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Celebrating our two-lane highways of yesteryear…And the joys of driving them today!

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Guest David G. Clark

We visited both rims in October 2001. It was just the reverse at

 

that time: North Rim was clear and absolutely beautiful for photos;

 

South Rim was hazy and somewhat disappointing due to a nearby fire.

 

The difference between the two in terms of climate and plant life

 

are striking.

 

 

 

Dave Clark

 

Windy City Road Warrior

 

 

 

--- In AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com, Nicole <arizona66nms@y...>

 

wrote:

 

Yes....the North Rim is another area I want to visit. When we

 

were there recently at the South Rim, my mom said the pictures

 

didn't turn out all that great because it was all hazy and foggy in

 

the Canyon. Well, there was a fire at the North Rim, and I guess a

 

pretty big one, and the smoke was pushed inside the Canyon....it

 

stretched pretty far. Then when we left Hilltop on the West end

 

after going to Supai, you could see where the fire was stemming from

 

at the North Rim.....it looked huge.

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Guest Butko, Brian A.

Next week, I'll be giving an introduction to the 1971 film Two Lane Blacktop

 

at the Frick Car & Carriage Museum in Pittsburgh. Remember? - James Taylor

 

as The Driver, Beach Boy Dennis Wilson as The Mechanic. They drift between

 

towns racing their 55 Chevy and meet up with Warren Oates, who is driving a

 

new GTO. Opinions are split - some think the acting is wooden and the plot

 

meandering. Others think it's genius. Lots just like the cars and road

 

scenes - Route 66 I believe.

 

 

 

Just wondering what thoughts you might have?

 

 

 

Brian Butko

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Hi Dave-

 

 

 

Can you describe what the North Rim is like....and what the differences are?

 

I'd be interested to know.

 

 

 

Thanks,

 

 

 

Nicole

 

 

 

"David G. Clark" <olympia66@netzero.net> wrote:

 

We visited both rims in October 2001. It was just the reverse at

 

that time: North Rim was clear and absolutely beautiful for photos;

 

South Rim was hazy and somewhat disappointing due to a nearby fire.

 

The difference between the two in terms of climate and plant life

 

are striking.

 

 

 

Dave Clark

 

Windy City Road Warrior

 

 

 

--- In AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com, Nicole <arizona66nms@y...>

 

wrote:

 

Yes....the North Rim is another area I want to visit. When we

 

were there recently at the South Rim, my mom said the pictures

 

didn't turn out all that great because it was all hazy and foggy in

 

the Canyon. Well, there was a fire at the North Rim, and I guess a

 

pretty big one, and the smoke was pushed inside the Canyon....it

 

stretched pretty far. Then when we left Hilltop on the West end

 

after going to Supai, you could see where the fire was stemming from

 

at the North Rim.....it looked huge.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Guest roadmaven

Brian,

 

Although I haven't seen Two Lane Blacktop, I hear it has a cult

 

following among roadies. Do you have a schedule for the showing in

 

case anyone on the list living in that area may want to see it?

 

Are you the same Brian Butko from "Highway Hangouts" fame?

 

 

 

Regards,

 

 

 

Pat Bremer

 

AR List Host

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Guest brownwho63

I've seen the movie a couple of times and enjoy the cars and the

 

roads more than anything else. Thought the acting was terrible and

 

the story worse. Another flick where the picked-up chick is a

 

problem child -- similar to the one in Crazy Larry, Lazy Mary.

 

 

 

Bliss

 

 

 

--- In AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com, "Butko, Brian A."

 

<babutko@h...> wrote:

 

> Next week, I'll be giving an introduction to the 1971 film Two Lane

 

Blacktop

 

> at the Frick Car & Carriage Museum in Pittsburgh. Remember? - James

 

Taylor

 

> as The Driver, Beach Boy Dennis Wilson as The Mechanic. They drift

 

between

 

> towns racing their 55 Chevy and meet up with Warren Oates, who is

 

driving a

 

> new GTO. Opinions are split - some think the acting is wooden and

 

the plot

 

> meandering. Others think it's genius. Lots just like the cars and

 

road

 

> scenes - Route 66 I believe.

 

>

 

> Just wondering what thoughts you might have?

 

>

 

> Brian Butko

 

>

 

>

 

>

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Guest Butko, Brian A.

