Just for Kids & Teachers - Research
 by Timothy
Crumrin
The first cries for a "national road" were heard
before there was even a nation. These calls for a
road to the west came as early as the 1740s and say much about the time and
place. For instance, the "west" was viewed roughly as those lands which lay
between the Alleghenies and Ohio River. And to many, the road was not an end
unto itself. Due to the perceived superiority of water travel, the proposed road
was seen primarily as a portage between waterways.
Several groups lobbied for a road or roads to
facilitate settlement and the transfer of goods. The few western settlers
themselves wished for an avenue to make it easier to market their goods and buy
essential supplies in return.
Land speculators realized the importance of an
infrastructure in the west. Members of the first Ohio Company, a group that
included a young George Washington, clamored for a road, knowing it would
greatly enhance their western land's value. The company went so far as to hire
Christopher Gist and Thomas Cresap to explore their lands and seek the best
route for a road. In 1752 Cresap employed a Delaware Chief named Nemacolin to
mark a path for a roadway-- which eventually followed an old Indian
trail.
The military, too, saw the advantages of a western
road. British General Edward Braddock, accompanied by George Washington,
constructed a military road from Cumberland, Maryland to Ft. Duquesne which
paralleled Nemacolin's.
However, these were "roads" in name only. In
actuality they were little more than crude trails carved out of the wilderness,
filled with stumps, sinkholes, and deep entrapping ruts. Despite the perceived
need for a sturdy road to the west, little was done.
Surveying the Path With the troubled birth of the
United States came renewed calls for a road to the west. The cited reasons were
much the same as before. Such a road would facilitate settlement and that seemed
particularly important now that Revolutionary War veterans had been given tracts
in the west. Also growing was the idea that the nation had to expand in order to
survive and flourish.
Economic considerations
weighed heavily in favor of a national road, which would be a two-way street
allowing farmers and traders in the west to send their production east in
exchange for manufactures goods and other essential of life. Government
officials feared that if such a trade network was not established westerners
would turn increasingly to the Spanish and their great "national road," the
Mississippi River, or to the British in Canada as trading partners.
George Washington continued his support for a road.
His extensive western travels, experiences as a military commander, and land
speculating convinced him that a "smooth way" was needed to "open a wide door"
to the west. In 1784 Washington traveled to the west, in part to contemplate the
best routes for portages and roads
Along the way he invariably asked settlers their
views of the optimal routes. While staying at a land agent's cabin near
present-day Morgantown, West Virginia he met a young surveyor who was later to
play a vital role in making the national road a reality, Albert Gallatin.
Gallatin advised Washington on possible routes. Eighteen years later, while
Jefferson's Treasury Secretary, he would help formulate the plan to fund the
project.
So, by the end of the eighteenth century there was a
growing consensus that a national road was needed. The two biggest obstacles
were how it was to be funded and where it should be constructed.
Paving the Way As always the most vexing problem
was funding. The debate about paying for a national road came hot upon the heels
of other money arguments and in the middle of the controversies surrounding the
proper role of the federal government. Who should pay? Some thought costs should
be borne by the states or territories it would help most. The federal
government, they said, should have no role in internal improvements. It was
unconstitutional to do so.
Working behind the scenes Gallatin and others came
up with a workable solution. In a February 2, 1802 letter, known as the "Origin
of the National Road," Gallatin proposed that states exempt federal land sales
from taxation and earmark a percentage of the proceeds for roadbuilding "first
from the navigable waters emptying into the Atlantic to the Ohio, and afterwards
continued through the new states"
Gallatin's idea caught fire and the enabling act
making Ohio a state contained provisions allotting federal
land sale proceeds to finance the road. Such provisions later made their way
into the laws of Indiana and Illinois to finance their part of the road. Like
the Ohio law they stipulated 3/5 of the funds for construction within the state
and 2/5 for the road to and from its borders.
The usual committee was formed. It reported to the
senate that a road was feasible and would ".... make the crooked ways straight,
and the rough ways smooth, .... will, in effect, remove the intervening
mountains; and, by facilitating the intercourse of our western brethren with
those on the Atlantic, substantially unite them in interest.... ." The road,
they said, would be the "cement of the union."
With proceeds from land sales mounting, it was
obvious that the new nation had found a will to do the job and now it had the
means. What was missing was the way.
Pointing the Way Still to be decided was the
actual route. Needless to say politicians and merchants in cities from Richmond
to Philadelphia held out hope that their city would be a terminus. The senate
committee had other ideas. On December 19, 1805 it reported on several possible
routes, but recommended one from Cumberland Maryland to the Ohio River. Whatever
route was ultimately chosen, committee members hoped the road would be built in
as straight a line as possible and with as little deviation as necessary.
