
Prior to 1926, the United
States was crisscrossed by hundreds of “trails” or highways that were mostly
unpaved, dirt roads maintained by counties and states. Boosters who were part
of the “Good Roads” movement gave these trails names, and tried to promote them
to the growing numbers of motorists as nice routes to travel. The Lincoln
Highway, for example, was the first of the coast-to-coast highways. The Lee
Highway ran from Washington, D.C., to San Diego. The Great Plains Highway,
running north to south roughly where Highway 83 is today, was one of these
informal roads.
The Federal Highway
Commission in 1924 was tasked with establishing a federal highway system that
would end these ad hoc roads and names. While some of the boosters complained
that changing the names to numbers would be cold and colorless, the commission
decided the most logical way to name the roads would be with easy to remember
digits — even numbered roads going east to west and odd, north to south, with
the coast-to-coast roads ending with “0.”
When the list of roads was
first floated, North Dakota representatives complained that the state had only
two roads, one in the east and one in the west, but nothing down the middle.
The commissioners added Route 83, which initially ran from Sterling, North
Dakota to the South Dakota border.
It next expanded down to
Pierre, South Dakota, and over the decades, the highway grew. It was mostly
gravel at first, and little of it was paved outside of the towns.
Until the late 1930s,
Highway 83 south of Pierre had a different route. Highway 83 ran east of there,
and traveled south through Nebraska and Kansas where Highway 183 is today. As
the vision of Highway 83 as a border-to-border highway grew, it was changed to
the western route it runs today and the two highway numbers switched.
Because of the Great Depression,
and World War II, progress on completing the road was slow. But throughout the
1950s, more and more of it became paved.
Finally, more than three
decades after it was established, Route 83 was paved from border to border. The
last stretch was sealed near Thedford, Nebraska, in Sept. 1959. Thousands of
people attended The Highway 83 celebration held in the Sand Hills town.
Highway boosterism returned
and the U.S. Highway 83 Association began promoting the road as a great place
to travel. It printed up several versions of the postcard seen to the right.