My intro is at 8 pm on Wed & Thur, Oct 15 & 16, followed by Two-Lane

 

Blacktop. Frick Car & Carriage Museum, Pittsburgh's east end. Free if you

 

say Brian sent ya!

 

 

 

It's certainly a surreal movie. For everyone who thinks it's just dumb,

 

there's another who rates it among the best flilms ever. Who knows? My

 

favorite review quote: "Two-lane Blacktop is the movie of choice when you

 

just came home from oral surgery and want to be lulled into distraction and,

 

finally, sleep. For all others, get a lobotomy or get something else." About

 

the only thing people agree on is that Warren Oates did a great job as GTO,

 

the neurotic nemesis.

 

 

 

That's me in HH. Next up, the family and I were interviewed at Wigwam

 

Village #2 about "Roadside Giants," a kids book (not out yet) about teapot

 

buildings, Paul Bunyan statues, etc. That'll be in "A Program About Unusual

 

Buildings And Other Roadside Stuff," produced by Rick Sebak - look for it

 

next summer on PBS. For now, working like mad to finish "Greetings from the

 

Lincoln Highway."

 

 

 

BB

 

 

 

 

 

Brian,

 

Although I haven't seen Two Lane Blacktop, I hear it has a cult

 

following among roadies. Do you have a schedule for the showing in

 

case anyone on the list living in that area may want to see it?

 

Are you the same Brian Butko from "Highway Hangouts" fame?

 

 

 

Regards,

 

 

 

Pat Bremer

 

AR List Host

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Guest Alex Burr

Another of those somewhat less than "B" movies that

 

became a cult classic. I've seen it a few times -

 

enjoyed it.

 

 

 

There was also 'the girl' who was hitch-hiking

 

somwhere, as I recall. Been a while since I've seen

 

the film.

 

 

 

Hudsonly,

 

Alex B

 

 

 

--- "Butko, Brian A." <babutko@hswp.org> wrote:

 

> Next week, I'll be giving an introduction to the

 

> 1971 film Two Lane Blacktop

 

> at the Frick Car & Carriage Museum in Pittsburgh.

 

> Remember? - James Taylor

 

> as The Driver, Beach Boy Dennis Wilson as The

 

> Mechanic. They drift between

 

> towns racing their 55 Chevy and meet up with Warren

 

> Oates, who is driving a

 

> new GTO. Opinions are split - some think the acting

 

> is wooden and the plot

 

> meandering. Others think it's genius. Lots just like

 

> the cars and road

 

> scenes - Route 66 I believe.

 

>

 

> Just wondering what thoughts you might have?

 

>

 

> Brian Butko

 

>

 

>

 

> [Non-text portions of this message have been

 

> removed]

 

>

 

>

 

 

 

 

 

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Guest roadmaven

Brian,

 

Great to hear we have another roadside expert in our midst!

 

Jennifer & I both rank Highway Hangouts at the top of our roadtrip

 

video library. We stayed at Wigwam Village #2 over July 4th weekend,

 

so I'm really looking forward to seeing that. Keep us all posted on

 

when it'll be on next summer.

 

 

 

Pat

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

--- In AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com, "Butko, Brian A."

 

<babutko@h...> wrote:

 

> My intro is at 8 pm on Wed & Thur, Oct 15 & 16, followed by Two-Lane

 

> Blacktop. Frick Car & Carriage Museum, Pittsburgh's east end. Free

 

if you

 

> say Brian sent ya!

 

>

 

> It's certainly a surreal movie. For everyone who thinks it's just

 

dumb,

 

> there's another who rates it among the best flilms ever. Who knows?

 

My

 

> favorite review quote: "Two-lane Blacktop is the movie of choice

 

when you

 

> just came home from oral surgery and want to be lulled into

 

distraction and,

 

> finally, sleep. For all others, get a lobotomy or get something

 

else." About

 

> the only thing people agree on is that Warren Oates did a great job

 

as GTO,

 

> the neurotic nemesis.

 

>

 

> That's me in HH. Next up, the family and I were interviewed at

 

Wigwam

 

> Village #2 about "Roadside Giants," a kids book (not out yet) about

 

teapot

 

> buildings, Paul Bunyan statues, etc. That'll be in "A Program About

 

Unusual

 

> Buildings And Other Roadside Stuff," produced by Rick Sebak - look

 

for it

 

> next summer on PBS. For now, working like mad to finish "Greetings

 

from the

 

> Lincoln Highway."

