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Washington to Richmond Road
Currently on display
From the Smithsonian Collection
This 1920 photograph shows the same part of the road that the 1919 photograph does. In 1920, the road had been covered with gravel, making it an improved road. The stretch of countryside still looks rural.
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Physical Description |
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photograph
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Details |
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History |
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As more Americans began to drive, cars took a heavy toll on the nation's existing road network. Cars weighed more than other road vehicles, and they went faster, creating wear and tear on the nation's roads. They also, in the early days of motoring, had high-pressure tires that tore up road surfaces. As automobiles became a fact of more and more peoples' daily lives, the nation built new roads, improved old ones, and began using materialsasphalt and concreteto surface highways so that America's automobiles could be on the road all year round.
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