fbpx
Wikipedia

U.S. Route 16 in Michigan

US Highway 16 (US 16), also called Grand River Avenue for much of its length in the state, was one of the principal roads prior to the post-World War II construction of freeways in the state of Michigan. Before the creation of the United States Numbered Highway System in 1926, the highway had been designated as a state highway numbered M-16. The modern route of Grand River Avenue cuts across the Lower Peninsula in a northwest–southeast fashion from near Grand Rapids to Detroit. Before the late 1950s and early 1960s, US 16 followed other roads between Muskegon and Grand Rapids, and then Grand River Avenue through Lansing to Detroit. In the years immediately preceding the creation of the Interstate Highway System, US 16 was shifted from older roads to newer freeways. Later, it was co-designated as an Interstate. When the gap in the freeway was filled in around Lansing, the US 16 designation was decommissioned in the state. The freeway was solely designated Interstate 96 (I-96) east of Grand Rapids and I-196 west of that city.

US Highway 16

US 16 highlighted in red on a modern map
Route information
Maintained by MSHD
Length210.643 mi[1] (338.997 km)
ExistedNovember 11, 1926 (1926-11-11)[2]–1962 (1962)[3][4]
HistoryReplaced by I-96
Major junctions
West endCar ferry docks in Muskegon
Major intersections
East end US 10 / US 12 / US 25 in Detroit
Location
CountryUnited States
StateMichigan
CountiesMuskegon, Ottawa, Kent, Ionia, Clinton, Ingham, Livingston, Oakland, Wayne
Highway system
M-15US 16, M-16 M-17
M-125M-126 US 127

The original pathway along the Grand River Avenue corridor was an Indian trail, a footpath used by the native population. The first European settlers to the area now known as Michigan also used this trail and in some areas enlarged it for the passage of wagons. In Detroit, Grand River is one of five major avenues (along with Woodward, Michigan, Gratiot, and Jefferson) planned by Judge Augustus Woodward in 1805 that extended from Downtown Detroit in differing radial directions; Grand River Avenue extends northwesterly from the city's downtown. In the middle of the 19th century, the trail was expanded into a plank road that formed the basis for one of the first state trunkline highways as M-16 in the early 20th century. Later, the highway was rerouted to replace M-126 and create M-104. Current segments of the roadway are still part of the state highway system as sections of M-5, M-11, M-43 or business loops off I-96. The portion of Grand River Avenue in Detroit between I-96 and the intersection with Cass Avenue and Middle Street in Downtown Detroit is an unsigned state trunkline, sometimes referred to as Old Business Spur I-96 (Old BS I-96).

Route description edit

 
SS Milwaukee Clipper docked in Muskegon

At the time of its decommissioning, US 16 started its run through Michigan at the Grand Trunk Western Railroad docks in Muskegon. The SS Milwaukee Clipper operated as a car ferry across Lake Michigan, connecting Muskegon to Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where US 16 continued to the west. From the docks, US 16 and M-46 traveled concurrently south and then east through downtown Muskegon. At Peck Street, US 16 turned south along Business US 31 (Bus. US 31). These two highways ran concurrently out of town to the south through Muskegon Heights to Norton Shores. There, the business loop ended at US 31, and US 16 joined the I-196 freeway headed east. (Later, the I-96 and I-196 designations west of Grand Rapids would be flipped,[5] but at the time leading up to US 16's decommissioning in the state of Michigan, this had not yet been approved.[6]) The I-196/US 16 freeway traveled southeast of Norton Shores through woodlands in rural Muskegon County parallel to the former US 16 routing through Fruitport to Nunica in Ottawa County. The freeway turned more directly east in Nunica past the eastern terminus of M-104, and continued through more mixed forest and grassland terrain to serve the communities of Coopersville and Marne.[3]

As the freeway approached Kent County, it met the western terminus of M-11 which was the former routing of US 16 through the Grand Rapids metropolitan area. I-196/US 16 continued eastward around the north side of the metropolitan area through the suburbs of Walker and Comstock Park. The freeway intersected the contemporaneous routing of US 131 along the East Beltline and curved south through the eastern edge of Grand Rapids to meet the end of I-96 east of downtown. There I-196 ended and US 16 was transferred to the I-96 freeway. I-96/US 16 continued southward intersecting Cascade Road, which was previously US 16. Cascade Road east of this interchange meets the westernmost part of Grand River Avenue, which carried US 16 east continuously to Downtown Detroit.[3][a]

 
Grand River Avenue sign in East Lansing

M-50 also joined the freeway at Cascade Road headed east, and together I-96/US 16/M-50 continued through eastern Kent County. M-50 departed to the south near Lowell, and the freeway crossed into southern Ionia County. Passing south of Portland, the freeway crossed east into Clinton County. North of Grand Ledge, I-96 ended and US 16 followed Wright Road off the freeway to Grand River Avenue. From there east, US 16 resumed its historic routing into the city of Lansing. Grand River Avenue carried the highway past the Capital City Airport and east to Larch Street, where US 16 turned south along US 27 north of downtown Lansing. At Saginaw Street, eastbound US 16 turned east on the one-way street, while westbound traffic ran a block north on Grand River Avenue. The two directions of travel merge at the east end of Saginaw Street in East Lansing. Grand River Avenue through East Lansing follows a tree-lined boulevard that forms the division between the campus of Michigan State University to the south and the rest of the city to the north. US 16 continued east in Ingham County through Okemos and rural parts of the county through Williamston and Webberville.[3]

 
Modern M-43 running along Grand River Avenue at Collingwood Drive in East Lansing (2008)

Grand River Avenue crosses to the east into Livingston County through Fowlerville to Howell. In Howell, Grand River Avenue meets Hartland Road which carries M-59; the highway also met M-155 in downtown, which at the time provided access to the Howell State Hospital. In the approach to Brighton, Grand River Avenue passes through rural southeast Michigan lake country. In Brighton, Grand River Avenue crossed the western end of the I-96 freeway. US 16 merged onto the freeway, and I-96/US 16 met the northern end of the US 23 freeway. I-96/US 16 continued east into Oakland County through Wixom and Novi.[3]

Near Farmington, I-96/US 16 continued to the southeast of the present-day I-96/I-275/I-696/M-5 interchange along the current M-5 freeway. Grand River Avenue through there was Business Loop I-96 (BL I-96). The freeway ends at a junction with Grand River Avenue that also marked the end of the business loop and the eastern end of I-96 at the time. From there, US 16 continued along Grand River Avenue the rest of way into Downtown Detroit. Along that routing, it intersected US 24 at Telegraph Road and M-39 at Southfield Road. US 16 continued past the eastern terminus of M-14 at Plymouth Road, which until 1956 had carried US 12, which had then been concurrent with US 16 to Cadillac Square. There US 16 terminated at a common point with US 10 (Woodward Avenue) and US 12 (Michigan Avenue), which had replaced US 112 less than a year earlier. US 25 ran through the square on Fort Street and Gratiot Avenue.[3]

History edit

The history of Grand River Avenue, and US 16 in Michigan, dates back to before the earliest settlement of Michigan by Europeans. The route has been the basis for an Indian trail, a pathway for European settlers, a state highway, a part of the US Highway System, and a section of the Interstate Highway System.

Indian trail to state highway edit

 

M-16

LocationMuskegon–Detroit
Existedc. July 1, 1919[8]–November 11, 1926[9]

The chief transportation routes in 1701 were the Indian footpaths that crossed the future state of Michigan; the Grand River Trail was one of these thirteen trails at the time. In 1805, Detroit created 120-foot (37 m) rights-of-way for the principal streets of the city, Grand River Avenue included.[10] This street plan was devised by Augustus Woodward and others following a devastating fire in Detroit.[11] A ten-year project to construct a plank road between Detroit and Howell was authorized in 1820 along the Grand River Trail.[10] Grand River Avenue was included as one of Five Great Military Roads by Governor Lewis Cass in 1825, along with the River Road, Michigan Avenue, Woodward Avenue and Gratiot Avenue.[12] The Grand River Road, precursor to the modern Grand River Avenue was named by Benjamin Williams, cofounder of Owosso.[13] The original Native American name for the river was Wash-ten-ong sibi meaning "the river that extends far off", or "far into the interior", which was translated as La Grande Riviere, the French name for the river; this name was then applied to the name of the trail that paralleled at least half of the river's length.[14]

The opening of the Erie Canal in New York in 1826 brought new settlers to the Great Lakes region, and to the future state of Michigan. Many of these settlers began their inland journeys in Detroit. At first the Grand River Road was a "deep rutted, ditch bordered road".[15] The road branched into two at Rouge (now Redford); the southern branch roughly followed the modern route of Grand River Avenue and the northern route ran by way of Pontiac along Woodward Avenue and the modern M-21 to the north of the Lansing area.[16] From Bancroft, several trails branched off, including the northern branch of the Grand River Road and the Saginaw Trail.[17] The two branches merged back together near Dewitt and continued west toward Ionia and on to Grand Rapids and Newton (now Grand Haven).[18] The early travelers plied the road in wagons pulled by oxen or horses, and drivers charged between four and seven cents a mile (equivalent to $1.08–1.89/mi in 2023[19]). The horses were exchanged every 12–15 miles (19–24 km) with the speed averaging around 8–10 miles per hour (13–16 km/h) with few obstacles.[20]

Congress further aided the road in 1835 with an appropriation of $25,000 (equivalent to $780,000 in 2023[21]) for a 20-foot-wide (6 m) road on 100 feet (30 m) of right-of-way.[22] These improvements included removing brush and debris and the construction of bridges across the Rouge, Shiawassee, Red Cedar and Grand rivers.[23] The Grand River Road was a major route for settlers headed inland to Grand Rapids in 1836, as the shortest route for travelers coming from Detroit.[24] An economic panic in 1837 drove settlers from New York to Michigan; these were the travelers who followed the Grand River Road. New settlements were created along the route, every six miles (9.7 km) or so, that distance being a good day's travel by horse. Approximately 120 wagons left Detroit each day between August and November 1843.[25]

