'^ THE.- F.>^ P-ME^PCS ^/^«^ BRIDGES X V • \X/ • J^ ^*^ ^ ^^ Class JULl Book. ' ^^3 /f r Copyright}]?. COPYRIGHT DEPOSm THE FARMER'S PRACTICAL LIBRARY EDITED BY ERNEST INGERSOLL ROADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES BY LOGAN WALLER PAGE TLe Farmers Practical Library EDITED BY ERNEST INGERSOLL Cloth i6mo Illustrated From Kitchen to Garret. By Virginia Terhune Van de Water. Neighborhood Entertainments. By Renee B. Stern, of the Congressional Library. Home Waterworks. By Carleton J. Lynde, Professor of Physics in Mac- donald College, Quebec. Animal Competitors. By Ernest Ingersoll. Health on the Farm. By Dr. H. F. Harris, Secretary Georgia State Board of Health. Co-operation Among Farmers. By John Lee Coulter. Roads, Paths and Bridges. By L. W. Page, Chief of the Office of Public Roads, U. S. Department of Agriculture. The Satisfactions of Country Life. By Dr. James W. Robertson, Principal of Macdonald College, Quebec. Farm Management. By C. W. Pugsley, Professor of Agronomy and Farm Man- agement in the University of Nebraska. Electricity on the Farm. By Frederick M. Conlee. The Farm Mechanic. By L. W. Chase, Professor of Farm Mechanics in the University of Nebraska. Ballads of the Countryside. By George S. Bryan. BPaPI^^^^^^^^Bl^^^l^^B& .^M ^'^ t: \ri ■ ■ "^l^tjlfi %^' -- '^V : -.;,», »*?■ 'u *^-'?^^^^> jji J# aHpH^H^^HBBI^o^S His II^BiS^HniMMWIP'iii '% A GRAVEL ROAD NEAR SAVANNAH, GA. ROADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES BY LOGAN WALLER PAGE DIRECTOR, UNITED STATES OFFICE OP PUBLIC ROADS; PRESIDENT, AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR HIGHWAY IMPROVEMENT; AND MEMBER, AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS ILLUSTRATED IRew l^orfi STURGIS & WALTON COMPANY 191^ All rights reserved ji ^^h Copyright 1912 By STURGIS & WALTON COMPANY Set up and electrotyped. Published June, 1912 gcu3i9ioa .tV So INTEODUCTION BY THE GENERAL EDITOE This is the day of the small book. There is much to be done. Time is short. Information is earnestly desired, but it is wanted in compact form, confined directly to the subject in view, authenticated by real knowledge, and, withal, gracefully delivered. It is to fulfill these con- ditions that the present series has been pro- jected — to lend real assistance to those who are looking about for new tools and fresh ideas. It is addressed especially to the man and woman at a distance from the libraries, exhibi- tions, and daily notes of progress, which are the main advantage, to a studious mind, of liv- ing in or near a large city. The editor has had in view, especially, the farmer and villager who is striving to make the life of himself and his family broader and brighter, as well as to increase his bank account; and it is therefore in the humane, rather than in a commercial di- rection, that the Library has been planned. yi INTRODUCTION The average American little needs advice on tlie conduct of his farm or business; or, if lie thinks he does, a large supply of such help in farming and trading as books and periodicals can give, is available to him. But many a man who is well to do and knows how to continue to make money, is ignorant how to spend it in a way to bring to himself, and confer upon his wife and children, those conveniences, comforts and niceties which alone make money worth acquiring and life worth living. He hardly realizes that they are within his reach. For suggestion and guidance in this direction there is a real call, to which this series is an answer. It proposes to tell its readers how they can make work easier, health more secure, and the home more enjoyable and tenacious of the whole family. No evil in American rural life is so great as the tendency of the young people to leave the farm and the village. The only way to overcome this evil is to make rural life less hard and sordid ; more comfortable and attractive. It is to the solving of that problem that these books are addressed. Their central idea is to show how country life may be made INTRODUCTION vii richer in interest, broader in its activities and its outlook, and sweeter to the taste. To this end men and women who have given each a lifetime of study and thought to his or her speciality, will contribute to the Library, and it is safe to promise that each volume will join with its eminently practical information a still more valuable stimulation of thought. Eenest Ingeksoll. INTEODUCTION EoAD building is an art based upon a science. In the location and survey of roads, tbe prepa- ration of plans and estimates, and tbe selection of materials, the science of engineering plays an important part. A reasonably adequate working knowledge of the art of road building, however, may be acquired by the layman through careful attention to the fundamental principles underlying the building of roads and the methods which have proved sound in prac- tice. For instance, proper drainage will con- vert an impassable quagmire into a reasonably firm earth road, and a judicious mixing of sand and clay will utilise the good qualities and neu- tralise the bad qualities of each. Bridge construction is much more exclusively within the province of the engineer than is road construction, and it is wise economy to incur the expense necessary to secure engineering skill in both road and bridge building. There INTEODUCTION are times, however, when the farmer finds it necessary to depend upon his own resources in the building of small bridges, culverts and drains. In such cases a practical knowledge of the simplest theory and practice will often en- able him to obtain satisfactory results. It is the purpose of this book to give in a concise and elementary form the fundamental principles governing the construction of roads, paths and bridges for farm and neighbourhood purposes, and to set forth the details of con- struction and maintenance so that they may be followed without great difficulty. A knowledge of the origin and development of road building and the progress of road legis- lation and administration is not only of interest to the student, but is of real value to every citi- zen, as it enables him to consider intelligently proposed reforms in road laws and existing systems of administration. The opening chap- ters deal with this phase of the subject and, in addition, point out a few of the economic aspects of the road question. CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE I HiSTOEY OF Road Building 3 II Road Legislation and Administration ... 38 III Locations, Surveys, Plans, Specifications . . 62 IV The Earth Road 79 V The Sand-Clay Road Ill VI The Gravel Road 124 VII The Broken Stone Road 134 VIII The Selection of Materials for Macadam Roads 163 IX Maintenance and Repair 177 The Earth Road— The Sand-Clay Road— The Gravel Road — The Macadam Road. X Roadside Treatment 207 XI Modern Road Problems 215 XII Paths 229 XIII Culverts and Bridges 241 ILLUSTRATIONS A Gravel Road near Savannah, Ga Frontispiece FACING PAGE Some Ancient^ Highways 5 Simplon Pass, Switzerland, Pont Napoleon 12 A Paved Street in Pompeii 12 Holland's Highways 21 Thomas Telford 28 John L. McAdam 28 Primitive Methods of Transportation 44 A Toll-house on the National Road 44 Destroyers of Property 49 Economics of Good-Roads Building 53 The Roads and the Schools 60 Examples of Good and Bad Road Location in a Hilly Region 64 Transformation of an Earth Road 85 An Earth Road with Proper Crown 92 An Undrained Prairie Road in Spring ...... 92 ■Road Machines Hauled by a Traction Engine . . . .101 The Sand-clay Road 108 Three Sorts of Good Roads 129 Constructins: a Macadam Road 133 ILLUSTRATIONS FACING PAGE Bad Road-construction 140 " Eoad-making Machinery 144 Effect of Treatment with a Split-log Drag 181 ' Good and Bad Maintenance 188 Specimen Eoads 209 ' The Automobile and the Road 224 ^ Path of Stone-screenings Beside an Oiled Macadam Road . 