 

>

 

> BB

 

>

 

>

 

> Brian,

 

> Although I haven't seen Two Lane Blacktop, I hear it has a cult

 

> following among roadies. Do you have a schedule for the showing in

 

> case anyone on the list living in that area may want to see it?

 

> Are you the same Brian Butko from "Highway Hangouts" fame?

 

>

 

> Regards,

 

>

 

> Pat Bremer

 

> AR List Host

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

>

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Guest Scott Piotrowski

Does anybody have any good recommendations for hotels in Portland,

 

Oregon? I'm going to most likely be up there in April for about a

 

week or so and would like to have something reasonably priced near

 

downtown.

 

 

 

(Just in case anyone thinks this is off-topic, go to

 

http://www.historicroads.org/omaha.htm to see why it's relevant to

 

post this here!)

 

 

 

 

 

Scott Piotrowski, Director

 

66 Productions

 

www.66productions.com

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Emily,

 

 

 

Why don't you just start an E-Group specifically for spammers?

 

You might start a trend of spammers spamming spammers in a singles

 

spamming spammers E-Group. Those group members then wouldn't be

 

spamming, although they all would think they are.

 

 

 

the landrunner

 

 

 

 

 

--- In AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com, "sundayjohn66"

 

<sundayjohn66@a...> wrote:

 

> > File : /Click here for a great jewish dating service

 

>

 

> So ... do you suppose we could solve that whole squabble in the

 

Middle East

 

> if we put this guy in touch with the one who posted the "Meet

 

beautiful Muslim

 

> singles" message to the Route 66 News forum? Hmmmm....

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Guest Rudyard Welborn

...what would be really cool is if it created such a whirlwind of

 

crosspaming that it melted down the hard drives of spammers everywhere,

 

forcing them to drown their sorrows with a belt of scotch and a SPAM

 

sandwich! Tsingtao, Kip

 

----- Original Message -----

 

From: "Ken" <thelandrunner@yahoo.com>

 

To: <AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com>

 

Sent: Sunday, November 09, 2003 1:04 AM

 

Subject: [AMERICAN_ROAD] OT: Spamming our E-Group

 

 

 

 

 

> Emily,

 

>

 

> Why don't you just start an E-Group specifically for spammers?

 

> You might start a trend of spammers spamming spammers in a singles

 

> spamming spammers E-Group. Those group members then wouldn't be

 

> spamming, although they all would think they are.

 

>

 

> the landrunner

 

>

 

>

 

> --- In AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com, "sundayjohn66"

 

> <sundayjohn66@a...> wrote:

 

> > > File : /Click here for a great jewish dating service

 

> >

 

> > So ... do you suppose we could solve that whole squabble in the

 

> Middle East

 

> > if we put this guy in touch with the one who posted the "Meet

 

> beautiful Muslim

 

> > singles" message to the Route 66 News forum? Hmmmm....

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

> Visit our homepage at: http://www.mockturtlepress.com

 

>

 

> To subscribe to AMERICAN ROAD magazine, PHONE TOLL-FREE 1-877-285-5434

 

WITH YOUR ORDER TODAY!

 

> Or send payment to: Mock Turtle Press, PO Box 3168, Lynnwood, WA

 

98046-3168

 

> SUBSCRIPTION RATES:

 

> 1 year (4 issues) for $15.95

 

> (save $3.85 off the newsstand price!)

 

> 2 years (8 issues) for $27.95

 

> (save $11.65 off the newsstand price!)

 

>

 

>

 

> For questions about the list, contact: AMERICAN_ROAD-owner@yahoogroups.com

 

>

 

> To SUBSCRIBE to this group, send an email to:

 

AMERICAN_ROAD-subscribe@yahoogroups.com

 

>

 

> To UNSUBSCRIBE from this group, send an email to:

 

> AMERICAN_ROAD-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com

 

>

 

> To POST a message via e-mail, send it to: AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

 

>

 

>

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Guest ukroads15

Hi, I hail from Glasgow in Scotland. I have been interested in

 

travelling the highways & byways of your grand country and recently

 

subscibed to American Road Magazine. I have driven Route 66 twice

 

now and also meandered down the Great River Road. My next project is

 

to drive from Sea to Shining Sea, all the way from the East Coast to

 

the West Coast. I am thinking Lincoln Highway but am very receptive

 

to other routes, if members fancy suggesting any.

