Honk! Honk! Seat belts buckled? Have you ever wondered how America looked while sightseeing down Route 66 back in the past? As you often travel down a flat, straight road, you are thinking this road trip is terrible, but when you get on Route 66 you feel like a bird soaring through the sky. Most people choose to ride on the interstate to get to places quicker, while in my opinion taking the back roads is way better because you get to explore new sights. Way back in history route 66 was a unique road to travel on, and the story "The Best of America is on the Blue Highways," really explains why. This author gives great examples of driving on Route 66, and what it represents. Route 66 represents America and its beautiful features. In the story the author states,"Route 66, to me, represents America before we had the same stores at every mall and the same restaurants along every Main Street. It represents an America where people could open a diner or a tourists attraction or a store on the town square and do something unique and interesting and make a living at it." It has many original features, along with many distinctive places. Many people often opened small businesses along this highway. This historic road led people to many places, such as, Chicago to Santa-Monica. This road was also known as "THE" road. …show more content…
We get to enjoy some, much needed, sightseeing. The author was very effective in proving that this highway represents America and its sovereignty. The author always thought that road was taking him back in time. The author proclaimed that this was THE road," and in my opinion he is correct. From past knowledge this road is not just any ordinary road. It is a road that makes you feel like you can soar, and you also feel like it is taking you to the past! Just think of how it used to be. Its amazing now, but back when there was several tourist attractions this road would be
Near Bethany, where Grant Line Road diverges from the Byron Highway today, the original dirt path forked. The left-hand fork, at first the popular trail, turned south toward Corral Hollow (modern San José Road takes its name from this fork). The center fork headed southwest to reach Middle Pass [Patterson Pass]. When the stage road took form soon after the Gold Rush, travelers chose the right-hand fork that scaled Livermore’s Pass [Altamont Pass]. Now, Grant Line Road between Bryon Highway and Altamont Pass Road follows this path’s bearing.
They talked about why the road was widened, and how settlement came to be. The book title is The Federal road through Georgia. In the book there was not a lot of text about Georgia. The Authors did a good job of explaining the Native removal act, and how the creeks protested against it (p.127). They also wrote a lot about the how the land was, waterways, and how our ancestors struggled (p.130). Overall, the authors stated their thesis clearly, but I do not think they were clear enough in their research to write about the Federal Road. The road was initially built for the military to use for transportation of supplies, wagons, cannons, and men on horses or foot (p.38). It also explained other ways the road was used such as the postal services (p.22). The authors really lacked the more broad topics of the road. The used opinion over fact, which made the book, almost seem as if it was made up or not true. There research on the thesis was very poor due to lack of facts. The book itself starts off very slow with little to no facts. The main majority of the important facts start in chapter 3, and 7. This book was a good way to look at the settling of the region (p.108, 111,112). There writing points out different perspectives of the Old federal road that people do not normally think about. There sources where all over the place, and did not some very persistent in content. The creek Indian war was a
Boom! POW! Seeing America on the interstate is not a good choice. The author of the passage "The Best Of America is on the Blue Highways" explains why traveling Route 66 is the real way to see America. On the two-lane highways you can take as long as you need, but on the interstate you have to be fast. The author was effective in proving that Route 66 represents America because on the interstate the roads are flat and straight and has nothing to look at, Americans drove by Route 66 from Chicago to Santa Monica in the 20, and was not being fast passed.
Route 66. One of the first roads of the U.S. highway network to be built, Route 66 ran for 2448 miles from Chicago, IL, through Missouri, Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, New Mexico, and Arizona before finally ending in Santa Monica, CA. First commissioned on November 11, 1926, the road also became known as the Mother Road, Will Rogers Highway, and the Main Street of America. With the development of the Interstate highway system and, especially, I-40, Route 66 became less relevant and was scheduled to be decommissioned. When it became apparent the interstate highway would bypass Williams, the town filed a lawsuit against the Federal government in an attempt to block construction of the highway. To settle the suit, the Federal government agreed to build three exits on I-40 for Williams, effectively ending the litigation. With the lawsuit settled, construction of I-40 was completed and, on October 13, 1984, Route 66 was officially decommissioned, signaling the end for one of America’s most storied
The 700 mile route was mark with red balls so that the drivers wouldn’t get lost. The route that the men would drive on was horrible. The tires would blow out because of shell fragments, barbed wire and empty C-ration cans. The trucks that were overloaded with supplies tipped and flipped, sank into mud country roads. The driver also fell asleep while driving and veered off into ditches. The red ball express finally ended after 82 days of non stop
Today, “The Natchez Trace Parkway is a 444-mile recreational road and scenic drive through three states. It roughly follows the "Old Natchez Trace" a historic travel corridor used by American Indians, "Kaintucks," European settlers, slave traders, soldiers, and future presidents.