230 ' Concrete Culverts and Bridges 244 * EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES ROADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES CHAPTER I HISTORY OF ROAD BUILDING Savage man built no roads. His wants were few and of an individual character. When hunger dictated, he sought food in the forests, or in the streams and lakes, and soon came to know the regions where game and fish were most abundant. As time went on he came to know the best and most direct route to his sources of supply, and established for himself definite trails. As he began slowly to mount the ladder of civilisation his habitation became fixed, and communication with his own and other tribes led him to establish more definite routes of travel. Gradually his trails were widened so as to admit the passage of beasts of burden. These widened trails were no doubt our first primitive roads. At a mucli later stage in human development 3 4 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES came the wheeled vehicle, and the war chariot was no doubt the precursor of the modern wagon. In history we find the chariot men- tioned as early as war itself. The Bible tells of the pursuit of the fleeing Israelites by Pharaoh with 600 picked chariots and a host of others- It is evident from this early general use of the chariot that roads, even in a somewhat modern sense, must have been a necessity at a very early period in our civilisation. The earliest authen- tic record which we have of stone-surfaced roads is found in Egypt. A little to the east of the Great Pyramids of Ghizeh have been dis- covered the remains of a great causeway, more than a mile in length. This is supposed to be a portion of the Great Highway built by King Cheops for the purpose of affording a passage across the sands for the transportation of the stone used in the construction of the Great Pyramids. This is no doubt the road on which Herodotus tells us that the Great King em- ployed 100,000 men for a period of ten years. It was built of massive stone blocks, which in places were ten feet thick, and was lined on SOiViE A^jCiEiS'T H1GHVVAV8. • 1. (Top.) Appian Way and ruins of the Claudian Aqueduct. 2. Tombs along the Appian Way. 3. Avenue of Sphinxes at Kar- nak, Egypt. HISTORY OF ROAD BUILDING 5 either side with mausoleums, temples, parks and statues. Ancient Imperial Highways, — Egypt is not the only land possessing relics of early road building. Babylon, the city of hanging gardens and great walls, at a very early date developed a high state of civilisation, and Semiramis, its great queen, was an enthusiastic road builder. It is at this period that we find what is prob- ably the first use of stone in bridge building, as the two portions of the city were joined by a stone bridge across the Euphrates. Strabo tells us that this wonderful bridge was built of large stone blocks, joined with plates of lead. At this period, more than 2,000 years before Christ, asphalt was used instead of mortar in constructing the vast walls around the city. Commerce flourished and great high- ways radiated to all the principal cities of the then known world. The highways leading to Susa, Ecbatana and Sardis, are especially men- tioned as being lined with travellers and beasts of burden transporting the wealth of commerce. It is said that a highway 400 miles long, and 6 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES paved with brick set in a mortar of asphaltum, connected Ninevah and Babylon. The conquering Persians probably learned the art of road building from the Babylonians, and instituted a system of military roads throughout their Empire. The Persians estab- lished a military messenger or post service, and at intervals of from 18 to 25 miles stations were established at which riders, whose swift- ness Herodotus informs us nothing mortal surpassed, secured fresh mounts. Their speed was estimated at from 60 to 120 miles per day. Strabo states that there were two branches of the great road leading from Babylon to Syria, on one of which only a moderate toll was ex- acted, and it was, therefore, much more fre- quented by travellers than the other branch. This is probably the earliest record of the col- lection of tolls. As to the details of the construction of these early roads and the system of maintenance in effect, we can judge only by inference; but, as practically all great works of the ancients of which we have definite knowledge were con- structed by forced labour, we must assume that HISTORY OF ROAD BUILDING 7 their roads and bridges were built and main- tained in the same way. During the time of Solomon two routes from Palestine to Egypt are mentioned as being thronged with travellers, and while no direct mention can be found, several historians in- form us that the streets of Jerusalem were paved at least in part during this period. It is plain that exceptionally good roads must have existed to carry on the great commercial trade of the city and to transport the material required for the splendid temple of Solomon. The ancient Greeks were by no means igno- rant of road construction, if we are to judge from the attention bestowed on the subject by the senate of Athens and the governments of Thebes and Lacedaemon. The physical require- ments of Greece, however, were such as to call for but few roads. Paved highways are known to have led from Athens to the Piraeus and to the sacred shrine at Eleusis. In the ancient city of Thebes the office of telearch, or cleaner of streets, was the lowest office in existence. The ungrateful inhabitants, in order to show their contempt for Epaminondas because of his 8 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES failure to capture Corinth, elected him to the despised place. But this citizen, whom Cicero declared to have been the greatest man of all times and all nations, held that no man is above the service he can render to the public, and soon through his own efforts Epaminondas raised the office of telearch to be one of the most distinguished favours the people of Thebes could bestow. Later, Thucydides informs us that Archelaus did more for Macedonia than all his predecessors combined, because he pro- moted the development of the land by making roads, and thus contributed largely to making the interior more accessible. It was left to the Carthaginians to become instructors to the world in the art of road build- ing. Carthage is given the credit of having demonstrated to the world the strategic and economic value of improved roads. But for a splendid system of highways, which permitted an easy means of communication with all parts of her domains, she never could have reached the heights attained, either in commerce or war. The ready exchange of commerce by land as well as by sea made her able to withstand the HISTORY OF ROAD BUILDING 9 terrible drains of long and bloody wars. In spite of the opposition of Athens and all the onslaughts of imperial Rome, and even in spite of the solemn edict, '^Carthago delenda est/* Carthage continued to stand as an ever-ready menace to Roman supremacy. But the Ro- mans were apt pupils. Ere long they saw at least the military advantage of roads upon which armies and supplies could be moved with celerity — a means, as it were, of increasing the reach of their swords. There is considerable doubt whether either the Romans or the Carthaginians realised to any large extent the commercial value of their roads. Both built them more as necessary adjuncts to the success- ful operations of war, offensive as well as defensive, than as avenues for commerce. Good roads were, in fact, the price of existence. They were absolutely necessary for the rapid movement of troops, as well aa for providing supplies for large armies. Commerce and exchange followed as a natural result. We know but little about the Carthaginians as road builders. In so far as they are concerned their art is lost. About the ancient ruins of Carthage are found to-day a few traces of a double road leading to Tunis and occasional traces of a road leading to- ward Camarat. These and a few ruins are the only visible remains of ancient Carthage, for, in spite of 10 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES the genius of her commanders, her natural develop- ment and great resources, Carthage was unable to withstand the continued onslaughts of her great rival. At last, after nearly 400 years of resistance, offensive as well as defensive, Carthage fell about 146 B. C, and imperial Rome began her mastery of the world. The Romans as Road Builders, — The Ro- mans are the first systematic road bnilders of whom we have definite knowledge. The first of their great roads, from Rome to Capna, a distance of 142 Italian miles, was begun by Appius Clandius, about 312 B. C, and is known as the Appian Way, or ^^The Queen of Roads." This avenue was later extended to Brundisium (Brindisi), or a total of 360 miles, and was probably completed by Julius C^sar. About 220 B. C. the Flaminian Way was built. This is of special interest because of a stone-arch bridge across the river Nar, 60 miles from Rome. The central arch had a span of 150 feet and a rise of 100 feet, and was pronounced by Addison as the stateliest ruin in Italy. After the completion of the Flaminian Way, road building progressed very rapidly, so that when Rome reached the height of her glory no HISTORY OF ROAD BUILDING 11 less than 29 great military roads radiated from her gates. As has already been pointed out, these roads, like