Congress passed a bill to that effect eight days later.
The choice of Cumberland as the starting point was a
logical one. It was connected to Baltimore by an existing road and a proposal to
make the Potomac navigable to Cumberland was under study (Gallatin had
landholdings in the Potomac area). The city had also been the jumping off point
for the Nemacolin, Braddock, and Ohio Company efforts.
The ensuing years saw the passage of various laws
that set the great project in motion. In 1806 Jefferson signed legislation
officially establishing a national highway to run from Cumberland to the
Mississippi, with the stipulation that it run through the capitals of each state
along the route.
Commissioners were appointed, surveyors contracted,
bids let but it was not until 1811 that the real work actually began.
Building the Road There were sound principles
underlaying the building of the National Road. The guiding tenets were the
shortest distance between two points and water crossings made where the waterway
was most navigable, not where most convenient. Later there were deviations from
the avowed course due to political considerations, but they were slight.
Specification for the road were also well-conceived. They called for slopes no
steeper than 5% of the horizon, a 66 foot, cleared right of way, and a roadway
twenty feet wide and covered with "stone, earth, or gravel, or a combination of
some or all of them." How closely these specifications were met depended upon
the locality and officials involved.
Technically, the commissioners had to obtain
permission to place the road across occupied land, though they were to make no
use of the right of eminent domain. Additionally, no compensation was offered to
landowners, because, it was felt, the road brought "nothing but benefits and
blessings" in its wake. Few property owners balked; most were farmers who
happily donated their 66 foot strip of land knowing it would benefit them in the
long run.
Once the legalities were out of the way, the very
hard work began. First in were the laborers with mattocks, axes, hoes, rakes,
and shovels who set out clearing the land. Trees were cut, stumps removed, and
brush cleared by a combination of man and animal power. Hills were leveled,
hollows filled; rock was hauled in or carted away. All just to get the area
ready to build the road surface.
The original specifications were issued before the
advent of macadamization, but once it was introduced it became clear it was the
best surface. The brainchild of Scottish engineer John Macadam, the method
called for the building of the road with layers of stone. The lowest layer was
12-18 inches deep and consisted of base stones approximately 7 inches (they had
to pass through a ring of that size) in diameter.
The road was then graded up with smaller stones
(which had to pass through a 3 inch ring) and gravel. The smaller surface stone
was mixed with soil and rounded off to allow for drainage. Drainage ditches were
dug along side.
Macadamization was the near ideal surface for the
time, but due to the expense and rather sophisticated techniques involved it was
not adopted everywhere. The traveler might encounter several surfaces during a
journey. Along any one stretch the sojourner might travel over, macadam,
corduroy or plank, or rutted, washed out roads.
J. Gould, who traveled the entire length of the road
in 1839, noted the National Road was for the most part "Macadamized and finished
in the most desirable manner as far as Columbus in Ohio" In Indiana, he
continued, ".... about four miles at Richmond...., a short piece at Centerville,
about six miles at Indianapolis, and three miles at Terre Haute, together with a
few bridges, are completed in the same substantial manner." However in some
areas of the Hoosier state the "road bed had been formed with earth.... and in
wet weather holes wash out and logs must be thrown in, often by travelers
themselves."
The major engineering marvels associated with the
National Road may have been the bridges which carried it across rivers and
streams. The bridges came in a wide variety of styles and types and were made of
stone, wood, iron, and later, steel. They were the wonder of their day and
bridgebuilding did much to advance engineering knowledge in America before the
Civil War.
One bridge style often associated with the road was
the S-type. Contrary to the popular, misguided opinion of the day, the bridges
were not the product of the fevered, whiskey-inspired imagination of an
engineer, but were built that way because it was easier to construct them in
that configuration than as a straight span at that time.
As the bridges indicate, an
amazing variety of skills were needed to build the road. Surveyors laid out the
path; engineers oversaw construction. Carpenters framed bridges; masons cut and
worked stones for bridges and milestones.
The most numerous group involved were the laborers
who did the heavy, onerous, monotonous tasks. They were the people who pulled
and tugged and cut and hauled through all types of weather. This group sometimes
included local farmers who earned extra income during slack times. Breaking rock
for the macadam method was one of the most tiresome jobs. It was also an
endeavor that involved chicanery as foreman sometimes discovered they were
paying several times over for the same load of rocks. When such behavior was
suspected officials daubed each load with paint or whitewash so as not to buy
them twice.
