Dixie Overland Highway
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member QuarrellaDeVil
N 32° 44.878 W 096° 28.327
14S E 736846 N 3626173
Texas Historical Marker in front of the Spellman Museum of Forney History at 200 S Bois d'Arc St, Forney, TX, providing some history of US 80 through the area.
Waymark Code: WM13A85
Location: Texas, United States
Date Posted: 10/24/2020
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member ggmorton
Views: 3

Careful readers of the Texas Historical Commission's Atlas will occasionally encounter old references to a given marker's being in the vicinity of US 80, when they should be referring to today's I-20.

This marker probably has an interesting history to it: While the Atlas provides the correct location today (2020), previously, it listed the marker as being on "FM 688 W of FM 548", on E Broad St. If it's been there for the last ten years, it's been very well-hidden.

Marker Number: 13299

Marker Text:
(U. S. Highway 80)

In the early 20th century, soon after the development of the automobile, travelers, city officials and others began planning for a network of paved overland routes. In the era before the advent of the interstate highway system, road associations provided the vision and the promotion, and states and municipalities provided necessary capital. Early results were piecemeal and inconsistent, but the Good Roads Movement, the National Highway Association and similar organizations continued efforts to improve routes on a national scale. In 1914, the Automobile Club of Savannah, Georgia, proposed an "all-seasons" route stretching from its home base to Los Angeles. Interested towns and parties formed the Dixie Overland Highway Association (DOHA), with offices in Columbus, Georgia. The route, which passed through 75 U.S. counties, including Kaufman, was partially opened by the 1920s, with the western terminus later changed to San Diego.

Along the route, travelers met significant obstacles, including what was known as the Forney Gap. Forney's portion of the road entered the city east of Mustang Creek and crossed through town, past the service stations and other businesses that opened to serve travelers. On the west side of town, as the landscape slopes downward to the floodplain of the East Fork of the Trinity River, the paved road stopped, leaving a slippery, muddy hill and a frequently flooded roadway. Despite such obstacles, DOHA's president, in a publicity stunt, made the length of the highway in record time in October 1926, traveling from San Diego to Savannah in just over 71 hours. Two months later, much of the highway became U.S. Highway 80. Its role as a primary interstate route was later superseded by Interstate 20. (2005)



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