TRANSPORTATION · HISTORICAL MARKER
The Lincoln Highway
Upper Sandusky, Ohio
Transportation
3
Conceived by leaders of the automobile industry to encourage the building of good roads, the Lincoln Highway was established in 1913 as the first transcontinental automobile route in the United States. It traversed twelve states and 3,389 miles from New York to San Francisco. The first route across Ohio connected Van Wert, Delphos, Lima, Ada, Upper Sandusky, Bucyrus, Galion, Mansfield, Ashland, Wooster, Massillon, Canton, Minerva, Lisbon, and East Liverpool. By the 1930s much of the original route had become part of the Federal Highway System and U.S. Route 30, many miles of which were later bypassed by modern four-lane highways.
PHOTOS
Photo: Dale K. Benington
Photo: Dale K. Benington
Photo: Dale K. Benington
Photo: Dale K. Benington
Photo: Dale K. Benington
Photo: Dale K. Benington
Photo: Dale K. Benington
Photo: Dale K. Benington
Photo: Dale K. Benington
Photo: Dale K. Benington
FIND IT
Upper Sandusky, Ohio · USA
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