Back to Top
Top Nav content Site Footer
University Home
Dental
Restricted Access
Today's hours: Closed
All hours
Research & Info Desk: 313-494-6900
Dental library
Optometry
Restricted Access
Today's hours: 9:00 - 5:00
All hours
Research & Info Desk: 313-494-6904
Optometry library
Librarian assistance
chat loading...

Book of the week

Ike's road trip : how Eisenhower's 1919 convoy paved the way for the roads we travel

book cover

"All roads begin somewhere, and today's U. S. highway system began with an exploratory, cross-country ride led by 28-year-old Army lieutenant colonel Dwight Eisenhower. This is the story of that coast-to-coast journey and how the dream of connecting America with roads began . . . The 1919 Transcontinental Motor Convoy of eighty-one trucks and other military vehicles traveled more than 3,000 precarious miles along the most famous road of the day, the Lincoln Highway, which ran between New York City and San Francisco. World War I had illustrated the importance of being able to move large amounts of troops and equipment quickly over long distances, and Eisenhower's mission was to evaluate whether the country's emerging network of paved roadways could handle such a task. It was an experience Eisenhower would never forget"

Catalog Page

Last updated 07/31/2025 by S. Wilson

University Archives & Digital Special Collections

Colored American - May 9, 1840
Voice of the Fugitive - November 18, 1852
William Wells Brown
Colored American - January 20, 1838
Colored American - July 4, 1840
Provincial Freeman - August 8, 1857
Weekly Anglo-African - December 7, 1861
Sojourner Truth
Provincial Freeman - May 24, 1856
Colored American - August 12, 1837
Provincial Freeman - November 25, 1854
William Wells Brown
Northern Star and Freemen's Advocate - March 10, 1842
Frederick Douglass' Paper - December 1, 1854
Colored American - June 20, 1840
Voice of the Fugitive - July 30, 1851
Provincial Freeman - March 25, 1854
Provincial Freeman - January 27, 1855
Back to Top