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Length: |
1,390 miles |
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Formed: |
1942 |
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South end: |
Dawson Creek, BC |
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North end: |
Delta Junction, AK |
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Major cities: |
Fort St. John, BC,
Fort Nelson, BC,
Watson Lake, YT,
Whitehorse, YT,
Tok |
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System: |
Alaska State Routes |
Proposals for a highway
to Alaska originated in the 1920s. Donald MacDonald dreamed of an
international highway spanning the United States, Canada and Russia. In
order to promote the highway,
Slim Williams originally traveled the proposed route by dog sled.
Since much of the route would pass through Canada, support from the
Canadian government was crucial. However, the Canadian government
perceived no value in putting up the required funds to build the road,
since the only part of Canada that would benefit was not more than a few
thousand people in the Yukon.
However, some route
consideration was given. The preferred route would pass through the
Rocky Mountain trench from
Prince George, British Columbia to
Dawson City before turning west to
Fairbanks, Alaska.
The
attack on Pearl Harbor and beginning of the
Pacific Theatre in
World War II, coupled with Japanese threats to the west coast of
North America and the
Aleutian Islands, changed the priorities for both nations. On
February 6, 1942 the construction of the Alaska Highway was approved by
the United States Army and the project received the authorization from
the U.S. Congress and President
Franklin D. Roosevelt to proceed five days later. Canada agreed to
allow construction as long as the United States bore the full cost, and
that the road and other facilities in Canada be turned over to Canadian
authority after the war ended.
The official start of
construction took place on March 8, 1942 after hundreds of pieces of
construction equipment were moved on priority trains by the
Northern Alberta Railways to the northeastern part of British
Columbia near Mile 0 at Dawson Creek. Construction accelerated through
the spring as the winter weather faded away and crews were able to work
from both the northern and southern ends; they were spurred on after
reports of the Japanese invasion of
Kiska Island and
Attu Island in the Aleutians. On September 24, 1942 crews from both
directions met at Mile 588 at Contact Creek and the highway was
dedicated on November 20, 1942 at Soldiers Summit.
The needs of war
dictated the final route, intended to link the airfields of the
Northwest Staging Route that conveyed lend-lease aircraft from the
United States to the
Soviet Union. Thus, the rather impractical, long route over
extremely difficult terrain was chosen.
The road was originally
built mostly by the
US Army as a supply route during
World War II. There were four main thrusts in building the route:
southeast from
Delta Junction, Alaska toward a linkup at
Beaver Creek, Yukon; north then west from Dawson Creek (an advance
group started from
Fort Nelson, British Columbia after traveling on winter roads on
frozen marshland from railway stations on the
Northern Alberta Railways); both east and west from
Whitehorse after being ferried in via the
White Pass and Yukon Route railway. The U.S. Army commandeered
equipment of all kinds, including local riverboats, railway locomotives,
and housing originally meant for use in southern
California.
Although it was
completed on
October 28,
1942 and its completion was celebrated at Soldier's Summit on
November 21 (and broadcast by radio, the exact outdoor temperature
censored due to wartime concerns), the "highway" was not usable by
general vehicles until 1943. Even then, there were many steep grades, a
poor surface, switchbacks to gain and descend hills, and few or no
guardrails.
Bridges, which progressed during 1942 from
pontoon bridges to temporary
log
bridges, were replaced with steel bridges where necessary only. One
old log bridge can still be seen at the
Aishihik river crossing. The easing of the Japanese invasion threat
resulted in no more contracts being given to private contractors for
upgrading of specific sections.
In particular, some 100
miles of route between
Burwash Landing and Koidern, Yukon, became virtually impassable in
May and June of 1943, as the
permafrost melted, no longer protected by a layer of delicate
vegetation. A
corduroy road was built to restore the route, and corduroy still
underlays old sections of highway in the area. Modern construction
methods do not allow the permafrost to melt, either by building a
gravel berm on top
or replacing the vegetation and soil immediately with gravel. However,
the Burwash-Koidern section is still a problem, as the new highway built
there in the late 1990s continues to experience frost heave.
The pioneer road
completed in 1942 was approximately 1,680 miles from Dawson Creek to
Delta Junction. The army then turned the road over to the
Public Roads Administration of Washington, which then began putting
out section contracts to private road contractors to upgrade selected
sections of the road. These sections were upgraded, with removal of
excess bends and steep grades; often, a traveler could identify upgraded
sections by seeing the telephone line along the PRA-approved route
alignment. When the Japanese invasion threat eased, the PRA stopped
putting out new contracts. Upon hand-off to Canada in 1946, the route
was 1,422 miles from Dawson Creek to Delta Junction.
The route follows a
northwest then northward course from Dawson Creek to Fort Nelson. On
October 16, 1957, a
suspension bridge crossing the Peace River just south of Fort St.
John collapsed. A new bridge was built a few years later. At Fort
Nelson, the road turns west and crosses the Rocky Mountains, before
resuming a westward course at Coal River. The highway crossed the
Yukon-BC border nine times from Mile 590 to Mile 773, six of those
crossings were from Mile 590 to Mile 596. After passing the south end of
Kluane Lake, the highway follows a north-northwest course to the Alaska
border, then northwest to the terminus at Delta Junction.