After statehood in 1837, Michigan assumed the costs for construction work to the Grand River Trail. At that time, about 60 miles (97 km) had been surveyed from Detroit westward. The new state lacked the money to continue improvements to the road, and Michigan petitioned Congress for the better part of the next decade for money to complete the work.[26] When the state capital was moved to Lansing in 1847, an improved road was needed to the capital city.[25] The first segments of roadway were privatized starting in 1844.[26] In 1850, the Michigan State Legislature established the Lansing and Howell Plank Road Company,[27] which set about converting various Indian trails into the Lansing–Howell Plank Road, a task the company completed by 1853. At Howell the road connected with the Detroit–Howell Plank Road, establishing the first improved connection direct from the state capital to Michigan's largest metropolis. The Lansing–Detroit Plank Road was a toll road until the 1880s, and it eventually evolved into the eastern part of the modern Grand River Avenue.[28]

 
West Grand River Avenue in Howell, 1900

By 1900, only a short stretch of the Detroit–Howell Plank Road was still made of planks; most of the other plank roads had been converted to gravel by this time.[29] On May 13, 1913, the Michigan Legislature passed the State Reward Trunk Line Highway Act (Public Act 334 of 1913) that created the original state highway system. In that act, Grand River Avenue between Detroit and Grand Rapids was included as Division 9 of the system.[30] The state highways were signposted starting in 1919,[31] and on the first maps published on July 1 of that year, the Michigan State Highway Department (MSHD) had applied the M-16 number to Grand River Avenue across the state between Grand Haven and Detroit.[8] M-16 was rerouted in the Lansing area in 1925, running along Grand River Avenue from Grand Ledge to East Lansing. The former routing through Downtown Lansing on Michigan Avenue became part of M-39 and the section north of Grand Ledge was eventually redesignated M-100. A second realignment moved M-16 to follow Grand River Avenue from Ionia through Ada. The former alignment became a part of M-21.[32] On August 7, 1926, the state completed paving on M-16, opening it to traffic as "the first paved highway across the state".[33]

The M-16 designation lasted for seven years. As the states were meeting with the American Association of State Highway Officials (AASHO, now AASHTO) to plan the United States Numbered Highway System, the route of M-16 was originally planned for inclusion in US 18.[34] When the system was created on November 11, 1926,[2] Grand River Avenue and M-16 became part of US 16.[9]

US Highway to Interstate edit

 

M-126

LocationMuskegon HeightsNunica
Length11.94 mi[1] (19.22 km)
Existed1934[35]–1940[36]

In 1929, Allan Williams placed a picnic table on the side of the road along US 16 south of Saranac. Williams was the Ionia County engineer in charge of the various roads in the county, and that location is "what many consider to be the nation's first roadside table".[37][b] The first change to the US 16 routing was made in 1933 when the highway was moved to bypass Farmington, with the old routing retained as a state highway.[39][40] The next year, in 1934, M-126 was created between Nunica and Muskegon.[35] In 1940, US 16 was rerouted to replace M-126, and the former route of US 16 between Nunica and Grand Haven was redesignated M-104.[36] Two further changes during 1941–42 rerouted the western end in Muskegon to end at the car ferry docks. Previously, motorists had to navigate from the western end along other roads to the ferry connection to the rest of US 16 in Wisconsin. The second change routed Bypass US 16 (Byp. US 16) along 28th Street and Wilson (previously the South Beltline and West Beltline sections of M-114) in the Grand Rapids area.[41] The US 16 designation was moved in 1953 to replace Byp. US 16 while the former routing through downtown Grand Rapids was redesignated Business US 16 (Bus. US 16).[42][43]

 
Olympia Stadium on Grand River Avenue, home of the Detroit Red Wings from 1927 to 1979

MSHD had plans to upgrade the US 16 corridor to freeway standards in the middle of the 20th century. The first planning map in 1947 for what later became the Interstate Highway System showed a highway in the corridor.[44] The General Location of National System of Interstate Highways Including All Additional Routes at Urban Areas Designated in September 1955, showed generalized plans for the locations of Interstate Highways as designated in 1955. This also included a highway in the US 16 corridor.[45] The 1957 approval for the Interstate Highway System replaced the Grand Rapids–Detroit section of US 16 with a portion of Interstate 94 (I-94), with the remainder to be I-94N.[46] MSHD submitted a recommended numbering plan for the Interstates in 1958 that showed I-96 following the US 16 corridor.[47] When initially approved, the Muskegon–Grand Rapids segment of US 16 was to be numbered as I-196 while the remainder was part of I-96.[48]

Segments of the road were upgraded in 1956 between Coopersville and Marne, Portland and Eagle, and Brighton and Farmington.[49] By 1962, freeway construction allowed motorists to travel between Muskegon and the Lansing area on a freeway, bypassing the old Grand River Avenue route.[3] The final connection between Lansing and Brighton was completed in late 1962. At that time, the US 16 designation, which had been applied alongside the I-96 and I-196 designations, was decommissioned. Segments of the old highway were retained in the state highway system under different numbers. Sections through Portland, Lansing, Howell, Farmington and Detroit were given Business Loop (BL) or Business Spur (BS) I-96 designations. The section between Lansing and Webberville became part of an extended M-43.[3][4] Other sections in the Detroit area became parts of M-102, M-5, or unsigned state highway.[50][51]

Post-Interstate era edit

External image
  Old Plank Road demolition, facing west in East Lansing near Bailey Street in early 1996

After US 16 was transferred to the new freeway, Grand River Avenue lost its state highway status along most of its length. Today the roadway remains the "Main Street" of over a dozen Michigan cities and a scenic route through one of the state's most populated corridors. In 1995, major reconstruction work along Grand River Avenue in East Lansing uncovered rotting logs, buried about 2 feet (0.61 m) below the present grade, that had been used as underlayment for the plank road surface in a low, swampy area. The logs had been in place for nearly 150 years.[52] In 2004, the state transferred several blocks at the eastern end of Grand River Avenue to the City of Detroit. State trunkline control now ends at the corner of Grand River Avenue, Middle Street, and Cass Avenue.[53][54]

Community leaders in Lansing have proposed renaming a section of Grand River Avenue in Old Town Lansing for César Chávez, the Mexican-American civil rights activist. The group "Lansing for Cesar E. Chavez" was raising funds to rename the section between Oakland and Pine streets in Old Town. Previously, a section of Grand Avenue was renamed for Chávez in 1994, but the voters overturned the decision.[55] The renaming proposal was even mentioned as a way to untangle a maze of different branches of Grand River Avenue running through Old Town. Currently, East Grand River Avenue and North Grand River Avenue bridge between sections of Grand River Avenue, in addition to Grand Avenue which runs along the Grand River near downtown.[56] While Lansing's Latino community supported the proposal, the business community opposed it. One shop owner said she would have $10,000 in costs associated with a name change, adding, "I think there's many beautiful ways to honor such an incredible man. Changing five blocks of a street doesn't seem to do justice."[57] Another business owner cited the work the Old Town Commercial Association has done to market the area using the Grand River Avenue name, marketing that would be useless after a name change.[57] The compromise solution reached in August 2010 was to rename lot 56, where Old Town holds festivals, to Cesar Chavez Plaza. Street signs would be installed marking parts of Grand River Avenue as Cesar E. Chavez Avenue, but only in a memorial capacity; the street would still be officially named Grand River Avenue.[58]

Memorial highway designations edit

 
Arthur H. Vandenberg

Born in Grand Rapids in 1884, Arthur H. Vandenberg was appointed to the United States Senate upon the death in office of Woodbridge N. Ferris in 1928. Vandenberg, a Republican, served as a member of the "isolationist bloc", and was an active opponent of the New Deal policies of Franklin D. Roosevelt. The senator declined a nomination for Vice President in 1936. In the aftermath of World War II, Vandenberg's world view changed significantly. He helped to draft the United Nations Charter and worked to secure its unanimous ratification in the Senate. He also worked to secure passage of the Marshall Plan and helped to establish the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. After his death in 1951, Michigan residents wanted to memorialize Vandenberg. The following year, the Michigan Legislature dedicated the length of US 16 from Muskegon to Detroit as the Arthur Vandenberg Memorial Highway by enacting Public Act 70 of 1952.[59]

 
George Washington

Vandenberg was not the only national figure honored with a memorial designation along the route of US 16 in Michigan. For a period from the 1930s through the 1950s, the highway used a few blocks of Washington Boulevard to connect between Grand River and Michigan avenues on its route through Detroit to its terminus at Cadillac Square. This street was named in honor of George Washington for his service as the "father of his country". The street was named by Judge Woodward as a part of his general street plan for the city of Detroit in 1807.[60]

Major intersections edit

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
MuskegonMuskegon0.0000.000Car ferry docks
 
 
M-46 east (Mart Street)
SS Milwaukee Clipper connected to US 16 in Wisconsin; western terminus of M-46
1.1001.770 
 
 
 
 
Bus. US 31 north / M-46 east (Peck Street)
Northern end of Bus. US 31 concurrency; eastern end of M-46 concurrency
Norton Shores6.1609.914 
 
I-196 east
  US 31 – Ludington, Holland
 
 
 
Bus. US 31 north (Airline Highway)
Western end of I-196 concurrency; southern end of Bus. US 31 concurrency
OttawaNunica15.45224.868 
 
M-104 west – Grand Haven
Eastern terminus of M-104
Tallmadge Township30.09948.440 
 
 
 
 
Bus. US 16 east / M-11 east (Remembrance Road) – Grand Rapids
Western terminus of M-11
KentWalker36.45558.669 
 
M-37 north (Alpine Avenue) – Traverse City
Western end of M-37 concurrency
Grand Rapids39.22363.123 
 
