Road Names and Signs
As early motorists ventured away from their own neighborhoods into strange country, they needed some way to keep from getting lost. There were no signs to direct people to where they wanted to go. When the first signs appeared, they were usually put up by business people who hoped to attract new customers. Often a group of merchants got together to promote a special route that would go through their own towns. A number of these routes developed.
Other road associations sprang up all over the state, each one marking the way with a painted pole to guide motorists to the cities along the route.
The Red Ball Road was marked by a white strip of pain on fence posts with a red dot in the cent. This road was marked between St. Louis, Missouri through Iowa to St. Paul, Minnesota in about 1908. The Avenue of the Saints, or Highway 27, is on this route today. The White Way is marked with a white strip of paint on post between Omaha, Nebraska through Iowa to Chicago, Illinois in about 1911. Highway 92 follows this route today.
Eventually there were so many different markers that the travelers were almost as confused as they had been before the poles were put up. Finally, in the 1920s a numbering system developed, and new signs with numbers replaced the old poles. Although states had their own numbering systems, a cross-country system of numbered national highways helped travelers who were driving through more than one state.
Source:
- Margaret Atherton Bonney, Ed., “From Here to There,” The Goldfinch 4, no. 2 (November 1982): 9.
My Path
- Log Cabin Experiences
- Coming to Iowa: Opportunities for African-Americans
- Female Black Officers Train in Des Moines in World War II
- Black Officers at Fort Des Moines in World War I
- Plants and Animals of Iowa
- Businesses on Main Street: The Livery Stable and Blacksmith Shop
- World War II: Iowans on the Home Front
- Businesses on Main Street: The General Store
- A Pioneer Family Comes to Iowa
- Schools for Amish Children
- Businesses on Main Street: The Ladies' Hatmaker
- King Corn in Sioux City
- Iowa's Prohibition Leaders
- A Czech and Slovak Community
- Flax in Forest City
Pathways
Compare and contrast road signs today and in history. What has changed? What is the same?
Media Artifacts
Reading Tip: Rereading and Reviewing
When reviewing articles, decide if there is important information to record or if the information can be used later.
