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PICTURE CREDITS

We gratefully acknowledge all those whose illustrations were used in this book. Many of the color plates, especially in Part I, are paintings in a series of 109 by the late Carl Rakeman (1878–1965), which were completed in the 1930’s and 1940’s on the theme of American transportation development. Rakeman was an employee of the Bureau of Public Roads who studied at the Corcoran Art School and the Royal Academies of Dusseldorf , Munich and Paris. Among other accomplishments, he helped complete the painted decorations of the U.S. Capitol. Special thanks are also extended to the National Archives and Records Service, which stored and protected much of the photographic material of the Federal Highway Administration and its predecessor agencies which appears in this history.

The following is a listing by chapter of all those individuals and organizations outside of the Federal Highway Administration who contributed illustrations printed in this book. The abbreviations with the page number of each credit indicate position; i.e., Top (T), Top Left (TL), Top Right (TR), Middle (M), Middle Left (ML), Middle Right (MR), Bottom (B), Bottom Left (BL), Bottom Right (BR).

PART I

CHAPTER 1. THE COLONIAL LEGACY
Page 4 (BR):
Winter Trail. Drawing by H. W. Hendley.
Page 5 (BL):
Post Rider. Drawing by H. W. Hendley.
Page 7 (T):
Rolling Tobacco. Drawing by H. W. Hendley, after H. E. Elliott.
CHAPTER 3. EARLY FEDERAL AID FOR ROADS AND CANALS
Page 18 (B):
Fairview Inn. Courtesy of Culver Pictures, Inc.
CHAPTER 5. THE GOOD ROADS MOVEMENT
Page 40 (T):
(B):
The Cherrelyn Horsecar. Courtesy of E. H. Maloney and Edie Dines.
Page 51 (T):
Bishop Creek. Courtesy of California Division of Highways.
(BR):
Plank Road. Courtesy of California Division of Highways.
Page 52 (T):
Sacramento Canyon. Courtesy of California Division of Highways.
CHAPTER 6. DAWN OF THE MOTOR AGE
Page 55 (BR):
1907 Columbia. Courtesy of Hank Head.
Page 58 (T):
The Pasear Highway. Courtesy of the California Division of Highways.
Page 59 (M):
Scenes of El Camino Sierra. Courtesy of the California Division of Highways.
Page 60 (T):
Challenge of early AAA tours. Courtesy of the Michigan Department of State Highways and Transportation.
CHAPTER 8. THE DRIVE FOR FEDERAL AID
Page 84 (T):
Spring thaw and roads in Michigan. Courtesy of the Michigan Department of State Highways and Transportation.
Page 85 (B):
State Highway No. 1 (Now I-25) in New Mexico. Courtesy of New Mexico State Highway Department.
CHAPTER 9. PLANNING A HIGHWAY SYSTEM
Page 93 (B):
W. Hicks and Sons General Store, Rockville, Md. (1900). Courtesy of William L. Hicks.
Page 94 (T):
State highway officials on inspection tour. Courtesy of the Michigan Department of State Highways and Transportation.
Page 95 (MR):
McConnellsburg, Pa. Courtesy of the Michigan Department of State Highways and Transportation.
CHAPTER 10. THE HIGHWAY BOOM
Page 118 (T):
Concrete Mixer patching a bad spot on the road. Courtesy of Hank Head.
Page 122 (M):
Maryland State Roads Commission testing laboratory. Courtesy of the Maryland State Roads Commission.
Page 127 (T):
First centerline on a rural state highway. Courtesy of the Michigan Department of State Highways and Transportation.
CHAPTER 11. ROADS FOR NATIONAL DEFENSE
Page 151 (B):
The Pennsylvania Turnpike. Courtesy of the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission.
CHAPTER 12. EVENTS LEADING TO ENACTMENT OF THE 1956 FEDERAL AID HIGHWAY ACT
Page 169 (T):
Turnpike toll booth. Courtesy of the Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission.

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