Bus. US 131 (Plainfield Avenue)
43.23369.577 
 
I-196 west
 
 
I-96 east
Eastern end of I-196 concurrency; western end of I-96 concurrency
43.96170.748  
 
US 131 / M-37 south (East Beltline Avenue) – Cadillac, Kalamazoo, Hastings
Eastern end of M-37 concurrency
Grand Rapids Township44.89772.255  M-21 (Fulton Street) – Holland, Flint
46.17474.310 
 
 
 
 
Bus. US 16 west / M-50 west (Cascade Road) – Grand Rapids
Western end of M-50 concurrency
Cascade Township49.14679.093 
 
M-11 west (28th Street)
Eastern terminus of M-11
Lowell Township58.46394.087 
 
 
 
M-50 east / M-91 north – Jackson, Greenville
Eastern end of M-50 concurrency; southern terminus of M-91
IoniaBerlin Township73.587118.427  M-66 – Ionia, Battle Creek
ClintonEagle Township92.578148.990 
 
I-96 west
  M-100 – Grand Ledge
I-96 temporarily ended here; US 16 follows Grand River Avenue east
InghamLansing101.738163.731 
 
M-174 north (Logan Street)
103.103165.928  US 27 (Larch Street) – ClareNorthern end of US 27 concurrency
103.630166.776 
 
  M-43 west / M-78 (Saginaw Street) – Hastings
 
 
US 27 south (Larch Street)
Eastern terminus of M-43; southern end of US 27 concurrency
Leroy Township121.099194.890 
 
M-47 north
Southern terminus of M-47
LivingstonHowell157.476253.433 
 
M-59 east – Pontiac
Western terminus of M-59
160.154257.743 
 
M-155 west
Eastern terminus of M-155
Brighton168.676271.458 
 
I-96 east
Western end of I-96 freeway concurrency
Brighton Township171.212275.539  US 23 – Flint, Ann Arbor
OaklandWest Novi182.782294.159 
 
M-218 east (Wixom Road) – Pontiac
Western terminus of M-218
Farmington189.210304.504 
 
BL I-96 east
193.314311.109 
 
I-96 west
 
 
BL I-96 west
Eastern end of I-96 freeway concurrency
OaklandWayne county lineFarmington TownshipLivonia city line194.590313.162 
 
M-102 east (8 Mile Road)
8 Mile Road is the county and city line; western terminus of M-102
WayneDetroit197.135317.258  US 24 (Telegraph Road) – Toledo
200.584322.809  M-39 (Southfield Road)
204.499329.109 
 
M-14 west (Plymouth Road) – Ann Arbor
Eastern terminus of M-14
207.727334.304  I-94 (Edsel Ford Freeway)
209.431337.047  BS I-696 (John C. Lodge Freeway)
210.643338.997 
 
US 10 west (Woodward Avenue) – Pontiac

 
 
US 12 west (Michigan Avenue) – Ypsilanti

  US 25 (Fort Street, Gratiot Avenue) – Port Huron, Toledo
Cadillac Square served as the common terminus for US 10, US 12 and US 16
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Related trunklines edit

Grand Rapids bypass edit

 

 

Bypass US Highway 16

LocationGrand Rapids
Length20.197 mi[1] (32.504 km)
Existed1942[41]–1953[42][43]

Bypass US Highway 16 (Byp. US 16) was a bypass route of US 16 in the Grand Rapids area. The highway became a part of the state highway system c. 1930 as a part of M-114, which was a beltline around the Grand Rapids area.[61] By 1942, the trunkline was completed and reassigned a Byp. US 16 designation along the southern and western legs. The designation connected to US 16 in Walker Township (now the city of Walker) and ran south along what is now Wilson Avenue over the Grand River into Grandville. From there it turned easterly along what is now 28th Street through Wyoming and Paris townships (now the cities of Wyoming and Kentwood) before terminating at US 16 in Cascade Township.[62] The designation was used until the mainline US 16 was rerouted over the bypass in 1953.[63][64]

Grand Rapids business loop edit

 

 

Business US Highway 16

LocationGrand Rapids
Length17.102 mi[1] (27.523 km)
Existed1953[42][43]–1962[3][65]

Business US Highway 16 (Bus. US 16) was a business route in the Grand Rapids area in the 1950s and 1960s. When US 16 was rerouted to replace Byp. US 16 around the southern and western sides of the city in 1953, the former route of the mainline through downtown was redesignated as the business loop.[42][43] That loop followed Remembrance Avenue southeasterly to Leonard Avenue in Walker Township. From there, the loop turned easterly on Leonard over the Grand River to Monroe Avenue before turning south parallel to the river along Monroe into downtown. In downtown Grand Rapids, Bus. US 16 turned eastward on Fulton Avenue into East Grand Rapids. There the loop followed Cascade Road into Cascade Township where it reconnected to US 16 at the intersection with 28th Street. Bus. US 16 lasted until 1962 when US 16 was decommissioned in Michigan.[3][4]

Farmington alternate route edit

 

US Highway 16A

LocationFarmington
Length3.863 mi[1] (6.217 km)
Existed1933[39][40]–1956[49][66]

US Highway 16A (US 16A) was an alternate route for US 16 that bypassed Farmington. It was designated in 1933[40] for a new highway that bypassed downtown along what is now Freedom Road.[67] In 1956, the designation was decommissioned when mainline US 16 was rerouted out of downtown Farmington, replacing US 16A. At the same time, the former route of the mainline through downtown was redesignated Bus. US 16.[49][66]

Farmington business loop edit

 

 

Business US Highway 16

LocationFarmington
Length4.129 mi[1] (6.645 km)
Existed1956[49][66]–1961[3][68]

