By the time the Federal Aid Highway Act was signed in 1956, Americans were well under way with their love affair with motor vehicles. Cross country truck routes had already been established back in the 1920s, but were hardly well thought out or efficient. Routes wound through a confusing series of Class B highways and back roads making a standard coast to coast delivery take up to two weeks.
World War II had done much to increase the production of
manufactured goods at home, and agricultural developments post-war had more
produce being grown by industrialized farms than could conceivably be shipped
through the current routes. The trains were overloaded, and a solution needed
to found. It was President Dwight D. Eisenhower and his federal transportation
department who came up with the solution - a government funded program to align
the major arteries of the country under one engineered banner. This was the Interstate
Highways System, which broke ground in 1957 and was later renamed the Dwight D.
Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense System in 1990 in Ike’s
honor.
Interstate highway system
The initial interstate system worked from a two-pronged approach,
with the first being the commercial movement of goods over state lines. The
second was to relieve a growing debt on individual state budgets that
previously had to develop their own systems of road-top transportation. By
coordinating a nation-wide project, arteries were formalized between major cities
along supply and production corridors, allowing for raw materials and final
products to be moved to and from points of processing and manufacture.
Construction material and design were also coordinated, making for vast
improvements.
No longer would it take an orange grown in Florida two weeks
to hit the shelf in Pasadena, and with this time factor removed, prices dropped
to more reasonable levels for consumers, increasing demand for supply. The
subsidies of the interstate system provided to individual states created a
standard for travel, allowing more trucks on the road with vastly decreased
travel time.
Before the Interstate system was placed into effect, states
were required through necessity to construct and pay for their own highway
systems, hopefully working with neighboring states in the process to ‘meet up’
somewhere along the shared border. As can be imagined, this didn’t always go as
planned. State highways projects were often abandoned in the middle of nowhere
due to budgetary mismanagement and related constraints, and miscommunication
with partnering states wreaked havoc from a coordination point of view. Local
government budgets were being decimated, and these pockets of loss were
affecting the commerce of the nation as a whole.
Interstate highways of tomorrow
Smart driving technology aside, the federal government has
turned its attention to repairing and improving existing stretches of highway
through fiscal recovery acts, both in 2006 and again in 2011. These channels of
funds are earmarked for road top repair and additions to increase efficiencies
in the interstate system. This forward thinking dedicates the federal
government’s focus on a connected nation, while maintaining the legacy of Ike’s
vision for a nation built on commerce.
This article sponsored by The Clermont County Historical Society
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