those of the Carthaginians, were built largely, if not entirely, for military purposes. They represented the visible ef- forts which the nation by and through her rul- ers made for her preservation and the exten- sion of her conquests. The Roman roads were, as a rule, laid out in approximately straight lines. Mountains, hills and valleys were crossed almost without any regard to topography. Hills were cut through and deep ravines filled in. Although these roads remain to some extent even to-day as splendid monuments of their builder's art (the Appian "Way is said to have been in good repair 800 years after it was built), we can hardly credit these people with having intentionally built for the ages. More than likely the pon- derous construction they adopted was that which they, to the best of their ability, believed necessary for a reasonably permanent and sat- isfactory road. The extent of the Roman road system is astounding. Every conquered province was 12 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES soon traversed in all directions with connect- ing roads. Of the narrow paths, three to six feet wide, found in conquered Gaul, no less than 13,000 miles are said to have been im- proved. In Britain, the road improvement is estimated to have been at least 2,500 miles. Across the Alps, through Gaul to Spain, Aus- tria and the regions of the Danube, led the great military roads. Nor were the countries beyond the seas ignored. Straight to the water's edge led the road from Rome, and then on the shore beyond was the continuation. England, Sicily, Africa, and even Asia, all bear witness of the wonderful energy which strove to bind firmly every member of the great em- pire into a living whole. Nor was this energy directed exclusively toward imperial progress and the building of roads for the movement of legions, or to satiate an empire with the luxuries of remote countries. If not at first, at least later in her development, Rome saw in her roads value other than mili- tary, for in the reign of Augustus we find a seemingly well-devised system of crossroads leading to and connecting villages and even STMPLON PASS, SWITZERLAND. POXT NAPOLEON. A PAVED STREET IN POMPEII. HISTORY OF ROAD BUILDING 13 farms with tlie great military roads. The roads were no longer exclusively military, but were also filling the domestic needs of the farmers. The construction proper of the best type con- sisted of four courses. The statumen or foun- dation was composed of large flat stones bedded in mortar. On this foundation was placed a layer of hand rock laid in lime or cement mor- tar, known as the rudus. The nucleus consisted of small stones, gravel, or pieces of brick and broken tile, laid in mortar. On top of this was placed the summa crusta, or wearing surface, of large, flat, closely bedded rocks, making the total depth of the road about three feet. Un- der present conditions and prices of labour, , even aided by all our modern machinery, such \ roads would probably cost from $50,000 to $200,000 per mile, and though the Roman roads were built in part by slave labour and the spoils of war, they represent an enormous outlay. The Roman roads, though solid enough to bear the heaviest loads and durable beyond question, still lacked many of the essentials of a good road. The steep grades and their ex- 14 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES cessive hardness made them very wearisome to travellers, and Horace informs ns that ^^they; were less fatiguing to those who travelled slowly. ' ' Even on these roads, which we would think nothing could injure, we find that the weight and nature of the traffic were closely regulated by statutes which were rigidly en- forced. The highway legislation of the Eomans forms the basis for our present road laws. By the Roman law, the use of the roads was for the public. The roads could be the property of no individual, while the emperors or other chief magistrates were their con- servators. The majority of the main highways were built by contract at the public expense. Their main- tenance was in part by the labour of soldiers, convicts or slaves, or by an enforced service which, in some instances, took the form of taxation. In whatever form the maintenance was made, it was at the expense of the district through which the road passed. Tolls as a means of repairing highways appear to have been seldom resorted to. Some of the Roman roads were constructed through the private munificence of her emperors or other great personages ambitious of popularity, or with the spoils of war brought home by successful generals. The supervision of the roads was entrusted to men of the highest rank. Augustus himself seems to have made those about Rome his special care. The crossroads or vicinal roads were HISTORY OF ROAD BUILDING 15 committed to the charge of the local magistrates, and, as a rule, maintained by compulsory labour, or the contributions of the whole neighbourhood, although occasionally a portion of a road was assigned to some landowner to maintain at his own cost. Roads in 'Ancient Peru and Mexico, — The countries of the Mediterranean are not the only ones whicK have developed systems of roads. The ancient civilisations of Mexico and Peru had roads which we are told were in some in- stances not inferior to those of the Romans. The Incas of Peru had a magnificent system, extending to every part of their vast empire, but, as far as we can learn, they were largely, if not entirely, built to accelerate the movement of troops and supplies. So well did they also serve an economic purpose, however, that, prior to the advent of the white man, such a thing as famine was unknown in Peru. At stated intervals along the main road were tambus or caravansaries and storehouses, where provi- sions were collected for the soldiery, so that the passage of troops never entailed any additional hardship on the people along the way. These roads also served as a system of post roads for 16 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES the rapid transmission of government dis- patches. About every five miles were sta- tioned runners selected for their speed, endur- ance and reliability, who acted as carriers. The most magnificent of the Peruvian roads was the great mountain highway between the two capitals, Quito and Cuzco, of which only a few fragments remain to-day. The younger Pizarro on first obtaining sight of it exclaimed : ** Nothing in Christendom equals the magnifi- cence of this road across the Sierra.'' Hum- boldt, who viewed the remains in the beginning of the 19th century, said; *^ Nothing I have seen of the remains of Eoman roads in Italy, in the south of France and in Spain, was more imposing than the works of the ancient Peru- vians, which were, moreover, situated at an elevation of more than 13,000 feet above the level of the sea ; ' ' while Cieza, who saw the road about 1540, compares it to the Roman road in Spain at that time, which was known as the ** Silver Road." The length of this magnifi- / cent road is variously estimated at from 1,500 I to 2,000 miles, or five or six times the length \ of the completed Appian Way. The breadth \ HISTORY OF ROAD BUILDING 17 of the road scarcely exceeded 20 feet. Near Cuzco we are told tliat there was a stream of water and shade trees on either side, while stone pillars at regular intervals, similar to European milestones, marked the distances. Besides the regular tambus there were also at frequent intervals smaller buildings exclusively for the accommodation of travellers. The construction was ingeniously varied with the requirements of the region traversed. Por- tions greatly exposed to destructive agencies were paved with massive blocks of well-cut stone, sometimes as much as 10 feet wide. Other regions were paved with a substance not unlike bituminous macadam, which Humboldt says ''time has made harder than the rock it- self.'