Business US Highway 16 (Bus. US 16) was a business loop through downtown Farmington along Grand River Avenue. Its western terminus was at the junction of US 16 and Grand River Avenue west of the city, and the eastern terminus was at the intersection between US 16 and Grand River Avenue southeast of Farmington. This highway was the original route of US 16 though downtown Farmington. In 1933, US 16 was routed onto a bypass route which had been constructed south of the city (the present-day Freedom Road) and the route through Farmington was retained as state trunkline.[39][40] In 1956, a new bypass freeway was built just to the south of the old bypass as part of the "Brighton–Farmington Expressway" and the route through downtown was designated Bus. US 16.[49][66] The original plans for I-96 called for it to replace US 16 and to run parallel to Grand River Avenue all the way from Farmington into downtown Detroit. In 1959, the Farmington bypass freeway was given the I-96 designation in addition to the US 16 moniker,[69] and the business route was redesignated as Business Loop I-96 two years later.[3][68]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Grand River Avenue ends at Cascade Road, but the historic routing carried it through Ada and Plainfield Township along the Grand River. The western end is at East Beltline, short of its westernmost extent in Grand Rapids.[7]
  2. ^ Other sources state that the first roadside park in the United States was created by Herbert Larson along what is now US 2 near Iron River in 1919–20.[38]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g Michigan Department of Transportation (2021). Next Generation PR Finder (Map). Michigan Department of Transportation. Retrieved October 11, 2021.
  2. ^ a b McNichol, Dan (2006). The Roads that Built America. New York: Sterling. p. 74. ISBN 1-4027-3468-9. OCLC 63377558.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Michigan State Highway Department (1962). Official Highway Map (Map). [c. 1:918,720]. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. §§ K8–M14. OCLC 12701120, 173191490. Retrieved October 17, 2019 – via Michigan History Center.
  4. ^ a b c Michigan State Highway Department (1963). Official Highway Map (Map). [c. 1:918,720]. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. §§ K8–M14. OCLC 12701120. Retrieved October 17, 2019 – via Michigan History Center.
  5. ^ "New Numbers Seen for Road". The Holland Evening Sentinel. United Press International. October 23, 1963. p. 4. ISSN 1050-4044. OCLC 13440201. Retrieved April 12, 2016 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ "Would Shift Route Number: Mackie Seeks Int. 96 Designation for Grand Rapids–Muskegon Stretch". The Grand Rapids Press. May 1, 1963. p. 32. OCLC 9975013.
  7. ^ City of Lansing (n.d.). . City of Lansing. Archived from the original on December 20, 2012. Retrieved March 21, 2008.
  8. ^ a b Michigan State Highway Department (July 1, 1919). State of Michigan (Map). Scale not given. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. Lower Peninsula sheet. OCLC 15607244. Retrieved October 17, 2019 – via Michigan History Center.
  9. ^ a b Bureau of Public Roads & American Association of State Highway Officials (November 11, 1926). United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials (Map). 1:7,000,000. Washington, DC: United States Geological Survey. OCLC 32889555. Retrieved November 7, 2013 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  10. ^ a b Lingeman, Stanley D. (April 6, 2001). Michigan Highway History Timeline 1701–2001: 300 Years of Progress. Lansing: Library of Michigan. p. 1. OCLC 435640179.
  11. ^ Baulch, Vivian M. (June 13, 1999). "Woodward Avenue, Detroit's Grand Old 'Main Street'". The Detroit News. Archived from the original on January 4, 2009. Retrieved September 5, 2010.
  12. ^ Wayne County Department of Public Services (n.d.). . Detroit: Wayne County Department of Public Services. Archived from the original on December 19, 2007. Retrieved September 6, 2010.
  13. ^ Woodard, Sadie G. (1966). Grand River Road: A Traveler's View of a Historic Route that Traversed Early Michigan. Lansing, Michigan: Plane Tree Press. p. 12. OCLC 433271.
  14. ^ Walton, Ivan (Spring 1955). "Indian Place Names in Michigan". Midwest Folklore. Vol. 5, no. 1 (Michigan ed.). pp. 23–34. ISSN 0544-0750. JSTOR 4317501. OCLC 681735082.
  15. ^ Woodard (1966), p. 6.
  16. ^ Woodard (1966), pp. 8–10.
  17. ^ Woodard (1966), pp. 10–11.
  18. ^ Woodard (1966), pp. 11–12.
  19. ^ 1634–1699: McCusker, J. J. (1997). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States: Addenda et Corrigenda (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1700–1799: McCusker, J. J. (1992). How Much Is That in Real Money? A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States (PDF). American Antiquarian Society. 1800–present: Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. "Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–". Retrieved February 29, 2024.
  20. ^ Woodard (1966), p. 13.
  21. ^ Johnston, Louis & Williamson, Samuel H. (2023). "What Was the U.S. GDP Then?". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved November 30, 2023. United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the MeasuringWorth series.
  22. ^ Lingeman (2001), p. 2.
  23. ^ Woodard (1966), p. 28.
  24. ^ Fisher, Ernest B., ed. (1918). Grand Rapids and Kent County, Michigan: Historical Account of Their Progress from First Settlement to the Present Time. Vol. 1. Chicago: Robert O. Law. p. 78. OCLC 13781280.
  25. ^ a b Woodard (1966), pp. 24–29.
  26. ^ a b Barnett, LeRoy (2004). A Drive Down Memory Lane: The Named State and Federal Highways of Michigan. Allegan Forest, Michigan: Priscilla Press. p. 93. ISBN 1-886167-24-9. OCLC 57425393.
  27. ^ Michigan Legislature (March 20, 1850). . Michigan Department of Natural Resources. Archived from the original on October 10, 2010. Retrieved September 6, 2010.
  28. ^ Towar, James DeLoss (1933). History of the City of East Lansing. East Lansing, Michigan: East Lansing Public Library. pp. 24–25. hdl:2027/mdp.39015071337409. OCLC 605707523.
  29. ^ Mason, Philip P. (1959). Michigan Highways from Indian Trails to Expressways. Ann Arbor, Michigan: Braun-Brumfield. p. 11. OCLC 23314983.
  30. ^ Michigan Legislature (1915) [enacted May 13, 1913]. "Chapter 91: State Reward Trunk Line Highways". In Shields, Edmund C.; Black, Cyrenius P.; Broomfield, Archibald (eds.). The Compiled Laws of the State of Michigan. Vol. 1. Lansing, Michigan: Wynkoop, Hallenbeck, Crawford. pp. 1868–72. OCLC 44724558. Retrieved January 24, 2012.
  31. ^ "Michigan May Do Well Following Wisconsin's Road Marking System". The Grand Rapids Press. September 20, 1919. p. 10. OCLC 9975013.
  32. ^ Michigan State Highway Department (September 1, 1925). (Map). [c. 1:823,680]. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. Archived from the original on May 10, 2017. Retrieved December 18, 2016 – via Archives of Michigan.
  33. ^ Barnett (2004), p. 94.
  34. ^ Joint Board on Interstate Highways (1925). "Appendix VI: Descriptions of the Interstate Routes Selected, with Numbers Assigned". Report of Joint Board on Interstate Highways, October 30, 1925, Approved by the Secretary of Agriculture, November 18, 1925 (Report). Washington, DC: United States Department of Agriculture. p. 50. OCLC 733875457, 55123355, 71026428. Retrieved November 14, 2017 – via Wikisource.
  35. ^ a b Michigan State Highway Department & Rand McNally (September 1, 1934). Official Michigan Highway Map (Map). [c. 1:850,000]. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. § K8. OCLC 12701143.
  36. ^ a b Michigan State Highway Department & Rand McNally (December 1, 1940). Official Michigan Highway Map (Map) (Winter ed.). [c. 1:850,000]. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. § K8. OCLC 12701143.
  37. ^ Ellison, Garret (July 4, 2011). "Ionia County Boasts First Roadside Picnic Table, One of West Michigan's Hidden Gems". The Grand Rapids Press. OCLC 9975013. from the original on October 14, 2012. Retrieved July 6, 2011.
  38. ^ Bleck, Christina (April 20, 2015). "Roadside Relief: Parks, Rest Areas, Turnouts Aid Travelers". The Mining Journal. Marquette, Michigan. p. 1A. ISSN 0898-4964. OCLC 9729223.
  39. ^ a b c Michigan State Highway Department & Rand McNally (May 1, 1933). (Map). [c. 1:840,000]. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. §§ M12–M13. OCLC 12701053. Archived from the original on May 10, 2017. Retrieved December 18, 2016 – via Archives of Michigan.
  40. ^ a b c d Michigan State Highway Department & Rand McNally (September 1, 1933). Official Michigan Highway Map (Map). [c. 1:840,000]. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. §§ M12–M13. OCLC 12701053.
  41. ^ a b Michigan State Highway Department & Rand McNally (June 1, 1942). Official Michigan Highway Map (Map) (Summer ed.). [c. 1:850,000]. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. §§ K8–L9. OCLC 12701143.
  42. ^ a b c d Michigan State Highway Department (April 15, 1953). Official Highway Map (Map). [c. 1:918,720]. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. §§ K9–L9. OCLC 12701120.
  43. ^ a b c d Michigan State Highway Department (October 1, 1953). Official Highway Map (Map). [c. 1:918,720]. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. §§ K9–L9. OCLC 12701120. Retrieved October 17, 2019 – via Michigan History Center.
  44. ^ Public Roads Administration (August 2, 1947). National System of Interstate Highways (Map). Scale not given. Washington, DC: Federal Works Agency. OCLC 77721014, 30326602.
  45. ^ Bureau of Public Roads (September 1955). General Location of National System of Interstate Highways Including All Additional Routes at Urban Areas Designated in September 1955 (Map). Scale not given. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. OCLC 416597 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  46. ^ Public Roads Administration (August 14, 1957). Official Route Numbering for the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways (Map). Scale not given. Washington, DC: Public Roads Administration. Retrieved September 4, 2010.
  47. ^ Michigan State Highway Department (April 25, 1958). (Report). Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. Archived from the original on August 5, 2004. Retrieved September 4, 2010.
  48. ^ Bureau of Public Roads (1977) [c. 1963]. "National System of Interstate and Defense Highways" (Map). In Federal Highway Administration (ed.). America's Highways 1776–1976. Scale not given. Washington, DC: Government Printing Office. p. 277. OCLC 3280344. Retrieved September 4, 2010 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  49. ^ a b c d e Michigan State Highway Department (October 1, 1956). Official Highway Map (Map). [c. 1:918,720]. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. §§ K8, L10, M12–M13. OCLC 12701120. Retrieved October 17, 2019 – via Michigan History Center.
  50. ^ Michigan Department of Transportation (2007). (Map). c. 1:158,400. Lansing: Michigan Department of Transportation. Detroit Area inset. OCLC 42778335. Archived from the original on August 27, 2019. Retrieved August 26, 2019 – via Archives of Michigan.
  51. ^ Michigan Department of Transportation (2008). Truck Operator's Map (Map). c. 1:221,760. Lansing: Michigan Department of Transportation. Detroit and Vicinity inset. OCLC 261183721.
  52. ^ Michigan Historical Museum (n.d.). Settling a State. Michigan Department of Natural Resources. Archived from the original on September 20, 2011. Retrieved September 14, 2007.
  53. ^ Michigan Department of Transportation (2004). Truck Operator's Map (Map). c. 1:221,760. Lansing: Michigan Department of Transportation. Detroit and Vicinity inset.
  54. ^ Michigan Department of Transportation (2005). Truck Operator's Map (Map). c. 1:221,760. Lansing: Michigan Department of Transportation. Detroit and Vicinity inset.
  55. ^ Leppek, Kyle (April 14, 2010). . City Pulse. Lansing, Michigan. OCLC 48427464. Archived from the original on July 28, 2011. Retrieved September 6, 2010.
  56. ^ Melinn, Kyle (June 16, 2010). . City Pulse. Lansing, Michigan. OCLC 48427464. Archived from the original on November 9, 2013. Retrieved September 6, 2010.
  57. ^ a b Pohl, Scott (June 15, 2010). . Lansing, Michigan: WKAR-AM. Archived from the original on December 4, 2014. Retrieved September 6, 2010.
  58. ^ Maki, Jessica (August 13, 2010). "Supporters Happy Chavez Will Be Honored". Lansing, Michigan: WLNS-TV.
  59. ^ Barnett (2004), pp. 25–26.
  60. ^ Barnett (2004), p. 235.
  61. ^ Michigan State Highway Department & H.M. Gousha (January 1, 1930). Official Highway Service Map (Map). Scale not given. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. Grand Rapids inset. OCLC 12701195, 79754957.
  62. ^ Michigan State Highway Department & Rand McNally (June 1, 1942). Official Michigan Highway Map (Map) (Summer ed.). Scale not given. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. Grand Rapids inset. OCLC 12701143.
  63. ^ Michigan State Highway Department (April 15, 1953). Official Highway Map (Map). Scale not given. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. Grand Rapids inset. OCLC 12701120.
  64. ^ Michigan State Highway Department (October 1, 1953). Official Highway Map (Map). Scale not given. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. Grand Rapids inset. OCLC 12701120. Retrieved October 17, 2019 – via Michigan History Center.
  65. ^ Michigan State Highway Department (1963). Official Highway Map (Map). Scale not given. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. Detroit Area inset. OCLC 12701120. Retrieved October 17, 2019 – via Michigan History Center.
  66. ^ a b c d Michigan State Highway Department (April 15, 1956). Official Highway Map (Map). Scale not given. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. Detroit Area inset. OCLC 12701120.
  67. ^ Google (January 16, 2016). "Overview Map of Former US 16A in Farmington" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved January 16, 2016.
  68. ^ a b Michigan State Highway Department (1961). Official Highway Map (Map). Scale not given. Lansing: Michigan State Highway Department. Detroit Area inset. OCLC 12701120, 51857665. Retrieved October 17, 2019 – via Michigan History Center. (Includes all changes through July 1, 1961)
  69. ^ "Michigan Delays Road Number System". Toledo Blade. June 4, 1959. p. 11. OCLC 12962635. Retrieved November 21, 2010 – via Google News.

