Book ID: CBB297072008

Getting Out of the Mud: The Alabama Good Roads Movement and Highway Administration, 1898–1928 (2017)

unapi

Olliff, Martin T. (Author)
Whitten, David O. (Author)


University of Alabama Press


Publication Date: 2017
Physical Details: 264
Language: English

Martin T. Olliff recounts the history of the Good Roads Movement that arose in progressive-era Alabama, how it used the power of the state to achieve its objectives of improving market roads for farmers and highways for automobilists, and how state and federal highway administrations replaced the Good Roads Movement.Getting Out of the Mud: The Alabama Good Roads Movement and Highway Administration, 1898–1928 explores the history of the Good Roads Movement and investigates the nature of early twentieth-century progressivism in the state. Martin T. Olliff reveals how middle-class reformers secured political, economic, and social power not only by fighting against corporate domination and labor recalcitrance but also by proposing alternative projects like road improvement and identifying the interests of the rising middle class as being the most important to public interest.   With the development of national markets in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Americans began to regard the nation as a whole, rather than their state or region, as the most important political entity. Many Alabamians wished to travel beyond their local communities in all seasons without getting stuck in the mud of rudimentary rutted dirt roads. The onset of the automobile age bolstered the need for roadmaking, alerting both automobilists and good roads advocates to the possibility of a new transportation infrastructure. The Good Roads Movement began promoting farm-to-market roads, then highways that linked cities, then those that connected states. Federal matching funds for road construction after 1916 led state and federal governments to supplant the Good Roads Movement, building and administering the highway system that emerged by the late 1920s.   Olliff’s study of how Alabamians dealt with strained resources and overcame serious political obstacles in order to construct a road system that would accommodate economic growth in the twentieth century may offer clues to the resurrection of a similar strategy in our modern era. Many problems are unchanged over the hundred years between crises: Alabamians demand good roads and a government that has the capacity to build and maintain such an infrastructure while, at the same time, citizens are voting into office men and women who promise lower taxes and smaller government.

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Authors & Contributors
Dennis Drabelle
Mike Esbester
Skinner, Robert E., Jr.
Rebecca Retzlaff
Jocelyn Zanzot
William W. Buzbee
Journals
The Journal of Transport History
Technology and Culture
Noesis: Travaux du Comité Roumain d'Histoire et de Philosophie des Sciences
Journal of Interdisciplinary History
The Bridge: Journal of the National Academy of Engineering
Publishers
Yale University Press
University of New Mexico Press
University of Alabama Press
St. Martin's Press
Sdu Uitgevers
Scribner
Concepts
Roads and highways
Transportation
Railroads
Technology and society
Land transportation
Urbanization
People
Mary Mallon
Norris, Frank (1870-1902)
Baker, Sara Josephine
Bierce, Ambrose (1842-1914?)
Ely, Richard Theodore
Time Periods
20th century
19th century
Progressive Era (1890s-1920s)
20th century, early
21st century
20th century, late
Places
United States
New York City (New York, U.S.)
Europe
Alabama (U.S.)
Great Britain
Tucumcari, New Mexico
Institutions
Central Pacific Railroad Company
League of Nations
Tuskegee Institute
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