Jump to content

Richardson Highway

Route map:
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Alaska Route 1 marker
Alaska Route 2 marker
Alaska Route 4 marker
Richardson Highway
Map
Richardson Highway highlighted in red
Route information
Length368 mi (592 km)
Component
highways
Major junctions
South end Alaska Marine Highway in Valdez
Major intersections
North end AK-2 (Steese Expressway) / Airport Way in Fairbanks
Location
CountryUnited States
StateAlaska
Highway system
AK-3Alaska Route 4 AK-5

The Richardson Highway is a highway in the U.S. state of Alaska, running 368 miles (562 km) and connecting Valdez to Fairbanks. It is marked as Alaska Route 4 from Valdez to Delta Junction and as Alaska Route 2 from there to Fairbanks. It also connects segments of Alaska Route 1 between the Glenn Highway and the Tok Cut-Off. The Richardson Highway was the first major road built in Alaska.[1]

History

[edit]
The "first car" to travel from Fairbanks to Valdez, 1913.[2]

Early Years and Exploration

[edit]

Indigenous trade routes existed in the region going from Prince William Sound to the north of the Alaska Range into the Alaskan Interior starting at least 5000 years ago. The majority of the trade was facilitated by the Ahtna, but also included the Eyak and Sugpiaq to the south, and the Tanana Athabaskans to the north. The route of the Richardson Highway primarily follows part of this old trade network.[3][4]: 11, 51–53, 66  Prospectors heard rumors of this ancient trade route and it encouraged them to explore the Interior to try to find a route to the gold fields in the Klondike area.[5]: 17 

In 1885, Lieutenant Henry Allen's party crossed the eastern Alaska Range from the mouth of the Copper River to the Tanana River via Suslota Pass, the first non-natives to do so. In his report, he noted that it would be possible to build a road between Prince William Sound to the Yukon River.[6]: 4  Shortly after his expedition, gold discoveries in the late 1880s to mid 1890s north of the Alaska Range, such as in the Fortymile Mining District, at Birch Creek near Circle, and in the western Yukon, put pressure on the US Congress to explore Alaska. In March of 1898, the US Department of War funded three expeditions to explore Southcentral Alaska. Edwin Glenn led the expedition ordered to explore from Prince William Sound to Cook Inlet for routes between the Susitna and Copper rivers then northward to the Tanana River. Attached to the expedition was geologist Walter Mendenhall from the USGS.[6]: 6–10  They would eventually cross Isabel Pass, who were also the first recorded non-natives through that route, but fell short 15-20 miles from the Tanana River.[7] This pass received very little attention at the time.[3]

Valdez-Eagle Trail

[edit]

Concurrently, Captain William Abercrombie was ordered to explore from Valdez northward to the Copper River and tributaries of the Tanana River. By 1899, the Army ordered Captain Abercrombie to build a military road from Valdez to Copper Center then onto Eagle. Before winter of 1899, they had completed a 93 mile trail suitable for packhorses through Keystone Canyon and past Thompson Pass to the Tonsina River.[3][6]: 11  By 1901, the pack trail was completed, and provided an "all-American" route to the Klondike gold fields.[3] The total distance of the road was about 409 miles (660 km).[citation needed] After the rush ended, the Army kept the trail open in order to connect its posts for communication at Fort Liscum, in Valdez, and Fort Egbert, in Eagle. One way message times were generally around 6 months from the Yukon to Washington, D.C.[6]: 12  By 1904, the completion of the WAMCATS allowed near instantaneous communication from Fort Egbert to the US Capitol using an all American telegraph system.[8][6]: 14 

Valdez-Fairbanks Trail

[edit]

The Fairbanks Gold Rush in July of 1902 drew attention away from the Klondike region, drawing prospectors to Fairbanks. These new travelers would follow the established Valdez-Eagle Trail until the Gakona River, and then utilize Ahtna trading trails through Isabel Pass to the Tanana Valley and finally unto Fairbanks. Most traffic using this route was during the winter with pack trains or sled dogs, since animals would tear up moss if it wasn't frozen, hampering travel.[9][10]: 27  Travel to the area during the summer was via riverboats.[6]: 21  The new traffic also enticed many to build roadhouses along the route, although many faced difficulty keeping them profitable.[2]