Further reading edit

  • Milan, Jon & Offen, Gail (2014). Grand River Avenue: From Detroit to Lake Michigan. Images of America. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4671-1212-3. OCLC 882189548.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
  • Historic US 16 at Michigan Highways
    • Historic US 16 Timeline at Michigan Highways
  • Former M-126 at Michigan Highways
  • Former BS I-96 at Michigan Highways
  • Unsigned Old BS I-96 at Michigan Highways
  • The Old Plank Road at A Brief History of East Lansing, Michigan
  US Highway 16
Previous state:
Wisconsin
Michigan Next state:
Terminus

route, michigan, this, article, about, section, highway, michigan, entire, length, current, highway, route, highway, also, called, grand, river, avenue, much, length, state, principal, roads, prior, post, world, construction, freeways, state, michigan, before,. This article is about the section of highway in Michigan For the entire length of the current highway see U S Route 16 US Highway 16 US 16 also called Grand River Avenue for much of its length in the state was one of the principal roads prior to the post World War II construction of freeways in the state of Michigan Before the creation of the United States Numbered Highway System in 1926 the highway had been designated as a state highway numbered M 16 The modern route of Grand River Avenue cuts across the Lower Peninsula in a northwest southeast fashion from near Grand Rapids to Detroit Before the late 1950s and early 1960s US 16 followed other roads between Muskegon and Grand Rapids and then Grand River Avenue through Lansing to Detroit In the years immediately preceding the creation of the Interstate Highway System US 16 was shifted from older roads to newer freeways Later it was co designated as an Interstate When the gap in the freeway was filled in around Lansing the US 16 designation was decommissioned in the state The freeway was solely designated Interstate 96 I 96 east of Grand Rapids and I 196 west of that city US Highway 16US 16 highlighted in red on a modern mapRoute informationMaintained by MSHDLength210 643 mi 1 338 997 km ExistedNovember 11 1926 1926 11 11 2 1962 1962 3 4 HistoryReplaced by I 96Major junctionsWest endCar ferry docks in MuskegonMajor intersectionsUS 31 near Muskegon US 131 in Grand Rapids US 27 in Lansing US 23 near Brighton US 24 in DetroitEast endUS 10 US 12 US 25 in DetroitLocationCountryUnited StatesStateMichiganCountiesMuskegon Ottawa Kent Ionia Clinton Ingham Livingston Oakland WayneHighway systemUnited States Numbered Highway System List Special Divided Michigan State Trunkline Highway System Interstate US State Byways M 15US 16 M 16 M 17 M 125M 126 US 127 The original pathway along the Grand River Avenue corridor was an Indian trail a footpath used by the native population The first European settlers to the area now known as Michigan also used this trail and in some areas enlarged it for the passage of wagons In Detroit Grand River is one of five major avenues along with Woodward Michigan Gratiot and Jefferson planned by Judge Augustus Woodward in 1805 that extended from Downtown Detroit in differing radial directions Grand River Avenue extends northwesterly from the city s downtown In the middle of the 19th century the trail was expanded into a plank road that formed the basis for one of the first state trunkline highways as M 16 in the early 20th century Later the highway was rerouted to replace M 126 and create M 104 Current segments of the roadway are still part of the state highway system as sections of M 5 M 11 M 43 or business loops off I 96 The portion of Grand River Avenue in Detroit between I 96 and the intersection with Cass Avenue and Middle Street in Downtown Detroit is an unsigned state trunkline sometimes referred to as Old Business Spur I 96 Old BS I 96 Contents 1 Route description 2 History 2 1 Indian trail to state highway 2 2 US Highway to Interstate 2 3 Post Interstate era 3 Memorial highway designations 4 Major intersections 5 Related trunklines 5 1 Grand Rapids bypass 5 2 Grand Rapids business loop 5 3 Farmington alternate route 5 4 Farmington business loop 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksRoute description edit nbsp SS Milwaukee Clipper docked in Muskegon At the time of its decommissioning US 16 started its run through Michigan at the Grand Trunk Western Railroad docks in Muskegon The SS Milwaukee Clipper operated as a car ferry across Lake Michigan connecting Muskegon to Milwaukee Wisconsin where US 16 continued to the west From the docks US 16 and M 46 traveled concurrently south and then east through downtown Muskegon At Peck Street US 16 turned south along Business US 31 Bus US 31 These two highways ran concurrently out of town to the south through Muskegon Heights to Norton Shores There the business loop ended at US 31 and US 16 joined the I 196 freeway headed east Later the I 96 and I 196 designations west of Grand Rapids would be flipped 5 but at the time leading up to US 16 s decommissioning in the state of Michigan this had not yet been approved 6 The I 196 US 16 freeway traveled southeast of Norton Shores through woodlands in rural Muskegon County parallel to the former US 16 routing through Fruitport to Nunica in Ottawa County The freeway turned more directly east in Nunica past the eastern terminus of M 104 and continued through more mixed forest and grassland terrain to serve the communities of Coopersville and Marne 3 As the freeway approached Kent County it met the western terminus of M 11 which was the former routing of US 16 through the Grand Rapids metropolitan area I 196 US 16 continued eastward around the north side of the metropolitan area through the suburbs of Walker and Comstock Park The freeway intersected the contemporaneous routing of US 131 along the East Beltline and curved south through the eastern edge of Grand Rapids to meet the end of I 96 east of downtown There I 196 ended and US 16 was transferred to the I 96 freeway I 96 US 16 continued southward intersecting Cascade Road which was previously US 16 Cascade Road east of this interchange meets the westernmost part of Grand River Avenue which carried US 16 east continuously to Downtown Detroit 3 a nbsp Grand River Avenue sign in East Lansing M 50 also joined the freeway at Cascade Road headed east and together I 96 US 16 M 50 continued through eastern Kent County M 50 departed to the south near Lowell and the freeway crossed into southern Ionia County Passing south of Portland the freeway crossed east into Clinton County North of Grand Ledge I 96 ended and US 16 followed Wright Road off the freeway to Grand River Avenue From there east US 16 resumed its historic routing into the city of Lansing Grand River Avenue carried the highway past the Capital City Airport and east to Larch Street where US 16 turned south along US 27 north of downtown Lansing At Saginaw Street eastbound US 16 turned east on the one way street while westbound traffic ran a block north on Grand River Avenue The two directions of travel merge at the east end of Saginaw Street in East Lansing Grand River Avenue through East Lansing follows a tree lined boulevard that forms the division between the campus of Michigan State University to the south and the rest of the city to the north US 16 continued east in Ingham County through Okemos and rural parts of the county through Williamston and Webberville 3 nbsp Modern M 43 running along Grand River Avenue at Collingwood Drive in East Lansing 2008 Grand River Avenue crosses to the east into Livingston County through Fowlerville to Howell In Howell Grand River Avenue meets Hartland Road which carries M 59 the highway also met M 155 in downtown which at the time provided access to the Howell State Hospital In the approach to Brighton Grand River Avenue passes through rural southeast Michigan lake country In Brighton Grand River Avenue crossed the western end of the I 96 freeway US 16 merged onto the freeway and I 96 US 16 met the northern end of the US 23 freeway I 96 US 16 continued east into Oakland County through Wixom and Novi 3 Near Farmington I 96 US 16 continued to the southeast of the present day I 96 I 275 I 696 M 5 interchange along the current M 5 freeway Grand River Avenue through there was Business Loop I 96 BL I 96 The freeway ends at a junction with Grand River Avenue that also marked the end of the business loop and the eastern end of I 96 at the time From there US 16 continued along Grand River Avenue the rest of way into Downtown Detroit Along that routing it intersected US 24 at Telegraph Road and M 39 at Southfield Road US 16 continued past the eastern terminus of M 14 at Plymouth Road which until 1956 had carried US 12 which had then been concurrent with US 16 to Cadillac Square There US 16 terminated at a common point with US 10 Woodward Avenue and US 12 Michigan Avenue which had replaced US 112 less than a year earlier US 25 ran through the square on Fort Street and Gratiot Avenue 3 History editThe history of Grand River Avenue and US 16 in Michigan dates back to before the earliest settlement of Michigan by Europeans The route has been the basis for an Indian trail a pathway for European settlers a state highway a part of the US Highway System and a section of the Interstate Highway System Indian trail to state highway edit nbsp M 16LocationMuskegon DetroitExistedc July 1 1919 8 November 11 1926 9 The chief transportation routes in 1701 were the Indian footpaths that crossed the future state of Michigan the Grand River Trail was one of these thirteen trails at the time In 1805 Detroit created 120 foot 37 m rights of way for the principal streets of the city Grand River Avenue included 10 This street plan was devised by Augustus Woodward and others following a devastating fire in Detroit 11 A ten year project to construct a plank road between Detroit and Howell was authorized in 1820 along the Grand River Trail 10 Grand River Avenue was included as one of Five Great Military Roads by Governor Lewis Cass in 1825 along with the River Road Michigan Avenue Woodward Avenue and Gratiot Avenue 12 The Grand River Road precursor to the modern Grand River Avenue was named by Benjamin Williams cofounder of Owosso 13 The original Native American name for the river was Wash ten ong sibi meaning the river that extends far off or far into the interior which was translated as La Grande Riviere the French name for the river this name was then applied to the name of the trail that paralleled at least half of the river s length 14 The opening of the Erie