Greetings From Iowa
Community Shoutout: Great White Way
Season 9 Episode 909 | 4m 57sVideo has Closed Captions
Learn the history of the Great White Way.
One of the earliest certified routes in Iowa connects five communities by way of white painted telephone poles. Learn the history of the Great White Way.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
Greetings From Iowa is a local public television program presented by Iowa PBS
Greetings From Iowa
Community Shoutout: Great White Way
Season 9 Episode 909 | 4m 57sVideo has Closed Captions
One of the earliest certified routes in Iowa connects five communities by way of white painted telephone poles. Learn the history of the Great White Way.
Problems playing video? | Closed Captioning Feedback
How to Watch Greetings From Iowa
Greetings From Iowa is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship.
Just off of i-80, between Council Bluffs and Des Moines, sits a 26 mile stretch of road with these.
White painted telephone poles.
Hundreds of them connect five communites between Adair and Dexter.
While these might look like a novel roadside attraction, it's actually an historically significant part of Iowa's highway system.
And it was once part of the road that connected America from coast to coast.
At the turn of the twentieth century Iowa's road system was a mess.
The majority of raods were no more than dirt paths.
And very few were paved.
Attempting to cross the state during inclament weather, might mean being stranded in mud or snow sometimes for days.
The roads were so bad, Iowa was once called the gumbo state, referring to the thick, dark soil, which for agriculture is great but for road material... is pretty poor.
As automobiles became more and more popular throughout the country, and the need for intrastate travel increased, Governor B.F. Carroll assembled delegates from all over the state, for the "Good Roads Convention" in Des Moines.
Delegates decided that a River to River road from Davenport to Council Bluffs would be the solution to Iowa's road woes.
Towns fought fiercely during the early days of road development.
Where the roads went, money would follow.
Many Iowa towns began to build roads at an incredible pace at this time.
After the Good Roads Convention, the original White Pole Road was designated, and followed along a rail road route from Des Moines to Council Bluffs.
Poles along this route were painted white.
This helped motorists know that they were still on the correct route.
Kind of like an early form of GPS.
The communities that were a part of this Great White Way, as it was then called, promised motorists a straighter, leveler, and shorter route across the state, with a town every five to six miles along the way.
The Great White Way Association plotted their Davenport to Council Bluffs route on country maps, and submitted their registration with a five dollar fee.
The commision then awarded a certificate to the route on July 1914.
Making it the first certified route in Iowa.
After various mergers with other roads, and name changes, sections of the Great White Way became part of US Highway 6.
Which at one point was the longest, continuous East to West route in the United States.
Stretching from Cape Cod, MA to Long Beach, CA.
But by the mid 1960s, something changed.
The act is the Interstate Highway System A forty-one thousand mile network of our most important roads.
After the passage of the federal aid highway act, the new Interstate highway system connected the country in a new way.
By 1965, Interstate-80 saw completion.
This new four lane route would fundamentally change the way Americans traveled.
And the Great White Way, like so many highways in the country, diminished in popularity.
In 2002, this old highway was renamed to White Pole Road as a tribute to the original Great White Way.
and poles along this 26 mile stretch, have once again been painted white.
This highway is a small piece of Iowa transportation history.
And really is a microcosm of the tenacity that Iowa towns had during the automobile boom of the 20th century.
If there's ever a time when you're driving from Des Moines to Council Bluffs It might be worth it to pull off one of the exits to experience this small stretch of road and get a sense of what it was like to drive the Great White Way.
Support for PBS provided by:
Greetings From Iowa is a local public television program presented by Iowa PBS













