Part 41 (1/2)

TheLancaster (Pennsylvania) Turnpike (1794) was hard-surfaced with gravel and broken stone. (WBE) Road Design: Macadam Roads

Macadam roads are still in use today, especially in areas such asNew England , where rock can be collected readily. However, rather than letting the broken stone surface be compacted by traffic, one layer at a time, as taught by McAdam, modern builders use heavy rollers. (Collier's) The use of steam rollers for this purpose was first introduced around 1876, and by the end of the nineteenth century perhaps 90% of the major roads ofEurope had been ”macadamized.” (Forbes, 535).

Nowadays, the princ.i.p.al highways employ asphalt or concrete surfaces, and only secondary or tertiary roads are of the macadam type.

The modern EB states correctly that McAdam taught use of ”small, single-sized, angular pieces of broken stone.” However, what is lacking there is the explanation of just how critical several of these features were.

The stones had to be broken so that they were angular; they had to be angular so that they would lock together when compacted. (Smiles, 430; Forbes, 534; 1911 EB). Pebbles rounded by the action of water would not create the desired surface. Likewise, the stones had to be small. If they were much larger than the effective area of contact between the wheel and the road surface-about one inch square-then the stones would not be consolidated by pa.s.sing traffic. (Reader, 2, 323, 379).

McAdam was very insistent that no ”sand, earth or other matter” be used ”on pretense of binding.”

(Reader, 39; Forbes, However, his road had an ”intrinsic” binding agent-the traffic wore down the rocks and the resulting dust acted as a binder. That may explain the modern practice, described by Collier's Encyclopedia , of bonding the modern macadam road ”into a solid ma.s.s by means of a finely crushed stone rolled into the surface.”

The up-timers' sources are not always consistent in the description of macadam roads. For example, the modern EB shows them as having 0.751 inch surface layer of gravel or broken stone. However, the 1911 EB says that while ”Telford covered the broken stone of new roads with 1/2 in. of gravel to act as a binding material,” his rival McAdam ”absolutely interdicted the use of any binding material, leaving the broken stone to work in and unite by its own angles under the traffic.”

Another problem with the modern EB text is a sin of omission. McAdam cambered, not only the road surface, and the base course, but also the subgrade. While this is depicted in the figure, it is not commented upon. All the encyclopedia says is that the road was ”elevated,” which was true but not the whole story.

Road Design: Plank Roads

The plank road differs from the corduroy road discussed previously, in that it uses lumber (planks) instead of whole or split logs.

In the period 18351855, many plank roads were constructed inNew York ,Pennsylvania ,Ohio ,Michigan ,Illinois , and other timber-rich states. These roads were typically ten to fifteen miles of length, and fed into ca.n.a.ls or railroads. Indeed, they were nicknamed ”the Farmer's Railroad.”

According to the 1911 EB, ”the plank road often used in American forests makes an excellent track for all kinds of traffic.” The construction was straightforward. First the road bed was cleared and graded, and drainage ditches dug. Then two or more columns of longitudinal sleepers were put down, and transverse planks were laid (and sometimes nailed or spiked down) on top. The planks were two to four inches thick, eight to sixteen feet long, and made of oak, hemlock or pine. For drainage purposes, the outer sleepers may be set a few inches lower than the inner ones. (Majewki, 9; WHS, ISM, WiscHS, 1911 EB).

These plank roads could be constructed at one-half to two-thirds the price of macadam roads.

(Majewski) Naturally, they were cheapest to build on level terrain with forests nearby.

In 1850, Charles E. Clarke told thePrairie State newspaper that the three plank roads near hisIllinois farm were ”the best roads imaginable-better by far than the best paved or 'macadamized'

road-pleasanter for the person riding-easier for the animals, and far less destructive to the carriages that roll upon them.” (Clarke)South Carolina manufacturer William Gregg even thought them superior to railroads (Majewski 9).