Canal in New York in 1826 brought new settlers to the Great Lakes region and to the future state of Michigan Many of these settlers began their inland journeys in Detroit At first the Grand River Road was a deep rutted ditch bordered road 15 The road branched into two at Rouge now Redford the southern branch roughly followed the modern route of Grand River Avenue and the northern route ran by way of Pontiac along Woodward Avenue and the modern M 21 to the north of the Lansing area 16 From Bancroft several trails branched off including the northern branch of the Grand River Road and the Saginaw Trail 17 The two branches merged back together near Dewitt and continued west toward Ionia and on to Grand Rapids and Newton now Grand Haven 18 The early travelers plied the road in wagons pulled by oxen or horses and drivers charged between four and seven cents a mile equivalent to 1 08 1 89 mi in 2023 19 The horses were exchanged every 12 15 miles 19 24 km with the speed averaging around 8 10 miles per hour 13 16 km h with few obstacles 20 Congress further aided the road in 1835 with an appropriation of 25 000 equivalent to 780 000 in 2023 21 for a 20 foot wide 6 m road on 100 feet 30 m of right of way 22 These improvements included removing brush and debris and the construction of bridges across the Rouge Shiawassee Red Cedar and Grand rivers 23 The Grand River Road was a major route for settlers headed inland to Grand Rapids in 1836 as the shortest route for travelers coming from Detroit 24 An economic panic in 1837 drove settlers from New York to Michigan these were the travelers who followed the Grand River Road New settlements were created along the route every six miles 9 7 km or so that distance being a good day s travel by horse Approximately 120 wagons left Detroit each day between August and November 1843 25 After statehood in 1837 Michigan assumed the costs for construction work to the Grand River Trail At that time about 60 miles 97 km had been surveyed from Detroit westward The new state lacked the money to continue improvements to the road and Michigan petitioned Congress for the better part of the next decade for money to complete the work 26 When the state capital was moved to Lansing in 1847 an improved road was needed to the capital city 25 The first segments of roadway were privatized starting in 1844 26 In 1850 the Michigan State Legislature established the Lansing and Howell Plank Road Company 27 which set about converting various Indian trails into the Lansing Howell Plank Road a task the company completed by 1853 At Howell the road connected with the Detroit Howell Plank Road establishing the first improved connection direct from the state capital to Michigan s largest metropolis The Lansing Detroit Plank Road was a toll road until the 1880s and it eventually evolved into the eastern part of the modern Grand River Avenue 28 nbsp West Grand River Avenue in Howell 1900 By 1900 only a short stretch of the Detroit Howell Plank Road was still made of planks most of the other plank roads had been converted to gravel by this time 29 On May 13 1913 the Michigan Legislature passed the State Reward Trunk Line Highway Act Public Act 334 of 1913 that created the original state highway system In that act Grand River Avenue between Detroit and Grand Rapids was included as Division 9 of the system 30 The state highways were signposted starting in 1919 31 and on the first maps published on July 1 of that year the Michigan State Highway Department MSHD had applied the M 16 number to Grand River Avenue across the state between Grand Haven and Detroit 8 M 16 was rerouted in the Lansing area in 1925 running along Grand River Avenue from Grand Ledge to East Lansing The former routing through Downtown Lansing on Michigan Avenue became part of M 39 and the section north of Grand Ledge was eventually redesignated M 100 A second realignment moved M 16 to follow Grand River Avenue from Ionia through Ada The former alignment became a part of M 21 32 On August 7 1926 the state completed paving on M 16 opening it to traffic as the first paved highway across the state 33 The M 16 designation lasted for seven years As the states were meeting with the American Association of State Highway Officials AASHO now AASHTO to plan the United States Numbered Highway System the route of M 16 was originally planned for inclusion in US 18 34 When the system was created on November 11 1926 2 Grand River Avenue and M 16 became part of US 16 9 US Highway to Interstate edit nbsp M 126LocationMuskegon Heights NunicaLength11 94 mi 1 19 22 km Existed1934 35 1940 36 In 1929 Allan Williams placed a picnic table on the side of the road along US 16 south of Saranac Williams was the Ionia County engineer in charge of the various roads in the county and that location is what many consider to be the nation s first roadside table 37 b The first change to the US 16 routing was made in 1933 when the highway was moved to bypass Farmington with the old routing retained as a state highway 39 40 The next year in 1934 M 126 was created between Nunica and Muskegon 35 In 1940 US 16 was rerouted to replace M 126 and the former route of US 16 between Nunica and Grand Haven was redesignated M 104 36 Two further changes during 1941 42 rerouted the western end in Muskegon to end at the car ferry docks Previously motorists had to navigate from the western end along other roads to the ferry connection to the rest of US 16 in Wisconsin The second change routed Bypass US 16 Byp US 16 along 28th Street and Wilson previously the South Beltline and West Beltline sections of M 114 in the Grand Rapids area 41 The US 16 designation was moved in 1953 to replace Byp US 16 while the former routing through downtown Grand Rapids was redesignated Business US 16 Bus US 16 42 43 nbsp Olympia Stadium on Grand River Avenue home of the Detroit Red Wings from 1927 to 1979 MSHD had plans to upgrade the US 16 corridor to freeway standards in the middle of the 20th century The first planning map in 1947 for what later became the Interstate Highway System showed a highway in the corridor 44 The General Location of National System of Interstate Highways Including All Additional Routes at Urban Areas Designated in September 1955 showed generalized plans for the locations of Interstate Highways as designated in 1955 This also included a highway in the US 16 corridor 45 The 1957 approval for the Interstate Highway System replaced the Grand Rapids Detroit section of US 16 with a portion of Interstate 94 I 94 with the remainder to be I 94N 46 MSHD submitted a recommended numbering plan for the Interstates in 1958 that showed I 96 following the US 16 corridor 47 When initially approved the Muskegon Grand Rapids segment of US 16 was to be numbered as I 196 while the remainder was part of I 96 48 Segments of the road were upgraded in 1956 between Coopersville and Marne Portland and Eagle and Brighton and Farmington 49 By 1962 freeway construction allowed motorists to travel between Muskegon and the Lansing area on a freeway bypassing the old Grand River Avenue route 3 The final connection between Lansing and Brighton was completed in late 1962 At that time the US 16 designation which had been applied alongside the I 96 and I 196 designations was decommissioned Segments of the old highway were retained in the state highway system under different numbers Sections through Portland Lansing Howell Farmington and Detroit were given Business Loop BL or Business Spur BS I 96 designations The section between Lansing and Webberville became part of an extended M 43 3 4 Other sections in the Detroit area became parts of M 102 M 5 or unsigned state highway 50 51 Post Interstate era edit External image nbsp Old Plank Road demolition facing west in East Lansing near Bailey Street in early 1996 After US 16 was transferred to the new freeway Grand River Avenue lost its state highway status along most of its length Today the roadway remains the Main Street of over a dozen Michigan cities and a scenic route through one of the state s most populated corridors In 1995 major reconstruction work along Grand River Avenue in East Lansing uncovered rotting logs buried about 2 feet 0 61 m below the present grade that had been used as underlayment for the plank road surface in a low swampy area The logs had been in place for nearly 150 years 52 In 2004 the state transferred several blocks at the eastern end of Grand River Avenue to the City of Detroit State trunkline control now ends at the corner of Grand River Avenue Middle Street and Cass Avenue 53 54 Community leaders in Lansing have proposed renaming a section of Grand River Avenue in Old Town Lansing for Cesar Chavez the Mexican American civil rights activist The group Lansing for Cesar E Chavez was raising funds to rename the section between Oakland and Pine streets in Old Town Previously a section of Grand Avenue was renamed for Chavez in 1994 but the voters overturned the decision 55 The renaming proposal was even mentioned as a way to untangle a maze of different branches of Grand River Avenue running through Old Town Currently East Grand River Avenue and North Grand River Avenue bridge between sections of Grand River Avenue in addition to Grand Avenue which runs along the Grand River near downtown 56 While Lansing s Latino community supported the proposal the business community opposed it One shop owner said she would have 10 000 in costs associated with a name change adding I think there s many beautiful ways to honor such an incredible man Changing five blocks of a street doesn t seem to do justice 57 Another business owner cited the work the Old Town Commercial Association has done to market the area using the Grand River Avenue name marketing that would be useless after a name change 57 The compromise solution reached in August 2010 was to rename lot 56 where Old Town holds festivals to Cesar Chavez Plaza Street signs would be installed marking parts of Grand River Avenue as Cesar E Chavez Avenue but only in a memorial capacity the street would still be officially named Grand River Avenue 58 Memorial highway designations edit nbsp Arthur H Vandenberg Born in Grand Rapids in 1884 Arthur H Vandenberg was appointed to the United States Senate upon the death in office of Woodbridge N Ferris in 1928 Vandenberg a Republican served as a member of the isolationist bloc and was an active opponent of the New Deal policies of Franklin D Roosevelt The senator declined a nomination for Vice President in 1936 In the aftermath of World War II Vandenberg s world view