^ Wide rivers in deep canyons were crossed on suspension bridges composed of fibre, some of them being more than 200 feet in span. In the adaptation of roads to natural conditions, the Peruvians were superior to the Romans. Instead of clinging to the straight line, the Peruvian roads were adapted to the topography of the country. No avoidable as- cents were made. Unavoidable precipices were 18 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES scaled by means of steps, and since wheeled vehicles were unknown and the llama was the universal beast of burden, this was no serious obstacle to travel. Mediceval Neglect and Its Consequences, — With the fall of the Eoman Empire, its mag- nificent system of roads passed into disuse and neglect. With Charlemagne came a slight re- vival, but the economic and political conditions were such as to make this impulse of but short duration, and the country soon lapsed into feudalism. Each little community depended upon itself for the necessities of life. Com- merce was practically abandoned. The roads came to be looked upon with dread, and as being simply avenues upon which the robber barons might at will swoop down for plunder and rapine. Seclusion and inaccessibility came to be considered as in a measure essential to safety. In many places the roads were torn up and destroyed in order to prevent the easy in- gress of robbers and marauders. The little travel done was on foot or horseback, along narrow paths or trails. At this period the old Eoman highways had HISTOEY OF EOAD BUILDING 19 sunk into the marshes or been overgrown by forests, and such other roads or paths as ex- isted are described as having been '4n a state of nature, or worse.'* A road was simply a right of way, an unimproved path from one hamlet to another. Almost all goods were transported by packhorses. In some parts of the country wheeled vehicles were entirely un- known. If the road was extraordinarily bad, the traveller left it and travelled in the adjoin- ing field or wood. At the end of the eleventh century came the first crusade, which was followed during the next two hundred years by seven other similar movements of greater or less magnitude. Though they failed of their original object, the crusades were of immense value to the whole of Europe, in that they promoted intercourse between the nations, awakened them from their lethargy, and stimulated commerce and the dis- semination of knowledge. In order that it might be possible to move armies toward Syria, towns made grants, and kings and popes con- tributed money and issued edicts for the im- provement of highways. 20 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES Revival of Road-Making in Europe. — Com- mencing with Louis XII in 1508, successive kings appointed road overseers for tlie king- dom of France. These officers bore various titles at different times. In general, however, they were charged with the duty of inspecting the *^ King's Highways" and repairing them. Even at this early time the French roads seem to have been divided into two classes : viz., those main lines between cities, known as the King's Highways, and the minor crossroads, under the charge of the nobles through whose territory they ran. It appears to have been about the beginning of the sixteenth century that some systematic repairs on roads were begun, though for another 150 years nothing more than filling up the worst holes was attempted. In the reign of Henry IV France emerged from mediaevalism. Sully, who was appointed Comptroller of Finance in 1597, was also made Grand Voyer or Great Way- Warden of France. Owing to the interest this first of the great min- isters took in agriculture, a beginning was made in the improvement of the roads through the rural districts. Up to that time France had HOLLAND- S HIGHWAYS. 1. Taking milk to town over a country road in the Netherlands. 2. An interiirban road in Holland, made of slag-brick; a cycle- path and shaded walk on the left and a bridle-path on the right. HISTORY OF ROAD BUILDING 21 not had a smooth, hard roadway since the Ro- man supremacy. A few, such as the road from Paris to Orleans, had a roughly paved causeway in the centre, but such was the con- dition that all travel was necessarily by horse- back. In the winter it was almost impassable by any means. Under Sully, and later under Richelieu, slow progress was made in bettering the condition of the roads. At the beginning of the seventeenth century broken stone began to be applied to the roads for their improve- ment. In 1661 Colbert was appointed Comp- troller of Finance, which office carried with it the superintendence of highways. During his ministry 15,000 miles of hard road were con- structed. Such a great work was not accom- plished without a corresponding hardship to the people. The old feudal institution of the cor- vee was used to an extent hitherto unknown. The peasantry were taken long distances from their homes and kept at work on the roads even during seeding and harvest times. Rioting and insurrection were provoked in various parts of the kingdom, and the condition of the people be- came almost unendurable. This system pre- 22 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES vailed with the utmost rigour until 1774, when Turgot, who was then Minister of Finance, re- lieved it of its worst features, but it was not finally abolished until 1787, when the nation was on the brink of revolution. The present magnificent road system of France was really founded by Napoleon. He built many roads through the empire, among others the famous road over the Simplon Pass in Switzerland, which was commenced in 1800, and required six years for completion. The road work of France was systematized and placed in the hands of a competent and per- manent body of engineers, and, in order to raise funds for the continuance of this work. Napo- leon attempted to establish a toll system on the best roads. Owing to the determined opposi- tion of the people, however, the idea was soon abandoned. From this time on road improve- ment has been extremely popular in France and the people have willingly submitted to the neces- sary taxation. In 1775 the great French engineer Tresa- guet published his first treatise on broken- stone roads. Too much credit can not be given HISTORY OF EOAD BUILDING 23 to the work of Tresaguet. He was the real father of modern road building and mainte- nance, as his work preceded that of McAdam and Telford by about forty years. Pierre-Marie-Jerome Tresaguet was bom at Nevers, France, in 1716, and was made Chief Engineer in the District of Limoges, July 22, 1764, at a salary of 2,400 francs ^($480) per annum. His duties con- sisted iQ supervising the construction and mainte- nance of bridges and highways in the District, and it was here that he conducted his most important work. On April 19, 1775, he was made Inspector General, at a salary of 3,600 francs ($720) per an- num, and 2,400 francs ($480) for travelling expenses. Later on in the same year, he was made a member of the Commission of Inspectors General of France, but he continued his duties at Limoges for about two years. He became very famous, and in 1785 he en- deavoured to introduce his system in Paris. About this time, however, he fell sick, and his great worth was recognised by his being awarded a pension of 3,000 francs ($600). During the French Revolution this pension was reduced, and, at the age of 80 years, he found himself reduced to the direst poverty. In that year the commune of Paris was called on to give this eminent engineer three pounds of meat daily. He died in the same year. In his report to the Assembly of Bridges and Highways in 1775, Tresaguet pointed out 24 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES that, although the ancient highways were of a thickness of eighteen inches in the middle and twelve inches at the sides, in six months they were cut with deep ruts, because of the lack of maintenance. He suggested reducing the depth of material in the centre to ten inches, and that the sides be sloped at an angle of about 20 degrees. TresagTiet laid great stress on systematic, continuous maintenance as against intermittent and irregular repairs. It was he who organised the canton, or patrol system, which has made the French roads the most superb in the world. Development of Road Building in England, — The first record of road legislation in England bears the date of 1285, and provides that the trees and bushes on both sides of the road for a distance of 200 feet shall be cut away to pre- vent robbers from lurking therein and rushing upon their victims unawares. It further pro- vides that when a road is worn deep another shall be laid out alongside. This latter provision was slightly modified by Henry VIII about 250 years later, who provided that *'two justices of the peace and 12 other men of HISTORY OF EOAD BUILDING 25 wisdom and discretion shall choose fresh routes when the old ones are worn out." In 1346 Edward III authorised the first toll to be levied for the repair of roads. This commission was granted to the Master of the Hospital of St. Giles and to John Holborn, authorising these parties to levy toll on vehicles pass- ing on the road leading from the hospital to the Old Temple of London, and also on an adjoining road called the Portal. In 1523 Parliament passed its first act relative to the repair of roads, but it was not until near the middle of the 18th century that highway