Postwar rebuilding has
not shifted the highway more than ten miles from the original alignment,
and in most cases, by less than three miles. It is not clear if it still
crosses the Yukon-BC border six times from Mile 590 to Mile 596.
The original agreement
between Canada and the United States regarding construction of the
highway stipulated that its Canadian portion be turned over to Canada
six months after the end of the war;
this took
place on April 1, 1946 when the US Army transferred control of the road
through the Yukon and British Columbia to the Canadian Army, Northwest
Highway System. The Alaskan section was completely paved during the
1960s; largely gravel even in 1981, the Canadian portion of the Alaska
Highway is now completely
paved, mostly with
bituminous surface treatment.
The Milepost,
an extensive guide
book to the
Alaska Highway and other highways in
Alaska
and Northwest
Canada,
was first published in 1949 and continues to be published
annually as the foremost guide to travelling the
highway.
The
British Columbia government owns the first 82.6 miles of the
highway, the only portion paved during the late 1960s and 1970s.
Public Works Canada manages the highway from Mile 82.6 (km 133) to
Historic Mile 630. The Yukon government owns the highway from Historic
Mile 630 to Historic Mile 1016 (from near
Watson Lake to
Haines Junction), and manages the remainder to the
U.S. border at Historic Mile 1221. The State of Alaska owns the
highway within that state (Mile 1221 to Mile 1422).
Extensive rerouting in
Canada has shortened the highway by approximately 35 miles (55 km) since
1947, mostly by eliminating winding sections and sometimes by bypassing
residential areas. Therefore, the historic milepost markings are no
longer accurate but are still important locally as location references.
Some old sections of the highway are still in use as local roads, while
others are left to deteriorate and still others are ploughed up. Four
sections form local residential streets in Whitehorse (3... see map) and
Fort Nelson (1), and others form country residential roadways outside of
Whitehorse. Although
Champagne, Yukon was bypassed in 2002, the old highway is still
completely in service for that community until a new direct access road
is built.
Rerouting continues,
expected to continue in the Yukon through 2009, with the Haines
Junction-Beaver
Creek section covered by the Canada-U.S.
Shakwak Agreement. The new Donjek River bridge was opened 26
September 2007, replacing a 1952 bridge. Under Shakwak, U.S. federal
highway money is spent for work done by Canadian contractors who win
tenders issued by the Yukon government. The
Shakwak Project completed the
Haines Highway upgrades in the 1980s between Haines Junction and the
Alaska Panhandle, then funding was stalled by Congress for several
years.
The Milepost shows the
Canadian section of the highway now to be approximately 1187 miles, but
the first milepost inside Alaska is 1222. The actual length of the
highway inside Alaska is no longer clear because rerouting, as in
Canada, has shortened the route, but unlike Canada, mileposts in Alaska
are not recalibrated. The B.C. and Yukon governments and Public Works
Canada have recalibrated kilometreposts only as far as a point just at
the southeast shore of Kluane Lake, with the latest BC recalibration in
1990 and the only Yukon recalibrations in 2002 and 2005 (based on the
distance value where the BC calibration of 1990 left off).
There are historical
mileposts along the B.C. and Yukon sections of the highway, installed in
1992, that note 83 specific locations, although the posts no longer
represent accurate driving distance.
The portion of the
Alaska Highway in Alaska is
Alaska Route 2. In the
Yukon, it
is Highway 1 and in
British Columbia,
Highway 97.
For people interested
in learning more about the history of the Alaska Highway there are
several books on its construction, including "Alcan Trail Blazers:
Alaska Highway's Forgotten Heroes."
The Canadian section of
the road was delineated with mileposts, based on the road as it was in
1947, until 1978, and over the years, reconstruction steadily shortened
the distance between some of those mileposts. That year, metric signs
were placed on the highway, and the mileposts were replaced with
kilometre posts at the approximate locations of a historic mileage of
equal value, e.g. Kmpost 1000 was posted approximately where historical
Mile 621 would have been posted.
Reconstruction
continues to shorten the highway, but the kilometre posts, at two-km
intervals, were recalibrated along the B.C. section of road in 1990 to
reflect then-current driving distance. The section of highway covered by
the 1990 recalibration has since been rendered shorter by further
realignments, such as near Summit Pass and between Muncho Lake and Iron
Creek.
The Alaska portion of
the highway is still marked by mileposts at one-mile intervals, although
they no longer represent accurate driving distance, due to
reconstruction.
The historic mileposts
are still used by residents and businesses along the highway to refer to
their location, and in some cases are also used as postal addresses.
Residents and
travelers, and the government of the Yukon, do not use "east" and "west"
to refer to direction of travel on the Yukon section, even though this
is the predominant bearing of the Yukon portion of the highway; "north"
and "south" are used, referring to the south (Dawson Creek) and north
(Delta Junction) termini of the highway. This is an important
consideration for travelers who may otherwise be confused, particularly
when a westbound travel routes southwestward or even due south to
circumvent a natural obstacle such as Kluane Lake.
Some B.C. sections west
of Fort Nelson also route more east-to-west, with southwest bearings in
some section; again, "north" is used in preference to "west".
Other roads that join
the Alaska Highway include:
Retrieved from
"http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alaska_Highway"
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