07/07/2025
🛣️ July 7, 1919 – The Road Trip That Built America 🚛🗽
Before the interstates. Before asphalt ribbons stitched America together. There was dirt. Sand. Swamps. Bridges too weak for trucks to cross. And yet, on July 7, 1919, the U.S. Army launched an audacious experiment: a cross-country motor convoy from Washington, D.C. to San Francisco. Among the passengers was a little-known Lieutenant Colonel named Dwight D. Eisenhower.
🚛 The Mission
The War Department wanted to test the mobility of its motorized units after World War I—and to prove a point. At the time, America had no true national road system. Outside of cities, most roads were muddy wagon tracks or rough gravel paths. The Good Roads Movement was gaining traction, but it would take something dramatic to convince lawmakers that the country’s infrastructure needed federal support.
Enter the convoy:
👉3,251 miles overland
👉62 days of nonstop travel
👉24 officers, 258 enlisted men, and 81 motor vehicles—trucks, motorcycles, ambulances, wreckers, even a mobile kitchen
👉Speeds averaging 6 mph
The convoy followed the Lincoln Highway, the nation’s first cross-country road—but in truth, it was more dream than reality. In the East, the roads were manageable. But by Nebraska, they were wading through deep sand and mud. Vehicles broke axles. Tires shredded. Engines overheated. At times, entire crews pushed trucks through ruts up to their hubs in quicksand. In Utah, the salt desert nearly ended the trip: vehicles were mired for hours, fuel ran low, and water was so scarce that each man was rationed a single cup.
📍 Moments of Chaos
👉In western Nebraska, 25 trucks slid off a slippery road into ditches—in one day.
👉In the Utah desert, the convoy covered 15 miles in 7.5 hours, most of it by manpower.
👉Bridges across the Midwest buckled under military weight—sometimes forcing the convoy to ford rivers or detour miles off course.
👉In the Sierra Nevadas, the trucks were so battered that engineers had to tow 12 vehicles at once just to keep moving.
🎖️ The Impact
Though grueling, the mission was a success. The convoy arrived in San Francisco on September 6, greeted with parades and a banquet. But more importantly, it left its mark on Eisenhower.
Decades later, having seen the well-maintained autobahns of Germany during WWII and remembering the suffering of 1919, President Eisenhower championed the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956—which gave birth to the Interstate Highway System.
🛻 Why It Matters Today
At Elmer Buchta Trucking, we run the same highways Eisenhower helped create—paved in part by the lessons of that punishing journey. Every load we haul, every destination we reach, is a direct result of that dusty, broken, determined path across America.
We remember July 7, 1919 not just as a piece of history, but as the moment American transportation truly began to move forward.