Along with the previous gold discoveries, the Fairbanks Gold Rush prompted the US Congress to send a senatorial party in 1903 to Alaska to hear testimony. At Eagle, Lieutenant William Mitchell told the party his estimated $2 million cost of building a road between Eagle to the Tanana River crossing, near Tok, then onto the Chena River confluence with the Tanana River. He suggested a route from Copper Center to the Tanana River crossing would be more cost effective. The senatorial party also met with Judge James Wickersham and Fairbanks resident Abraham Spring, both pushing for government led roadbuilding, opining that the miners could build feeder roads if a central road was built.[6]: 14–20 

Road Building and Modernity

[edit]

In early 1904, Congress passed legislation to build roads throughout Alaska. After surveys by the Army Corps of Engineers during the summer of that year, President Theodore Roosevelt appointed Major Wilds Richardson as the head of the Alaska Road Commission to supervise the construction of a wagon road from Valdez to Fairbanks starting in 1905.[2][6]: 23–30 [10]: 27  Richardson suggested dividing the trail into 3 sections, the first from Valdez to Copper Center along Abercrombie's route, the second from the mouth of the Delta River to Fairbanks, and the third connecting the two from Copper Center to Isabel Pass. By 1909, eggs, cranberries, cattle, and other groceries were shipped up the trail in the winter to Fairbanks.[10]: 30–34  Although Richardson contended with low funds and difficult construction, the road was finished in 1910.[2][6]: 34–47 

During the construction, the government hired failed gold prospectors as well as regular construction workers. The income from this work allowed many of the prospectors to leave Alaska.[citation needed]

Although automobiles and motorcycles were shipped to Fairbanks and Valdez sometime after 1908, it is unknown when the first motorized vehicle was used on the highway. BY 1909, cars were used at either end of the highway. Attempts were made in 1909 to use a motorcycle to cross the entirety of the highway, but storms and mechanical issues proved too much.[10]: 341–345  On July 29th, 1913, Bobby Sheldon and two prospectors, John Ronan and John Ferguson, began the trip from Fairbanks at approximately 10:30pm in a modified Model T. They arrived at Valdez four days later, at around 11pm on August 2nd, after taking a detour to Chitina. A second vehicle made by the White Motor Company from the Alaska Road Commission with representatives manufacturer left the day before Bobby Sheldon's party, and arrived in Fairbanks on August 6th.[10]: 354–365 

The rise of motorized travel led the road to be upgraded to automobile standards in the 1920s. To finance continued maintenance and road construction, the Alaska Road Commission instituted tolls for commercial vehicles in 1933 of up to $175 per trip, which were collected at the Tanana River ferry crossing at Big Delta. When the tolls were further increased in 1941 to boost business for the Alaska Railroad, disgruntled truckers nicknamed "gypsies" started a rogue ferry service in order to evade the toll.[citation needed]

The Alaska and Glenn highways, built during World War II, connected the rest of the continent and Anchorage to the Richardson Highway at Delta Junction and Glennallen respectively, allowing motor access to the new military bases built in the Territory just prior to the war: Fort Richardson in Anchorage, and Fort Wainwright adjacent to Fairbanks. The bridge at Big Delta, the last remaining gap, was built as part of the Alaska Highway project.[citation needed]

The southern end was only open during summers until 1950, when a freight company foreman who lived near the treacherous Thompson Pass plowed the snow himself for an entire season to prove the route could be used year-round. The highway was paved in 1957.[citation needed]

The Trans-Alaska Pipeline System, built in 1973-1977, mostly parallels the highway from Fairbanks to Valdez.[citation needed]

Roadhouses

[edit]

Due to the rugged nature of the early highway, roadhouses were built every 15-20 miles. These ranged from a tents on platforms to properly built cabins with separated rooms. Most were heated by woodstoves and sourced water from nearby lakes or streams. Food ranged from bleak to scrumptious, depending on nearby game availability and gardens at each outpost. Hay and water for horses were also provided. Around 30 roadhouses existed, but this would change each year as they route of the highway changed and business would open and close.[10]: 42–52 

Recent and future improvements

[edit]
Interchange with the Fairbanks end of Badger Road, a loop road serving suburban parts of the North Pole area. The interchange was constructed in the early 2000s, after an approximately three-decade history of serious accidents at the previous at-grade intersection.
  • During the 1990s[dubiousdiscuss], the highway was upgraded from Fairbanks to the main gate at Eielson AFB, making this stretch a 4-lane divided road. Intersections with other roads, however, are still almost entirely at-grade.
  • Under SAFETEA-LU, Alaska Route 2 from the Canadian border to Fairbanks, comprising parts of the Richardson and Alaska Highways, has been declared a High Priority Corridor (Corridor 67). What this means for the distant future is not yet certain; although SAFETEA-LU does explicitly provide federal funds for upgrading the road to 4 lanes and divided, from Salcha to Delta Junction.

