EMMITSBURG,
Md. – The Maryland State Highway Administration has
scheduled June 28 as the date the 1919 “Eisenhower convoy”
will stop at the South Seton Rd. bridge over Toms Creek for
a commemoration ceremony and the unveiling of a historic marker.
The
event is being planned to celebrate the 50th anniversary
of the creation of the national highway system, for which
President Dwight D. Eisenhower was the leading proponent.
Eisenhower’s inspiration to establish a national highway
network began in 1919 when he joined a military experiment
to see how fast the army could get from coast to coast.
Jennifer
Gavin, American Association of State Highway and Transportation
Officials deputy Director of Communications, said the experiment,
“was a really bad experience. The roads were awful.”
The convoy found the roads across the country in such bad
shape it took them more than a month to get to the West
Coast.
State announces convoy reenactment details
Valerie
Edgar, SHA spokesperson, said the convoy will include President
Eisenhower’s great-grandson, Merrill Eisenhower Atwater,
a full-scale section of a covered bridge will be erected
at the South Seton bridge for the ceremony, and a historic
marker will be unveiled.
The
convoy will include 20 vehicles, half of which will be passenger
cars, including some antiques, along with “eight or
nine 18-wheelers, two buses, and one or two recreational
vehicles,” Edgar said. The convoy may be joined by
a “rolling display vehicle” explaining the national
highway system.
The
reenactment will take place in reverse, beginning in San
Francisco, basically following Interstate 80, then turning
south in Gettysburg to use Route 15, and ultimately taking
Route 270 from Frederick into Washington, D.C.
The
trip is a collaborative effort involving essentially all
of the departments of transportation in the states through
which the convoy will travel. The event will conclude with
a celebration in Washington, D.C. on June 29, the anniversary
date of the 1956 act creating the highway system.
More
information about the historic event is summed up in the
“Daily log of the first transcontinental motor convoy”
for July 8, 1919:
“Departed
Frederick, 7 am…Unsafe covered wooden bridge, one
mile south of Emmitsburg (South Seton bridge) reached at
9 a.m. Two hours delay due to unsafe and covered bridges
too low for shop trucks, necessitating detours and fording
… pulled Class B Machine Shop (10 tons) out of mud
on bad detour near Emmitsburg after two Macks in tandem
had failed.”
The
convoy traveled the 62-mile journey from Frederick to Chambersburg,
Pa, in ten and a half hours. Not just a fun army outing,
considering this excerpt from a brief prepared by Captain
William C. Greany, United States Army Motor Transport Corps,
after the trip ended:
“The
personnel (in the convoy) consisted of 24 expeditionary
officers, 15 war department, staff observation officers,
and 258 enlisted men. Twenty-one men were lost through various
casualties en route … nine vehicles were destroyed
or so damaged as to require retirement while en route.”
Few
photographs apparently exist of the South Seton covered
bridge. In 1923, it was replaced with the current concrete
bridge presently undergoing renovation.