legislation became active. The condition of the streets and roads of England was indeed deplorable during this time. Street pavements developed somewhat earlier than rural roads, but even their im- provement was extremely slow. As late as 1190, we are told that a wind-storm unroofed the church of St. Mary-le-Bow, Cheapside, Lon- don, and four pillars 26 feet long, falling verti- cally in the street, sank by their own weight, so that only four feet remained above the mud. These were certainly not very inviting streets for either pleasure or business. Still, it was not until 1532 that the first statute for paving in London was recorded. In this modest act the streets are described 26 KOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES as ^^very foul and full of pits and sloughs, so as to be mighty perilous and noyous as well for all tlie King's subjects on horseback as on foot with carriages." Nor did this condition change rapidly. Writing in the year 1770 Mr. Arthur Young, after a six months ' tour through- out northern England, says of the turnpike to Wigan : *'I know in the whole range of language no terms sufficiently expressive to describe this infernal road. Let me seriously caution all travellers who may acci- dentally propose to travel this terrible country to avoid it, as they would the devil, for a hundred to one they break their necks or their limbs by over- throw or breakings down. They will meet with ruts, which I actually measured, four feet deep, floating with mud only from a wet summer; what then must it be in winter? The only mending it receives is tumbling some loose stones into the worst holes, which serves no other purpose than jolting a carriage in the most intolerable manner. These are not only opin- ions, but facts; for I actually passed three carts broken down in those 18 miles of execrable memory. ' ' Still later Lord Macaulay informs us that the roads were so bad that in places the crops were allowed to rot in the fields, while only a HISTORY OF ROAD BUILDING 27 few miles away people were actually dying of starvation. "With such roads, a few miles were a more effective barrier than the oceans are to-day. Not only was commerce practically impossible, but even the news of dearth or plenty could travel but slowly. The legislative effort to better the condition of the English roads expressed itself in a com- prehensive system of turnpike acts. It is es- timated that in 1838 about 1,100 of these turn- pike trusts were in existence throughout the kingdom. They proved of little permanent value, however. Not only their construction, but also maintenance was often defective. The cost of collecting the tolls often nearly equalled the income, leaving little or nothing for main- tenance. In 1871 the census showed that 5,000 persons in England and Scotland were engaged in merely collecting tolls. In 1857 Ireland freed herself from toll gates, and tolls were abolished in England by act of Parliament, passed in 1878. McAdam and Telford, — No historical sketch of the highways of England would be complete without at least a mention of the two great en- 28 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES gineers, Jolin Loudon McAdam and Thomas Telford. John Loudon McAdam was born at Ayr, Scotland, September 21, 1756, and spent his boyhood in New York. He returned to Scot- land in 1783, and from that time until 1798, he was Trustee of Roads and Deputy Road Lieu- tenant of Ayrshire. In 1798 he moved to Eng- land and was made Superintendent of Roads of the Bristol District in 1815. He made a most exhaustive investigation of roads in England, and he is said to have travelled 30,000 miles and spent more than five years and £5,000 in in- vestigating the English roads. He made a re- port in 1811 to a committee of the House of Commons, outlining his system. In 1827 he was made General Surveyor of the Metropoli- tan Roads, and m recognition of his success in improving them, he received a grant of £10,000 from the British Government. His methods are set forth in the chapter on macadam roads in some detail. McAdam died at Moffat, in Dumfriesshire, November 26, 1836. He wrote two books, which have become classics in road- building. They are: *'A Practical Essay on o O Eh HISTORY OF ROAD BUILDING 29 the Scientific Repair and Preservation of Roads ^' (1819), and 'Present State of Road- Making'' (1820). Thomas Telford, a civil engineer, was born August 9, 1757, at Eskdale, Dumfriesshire, and was the son of a shepherd. At the age of fif- teen he was apprenticed to a stone mason at Langholme, where he had an opportunity to gain an acquaintance with Latin, French and German. As a young man, he was fond of writ- ing poems, a number of which were published, although they were of comparatively little value. In 1780 he went to Edinburgh, where he was em- ployed in the erection of houses, and occupied much of his time in learning architectural draw- ing. In 1782 he went to London and found employment in the erection of Somerset House. This was followed by other work of a similar character, which eventually resulted in his ap- pointment as Surveyor of Public Works for the county of Sallop. His first bridge was finished in 1792. Later on he was employed in the con- struction of some of the most important canals in Great Britain, and was consulted in 1806 by the king of Sweden regarding the construction 30 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES of the great Gotha Canal, for which his plans were adopted. In 1803 he was appointed en- gineer for the construction of 920 miles of road in Scotland, most of which was through difficult country. He also built a system of roads in the most inaccessible parts of Wales, where he built a most magnificent suspension bridge across the Menai Straits. He also built an im- portant road for the Austrian Government from Warsaw to Brest. He did very impor- tant work in the improvement of harbors, and was generally looked upon as one of the most eminent engineers of his time. His great work in the building of roads and bridges has given him the most lasting fame, and a type of road which is now quite frequently built on marshy or unstable ground is known as the Telford road. Early Road Work in the United States, — America, as an abode of the white man, was still young when she entered the field of road building and road legislation. The first Amer- ican road law was passed by the House of Burgesses of Virginia in 1632. So far as can be ascertained, the first American road built by HISTOEY OF EOAD BUILDING 31 white men was at Jamestown a few years later. We can imagine tlie conditions somewhat, both as to means of communication and trans- portation, when we learn that in 1625, when the British Crown took over Virginia from the London Company, the inventory revealed the interesting fact that the Governor alone had a horse. In the North the so-called New England Path, be- tween Boston and Plymouth, was begun in 1639. In the province of New York, regulations for road build- ing were passed in 1664, and two years later the first Maryland road law came into existence. Pennsylvania followed some years later (1692) with a road act placing the control of the highways in the hands of the townships which, however, was amended eight years later, whereby the control was given over to the counties. To Pennsylvania is also given the credit of the first important macadam road built in America — the Lancaster turnpike from Lancaster to Philadelphia — which was constructed in 1794. Por- tions of this road are still operated as a toll road. The extent and character of these early roads may perhaps be judged more clearly from the state of the postal service. It was not until 1673 that a post service was established between New York and Bos- ton, and three days were required for the trip. Twenty-two years later, in 1695, letters were for- 32 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES warded only eight times a year from the Potomac to Philadelphia. In 1717 mail from Boston to Wil- liamsburg, Virginia, was delivered every four weeks in summer and every eight weeks in winter, and as late as 1790, the number of post-offices in the United States numbered only 75. Thus, at the time of the organisation of our Government, highway construction can scarcely be said to have begun. The few roads, if they may be dignified by such a name, were mostly the result of chance — mere trails which had gradually been widened to admit the passage of vehicles, but were usually almost impassable during long periods. Systematic organisation for either construction or maintenance did not exist, and each little community was left to cope with the problem as