Interstate Highway System

[edit]
Interstate A1 and Interstate A2
LocationDelta Junction to Fairbanks
Length325.38 mi (523.65 km)
Existed1976–present

Richardson Highway is part of the unsigned part of the Interstate Highway System east of Fairbanks. The entire length of Interstate A-2 follows Route 2 from the George Parks Highway (Interstate A-4) junction in Fairbanks to Tok, east of which Route 2 carries Interstate A-1 off the Tok Cut-Off Highway to the international border.[11][12] Only a short piece of the Richardson Highway in Fairbanks is built to freeway standards.

Major intersections

[edit]


BoroughLocationmikmDestinationsNotes
UnorganizedValdez00.0 Alaska Marine HighwaySouthern terminus of Alaska Route 4 & Richardson Highway
Willow Creek
AK-10 east (Edgerton Highway)
Western terminus of Alaska Route 10
Old Edgerton Highway
Copper Center100160Old Richardson Highway
Glennallen115185
AK-1 south (Glenn Highway) – Anchorage
Southern terminus of concurrency with Alaska Route 1; Northern terminus of Glenn Highway
Gakona129208
AK-1 north (Tok Cut-Off Highway) – Tok
Northern terminus of concurrency with Alaska Route 1; Southern terminus of Tok Cut-Off Highway
Paxson186299
AK-8 west (Denali Highway) – Denali National Park
Eastern terminus of Alaska Route 8 & Denali Highway
Delta Junction266428
AK-2 south (Alaska Highway)
Northern terminus of Alaska Route 4, Alaska Route 2 continues north as the Richardson Highway
266428See Alaska Route 2#Major intersections for the major intersections along the Alaska Route 2 section of the Richardson Highway
Fairbanks North StarFairbanks368592
AK-2 north (Steese Expressway) / Airport Way
Northern terminus of the Richardson Highway; Alaska Route 2 continues north as the Steese Expressway
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Borneman, Walter R. (2003). Alaska : saga of a bold land (1st ed.). New York, NY: HarperCollins. p. 332. ISBN 0-06-050306-8.
  2. ^ a b c d Historic Roads of Alaska: Driving the History of the Last Frontier (PDF). : Alaska Department of Natural Resources, Office of History and Archaeology and Interpretation and Education, Alaska State Parks. 2017. p. 8. Retrieved September 27, 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d Bleakly, Geoffrey. "History of the Valdez Trail". US National Park Service. Retrieved September 27, 2024.
  4. ^ Reckord, Holly (1983). Where Raven Stood. Elmer E. Rasmuson Library: University of Alaska Fairbanks.
  5. ^ Dessauer, Peter; Harvey, David (March 1980). An Historical Resource Study of the Valdez Creek Mining District, Alaska-1997 (Report). US Bureau of Land Management.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Naske, Claus (June 1983). Alaska Road Commission Historical Narrative (PDF) (Report). State of Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities.
  7. ^ Fred H. Moffit (1954). Geology of the eastern part of the Alaska Range and adjacent area (PDF) (Report). US Department of the Interior, Geological Survey. Retrieved May 17, 2024.
  8. ^ Wenger, Jason. "WAMCATS: The Washington-Alaska Military Cable and Telegraph System". LitSite Alaska. Retrieved September 27, 2024.
  9. ^ Bonnell, Ray. "Valdez-Fairbank Trail, a lifeline for early Interior Alaskans". Sketches of Alaska. Retrieved April 27, 2024.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Marsh, Kenneth. The Trail: The Story of the Historic Valdez-Fairbanks Trail that Opened Alaska's Vast Interior. Elmer E. Rasmuson Library: Trapper Creek Museum. ISBN 0-9718302-3-1.
  11. ^ Federal Highway Administration, National Highway System Viewer Archived 2007-08-27 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved August 2007.
  12. ^ Alaska Department of Transportation and Public Facilities, Dwight D. Eisenhower Interstate Routes Archived 2009-07-27 at the Wayback Machine, April 2006
[edit]
KML is from Wikidata

Media related to Richardson Highway at Wikimedia Commons