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Lincoln
Highway in Blair, Nebraska

"Even in the 1940s, Highway 30 through Blair was still know as the 'Lincoln
Highway' by many."
History
At the end of June, 1929, on the first day the Blair
toll bridge across the Missouri River opened, 189 cars crossed it. A month
later, on the day before its July 26 dedication as the Abraham Lincoln Memorial
Bridge, traffic had greatly increased – 9,100 cars drove across.
Those cars, however, weren’t on the U.S. 30 we know today --
which was also known at the time as the Lincoln Highway, this
country’s first transcontinental road. They were on the
Lincoln Highway Cut-off, and after crossing the bridge they
drove from Blair to Fremont on the “B-Line,” a designation
made in 1923 by the Nebraska state highway department.
Had those drivers stayed on the official Lincoln Highway, they
would have driven from Missouri Valley to Council Bluffs, across the bridge to
Omaha, and then to Fremont. The cut-off through Blair saved them approximately
30 miles.
Early Ferry Crossing
Earlier drivers using the cut-off before the bridge was built saved miles
but not time. Even with good weather and daylight they encountered poor roads
(those roads were improved, but not paved, on the Iowa and Nebraska sides while
the bridge was being built), and they had to wait to cross the river by ferry.
And when the river froze, the ferry couldn’t operate.
There had been sporadic agitation for a bridge at Blair over
several decades, and that agitation increased after platting of the Lincoln
Highway began in 1913. The community mobilized in 1925 with the threat of a new
bridge at Decatur that would create a route bypassing Blair, and the Chamber of
Commerce organized a committee headed by Blair attorney Reed O’Hanlon to promote
a bridge. The U.S. Congress authorized its construction but provided no funds,
and neither did the state.
A New Bridge
Then O’Hanlon, who became president of the Blair Chamber in 1925 and city
attorney in 1927, organized a private bridge company, incorporating it in July
1927 with two major Omaha investors, as the Nebraska-Iowa Bridge Company.
Congress was again petitioned, this time for a private franchise. It was granted
and signed into law by President Herbert Hoover.
The corporation lined up individuals and companies to engineer
and build “The New Bridge on the Lincoln Highway Cut-off,” and it actively
promoted local stock sales.
Lincoln Highway through Blair Official
In 1930, a year after the bridge was dedicated, the route became the official
Lincoln Highway. The controversial change came about when the Lincoln Highway
Association ordered several crews to move, in the middle of the night, Lincoln
Highway markers from the original route through Council Bluffs to the new one
through Blair.
Two days later, the Omaha World-Herald, in a July 25, 1930,
article headed “Strong Protest as Omaha Loses Lincoln Highway” ran a rebuttal by
the association’s secretary. According to the article, the secretary maintained
that “Lincoln Highway was a copyrighted name. Therefore, the markers which line
the highway are private property, owned by the association, and could be placed
where they saw fit.” He also noted, the newspaper said, that the association
only needed permission from the towns where the privately owned markers were to
be placed and not from where they were removed.
The Lincoln Highway Association, formed in 1913, had
officially disbanded in 1927, but influential regional and private groups
remained active. As its last official act, on September 1, 1928, the association
marked and dedicated the road as the Abraham Lincoln Memorial Highway. Beginning
at 1 p.m., and all in one day, groups of Boy Scouts nationwide placed
approximately 3,000 markers at crossroads and at intervals along the route, each
with the highway’s insignia, a bronze medallion, and a directional arrow. In
1992 enthusiasts formed a new Lincoln Highway Association as a nonprofit
organization dedicated to interpreting and preserving this country’s first
transcontinental road.
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National Park Service Report
Even with the re-routings and the
new federal highway numbers, the identity of the Lincoln Highway did not die
with the Lincoln Highway Association. The image made for the highway was by then
too deeply seated. Throughout the 1930s and 1940s, many piecemeal road
relocations were considered as improvements to the Lincoln Highway, not as
bypasses of the Lincoln Highway. This was the case with the 1931 opening of the
magnificent George Westinghouse Bridge east of Pittsburgh, and the 1930
Blair Bridge across the Missouri River, which caused Omaha, Nebraska, to be
dropped from the Lincoln Highway. [Source]
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Moving the markers placed Blair on the principal thoroughfare
of the transcontinental highway. But the exact route of the highway within Blair
was controversial. What street should it be on -- Lincoln, South, or Washington?
The controversy was quickly resolved in 1932 when the field
secretary for the Lincoln Highway Bureau made an unexpected appearance before
the deadlocked City Council. The November 3, 1932, Pilot-Tribune reported that
the secretary told the Council, “The present route from the bridge into Blair is
unsatisfactory and has caused the bureau much worry. Until a definite route is
agreed upon, the paving will not be extended from Missouri Valley to the bridge,
nor from the bridge to Fremont. Our bureau naturally is much interested in
securing the paving, since our object is the shortest, most direct and most
scenic route from coast to coast.”
The Council acted immediately, and its November 1 minutes
include this resolution: “Resolved, that the Lincoln Highway Bureau be and are
hereby given the right and authority to move the Lincoln Highway thru the
corporate City Limits of Blair, State of Nebraska, as follows: Said Highway
shall proceed from the western terminal of the Blair Bridge to the eastern
terminal of the brick paving of Washington Street, thence west on Washington
Street to Third Street [now 19th] then south on Third Street to South Street,
thence southwest as routed at present. . . .”
The years since this 1932 resolution have brought changes to
the Blair segment of U.S. 30, with the most major change taking place in 1991
when the 1929 bridge was replaced. And few residents today refer to U.S. 30 as
the Lincoln Highway – but its route through Blair remains the same.
(This article is based on information from Photographs,
Historical and Descriptive Data, Abraham Lincoln Memorial Bridge (Blair Bridge),
Historic American Engineering Record, Department of the Interior, National Park
Service, Rocky Mountain Regional Office.) |