changed significantly He helped to draft the United Nations Charter and worked to secure its unanimous ratification in the Senate He also worked to secure passage of the Marshall Plan and helped to establish the North Atlantic Treaty Organization After his death in 1951 Michigan residents wanted to memorialize Vandenberg The following year the Michigan Legislature dedicated the length of US 16 from Muskegon to Detroit as the Arthur Vandenberg Memorial Highway by enacting Public Act 70 of 1952 59 nbsp George Washington Vandenberg was not the only national figure honored with a memorial designation along the route of US 16 in Michigan For a period from the 1930s through the 1950s the highway used a few blocks of Washington Boulevard to connect between Grand River and Michigan avenues on its route through Detroit to its terminus at Cadillac Square This street was named in honor of George Washington for his service as the father of his country The street was named by Judge Woodward as a part of his general street plan for the city of Detroit in 1807 60 Major intersections editCountyLocationmi 1 kmDestinationsNotes MuskegonMuskegon0 0000 000Car ferry docks nbsp nbsp M 46 east Mart Street SS Milwaukee Clipper connected to US 16 in Wisconsin western terminus of M 46 1 1001 770 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Bus US 31 north M 46 east Peck Street Northern end of Bus US 31 concurrency eastern end of M 46 concurrency Norton Shores6 1609 914 nbsp nbsp I 196 east nbsp US 31 Ludington Holland nbsp nbsp nbsp Bus US 31 north Airline Highway Western end of I 196 concurrency southern end of Bus US 31 concurrency OttawaNunica15 45224 868 nbsp nbsp M 104 west Grand HavenEastern terminus of M 104 Tallmadge Township30 09948 440 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Bus US 16 east M 11 east Remembrance Road Grand RapidsWestern terminus of M 11 KentWalker36 45558 669 nbsp nbsp M 37 north Alpine Avenue Traverse CityWestern end of M 37 concurrency Grand Rapids39 22363 123 nbsp nbsp Bus US 131 Plainfield Avenue 43 23369 577 nbsp nbsp I 196 west nbsp nbsp I 96 eastEastern end of I 196 concurrency western end of I 96 concurrency 43 96170 748 nbsp nbsp nbsp US 131 M 37 south East Beltline Avenue Cadillac Kalamazoo HastingsEastern end of M 37 concurrency Grand Rapids Township44 89772 255 nbsp M 21 Fulton Street Holland Flint 46 17474 310 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Bus US 16 west M 50 west Cascade Road Grand RapidsWestern end of M 50 concurrency Cascade Township49 14679 093 nbsp nbsp M 11 west 28th Street Eastern terminus of M 11 Lowell Township58 46394 087 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp M 50 east M 91 north Jackson GreenvilleEastern end of M 50 concurrency southern terminus of M 91 IoniaBerlin Township73 587118 427 nbsp M 66 Ionia Battle Creek ClintonEagle Township92 578148 990 nbsp nbsp I 96 west nbsp M 100 Grand LedgeI 96 temporarily ended here US 16 follows Grand River Avenue east InghamLansing101 738163 731 nbsp nbsp M 174 north Logan Street 103 103165 928 nbsp US 27 Larch Street ClareNorthern end of US 27 concurrency 103 630166 776 nbsp nbsp nbsp M 43 west M 78 Saginaw Street Hastings nbsp nbsp US 27 south Larch Street Eastern terminus of M 43 southern end of US 27 concurrency Leroy Township121 099194 890 nbsp nbsp M 47 northSouthern terminus of M 47 LivingstonHowell157 476253 433 nbsp nbsp M 59 east PontiacWestern terminus of M 59 160 154257 743 nbsp nbsp M 155 westEastern terminus of M 155 Brighton168 676271 458 nbsp nbsp I 96 eastWestern end of I 96 freeway concurrency Brighton Township171 212275 539 nbsp US 23 Flint Ann Arbor OaklandWest Novi182 782294 159 nbsp nbsp M 218 east Wixom Road PontiacWestern terminus of M 218 Farmington189 210304 504 nbsp nbsp BL I 96 east 193 314311 109 nbsp nbsp I 96 west nbsp nbsp BL I 96 westEastern end of I 96 freeway concurrency Oakland Wayne county lineFarmington Township Livonia city line194 590313 162 nbsp nbsp M 102 east 8 Mile Road 8 Mile Road is the county and city line western terminus of M 102 WayneDetroit197 135317 258 nbsp US 24 Telegraph Road Toledo 200 584322 809 nbsp M 39 Southfield Road 204 499329 109 nbsp nbsp M 14 west Plymouth Road Ann ArborEastern terminus of M 14 207 727334 304 nbsp I 94 Edsel Ford Freeway 209 431337 047 nbsp BS I 696 John C Lodge Freeway 210 643338 997 nbsp nbsp US 10 west Woodward Avenue Pontiac nbsp nbsp US 12 west Michigan Avenue Ypsilanti nbsp US 25 Fort Street Gratiot Avenue Port Huron ToledoCadillac Square served as the common terminus for US 10 US 12 and US 16 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminusRelated trunklines editGrand Rapids bypass edit nbsp nbsp Bypass US Highway 16LocationGrand RapidsLength20 197 mi 1 32 504 km Existed1942 41 1953 42 43 Bypass US Highway 16 Byp US 16 was a bypass route of US 16 in the Grand Rapids area The highway became a part of the state highway system c 1930 as a part of M 114 which was a beltline around the Grand Rapids area 61 By 1942 the trunkline was completed and reassigned a Byp US 16 designation along the southern and western legs The designation connected to US 16 in Walker Township now the city of Walker and ran south along what is now Wilson Avenue over the Grand River into Grandville From there it turned easterly along what is now 28th Street through Wyoming and Paris townships now the cities of Wyoming and Kentwood before terminating at US 16 in Cascade Township 62 The designation was used until the mainline US 16 was rerouted over the bypass in 1953 63 64 Grand Rapids business loop edit nbsp nbsp Business US Highway 16LocationGrand RapidsLength17 102 mi 1 27 523 km Existed1953 42 43 1962 3 65 Business US Highway 16 Bus US 16 was a business route in the Grand Rapids area in the 1950s and 1960s When US 16 was rerouted to replace Byp US 16 around the southern and western sides of the city in 1953 the former route of the mainline through downtown was redesignated as the business loop 42 43 That loop followed Remembrance Avenue southeasterly to Leonard Avenue in Walker Township From there the loop turned easterly on Leonard over the Grand River to Monroe Avenue before turning south parallel to the river along Monroe into downtown In downtown Grand Rapids Bus US 16 turned eastward on Fulton Avenue into East Grand Rapids There the loop followed Cascade Road into Cascade Township where it reconnected to US 16 at the intersection with 28th Street Bus US 16 lasted until 1962 when US 16 was decommissioned in Michigan 3 4 Farmington alternate route edit nbsp US Highway 16ALocationFarmingtonLength3 863 mi 1 6 217 km Existed1933 39 40 1956 49 66 US Highway 16A US 16A was an alternate route for US 16 that bypassed Farmington It was designated in 1933 40 for a new highway that bypassed downtown along what is now Freedom Road 67 In 1956 the designation was decommissioned when mainline US 16 was rerouted out of downtown Farmington replacing US 16A At the same time the former route of the mainline through downtown was redesignated Bus US 16 49 66 Farmington business loop edit nbsp nbsp Business US Highway 16LocationFarmingtonLength4 129 mi 1 6 645 km Existed1956 49 66 1961 3 68 Business US Highway 16 Bus US 16 was a business loop through downtown Farmington along Grand River Avenue Its western terminus was at the junction of US 16 and Grand River Avenue west of the city and the eastern terminus was at the intersection between US 16 and Grand River Avenue southeast of Farmington This highway was the original route of US 16 though downtown Farmington In 1933 US 16 was routed onto a bypass route which had been constructed south of the city the present day Freedom Road and the route through Farmington was retained as state trunkline 39 40 In 1956 a new bypass freeway was built just to the south of the old bypass as part of the Brighton Farmington Expressway and the route through downtown was designated Bus US 16 49 66 The original plans for I 96 called for it to replace US 16 and to run parallel to Grand River Avenue all the way from Farmington into downtown Detroit In 1959 the Farmington bypass freeway was given the I 96 designation in addition to the US 16 moniker 69 and the business route was redesignated as Business Loop I 96 two years later 3 68 See also edit nbsp Michigan Highways portalNotes edit Grand River Avenue ends at Cascade Road but the historic routing carried it through Ada and Plainfield Township along the Grand River The western end is at East Beltline short of its westernmost extent in Grand Rapids 7 Other sources state that the first roadside park in the United States was created by Herbert Larson along what is now US 2 near Iron River in 1919 20 38 References edit a b c d e f g Michigan Department of Transportation 2021 Next Generation PR Finder Map Michigan Department of Transportation Retrieved October 11 2021 a b McNichol Dan 2006 The Roads that Built America New York Sterling p 74 ISBN 1 4027 3468 9 OCLC 63377558 a b c d e f g h i j k l Michigan State Highway Department 1962 Official Highway Map Map c 1 918 720 Lansing Michigan State Highway Department K8 M14 OCLC 12701120 173191490 Retrieved October 17 2019 via Michigan History Center a b c Michigan State Highway Department 1963 Official Highway Map Map c 1 918 720 Lansing Michigan State Highway Department K8 M14 OCLC 12701120 Retrieved October 17 2019 via Michigan History Center New Numbers Seen for Road The Holland Evening Sentinel United Press International October 23 1963 p 4 ISSN 1050 4044 OCLC 13440201 Retrieved April 12 2016 via Newspapers com Would Shift Route Number Mackie Seeks Int 96 Designation for Grand Rapids Muskegon Stretch The Grand Rapids Press May 1 1963 p 32 OCLC 9975013 City of Lansing n d Lansing History City of Lansing Archived from the original on December 20 2012 Retrieved March 21 2008 a b Michigan State Highway Department July 1 1919 State of Michigan Map Scale not given Lansing Michigan State Highway Department Lower Peninsula sheet OCLC 15607244 Retrieved October 17 2019 via Michigan History Center a b Bureau of Public Roads amp American Association of State Highway Officials November 11 1926 United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials Map 1 7 000 000 Washington DC United States Geological Survey OCLC 32889555 Retrieved November 7 2013 via Wikimedia Commons a b Lingeman Stanley D April 6 2001 Michigan Highway History Timeline 1701 2001 300 Years of Progress Lansing Library of Michigan p 1 OCLC 435640179 Baulch Vivian M June 13 1999 Woodward Avenue Detroit s Grand Old Main Street The Detroit News