

Watching the TV coverage of the Iowa Caucuses last night made me think about a nice trip we took across the state on June 7-8 2004 on old 2-lane U.S. 34.

I was intrigued by U.S. 34, since it shared pavement in Chicago with Route 66. From the mid 1930s until sometime in the 1970s, 66 and 34 were cosigned along Jackson Boulevard, Adams Street, and Ogden Avenue within Chicago, and along Ogden through Cicero and Berwyn. The two routes parted company at Ogden and Harlem. Today, U.S. 34 starts at Harlem and heads west on Ogden Avenue through Chicago’s western suburbs and across Illinois. It enters Iowa at Burlington and cuts across the southern part of the state to Cedar Rapids and crosses into Omaha, Nebraska.

Our trip on 34 ended there in Omaha, since the purpose of our trip was to get to the 2004 Route 66 festival in Tulsa, Oklahoma, so from Omaha we headed south. Someday we will complete our 34 trip across Nebraska and ending at Rocky Mountain National Park in Colorado.

I have 11 photos posted on my flickr site, click on the link below to see them all:

http://www.flickr.com/gp/20216019@N02/5vhEGS
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81 Years ago today…

Wednesday, January 2nd, 2008

On January 1, 1927, “Final location of the United States’ most important roads in the country was announced today by the bureau of public roads of the department of agriculture. The system as finally selected embraces ten main transcontinental routes designated by numbers which are multiples of ten while the important north and south routes are numbers 1, 11, 21, etc.”

Thus reported the Chicago Tribune on January 2, 1927. The original numbering scheme for what we now call the U.S. Highway System had been finalized in November 1926, but the public announcement of the route system was delayed until the New Year of ‘27.

Here is the rest of the article from page 23 of the 01/02/1927 Trib, which was headlined “U.S. Marks Ten Main Roads With Route Numbers”:

Virtually all the large cities of the nation are served either by the through routes or connecting roads.

The route numbering system which has been decided upon will be of great assistance to tourists in following through routes. All east and west routes bear even numbers, while north and south routes have odd numbers. Frequently three digit numbers are used to indicate branches of through routes. For example route 40 is a direct road.

Convenience of Travelers
There will be no difficulty in following any selected route since a standard sign showing the route number has been adopted and also standard danger, caution and directional signs. These standard signs will add greatly to the safety and convenience of travel as there will be no change in their character in passing from one state to another.

Twenty-two states already report their United States highways completely marked, fourteen report the work partially complete and six which have not yet started anticipate that it will be completed next season.

Push Work Rapidly
The system in its final form has the approval of each of the state highway departments and work on the unimproved sections is to be pushed rapidly.

No special funds are to become available as the result of the designation of any road as a part of the system. The purpose has been to select a main system of highways for the nation, the unimproved sections of which will be given priority in improvement, and to eliminate confusion as to route designation, marking, and safety signs. Virtually all of the system is on the system of federal aid highways and is eligible to receive federal aid.

End of article.

A couple of thoughts:

The Article notes 22 states with U.S. highways markings complete, 14 with partial completion, and 6 that expected to be done in the 1927 construction season. That was 42 of the 48 states. Illinois was NOT one of those 42–research by myself and Carl Johnson shows that our state did not put up U.S. Highway markers until the summer of 1928. Here is a map from the 1927 Rand McNally atlas showing the U.S. Highways in the Chicago area, even though the route markers would not be posted until 1928.

1927 Rand McNally Atlas Map of Chicago Region shows U.S. Highways, although Illinois would not post the markers until 1928. Click Here for Larger ViewThis article crystalizes something that still seems to be misunderstood by many–that the U.S. Highway system had “no special funds.” The purpose then as always was to “eliminate confusion as to route designation, marking, and safety signs.” The unimproved portions of road that were designated as U.S. Highways were to be given priority of improvement, nothing more. That most of the highways designated as part of the U.S. system would be eligible for federal aid was coincidental.

So, what “confusion” were they eliminating? There were two systems in place back in 1927–state highways and named auto trails. State highways then as now were marked to state lines, where the system of the neighboring state would take over. The only systems that were consistent across state lines were the marked auto trails–such as the Lincoln Highway, the Yellowstone Trail, the Lone Star Route, and the Dixie Highway. The quality of marking depended upon the degree of competence of the particular highway associations, and often the traveler was left with no reliable information in the middle of nowhere.

Thus, the announcement that the several states would cooperate on a system which would be consistently numbered across state lines was greeted with approval with everyone EXCEPT some of the auto trail associations, who knew that the U.S. system would lead to the extinction of the named trails.

Although some of the named trails had been well-maintained (such as the Lincoln Highway), the advent of the U.S. system was indeed a step forward, an improvement that was a true boon to the auto traveler.