Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Mar 30, 2023 · Bankhead would be one of the most significant figures in improving transportation at the federal level, and Rountree became one of the most prominent “good roads” advocates in the state.

  2. Dec 14, 2023 · In Alabama, they can be found in Macon, Monroe, and Conecuh Counties, among others. Much of what is currently known about the history of the Old Federal Road in Alabama is based on research by Henry deLeon Southerland and J. Elijah Brown, who wrote the first book-length study of the road.

  3. People also ask

  4. Mar 1, 2019 · The critical period for establishing a modern transportation system took place in Alabama from 1900 to 1930. What was going on in Alabama, Olliff said, was part of the largest infrastructure project in world history. More reliable roads and bridges were built in the U.S. than had ever been built before in world history.

    • Peter J. Hamilton
    • Indian Trails.
    • Trade routes.
    • Colonial Roads.
    • American Highways.
    • Lorenzo Dow Diaries
    • Alabama Footprints Exploration: A Collection of Lost & Forgotten Stories

    Scroll down to read story (Unedited Transcription from Publications of the Alabama Historical Society, Miscellaneous.. Volume 1 by Alabama Historical Society) Roads made Roman history, and with the development of roads everywhere comes the evolution of a country. A wagon road in the settlement of Alabama counted for more than a nickle plate railway...

    The Chickasaws and Choctaws were generally hostile and no regular roads were to be found between them. The Cherokees were not sufficiently identified with the Gulf history to leave much trace in our section. But the Choctaws seem to have had a path which crossed the Bigbee at or near McGrew’s Shoals, ran thence along the Alabama, and about Cahaba c...

    French trade from Mobile was principally by the river, but there was a land route to Fort Toulouse, which doubtless joined the one from Pensacola, running through thick forests south of the Alabama to the same place, and in Bartram’s time the great trading path for West Florida. This was at a distance from the river and to some extent a ridge road....

    The French made few roads, except within their own settlements. To reach the Indians they used the rivers and the old Indian trails. A military way was projected by the British from Mobile to Natchez, which would have been of value in the control of the West by the Mississippi River, and in preventing the dispatch of supplies by the Spaniards to th...

    In course of time after the Revolution, various roads connected the Atlantic States with the country west of the Alleghanies, and are to be thought of as superseding or at least supplementing the river routes. But Natchez and St. Stephens, making up the best part of Mississippi Territory, long remained isolated advance guards of civilization. Natch...

    An instance of the difference between travelling before and after the Federal Road was cut may be found in the life of the eccentric but earnest Methodist preacher Lorenzo Dow. In 1803 he was in Georgia and set out for Tombigbee, by way of the agency of Hawkins, who “treated them cool.” In thirteen and a half days after leaving the Georgia settleme...

    Alabama Footprints – Exploration – is a collection of lost and forgotten stories about the people who discovered and initially settled in Alabama. Stories include: First Mardi Gras in America The Mississippi Bubble Burst Royalists settle in Alabama Sophia McGillivray- A Remarkable Woman The Federal Road – Alabama’s First Interstate

  5. Oct 23, 2017 · Many of the first planned roads in Alabama were built by Alabamian men themselves. While many of these men were not skilled at road-building (most listed their primary occupation as “farmer” on the census), they saw a need for better roads in their state, and they filled that need the best way that they knew how: by picking up tools and ...

  6. Oct 30, 2010 · Ward states that one of the most important and certainly the most publicized of all the early roads through Covington County was the Three Notch Road, which followed the ridge along the divide between the Conecuh River on the west and the Black Water, Yellow and Pea Rivers on the East.

  7. Natchez Trace Parkway, scenic and historic roadway, extending 444 miles (715 km) through Mississippi, Alabama, and Tennessee, U.S. It begins in Natchez, Mississippi, and, generally following a Native American trail in a northeasterly direction, ends near Nashville, Tennessee.

  1. People also search for