best it could. Civilisation was rapidly pushing toward the great West, however, and the need of roads be- came imperative. The first wagons crossed the Alleghanies within two years after the close of the War of the Revolu- tion. The need for better roads had now become so strong that private capital was attracted and numer- ous toll roads were constructed throughout the dif- ferent States. By 1828 nearly 2,380 miles of these HISTOEY OF EOAD BUILDING 33 roads had been constructed in Pennsylvania alone, at a cost of $8,431,000. Few, if any, of the turn- pikes returned sufficient dividends to make them a profitable investment, as one of the chief drawbacks was the high cost of maintaining toll gates and col- lecting the tolls. Nor did the turnpikes suffice to fill the demands of the time. In 1821 the cost of transporting a barrel of mackerel from Philadelphia to Somerset was $8 per hundred pounds, and from Philadelphia to Pittsburg the rate was $11, or 70 cents per ton-mile. Not until about 1865 were the railroads of sufficient extent to make themselves felt as considerable factors in the wholesale reduction of long-distance freight rates. By this time the charge for hauling freight from Baltimore to Wheeling on the turnpike road was reduced to 17 cents per ton- mile. Our national legislators early recognised the need of adequate means of communication and transportation, and after a lengthy debate an act was passed in 1806 providing for the build- ing of a great highway from the Atlantic to the Mississippi. Beginning at Cumberland, Md., on the Potomac, this great highway passed through the States of Maryland, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana, westward to the Wabash and the Mississippi. For thirty-two years the Gov- ernment struggled with this great enterprise 34 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES until finally the appropriations ceased alto- gether in 1838, and the work was discontinued after an expenditure of $6,824,919.33 appropri- ated by Congress. President Monroe once vetoed the appropriations for the National Turnpike, as well as a bill introduced by John C. Calhoun, providing for setting aside the dividends from the National banks for road purposes. Revenues derived from the sale of public lands, how- ever, continued to be set aside by Congress for aid in road construction. Between 1811 and 1845 Lou- isiana, Indiana, Mississippi, Illinois, Missouri and Iowa were aided in this way to the extent of about $5,000,000. Between 1854 and the beginning of the Civil War Congress appropriated in all something like $1,600,000, which was expended chiefly on roads within the territories. Thus, up to 1861, the National Government had assisted in road building throughout the Nation to the extent of about $14,000,000. Since 1861 the National Government has rendered aid to road building only in an edu- cational sense. For a time following the war the immense debt incurred made appropria- tions from the National treasury almost out of the question, and besides, the idea had be- come quite prevalent that the railroads had lessened the need as well as value of improved HISTORY OF ROAD BUILDING 35 roads. It required some time for the country: to discover tlie error and it was not until the advent of the bicycle that the good-roads move- ment awoke from its lethargy. Government Aid. — An office of road inquiry was established under an act of Congress, ap- proved March 3, 1893, making an appropriation of $10,000 to the Department of Agriculture for making inquiries in regard to systems of road management throughout the United States and for making investigations in regard to the best methods of road-making, preparing didactic publications on this subject, and assisting the agricultural colleges and experiment stations in disseminating information. The work of the office was at first of neces- sity very limited. In 1897 the construction of short sections of sample roads under the super- vision of skilled road builders was begun in a small way in co-operation with the various agri- cultural experiment stations. In December, 1900, a laboratory for testing the physical qualities of different road-building materials was added. Two years later the annual ap- propriation was increased to $20,000, and pro- 36 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES vision was made for the investigation of the chemical and physical character of road materi- als. The language of the appropriation bills has remained practically unchanged up to the present time, except that the name of the office was changed from Public Eoad Inquiries to the Office of Public Eoads, and a statutory organisa- tion provided in the agricultural bill, approved March 3, 1905. From this modest beginning the work of the office has gone along in a careful and conserva- tive manner. Local communities can easily avail themselves of the assistance granted by the United States Office of Public Roads. It is necessary only for the local au- thorities having jurisdiction over the roads to make application either to the Secretary of Agriculture or the Director of the Office of Public Roads for the assignment of an engineer or expert to investigate local conditions with reference to the roads, and to give such advice and instruction as may be necessary. The salary, and in most cases the expenses, of such an engineer are paid by the National Government, and hence his services are free to communities. The road-material laboratories of the Office of Public Roads make tests to determine the relative value of road material, without cost to any citizen of the HISTORY OF ROAD BUILDING 37 United States who will take the trouble to write to the Office and obtain the necessary forms and ship- ping blanks for submitting samples of material. The only expense to be borne by the private individual is the transportation charge on the material to the Office. Within recent years the investigative work of the Office of Public Roads has attracted world-wide attention, and the testing laborator- ies are looked upon as equal to, if not superior to, any. in existence. CHAPTER II EOAD LEGISLATION AND ADMINISTEATION While in its strict interpretation a principle is defined as a fundamental truth or doctrine, we are at liberty, in dealing with this subject, to regard a policy which has been followed by many agencies over long periods of time and with successful results as being fundamental, and, therefore, to be considered in the light of a principle. Applying this reasoning to the information afforded by the histories of the road systems of all countries, it becomes evident that one of the features common to all of the successful road systems of history is centralisation of authority and responsibilities. The most striking exam- ple illustrating the power of centralisation is afforded by the splendid roads of Rome. No sooner had the power of the imperial city crum- bled away and the management of her splendid 38 ROAD LEGISLATION 39 roads passed into the hands of many nations than the roads began to deteriorate, because of the utter absence of attention. The most con- spicuous example in modern times of an efficient system of roads well constructed, maintained and administered is the road system of France. Beginning with the humble patrolman, the sys- tem provides definite lines of authority through various grades upward to the Inspector-General at Paris, whose guiding hand directs the whole organisation, prevents duplication of effort and co-ordinates all efforts and all accomplishments In the United States the States which have made most progress in the actual improvement of the public roads are those which have in some degree centralised the construction and care of the roads in a State official or officials. Until comparatively recent years most of the States of the Union have followed a policy di- rectly opposed to the policy of centralisation. The laws all provided, and in many States continue to provide, for a large number of officials, each having a very limited territory under his control, and each being, in a measure, independent of any direct supervision. This 40 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES policy of extreme localisation has, by its very failure to produce adequate results, confirmed the wisdom of a centralised system. In the light of this evidence it seems clearly demonstrated that each State should provide a centralised direction of its road work, and, pending that time, each county should, as far as possible, centralise the control of its road work in a competent official, and, carrying this reason- ing still further, it is safe to say that each township could with