Kentucky’s Oldest Road Had a Dramatic Effect on American Travel

I’ve spent a good deal of spare time driving the backroads of Kentucky and have recently tackled some new ones. Earlier this year, I drove a Kentucky highway that was new to me but, in actuality, is as far from NEW as you can get when it comes to roads in the Commonwealth.

The Oldest Road in Kentucky

Completed in 1835, the Maysville Road is a 67-mile-long stretch of U.S. Highway 68 from Lexington to Maysville.

What the Maysville Road Meant to the Rest of the Country

Of course, it wasn’t numbered when it became the first American highway that led folks west across the Appalachians. Professor Karl Raitz from the University of Kentucky’s Department of Anthropology and Nancy O’Malley–the assistant director of the William S. Webb Museum of Anthropology at the university–wrote a book called Kentucky’s Frontier Highway: Historical Landscapes Along the Maysville Road that explores the history of this transformative byway.

The Kentucky Transportation Cabinet’s Heritage Spotlight describes it here:

It was the first highway in the trans-Appalachian West and was one of the most important roads in post-colonial America. It linked the “Eden of the West” (early 1800s Lexington) to the commercial centers of a growing nation.

Sights to See on Kentucky’s Oldest Road

Now, what can you see today as you travel along Kentucky’s oldest highway? Well, you’ll either begin in Lexington or WIND UP in Lexington, but we’re all well aware there’s plenty to do in the Commonwealth’s second-largest city. So let’s move on to Paris KY and a 4K virtual tour of the city. Now this tour is VERY detailed, so you might want to skip ahead to the 21:00 mark where a look at the downtown area begins. But if you want to go straight to a TOTALLY expected landmark, go to 23:24:…

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