In this passage, TJ Armstrong, the author of the passage, recounts his story of an eye-opening event he experienced while coming home from the racetrack one night. He starts off with telling the reader that he works at a racetrack as a speaker and as he arrives at the track one night he realized the race had been postponed. On his way home that night he drove by an old broken-down house and thought to himself that he had to have a picture of the house so went to a neighboring house and asked if he could take a picture of the old house. The woman who answered the door promptly offered to tell him the story behind the house. TJ accepted and then followed her into the house and listened to her and her husband’s endless stories of her grandfather building the house, growing up there, and life in the country. After a while, he politely excused himself and left to go take pictures. As he is taking pictures of this house that must be over 100 years old and full of so much more history, he is able to visualize the events that the woman told him as if they are happening now and he is standing in the middle of it. At the end of the passage, the author makes clear the importance of taking the time to stop and enjoy life because it will be over before you know
Route 66 is a place where you feel like belong.It still today has the same stores,mall and also the same restaurants along every street.Sure, the interstate will get you there faster. I would never argue that it won't. But here's the thing: when you drive the two-lane highways it does not matter how much time it takes. In fact, you might even want
In the novel “The Road’ Cormac McCarthy tells the story of a boy and his father in a post apocalyptic world. McCarthy uses many different things to create a real and terrifying view of this world. The way the book is written and the details that are added help show us the how truly dreadful the world is. It also creates an understanding of the awful condition the world is left in and the horrible state the survivors are in. Many passages throughout the book give a clear description of the world and the survivors. The novel shows the reality in a post apocalyptic world and gives a different take on the way people act and live.
This was the case for a woman named Jennifer Boatright who was stopped on her annual trip to her hometown, Linden, Texas. The road on which she was traveling, U.S. 59, was said to be a
The author stated how on route 66 there is something new to see on every corner and when you drive on an interstate there are nothing but rode. On an interstate you do not see anything big and beautiful, the only thing you see is a gas station and maybe a hotel. The only time you will really see anything like restaurant is if you turn on an exit ramp a long way away. The Jefferson Highway sits right on a river, after that it is twisty two lane roads that wind through the hills and into the West St. Louis County. As the author said, "It is one gorgeous vista after another." If the Jefferson highway is important to people any other highway may be important as well, referring to Route 66. You would not be able to see those things on an interstate.
The Road is a story where is set in a post-apocalyptic world, where the date and location is unnamed. The author of the novel Cormac McCarthy doesn 't describe why or how the disaster has demolish the earth. But after reading the novel, I can sense that the author wanted to present a case of mystery and fear to the unknown to the reader. By the author 's exclusion I think that the story gains a better understanding of what the author wanted to express to the reader. An expression of a man and his son surviving in a post-apocalyptic setting.
That was incredible. The author states that when you are riding on an interstate that there is not really much that you could see and explore, but on Route 66 there is not many beautiful and outstanding things you can see and visit. You could see Gelena's mining and historic museum, cars on the route, Galena's haunted Bordello, Marsh rainbow arch bridge, Baxter Springs,and so many other astonishing attractions. It is not always about what you see when you are driving it about making memories with the people that you are with while you are driving. For example you could be with friends, family, or even college room mates going on a road trip to some where you could take Route 66 to get to where you are
For starters, The Road displays that people can overcome tough situations by having faith and never giving up. A father and son in the novel are forced to survive and adapt to a new way of living that includes, searching for food and shelter to survive, and always being on the lookout for evil people. Never giving up, and having faith in these tough situations is how the pair survive and live the best life possible. The man in the novel always believed in never giving up, and to keep moving forward. After days without food
Naturally, at such a young age I was heavily drawn towards the bright lights and attractions. The delicious smells of oil dripping foods also intrigued me, and I had a high demand for intake. Because of that, planning out where we planned to each day with my parents was a huge pain. There were just so many places to go in such little time. Upon this thought, we’d decided to buy the fast lane wristband to cram in every single amusement