profit place its work under the direction of a competent employe or official rather than to depend upon a number of officials whose authority is not defined and whose duties overlap. A second important point which has been brought out clearly by the experience of all na- tions, and which has been emphasised most strongly since the development of modern traffic conditions is the necessity for special knowl- edge and skill on the part of the men who actually build and maintain the roads. It is a curious fact that, although the public road is conceded to be so important to humanity as to be classed with the home, the church, and the EOAD LEGISLATION 41 school, and although its condition directly affects the welfare of all who are called upon to traverse it, and indirectly all who are dependent upon the products which are transported upon it, few people give more than a passing thought to the methods by which the road is built and maintained, while it is an inborn conviction on the part of nine men out of ten that they are thoroughly competent to say how a road should be built and maintained. If the general public would consider that to build a successful road a suitable location must be found, grades re- duced where necessary, a drainage system pro- vided, suitable material selected, foundation and surface arranged with great exactness, cul- verts and bridges constructed, and, to meet modern traffic conditions, the whole subject of bituminous and other special binders dealt with from the standpoint of the expert, there would be more inclination to employ for such work men who make a profession of highway en- gineering. It is very difficult to find in any of the road laws of this country, except those that provide for State Highway departments, any re- quirement that the officials having charge of the 42 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES road work shall possess any special qualifica- tions. Hence the enormous waste of public funds through ignorance of correct methods, as well as from the lack of centralised authority. Skilled supervision is an essential in road work, and should be considered a fundamental re- quisite applicable at all times, under all con- ditions, and by all units of government. It is just as necessary for the township to employ a man with a knowledge of road building rather than one who has no knowledge of the subject, as it is for the State to require its highway eur- gineer to be competent and experienced. Roads Belong to the Public, — That the roads belong to the public and that their use and con- trol should remain with the public is a principle recognised by Eome in the management of her great system of highways, and which has per- sisted in all of the civilised countries of Europe, and has finally been recognised throughout the United States, in spite of costly and elaborate experiments with the toll-road system, particu- larly in England and in this country. The Eomans never approved the plan of giving over any of the public roads to the control of private EOAD LEGISLATION 43 individuals or companies, and few, if any, tolls were ever collected on Roman roads. The Eng- lish Parliament in the latter part of the eight- eenth century passed innumerable turnpike acts, and for a good many years during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries the toll-road system was supreme in England. It broke down under the fierce resentment of the public, and because it was costly and clumsy in operation. The cost of collecting the tolls was totally out of pro- portion to the amount actually spent in main- tenance. Toll roads were abolished finally in Great Britain in 1878. In this country the be- ginning of the nineteenth century witnessed very great activity in the building of pikes or toll roads. Here, however, as in other coun- tries, the experiment proved unprofitable and contrary to the public welfare, with the result that this system has been gradually abandoned, until at the present time the toll road is de- cidedly the exception rather than the rule in the United States. The toll system is funda- mentally wrong because it places under private control that which must of necessity be a public utility; it places the burden of taxation solely 44 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES upon the users of the road, and leaves untaxed those who benefit materiallj from the improve- ment of the road, although having no occasion to make use of it for travel. An example of this is to be found in non-resident owners of tracts of land abutting the road and increasing in value by reason of the improvement. Finally the toll system is unprofitable to the stockholder and excessively burdensome to the traveller, be- cause of the great cost of collecting the tolls and conducting the system, which makes the divi- dend low to the stockholder and the rate high to the traveller. Personal Service on Roads Inadvisable. — From ancient times the practice has been gen- eral among all nations to compel personal serv- ices on the roads, or to accept personal services in lieu of a cash tax. Under the ancient des- potic monarchies slave labour was largely used, and under the Bourbons of France the peasants were compelled to contribute a number of days * work on the public roads. Modern standards of humanity discountenance these rigorous methods, but thuy exist in another form through what is known as the statute-labour system. PRIMITIVE METHODS OF TRAXSPORTATIOX. A TOLL-HOUSE OX THE XATIU.nal KUAD. EOAD LEGISLATION 45 Under this system the laws require that each able-bodied citizen perform a given number of days' service upon the road, or commute this labour tax in cash, while in many States of the Union, even the taxes that are payable in cash may be paid in labour at a given rate per day. This inadequate system is entirely out of harmony With modern business practice and modern governmental policies. It provides un- trained labourers who are not amenable to dis- cipline and who render their services grudgingly and in as scant a measure as possible. They are at the same time employers and employes, because it is by their votes that the road offi- cials are kept in power. In consequence they dominate their leaders and the results which they accomplish are almost negligible. Hence it has come to be essential to efficiency in the administration of our public roads that all road taxes be paid in cash, so that regular employes may be obtained, who may be required to give a full and honest day^s work, who may acquire the skill essential to efficiency, and who may be answerable to reasonable discipline. We can hardly consider it, however, a maxim that road 46 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES taxes should be paid in cash, regardless of all conditions. It has been claimed that in some of the Southern States it is impossible to collect cash taxes, and the only recourse is to compel personal services on the part of a large element of the population. It must be understood that such examples constitute exceptions, and that recourse to the payment of road taxes in labour is justified only in extreme cases. The problem of what to do with the convicts and other offenders against society has been one which has vexed the students of sociology for centuries, and it is now universally conceded that idleness is extremely detrimental to the prisoner, and by reason of his unproductive- ness, burdensome to the public. Outdoor pro- ductive labour is conceded to be beneficial to the prisoner mentally, morally, and physically, and to make possible a return to society for its out- lay. As to the character of work which should be performed by the convict, it is reasonable to assert that as the prisoner has offended against the public, his labour should be for the benefit of the public, and directed toward public im- provements. In this way, he is not only pro- EOAD LEGISLATION 47 moting the public welfare, but he is also enter- ing into competition to the least possible degree with honest free labour. The volume of public improvements is necessarily limited, and com- prises, among other improvements, the construc- tion of roads and the preparation of road mate- rials. Certainly no public improvement upon which the^ convict can be employed will yield a greater amount of benefit to the public than the improvement of the roads, and wherever this form of labour is applicable, it should be em- ployed. In the South excellent results have been obtained by using convicts in actual con- struction of roads. In some other States the convicts have been employed in stockades in the preparation of road materials. Conditions are such in some of the States