Archived from the original on January 4 2009 Retrieved September 5 2010 Wayne County Department of Public Services n d History The River Road Detroit Wayne County Department of Public Services Archived from the original on December 19 2007 Retrieved September 6 2010 Woodard Sadie G 1966 Grand River Road A Traveler s View of a Historic Route that Traversed Early Michigan Lansing Michigan Plane Tree Press p 12 OCLC 433271 Walton Ivan Spring 1955 Indian Place Names in Michigan Midwest Folklore Vol 5 no 1 Michigan ed pp 23 34 ISSN 0544 0750 JSTOR 4317501 OCLC 681735082 Woodard 1966 p 6 Woodard 1966 pp 8 10 Woodard 1966 pp 10 11 Woodard 1966 pp 11 12 1634 1699 McCusker J J 1997 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States Addenda et Corrigenda PDF American Antiquarian Society 1700 1799 McCusker J J 1992 How Much Is That in Real Money A Historical Price Index for Use as a Deflator of Money Values in the Economy of the United States PDF American Antiquarian Society 1800 present Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis Consumer Price Index estimate 1800 Retrieved February 29 2024 Woodard 1966 p 13 Johnston Louis amp Williamson Samuel H 2023 What Was the U S GDP Then MeasuringWorth Retrieved November 30 2023 United States Gross Domestic Product deflator figures follow the MeasuringWorth series Lingeman 2001 p 2 Woodard 1966 p 28 Fisher Ernest B ed 1918 Grand Rapids and Kent County Michigan Historical Account of Their Progress from First Settlement to the Present Time Vol 1 Chicago Robert O Law p 78 OCLC 13781280 a b Woodard 1966 pp 24 29 a b Barnett LeRoy 2004 A Drive Down Memory Lane The Named State and Federal Highways of Michigan Allegan Forest Michigan Priscilla Press p 93 ISBN 1 886167 24 9 OCLC 57425393 Michigan Legislature March 20 1850 An Act to Incorporate the Lansing and Howell Plank Road Company Michigan Department of Natural Resources Archived from the original on October 10 2010 Retrieved September 6 2010 Towar James DeLoss 1933 History of the City of East Lansing East Lansing Michigan East Lansing Public Library pp 24 25 hdl 2027 mdp 39015071337409 OCLC 605707523 Mason Philip P 1959 Michigan Highways from Indian Trails to Expressways Ann Arbor Michigan Braun Brumfield p 11 OCLC 23314983 Michigan Legislature 1915 enacted May 13 1913 Chapter 91 State Reward Trunk Line Highways In Shields Edmund C Black Cyrenius P Broomfield Archibald eds The Compiled Laws of the State of Michigan Vol 1 Lansing Michigan Wynkoop Hallenbeck Crawford pp 1868 72 OCLC 44724558 Retrieved January 24 2012 Michigan May Do Well Following Wisconsin s Road Marking System The Grand Rapids Press September 20 1919 p 10 OCLC 9975013 Michigan State Highway Department September 1 1925 Official Highway Condition Map Map c 1 823 680 Lansing Michigan State Highway Department Archived from the original on May 10 2017 Retrieved December 18 2016 via Archives of Michigan Barnett 2004 p 94 Joint Board on Interstate Highways 1925 Appendix VI Descriptions of the Interstate Routes Selected with Numbers Assigned Report of Joint Board on Interstate Highways October 30 1925 Approved by the Secretary of Agriculture November 18 1925 Report Washington DC United States Department of Agriculture p 50 OCLC 733875457 55123355 71026428 Retrieved November 14 2017 via Wikisource a b Michigan State Highway Department amp Rand McNally September 1 1934 Official Michigan Highway Map Map c 1 850 000 Lansing Michigan State Highway Department K8 OCLC 12701143 a b Michigan State Highway Department amp Rand McNally December 1 1940 Official Michigan Highway Map Map Winter ed c 1 850 000 Lansing Michigan State Highway Department K8 OCLC 12701143 Ellison Garret July 4 2011 Ionia County Boasts First Roadside Picnic Table One of West Michigan s Hidden Gems The Grand Rapids Press OCLC 9975013 Archived from the original on October 14 2012 Retrieved July 6 2011 Bleck Christina April 20 2015 Roadside Relief Parks Rest Areas Turnouts Aid Travelers The Mining Journal Marquette Michigan p 1A ISSN 0898 4964 OCLC 9729223 a b c Michigan State Highway Department amp Rand McNally May 1 1933 Official Michigan Highway Map Map c 1 840 000 Lansing Michigan State Highway Department M12 M13 OCLC 12701053 Archived from the original on May 10 2017 Retrieved December 18 2016 via Archives of Michigan a b c d Michigan State Highway Department amp Rand McNally September 1 1933 Official Michigan Highway Map Map c 1 840 000 Lansing Michigan State Highway Department M12 M13 OCLC 12701053 a b Michigan State Highway Department amp Rand McNally June 1 1942 Official Michigan Highway Map Map Summer ed c 1 850 000 Lansing Michigan State Highway Department K8 L9 OCLC 12701143 a b c d Michigan State Highway Department April 15 1953 Official Highway Map Map c 1 918 720 Lansing Michigan State Highway Department K9 L9 OCLC 12701120 a b c d Michigan State Highway Department October 1 1953 Official Highway Map Map c 1 918 720 Lansing Michigan State Highway Department K9 L9 OCLC 12701120 Retrieved October 17 2019 via Michigan History Center Public Roads Administration August 2 1947 National System of Interstate Highways Map Scale not given Washington DC Federal Works Agency OCLC 77721014 30326602 Bureau of Public Roads September 1955 General Location of National System of Interstate Highways Including All Additional Routes at Urban Areas Designated in September 1955 Map Scale not given Washington DC Government Printing Office OCLC 416597 via Wikimedia Commons Public Roads Administration August 14 1957 Official Route Numbering for the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways Map Scale not given Washington DC Public Roads Administration Retrieved September 4 2010 Michigan State Highway Department April 25 1958 Recommended Interstate Route Numbering for Michigan Report Lansing Michigan State Highway Department Archived from the original on August 5 2004 Retrieved September 4 2010 Bureau of Public Roads 1977 c 1963 National System of Interstate and Defense Highways Map In Federal Highway Administration ed America s Highways 1776 1976 Scale not given Washington DC Government Printing Office p 277 OCLC 3280344 Retrieved September 4 2010 via Wikimedia Commons a b c d e Michigan State Highway Department October 1 1956 Official Highway Map Map c 1 918 720 Lansing Michigan State Highway Department K8 L10 M12 M13 OCLC 12701120 Retrieved October 17 2019 via Michigan History Center Michigan Department of Transportation 2007 Michigan Official Department of Transportation Map Map c 1 158 400 Lansing Michigan Department of Transportation Detroit Area inset OCLC 42778335 Archived from the original on August 27 2019 Retrieved August 26 2019 via Archives of Michigan Michigan Department of Transportation 2008 Truck Operator s Map Map c 1 221 760 Lansing Michigan Department of Transportation Detroit and Vicinity inset OCLC 261183721 Michigan Historical Museum n d An Old Plank Road in East Lansing Settling a State Michigan Department of Natural Resources Archived from the original on September 20 2011 Retrieved September 14 2007 Michigan Department of Transportation 2004 Truck Operator s Map Map c 1 221 760 Lansing Michigan Department of Transportation Detroit and Vicinity inset Michigan Department of Transportation 2005 Truck Operator s Map Map c 1 221 760 Lansing Michigan Department of Transportation Detroit and Vicinity inset Leppek Kyle April 14 2010 Avenida Chavez Naming a Street after the Labor Leader Hopes to Avoid Pitfalls of Last Go Around City Pulse Lansing Michigan OCLC 48427464 Archived from the original on July 28 2011 Retrieved September 6 2010 Melinn Kyle June 16 2010 The Drive for Cesar E Chavez Avenue City Pulse Lansing Michigan OCLC 48427464 Archived from the original on November 9 2013 Retrieved September 6 2010 a b Pohl Scott June 15 2010 Effort to Rename Grand River Avenue in Old Town Lansing Meeting with Resistance Lansing Michigan WKAR AM Archived from the original on December 4 2014 Retrieved September 6 2010 Maki Jessica August 13 2010 Supporters Happy Chavez Will Be Honored Lansing Michigan WLNS TV Barnett 2004 pp 25 26 Barnett 2004 p 235 Michigan State Highway Department amp H M Gousha January 1 1930 Official Highway Service Map Map Scale not given Lansing Michigan State Highway Department Grand Rapids inset OCLC 12701195 79754957 Michigan State Highway Department amp Rand McNally June 1 1942 Official Michigan Highway Map Map Summer ed Scale not given Lansing Michigan State Highway Department Grand Rapids inset OCLC 12701143 Michigan State Highway Department April 15 1953 Official Highway Map Map Scale not given Lansing Michigan State Highway Department Grand Rapids inset OCLC 12701120 Michigan State Highway Department October 1 1953 Official Highway Map Map Scale not given Lansing Michigan State Highway Department Grand Rapids inset OCLC 12701120 Retrieved October 17 2019 via Michigan History Center Michigan State Highway Department 1963 Official Highway Map Map Scale not given Lansing Michigan State Highway Department Detroit Area inset OCLC 12701120 Retrieved October 17 2019 via Michigan History Center a b c d Michigan State Highway Department April 15 1956 Official Highway Map Map Scale not given Lansing Michigan State Highway Department Detroit Area inset OCLC 12701120 Google January 16 2016 Overview Map of Former US 16A in Farmington Map Google Maps Google Retrieved January 16 2016 a b Michigan State Highway Department 1961 Official Highway Map Map Scale not given Lansing Michigan State Highway Department Detroit Area inset OCLC 12701120 51857665 Retrieved October 17 2019 via Michigan History Center Includes all changes through July 1 1961 Michigan Delays Road Number System Toledo Blade June 4 1959 p 11 OCLC 12962635 Retrieved November 21 2010 via Google News Further reading editMilan Jon amp Offen Gail 2014 Grand River Avenue From Detroit to Lake Michigan Images of America Charleston South Carolina Arcadia Publishing ISBN 978 1 4671 1212 3 OCLC 882189548 External links editKML file edit help Template Attached KML U S Route 16 in MichiganKML is from Wikidata Historic US 16 at Michigan Highways Historic US 16 Timeline at Michigan Highways Former M 126 at Michigan Highways Former BS I 96 at Michigan Highways Unsigned Old BS I 96 at Michigan Highways The Old Plank Road at A Brief History of East Lansing Michigan nbsp US Highway 16 Previous state Wisconsin Michigan Next state Terminus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title U S Route 16 in Michigan amp oldid 1213197616 Grand Rapids bypass, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.