Highway Chronicle Chapter 11
Post-War Road Construction Boom Shapes the Way We Travel
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World War II focused new emphasis on the importance of roads as military supply and evacuation routes.
President Roosevelt signed the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1944 authorizing the creation of a “National System of Interstate Highways,” but this initiative would remain under-funded until President Eisenhower signed the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956. This legislation provided for one of America’s largest public works programs, which was the construction of our multi-lane interstate highway system, and the modernization of state and local routes.
Interstate highways eventually built through Franklin County include I-70 (1962), I-71 (1966), I-270 (1976), and I-670 (2003).
Major federal and state routes include Broad Street (S.R. 16 & U.S. 40), Cleveland Avenue/Westerville Road (S.R. 3), Dublin-Granville Road (S.R. 161), Hamilton Road (S.R. 317), Harrisburg Pike (S.R. 3 & U.S. 62), High Street/Indianola Avenue/Portsmouth-Columbus Road (U.S. 23), Jackson Pike (S.R. 104), Johnstown Road (U.S. 62), London-Groveport Road (S.R. 665), Main Street (U.S. 40), Riverside Drive/Livingston Avenue/Columbus-Lancaster Road (U.S. 33), and State Route 315.