From the section on ”Friction,” we know that wood is a ”fast” road surface. On a new plank road, stage coaches traveled eight miles per hour (Luedtke; Clarke). Two horses could draw two tons forty miles per day (Clarke). TheWatertown ,Wisconsin Plank Road reduced the round trip fromMilwaukee toWatertown from four to six days, to three, and allowed wagon loads to be increased from 1,5002,000 pounds, to 3,000; freight rates were reduced by about 25%. (WHS). ”Trips which took from four to six days on dirt roads were cut to from ten to fourteen hours over plank roads.” (Mason) Unlike unsurfaced roads, plank roads could be used in any season (Majewski, 9).

Not everyone liked plank roads quite so much as Clarke. Asa Stoddard critiqued the Kalamazoo-Grand Rapids highway in verse, asking the reader if he had ever ”brave[d] the peril, dare[d]

the danger, of a journey on the Plank?”

The reason we hear such inconsistent views is that plank roads were excellent when new, but needed repairs or replacement more frequently than the plank road companies had expected. The boards decayed, warped, or were stolen. (Majewski 2 says that the expected life was 812 years, the true one 45. WiscHS states a life of 56 years, and Clarke says 78. Mason says that the roads were in good condition for 34 years, then needed constant attention, with maintenance costs running 3040% of the original construction cost annually.) And toll revenues weren't sufficient to pay for the maintenance. The roads fell into disrepair and became hazardous.

It does not appear that the wood used in the plank roads was treated in any way to make it more weatherproof. It is possible that such treatment, if it could be done economically, would substantially extend the working life of a plank road.

A plank road one mile long, eight feet wide, with three inch thick planks would require 10,560 cubic feet of wood. Then for a mile's worth of two stringers, each three inches wide by three inches thick, add another 3,455 cubic feet. That is a total of about 14,000 cubic feet, or about 1,200 board feet.

Unfortunately, the USE-controlled region of early seventeenth-centuryGermany is unlikely to be, in the near future, the site of a ”plank road craze” comparable to the one in nineteenth-centuryAmerica . That is because there is a relative shortage of wood. (Virginia DeMarce, Charles Prael, Manfred Gross, and Andrew Ramage, private communications.) Wood is the princ.i.p.al fuel, and, by ”the early modern period,” per capita consumption of wood was about 45 cubic meters per year. (Other uses of wood totaled another cubic meter, annually.) (Halstead) The Black Forest, nonetheless, was a wood exporting region, with pine, fir and spruce being s.h.i.+pped down the Rhine toMainz , either as timber rafts, or as sawn lumber. (Id.) Unlike the American wilderness, the forests of Germany-which also include the nearby Thuringerwald -are owned by various n.o.bles, but they are likely to allow plank roads to pa.s.s through their territory if it yields a net financial benefit to them. Whether that will prove to be the case is debatable; Virginia DeMarce informs me that the Thuringerwald covers low mountains, and that roads were customarily made simply by taking off the topsoil to expose the bare rock.

Poland,Russia and Scandinavia also export wood (although there has been some question raised as to how heavily forestedSweden itself was in the 1630s). While it probably is not economical to import Baltic wood intoGermany merely to construct plank roads, the Baltic countries may themselves find such roads to be advantageous, especially to connect one river to another.

Road Design: City Pavements

City pavements have to bear the heaviest traffic. In medieval times, the usual expedient was the familiar cobblestone street, with large stones embedded in soil, sand or gravel. Gregory (140) comments that cobbled roads were ”largely used on the North German Plain, where there is no local supply of squared stone, but cobbles are plentiful in the glacial drifts.”

In nineteenth-centuryEngland , the noisy cobbled roads were gradually replaced by set stone pavements, which are described in the 1911 EB. The paving stones should be flat, square, and about three inches wide and nine inches deep.

The stones are fitted closely together, and the joints sealed with a grout of lime or cement. This is adequate, says the 1911 EB, if the foundation is concrete or broken stone or hard core.