 

Its a pleasure to join your group and I look forward to getting to

 

know everyone

 

Kind Regards from freezing cold Glasgow

 

Walter

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Guest Jim Conkle

Hi Walter,

 

 

 

Welcome to our group. You will find just about everything you ever wanted to

 

know from the other members. We are 'roadies' and it sounds as if you are

 

too.

 

 

 

You might try Hwy 40 they have a yahoo group as well. Look at a few of the

 

books in the back of American Roads which will also give you some ideas.

 

 

 

Look forward to seeing you on the road.

 

 

 

James M.Conkle

 

CEO

 

Route 66 Preservation Foundation

 

P O Box 290066

 

Phelan, CA 92329-0066

 

760 617 3991 cell

 

760 868 3320

 

760 868 8614 fax

 

jim@cart66pf.org

 

www.cart66pf.org

 

 

 

-----Original Message-----

 

From: ukroads15 [mailto:ukroads@btconnect.com]

 

Sent: Tuesday, December 09, 2003 5:22 AM

 

To: AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com

 

Subject: [AMERICAN_ROAD] The American Road

 

 

 

Hi, I hail from Glasgow in Scotland. I have been interested in

 

travelling the highways & byways of your grand country and recently

 

subscibed to American Road Magazine. I have driven Route 66 twice

 

now and also meandered down the Great River Road. My next project is

 

to drive from Sea to Shining Sea, all the way from the East Coast to

 

the West Coast. I am thinking Lincoln Highway but am very receptive

 

to other routes, if members fancy suggesting any.

 

Its a pleasure to join your group and I look forward to getting to

 

know everyone

 

Kind Regards from freezing cold Glasgow

 

Walter

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Visit our homepage at: http://www.mockturtlepress.com

 

 

 

To subscribe to AMERICAN ROAD magazine, PHONE TOLL-FREE 1-877-285-5434 WITH

 

YOUR ORDER TODAY!

 

Or send payment to: Mock Turtle Press, PO Box 3168, Lynnwood, WA 98046-3168

 

SUBSCRIPTION RATES:

 

1 year (4 issues) for $15.95

 

(save $3.85 off the newsstand price!)

 

2 years (8 issues) for $27.95

 

(save $11.65 off the newsstand price!)

 

 

 

 

 

For questions about the list, contact: AMERICAN_ROAD-owner@yahoogroups.com

 

 

 

To SUBSCRIBE to this group, send an email to:

 

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To POST a message via e-mail, send it to: AMERICAN_ROAD@yahoogroups.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

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Guest Lulupic66@aol.com

In a message dated 12/9/03 7:57:25 AM Central Standard Time,

 

ukroads@btconnect.com writes:

 

 

 

<< I am thinking Lincoln Highway

 

Hi Walter,

 

Are you aware that there is a Lincoln Highway internet group also?

 

Do a search in the yahoo groups for it and I am sure it will Pop up,

 

hope this helps, if you need any info

 

You might want to contact Clare and Ruth Frantz

 

214 Main St

 

Sugar Grove, IL 60554

 

630-466-4382

 

She is the Prez of the IL chapter of the Lincoln Highway Association and I'm

 

sure they could give you all kinds of Info,

 

Hope this helps,

 

Lulu

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Guest Alex Burr

Hi Walter,

 

 

 

You might consider U S 50 for a coast to coast trip

 

- it's largely intact from it's early days.

 

 

 

Here's a couple of web sites on it:

 

 

 

http://www.gbcnet.com/ushighways/US50.html

 

http://www.route50.com/

 

 

 

On that last one - the gentlman wrote a book of his

 

trip across 50. It's a very good book.

 

 

 

Just an idea from a fellow Scot (my dad's side of

 

the family came from around Fyvie).

 

 

 

Have a good one.