Though many people hired out for the road for only a
short period, others followed it across the nation, making it their full-time
occupation. Among theses were the fabled Irish immigrants who were beginning to
arrive in large numbers as construction began.--many of whom were later to work
on the canals. One onlooker marveled at the great brigade of Irish workers
digging, hauling, and breaking rocks, intent on "Building a roadway good enough
for an emperor to travel over.... ." Some worked the road to pay off their
passage and were, in effect, indentured servants. To them roadbuilding was known
as "working to pay off the dead horse."
The pay scale was as varied as the workers
themselves. In some areas good wages of .50 $1.00 a day were paid, but for some
it was as low as 12 1/2 cents for a day's toil. Some of the Irish workers were
lucky to get $6.00 a month.
Initial cost estimates for the National Road were
$6,000. per mile, but like many another government project this proved
optimistic. Portions of the road through the hilly sections of Pennsylvania cost
$9,000. to $13,000. per mile. Expenditures were sometimes lower as the road
stretched across the flat lands of western Indiana and eastern
Illinois.
The National Road, of course, was built in sections
over more than four decades. As noted, the first axe and shovel split the air in
1811 at Cumberland. Seven years later engineers reported the completion of the
first major section, the 113 mile stretch from Cumberland to Wheeling. A long
held dream moved slowly to realization.
In may of 1820 Congress appropriated funds to lay
out the road from Wheeling to the Mississippi. Construction in Ohio did not
commence until 1825. Indiana's route was surveyed in 1827, with construction
beginning in 1829. By 1834 the road extended across the entire state, albeit in
various stages of completeness. The road began to inch across Illinois in the
early 1830s, but shortages of funds and national will, and local squabbles about
its destination, caused it to end in Vandalia rather of upon the shore of the
Mississippi.
Travelling the Road One of the easiest questions
to answer about the National Road was who used it. The simple reply is: damned
near everybody. People from all walks, from all trades, of all religions, from
every social stratum stepped or rode along its route. Eager travelers often
literally waited in line for sections to open. Hordes of people, animals, and
wagons toed the line waiting for the word that travel was allowed and
immediately upon getting the signal they filled the road.
One of the most important "official" uses of the
road was mail delivery and its opening greatly speeded the process. By 1837 the
mail could flash from Washington, D.C. to Indianapolis in 65 hours and on to St.
Louis in an additional 29 hours. The arrival of the mail coach usually caused
quite a stir. The driver would sound forth with a blast from his bugle as he
approached the inn or stopping place to prepare the postmaster for the quick
exchange of mail. For a two-year period in the mid-1830s an early version of the
pony express rode swiftly along the road.
Numerous stage lines sprang up to serve the public.
Every area had lines that constantly used the National Road to ferry travelers.
In Indiana the Bears line was one of the most famous. One of the great
advantages of the road, of course, was that it considerably shortened travel
times. In 1832, even before the road was completed, it advertised its trips from
Dayton to Indianapolis as taking only two and a half, with nightly stops at inns
or taverns. Later, "express" stage services claimed the ability to cross 150
miles of the road in a day.
Another heavy presence on the road were the
ubiquitous teamsters who, like modern-day truckers, hauled their freight day and
night. They often drove conestoga wagons, perhaps the vehicles most associated
with the National Road. The six-horse team so closely identified with these
haulers was actually a National Road innovation that allowed the teamsters to
more efficiently exploit the highly profitable business of transporting goods.
The wagons often competed for space with herds of cattle and pigs being driven
to market.
Perhaps the group most associated with the road were
the settlers using it as an avenue to a new life. Families, often complete with
household good, numerous children, and a few farm animals clogged the road. The
highway became the yellow brick road to a new eden.
The above description of the road as clogged is an
apt one. Observers marveled at the traffic. One Hoosier took note of the
phenomena as it appeared in the 1840s: "From morning til night, there was a
constant rumble of wheels.... when the rush was greatest,there was never a
minute that wagons were not in site [sic], and as a rule, one company of wagons
was closely followed by another." During many periods traffic was so constant a
traveler noted that the wagons were so closely strung together they resembled a
train upon its tracks.
It was a sight which inspired wanderlust. The same
Hoosier wrote that "with the tinkling of the bells, the rumbling of the wheels,
the noise of the animals and the chatter of the people.... the little boy who
had gone to the road from his lonesome home in the woods was captivated and
carried away into the great active world."
A wondrous assortment of vehicles passed along the
road. Stage coaches, small farm wagons, and buggy-like wagons for personal use
jostled for their share of roadway. But the kings of the road were the
conestogas. From the larger ones used for freight hauling to the smaller models
that carried a nation westward, they were everywhere.
