Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Interstate­s: Taking the roads many people take

- Bill Rettew Small Talk

There is no better way to travel America than along interstate highways.

Whether it’s I-5 on the West Coast (the left coast) or I-95 to the east (the right coast) there’s no way I’d rather burn miles.

Apparently others agree. A quarter of all miles driven in the United States are along interstate­s. At more than 47,000 miles long, the interstate system officially began with the 1956 Eisenhower Federal-Aid Highway Act, which establishe­d a “national system of interstate and defense highways.”

At 3,101 miles, stretching from Seattle to Boston, I-90 is the longest interstate highway. An historic marker along the way notes that the length of the highway, just in Montana alone, stretches about the same distance as New York City to Chicago.

Take I-10 on the Eisenhower Interstate System all the way across Texas from west to east, starting at mile marker 0 near El Paso and you’ll pass MM 880 on the eastern border of the Lone Star State near Beaumont.

My buddy Wild Horse has suggested that it might be possible to travel from the Atlantic to Pacific Ocean along 2,460 mile east/west interstate I-10 in a single calendar day.

With the three hour time change from Eastern to Pacific time zones, and an extra hour added in the Fall when the clocks are turned back, a driver exceeding the speed limit would have 28 hours, at an average speed of 88 m.p.h., to make it from coast to coast.

For the most part, the single and double digit even numbered roadways (I-76, I-70, I-80) travel from east to west and the odd numbered roadways (I-95, I-77, I-5) go north/ south.

Three digit interstate­s starting with even numbers (I-476, the Blue Route) usually wrap around large population centers and odd numbered interstate­s (I-195) act as spurs, taking motorists into the heart of cities.

You could make a strong argument that the east/west Pennsylvan­ia Turnpike (I-76, I-70) or the “Granddaddy of the Pikes,” which opened in October 1940, was the first super highway or interstate.

You don’t need to cross state lines to be considered an interstate. While Hawaii interstate­s are perfect examples, one of the shortest interstate­s, the Vine Street Expressway (I-676), at 6.9 miles, carries drivers through both New Jersey and Pennsylvan­ia.

Oddly, this is one of only a few interstate­s with no numbered exits. Instead, street names are used.

Not every interstate mile is scenic. Anybody who has driven to Florida would recall the monotony when passing by hundreds of strip malls, fast food joints, South of the Border billlboard­s and gas stations along I-95.

At my job as tour guide with Ride the Ducks we’d cross high above I-95 at Penn’s Landing.

Philadelph­ia is packed with superlativ­es. I’d often tease riders by telling them that this north/south interstate is the most scenic in the country. Sometimes, and sometimes not, I’d clarify and say that maybe I-95 is pretty in northern Maine and southern Florida.

I-40 and I-44 share much of the same roadbed with historic Route 66. Often Route 66 parallels the interstate. Places to get off the main road and ride Route 66 are well marked.

Interstate­s sometimes determine where people reside. I-95 runs from the Canadian border in Maine to the East Coast of Florida. I-75 connects Michigan and the West Coast of the Sunshine State.

Partly due to those two interstate­s, there are more transplant­ed Midwestern­ers sunning on Gulf of Mexico beaches and more northeaste­rners swimming in the Atlantic Ocean.

Interstate­s run smack dab through the heart of at least two national parks. A park ranger in Theodore Roosevelt National Park, N.D., told me that many motorists buzzing along I-94 don’t even realize they’ve visited the park. The same goes for Petrified Forest National Park (I-40).

The goal of the Eisenhower Interstate System was to connect every American city with a population of more than 100,000.

All but five state capitols, Alaska, Delaware, Missouri, Nevada and South Dakota have easy access to the interstate system.

The cost in 2006 dollars for linking the nations major roadways was $425 billion. In October of 1992 the original highway system was completed. We recently celebrated the massive system’s 50th anniversar­y.

Interstate cross streets are limited and there are at least two lanes in each direction. For the most part, opposing traffic is limited to underpasse­s and overpasses. A very rare red light slows traffic in Center City on the Vine Street Expressway.

During an army convoy, President Eisenhower took the cross country Lincoln Highway (U.S. 30). He then establishe­d the interstate system to easier transport military supplies and to hasten troop deployment­s in case of emergency or foreign invasion.

Known as the greatest public works project of all time, interstate­s get us there faster and more efficientl­y. It just might not seem that way on a long road trip when the white and yellow lines begin to blur.

Even for short distances, interstate­s often save time and gas. Almost everything we buy rides along in a truck on an interstate highway.

Where would we be without them?

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 ?? PHOTO BY BILL RETTEW JR. ?? Counting down the mile markers on I-75 which stretches from Canada to Miami.
PHOTO BY BILL RETTEW JR. Counting down the mile markers on I-75 which stretches from Canada to Miami.
 ?? PHOTO BY BILL RETTEW JR. ?? Turn right and Interstate I-75 near Naples, Fla. will take you to Tampa and Canada and go left and you’ll arrive in Miami.
PHOTO BY BILL RETTEW JR. Turn right and Interstate I-75 near Naples, Fla. will take you to Tampa and Canada and go left and you’ll arrive in Miami.
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