 

 

 

Hudsonly,

 

Alex B

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

--- ukroads15 <ukroads@btconnect.com> wrote:

 

> Hi, I hail from Glasgow in Scotland. I have been

 

> interested in

 

> travelling the highways & byways of your grand

 

> country and recently

 

> subscibed to American Road Magazine. I have driven

 

> Route 66 twice

 

> now and also meandered down the Great River Road. My

 

> next project is

 

> to drive from Sea to Shining Sea, all the way from

 

> the East Coast to

 

> the West Coast. I am thinking Lincoln Highway but am

 

> very receptive

 

> to other routes, if members fancy suggesting any.

 

> Its a pleasure to join your group and I look forward

 

> to getting to

 

> know everyone

 

> Kind Regards from freezing cold Glasgow

 

> Walter

 

>

 

>

 

 

 

 

 

__________________________________

 

Do you Yahoo!?

 

New Yahoo! Photos - easier uploading and sharing.

 

http://photos.yahoo.com/

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Guest Rich Rheingold

You might like to travel on this historic route. it covers 3,200

 

miles from Boston to Oregon. There is a web site as well as a yahoo

 

group www.usroute20.com.

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Guest Carol Ruth

Hi Walter,

 

There was a LH Anniversary Cross Country Tour this past summer on the

 

Lincoln Highway and the Tour Guidebook they used is very good and broken

 

down day by day. It is probably still available from the Lincoln

 

Highway Association: www.lincolnhighwayassoc.org

 

Wherever you go, have a great trip!

 

 

 

Cheers, Carol

 

 

 

ukroads15 wrote:

 

 

 

> I am thinking Lincoln Highway but am very receptive

 

> to other routes, if members fancy suggesting any.

 

> Its a pleasure to join your group and I look forward to getting to

 

> know everyone

 

> Kind Regards from freezing cold Glasgow

 

> Walter

 

>

 

>

 

> Yahoo! Groups Sponsor

 

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o=60178338&partid=4116730>

 

>

 

>

 

>

 

> Visit our homepage at: http://www.mockturtlepress.com

 

>

 

> To subscribe to AMERICAN ROAD magazine, PHONE TOLL-FREE 1-877-285-5434

 

> WITH YOUR ORDER TODAY!

 

> Or send payment to: Mock Turtle Press, PO Box 3168, Lynnwood, WA

 

> 98046-3168

 

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> (save $3.85 off the newsstand price!)

 

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>

 

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Guest drivewdave@aol.com

as regards what goes good with peanut butter the

 

raspberry preserves sounds perfect...

 

 

 

back in my younger days I used to get dark brown miso

 

from the food co-op and combo up with that, for those

 

who might not know, miso is a very salty paste made of

 

fermented soy beans and is mainly used as a soup base,

 

it takes about a year to make it and the Japanese have

 

been doing so for untold centuries.

 

 

 

and by the way, this nutty discussion is not off topic

 

if you buy the argument the trucking industry posits:

 

 

 

Everything you have came on a truck

 

 

 

This is literally true, a couple of 40 foot boxes with peanut butter

 

back up to the loading dock at Safeway every night regular as a Timex.

 

 

 

Some historians hold that cultures are defined by their

 

transportation of goods and services and it is hard

 

for me to disagree with them.

 

 

 

Roads permeate our culture and most of the significant

 

events in my life involved trips on former US 99 and I-5.

 

 

 

What I am saying is there is no off-topic when it

 

comes to roads, virtually everything is fair game.

 

 

 

Whether something is interesting or not is another thing...

 

 

 

one more thing, most peanut butter is adulterated with

 

hydrogenated vegetable oil to prevent separation as

 

people are willing to sacrifice taste for convenience.

 

In general most are willing to settle for so little as

 

witness the sorry condition of the music industry.

 

 

 

cranky as ever, dave

 

 

 

ps if you ever get a chance, check out one of the massive

 

grocery distribution centers, they are like an airport for

 

food with dozens upon dozens of bays, it's just amazing.

 

 

 

pps pure peanut butter is best by far for those willing

 

to mix it up, Deaf Smith brand out of Texas used to be good.

 

I trust we roadies like to 'mix it up' real good as a rule.

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Guest Alex Burr

Lincoln Highway web sites:

 

 

 

http://www.lincolnhighwayassoc.org/

 

 

 

http://www.ugcs.caltech.edu/~jlin/lincoln/

 

 

 

http://www.roadsidephotos.com/LH/index.htm

 

 

 

There are others to be found by, as Lulu says,

 

searching with a search engine, like Google.

