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Good Roads Movement

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Good Roads Building at theAlaska–Yukon–Pacific Expositionof 1909

TheGood Roads Movementoccurred in the United States between the late 1870s and the 1920s. It was the rural dimension of theProgressive movement.The movement started as a coalition between farmers' organizations groups and bicyclists' organizations, such as theLeague of American Wheelmen.Advocates for improved roads turned local agitation into a national political movement. The goal was state and federal spending to improve rural roads. By 1910, automobile lobbies such as theAmerican Automobile Associationjoined the campaign, coordinated by the National Good Roads Association.

Outside cities, roads were dirt or gravel; mud in the winter and dust in the summer. Travel was slow and expensive. Early organizers citedEuropewhereroad constructionand maintenance was supported by national and local governments. In its early years, the main goal of the movement was education for road building in rural areas between cities and to help rural populations gain the social and economic benefits enjoyed by cities where citizens benefited from railroads,trolleysand paved streets. Even more than traditional vehicles, the newly invented bicycles could benefit from good country roads.

History

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Good Roadsmagazine was an early advocate for road improvements.

The Good Roads Movement was officially founded in May 1880, when bicycle enthusiasts, riding clubs and manufacturers met inNewport, Rhode Island,to form theLeague of American Wheelmento support theburgeoning useof bicycles and to protect their interests from legislative discrimination. The League quickly went national and in 1892 began publishingGood Roadsmagazine. In three years circulation reached one million. Early movement advocates enlisted the help of journalists, farmers, politicians and engineers in the project of improving the nation's roadways, but the movement took off when it was adopted by bicyclists.

Groups across the country held road conventions and public demonstrations, published material on the benefits of good roads and endeavored to influence legislators on local, state and national levels. Support for candidates often became crucial factors in elections. The League not only advocated road improvements for bicyclists, but pressed the idea to farmers and rural communities, publishing literature such as the famous pamphlet,The Gospel of Good Roads.[1]

A key player was theUnited States Post Office Department.Once a commitment was made forRural Free Deliveryof the mail, the Post Office had to determine which local roads were suitable and which were not. Farmers living on officially unusable roads now had motivation to get them upgraded.[2]

New Jerseybecame the first state to pass a law providing for a state to participate in road-building projects. In 1893, theU.S. Department of Agricultureinitiated a systematic evaluation of existing highway systems. In that same year,Charles Duryeaproduced the first American gasoline-powered vehicle, andRural Free Deliverybegan. By June 1894, "Many of the railway companies [had] made concessions in transporting road materials ranging from half rates to free carriage."[3]

20th century

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Advocacy efforts frequently focused on farmers' plight — Illinois, 1903

At the turn of the twentieth century, interest in the bicycle began to wane in the face of increasing interest inautomobiles.Subsequently, other groups took the lead in theroad lobby.As the automobile was developed and gained momentum, organizations developed such cross-county projects as the coast-to-coast east–westLincoln Highwayin 1913, headed by auto parts and auto racing magnateCarl G. Fisher,and later his north–southDixie Highwayin 1915, which extended from Canada toMiami, Florida.

An AAA Good Roads official passes theonlyroad sign on his transcontinental auto trip — Glendive, Montana, 1912
1904 editorial cartoon byE. A. Bushnell,urging that funds be appropriated for the goals of the Good Roads Movement

The movement gained national prominence when PresidentWoodrow Wilsonsigned theFederal Aid Road Act of 1916on July 11, 1916. In that year, the Buffalo Steam Roller Company of Buffalo, New York, and the Kelly-Springfield Company of Springfield, Ohio, merged to form the Buffalo-Springfield Company, which became the leader in the Americancompaction industry.Buffalo-Springfield enabled America to embark on a truly national highway construction campaign that continued into the 1920s.

Horatio Earleis known as the "Father of Good Roads". Quoting from Earle's 1929 autobiography: "I often hear now-a-days, the automobile instigated good roads; that the automobile is the parent of good roads. Well, the truth is, the bicycle is the father of the good roads movement in this country." "The League fought for the privilege of buildingbicycle pathsalong the side of public highways. "" The League fought for equal privileges with horse-drawn vehicles. All these battles were won and the bicyclist was accorded equal rights with other users of highways and streets. "

State Good Roads associations

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The 1920Directory of American Agricultural Organizations[4]lists the following state organizations as being affiliated with the Good Roads Movement:

  • Alabama Good Roads Association
  • Arizona Good Roads Association
  • Central Florida Highway Association
  • Good Roads Association of Wisconsin
  • Illinois Association for Highway Improvement
  • Kansas Good Roads Association
  • Massachusetts Highway Association
  • Michigan Pikes Association
  • Michigan State Good Roads Association
  • Montana Good Roads Congress
  • Montana Highway Improvement Association
  • Nebraska Good Roads Association
  • Nevada Highway Association
  • New Hampshire Good Roads Association
  • New York Road Association
  • North Carolina Good Roads Association
  • Ohio Good Roads Federation
  • Southeastern Idaho Good Roads Association
  • Virginia Good Roads Association
  • Washington State Good Roads Association
  • Wilmington-Charlotte-Asheville Highway Association
  • Wisconsin Highway Commissioners' Association
  • Wyoming Good Roads Association

See also

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References

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  1. ^The Gospel of Good Roads
  2. ^Wayne E. Fuller, "Good Roads and Rural Free Delivery of Mail<"Mississippi Valley Historical Review(1955) 42#1 pp 67-83.online
  3. ^The Good Roads CrusadeCayuga Chief - Jun 2, 1894
  4. ^Directory of American Agricultural Organizations

Further reading

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Scholarly studies

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  • Finkelstein, Alexander. "Colorado Honor Convicts: Roads, Reform, and Region in the Progressive Era".Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era20.1 (2021): 24–43.
  • Fuller, Wayne E. "Good roads and rural free delivery of mail".Mississippi Valley Historical Review42.1 (1955): 67-83.
  • Hugill, Peter J. "Good roads and the automobile in the United States 1880-1929".Geographical Review(1982): 327-349online.
  • Ingram, Tammy.Dixie Highway: Road Building and the Making of the Modern South, 1900-1930(2013). It linked Chicago to Florida and helped modernize the South.
  • Lee, Jason. "An Economic Analysis of the Good Roads Movement" (Institute of Transportation Studies, U of California, Davis; 2012)online
  • Lichtenstein, Alex. "Good roads and chain gangs in the progressive South: 'the negro convict is a slave.'"Journal of Southern History(1993). 59#1: 85–110.online
  • Longhurst, James.Bike battles: A history of sharing the American road(U of Washington Press, 2015).
  • Mayo, Earl (July 1901)."The Good Roads Train".The World's Work.II(3). New York: Doubleday, Page & Co.: 956–960.RetrievedApril 29,2012.
  • Olliff, Martin T.Getting Out of the Mud: The Alabama Good Roads Movement and Highway Administration, 1898–1928(U of Alabama Press, 2017).online review
  • Reid, Carlton (2015).Roads Were Not Built for Cars.Washington: Island Press.ISBN978-1-61091-689-9.
  • Wells, Christopher W. (Spring 2006). "The Changing Nature of Country Roads: Farmers, Reformers, and the Shifting Uses of Rural Space, 1880-1905".Agricultural History.80(2): 143–166.doi:10.1525/ah.2006.80.2.143.

Advocacy inGood Roadsmagazine c. 1890–1920

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Advocacy in books and pamphlets c. 1880–1920 (examples)

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