It was not always possible to lay a proper foundation, as this required tearing up the original street. If so, then one could use a ”bituminous grout,” which was the result of adding a composition of ”coal tar, pitch and creosote oil” to packed down gravel.

The 1911 EB notes that brick, wood and asphalt can also be used in paving. (We will take up the issue of asphalt in the next section.) The use of brick dated back to about 1885, and brick roadways are said to have ”stood well under hard wear for fourteen years.” The 1911 EB provides particulars concerning the composition of the clay, the manufacturing method used to minimize chipping, and tests for moisture and abrasion resistance.

1911 EB adds that wood pavements were introduced inEngland in 1839, and improved in 1871. In essence, these streets feature wood blocks, fitted together. There is much debate in 1911 EB as to which is the best wood to use. The improved pavement was laid over an elastic foundation of tarred wood boards, which in turn rested on sand. The pavement joints were filled with tarred gravel.

Gregory (140) is actually quite complimentary about wood block pavements, provided the wood is hard and heavy: ”they form a smooth surface, which makes one of the quietest of road; the surface is easily cleaned and is durable. Wood pavement is well adapted for horse traffic and motors: it has the advantage over asphalt or macadam that it is not thrown into waves.”

Road Design: Modern Asphalt Roads

Within the Ring of Fire, there are several modern asphalt roads. Such roads were completely unfamiliar to seventeenth-century Europeans. In K.D. Wentworth's ”Here Comes Santa Claus” (Ring of Fire), General Pappenheim mused, ”The unfamiliar substance was hard as rock, yet seemed to have been laid down in malleable form somehow, then smoothed like b.u.t.ter before it solidified.”

The nineteenth-century author-to-be Laura Ingalls Wilder was equally surprised by her first encounter with asphalt: ”In the very midst of the city, the ground was covered by some dark stuff that silenced all the wheels and m.u.f.fled the sound of hoofs. It was like tar, but Papa was sure it was not tar, and it was something like rubber, but it could not be rubber because rubber cost too much. We saw ladies all in silks and carrying ruffled parasols, walking with their escorts across the street. Their heels dented the street, and while we watched, these dents slowly filled up and smoothed themselves out. It was as if that stuff were alive. It was like magic.” (NAPA) The usage of the terms ”tar,” ”bitumen” and ”asphalt” is somewhat quixotic. I will use ”tar” to refer to coal tar, and ”bitumen” to refer to solid or semisolid petroleum per se. ”Asphalt” may mean the crude source (rock or lake asphalt), or the derivative road material.

WhileParis had its first asphalt footpath in 1810, it took time to develop the proper techniques for asphalt paving, and the modern EB says that the ”first successful major application” was on the rue Saint-Honore in 1858.

We have the expertise to lay it, we have the necessary equipment in the WVDOT garage . . . but where do we get the asphalt?

There is, of course, asphalt in theMiddle East . In fact, the first use of asphalt as a road surface was by the Babylonians. (NAPA) The asphalt came from Hit, inTurkey . (1911 EB, ”Hit”). But theOttoman Empire is hostile to the USE, and the trade route is in any event a long one.

Fortunately, there are European sources (Earle, 2833; 1911 EB). According to the 1911 EB ”Asphalt”

article, ”the material chiefly used in the construction of asphalt roadways is an asphaltic or bituminous limestone found in the Val de Travers, Canton of Neuchattel; in the neighborhood of Seyssel, department of Am; at Limmer, near the city of Hanover; and elsewhere.” Forbes (539) mentions Wietze, too, which would be a logical place to look since we are already drilling for oil there.

The Val de Travers (Swiss) rock asphalt, a bituminous limestone with an oil content of about 1012%, has been known since pre-Roman times, but in OTL, it was first described scientifically by Dr. d'Eyrinis (1712). The Limmer deposit was discovered around 1730 but not worked until 1840. The 1911 EB article fails to mention that there are also deposits at Vorwohle.