 

 

 

Hudsonly,

 

Alex B

 

 

 

--- Lulupic66@aol.com wrote:

 

> In a message dated 12/9/03 7:57:25 AM Central

 

> Standard Time,

 

> ukroads@btconnect.com writes:

 

>

 

> << I am thinking Lincoln Highway

 

> Hi Walter,

 

> Are you aware that there is a Lincoln Highway

 

> internet group also?

 

> Do a search in the yahoo groups for it and I am

 

> sure it will Pop up,

 

> hope this helps, if you need any info

 

> You might want to contact Clare and Ruth Frantz

 

> 214 Main St

 

> Sugar Grove,

 

> IL 60554

 

> 630-466-4382

 

> She is the Prez of the IL chapter of the Lincoln

 

> Highway Association and I'm

 

> sure they could give you all kinds of Info,

 

> Hope this helps,

 

> Lulu

 

>

 

 

 

 

 

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Guest John Ridge

9 December 2003

 

 

 

To Walter from Glasgow,

 

 

 

It is a pleasure to suggest a very different historic route across America

 

on a "Good Road from Plymouth Rock to Puget Sound." This route is the

 

Yellowstone Trail. Its sponsoring organization, the Yellowstone Trail

 

Association, was created in 1912, the year before the founding of the

 

Lincoln Highway Association and just after the founding of the National Old

 

Trails Highway Association. The latter is arguably the first to sponsor a

 

coast-to-coast route.

 

 

 

The Yellowstone Trail will take you through the country and through the

 

history of America, beginning with Plymouth Rock and the area of the

 

Revolutionary War. You will visit the "established" population centers

 

from Buffalo, Cleveland, through Chicago. You will see the Great Plains

 

through the Dakotas with Indian reservations, bad lands, and the

 

traditional small town America. In Montana you see, up close, the wide

 

open spaces and the mountain majesties, traveling, if you wish, on gravel

 

roads and nearly unused paved roads. You cross from Montana into Idaho

 

over an easy to drive pass little changed from its first opening in

 

1914. The original spur of the Trail from Livingston to the Yellowstone

 

National Park still, for the most part, exists as a great drive on road

 

upgraded from its original dirt to very good gravel, from which you can see

 

everybody on US 89 missing the real pleasures of the trip.

 

 

 

In the words of its 1912 founders "Connecting the heart of the

 

manufacturing section of the country, the best of the central states, the

 

"breadbasket of the World" in the Northwest, scenic America in the Northern

 

Rockies . . . , and the Pacific Coast. No wastes, deserts or lack of

 

accommodations or water. The most logical location for a great national

 

highway."

 

 

 

Like the Lincoln highway, the coming of route numbering reduced the

 

importance of the painted rocks and maps of the Association. By the second

 

half of the 20th Century the Trail (the common term for long distance

 

routes, such as the Oregon Trail) remained only in the memory of those who

 

lived or traveled it while it still remained marked. A new Yellowstone

 

Trail Association is just now being formed with members from fifteen states

 

to research and promote the route as an important part of US history. The

 

budding web site devoted to the Trail can be visited at

 

www.yellowstonetrail.org. Detailed maps of the Trail are being developed

 

and will appear on the web site as soon as they are ready (see Wisconsin

 

for samples) and we have time and resources to get them there. We would be

 

happy to work with people with specific travel plans to make sure they have

 

the information they need to take a great trip on the "blue roads."

 

 

 

Follow the Yellowstone Trail then write up a short article about your

 

experiences on the trip for the National Arrow, the newsletter of the

 

Yellowstone Trail Association.

 

 

 

John Ridge

 

yttrailman@yellowstonetrail.org

 

 

 

 

 

At 12/9/2003, you wrote:

 

>Hi, I hail from Glasgow in Scotland. I have been interested in

 

>travelling the highways & byways of your grand country and recently

 

>subscibed to American Road Magazine. I have driven Route 66 twice

 

>now and also meandered down the Great River Road. My next project is

 

>to drive from Sea to Shining Sea, all the way from the East Coast to

 

>the West Coast. I am thinking Lincoln Highway but am very receptive

 

>to other routes, if members fancy suggesting any.

 

>Its a pleasure to join your group and I look forward to getting to

 

>know everyone

 

>Kind Regards from freezing cold Glasgow

 

>Walter

 

>

 

>

 

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