Many myths have grown tall around the conestoga. One
of the biggest is that they were built in their now-familiar shape so they might
float across rivers and streams. They certainly resembled a boat, but float they
could not. The design actually allowed for easier front and back loading, while
maintaining a short wheel base allowing for a smaller turning radius. It also
afforded greater protection from the ever present elements. Seldom were their
riders on a conestoga. The driver normally walked alongside or rode the lead
horse-- although some featured a "lazy board" for those unwilling to walk.
Another feature often noted were the conestoga bells. A great variety of styles
adorned the horses and it was said you could differentiate the drivers by the
tinkling of their bells. Small debts of gratitude--or thirst-quenching-- were
often settled by the teamster by the bestowing of a bell or set of bells. It was
said that the married teamster who returned home without his full complement of
bells would face rough treatment from his wife.
The residents of Indianapolis were accustomed to the
wide variety of vehicles passing by, but in 1854 a rare sight supposedly caught
them by surprise. A "take-your-own-house-and-walk immigrant" rolled along the
highway in a cabin fitted with wagon wheels. This strange contraption was drawn
by four horses and came complete with a fireplace at one end. A local wit
commented that he "saw no barns and outhouses, but they might well be along
soon."
Many business sprang up to serve all of this
traffic. Blacksmith shops to make repairs, stores to victual them, and livery
stables to provide for horses, lined the road. But perhaps the most numerous and
renowned of theses service industries were the inns and hotels.
They were the oases, truckstops, and travel plazas
of the period, offering a myriad of services. The weary traveler could get a
room, food, drink, a place for his animals, and any number of other
blandishments to make life a little easier. In some, it was said, those of a
baser sort could entertain themselves with too much liquor, a few hands of
cards, and perhaps some fleeting companionship for an evening.
Inns were everywhere. One estimate says they
averaged one each mile in Pennsylvania and parts of Ohio. There was perhaps one
every five miles in Indiana. Not all of the establishments could be described as
elegant. Some were fly-by-night operations that were little more than farmhouses
near the road which took in guests. Still more would have been more than willing
to sell a bit of the ardent spirits without having to deal with providing food
and shelter. To prevent such activities Indiana passed a law in 1832 which
stipulated taverns and inns must have at least one spare room with two beds and
stabling for four horses to acquire a liquor license.
End of the Road The National Road stopped at
Vandalia, Illinois in 1852. The dream of many to extend it to the Mississippi
River and beyond was never fulfilled. Among other factors, the road fell victim
to the squabbling over internal improvements, sectionalism, and constitutional
interpretation. The last regular federal appropriation for the road was in 1838.
States provided funding through tolls and appropriations in order to press on.
The federal government began to cede control of varying aspects of the road to
the states through which it passed as early as 1831.
Despite this turning away there is no doubt about
the significance of the road. It fulfilled many of the promises of its
advocates. It stimulated settlement in the west. Indiana's population, for
example, more than quadrupled between 1820 and 1840 and many came to the state
upon the National Road-- especially during the swelling days of the Jacksonian
migration. Similar figures may be noted for other states in the "west."
Associated with this phenomena was townbuilding stimulated by the road. Again,
Indiana may serve as an example. When the survey began in Indiana in 1827,
Indianapolis was virtually the only town between Centerville and Terre Haute, a
distance of nearly 125 miles. Within eight years more at least nine new towns
and villages sprang up which still exist. The sword was double-edged though. The
little Hoosier hamlet of Vandalia died because it was too far removed from the
route. Some of its buildings were moved to form the nucleus of one of the towns
which grew along the road, Cambridge City. Brazil, Indiana, grew from a stage
line relay station to become the seat of Clay County because the previous county
seat, Bowling Green, was situated far south of the road.
The National Road was indeed a two-way street that
aided the economy by facilitating the transfer of goods and was to play a role
in "nationalizing" trade. Manufactures from the east more readily made their way
west, often passing the product of the west heading in the other direction. The
road helped the nation expand while drawing it closer together.
The National Road (it was also called the Cumberland
Road, National Pike and other names, but National Road was most popular by 1825)
also contributed to the national consciousness. It was celebrated in song,
story, painting, and poetry; political tickets adopted the name for themselves.
Many towns along the route today call their main street National Avenue, Street,
or Road.
The federal government drew farther away from the
road as time passed. In 1879 it ceded the last of its control when it granted
Ohio and Maryland the right to make the road free; in return the United States
was absolved in any further responsibility or liability for the road. The
National Road was national no more.
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