New Moto Guzzi Door Mats Available Now
The link wouldn’t work for me. I’d like to print one of those alright
Very interesting, thanks for posting. I'd love to see some smaller scale.Plenty of interesting things to point out here, but a few that stood out to me..No Mackinac bridgeNo Lake Ponchartrain causewayNo Hampton Roads connectionsAtlanta, Miami, Charlotte apparently aren't big enough to warrant ALL CAPS, but Pittsburgh and Cleveland are.L.A. & S.F. are the only western cities that do.
My impression too. Many, many major roads that existed then are not shown. I still prefer paper maps and carry the map for each state I plan to be in or might be in on a trip.Pete
I don't know what you meant by "smaller scale."
My mistake, I meant larger scale - closer in and greater detail.I had to look it up - I always get those confused.
The three features Old Mojo pointed out all opened in 1956 or 1957, so the 1955 map is correct for its date, with respect to them. Can you give some specific examples of the "many, many major roads that existed then [i.e., in 1955]" that are missing from the map?I carry modern paper maps too. It would be foolish to rely directly on the 1955 map, of course.
... US 62 from Niagara Falls, NY to El Paso, TX, created in the 1930s, nothing on the map ...Pete
Your statement about US 62 is false. The map does indeed show it running from El Paso to Oklahoma City, to Paducah, KY, and then to Moranburg, on the Ohio River, about 1500 miles. After that, the remainder up to Niagra Falls is missing. I didn't check your other claims. I doubt that any omitted highways, or pieces of highways, were considered "major roads," as you assert them to have been. Otherwise they would have been included by the cartographers. In any event, if the map doesn't meet your needs, don't use it.Moto
The point is the map is in no way complete as you just confirmed and its Niagara Falls.Pete