as to make the wis- dom of using convicts in this way questionable, but the plan should not be rejected without the most thorough consideration. Roads More Than Local Institutions, — By reason of the many inventions of modem times which have tended to shorten distance and time, which have enormously increased manufactures, and which have made possible the concentration 48 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES of a large percentage of our population in cities, and because of the growth of education, the gen- eral dissemination of learning, and the broader field of knowledge afforded to the people of civ- ilised nations in the present day, the isolation of local communities has been largely super- seded by the intercommunication and interde- pendence which link together communities hun- dreds of miles apart. The road is no longer a merely local institution, for over it must be transported the food products which are neces- sary for the existence of the city dwellers, and the manufactured products which come from the city to the country dwellers. This road may be traversed by the automobilists from other neighbourhoods and other States, and by the transient guests of the summer hotels and resorts. The condition of this road affects the welfare, not only of the people who live near it, but of all those other classes of people who have occasion to buy the products of the surrounding country, or to sell to the inhabitants, or to make use of the road as transients. This condition has given increasing importance to the maxim that all who share the benefits of road improve- DESTROYERS OF PROPERTY ]. A mudhole on a r "ci in ;i Vii';'j,ini 1 township which voted down a bond-issue. 2. A hill road in another short-sighted community. 3. Ruined wagons about a blacksmith shop where roads are unimproved. EOAD LEGISLATION 49 ment should share the burdens incident to such improvement. This maxim has found concur- rent expression in the establishment of State highway departments and the appropriation of State funds to aid in the improvement of the main travelled roads. State aid is justified, not only on the ground that it distributes the bur- dens in proportion to the benefits, but also be- cause it provides a centralisation of authority, skilled supervision, and the public control al- ready referred to as essentials, and as a result of these factors, economy, co-ordination and tangible results in the way of construction and effective maintenance follow. Importance of Systematic Maintenance, — Effective maintenance of the roads is rather a result than a system and, if the other essentials, namely, centralised skilled supervision, cash tax- ation, public control, and the utilisation of con- vict labour, be adopted, it is probable that effective maintenance will follow. It is well to state here, however, that almost without excep- tion no provision has been made in the United States for the maintenance of roads, even those which are most perfectly constructed and which 50 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES would, therefore, seem to justify some outlay for the maintenance of their high state of effi- ciency. It is just as careless and unwise to leave a good road uncared for as it is to leave a well-constructed building to the mercy of the elements and depredations of the public. The strongest feature of the French road system is the constant care of the roads which have already been constructed. The whole system of main roads is divided into short sections of from 2% to 5 miles approximately, and each section is in charge of a patrolman, who gives his entire time to the road, repairing slight defects as soon as they occur, keeping the ditches open, trimming the trees and bushes, removing dust and de- posits of sand and earth after heavy rains, and, when ordinary work is impossible, he prepares stone and transports it to where it is needed. In order to facilitate this repair work quantities of crushed stone and gravel are placed at con- venient intervals along the road, while to meet the expense of this maintenance annual appro- priations are made, based upon careful esti- mates by the engineers in charge. Mainte- nance, to be effective, must be systematic or in EOAD LEGISLATION 51 accordance with some definite plan or pnrpose, and must be continuous, instead of at long in- tervals, as we practise it in this country. Financing Public Roads, — The methods of financing road improvement constitute a very important part of the subject. Eliminating as unwise and impracticable the toll system and, except in extreme cases, payment of road taxes in labour, it follows that there are only four ways of obtaining revenues for improving the roads, namely, a cash property tax, a poll tax, a bond issue, and a State appropriation, the latter of which may be derived from one or many sources. There may be special methods of ob- taining revenue which are applicable only in special cases, such, for example, as private sub- scription, the sale of public property, the appro- priation of certain license taxes, etc., but as a general proposition the four sources of revenue already named must be depended upon. It is manifest that State aid cannot be given in suffi- cient amount to meet the needs of the respective counties. Poll taxes may not be available, as the law may provide that they be expended for other than road improvement. Even where this S2 ROADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES form of revenue is available, it is usually neces- sary to supplement it with some other form of revenue. This brings us to the consideration of the relative advantages of making only such im- provements as may be possible by means of an annual cash tax, and the making of improve- ments on a large scale by means of a bond issue. It may be said in favour of bond issues that they bring immediate returns in the form of im- proved roads and in such amount as to enable a large proportion of the population to enjoy the benefits of this improved medium of transporta- tion without having to wait a long period of years. The improvement necessarily develops the resources of the locality more quickly and thereby increases wealth. The cost per mile of road is lowered by reason of the magnitude of the enterprise, while the cost of maintenance is materially decreased because it is easier to maintain a long stretch of improved road con- necting two communities than it is to maintain short sections of improved roads, the ends of which ravel or disintegrate more quickly be- cause of the fact that the remainder of the road extending from each end of the improved sec- EOAD LEGISLATION 53 tion remains imimproved. A bond issue gen- erally places upon the next generation a portion of the burden, but this is contended to be equita- ble by reason of the fact that the wealth thus developed inures to the benefit of the generation called upon to bear a portion of the burden. A bond issue should never be considered a wise undertaking simply because it is a bond is- sue, nor should it be considered unwise for the same reason. The needs of the community in the way of improved roads, the financial condi- tion of the community, the necessary outlay to obtain this improvement, and the probable re- sultant benefits, compared with the resultant burdens, should always be considered. The Office of Public Eoads of the United States De- partment of Agriculture maintains a corps of engineers who are qualified to examine local conditions intelligently, and recommend a plan of improvement and outlay commensurate with the needs and the ability of the localities which they are called upon to advise. The services of these engineers are given free by the Govern- ment. Moreover, in many of the States having State highway departments, assistance of this 54 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES kind can be secured without cost. It is recom- mended, therefore, that the expenditure of large sums of money be based upon such careful and conservative advice. Road Economics. — Economics deal with that phase of the road subject which has to do with the relation between the outlay for road im- provement and the returns in the form of bene- fits. The question to be considered in all cases is not whether the outlay is large or whether the benefit is indirect, but whether the resultant benefit, either direct or indirect, is greater than the outlay. The amount to be expended can easily be ascertained by means of specific desig- nation and conservative estimates of the im- provements proposed to be made. The methods of providing the necessary revenues can be de- termined and the necessary administrative re- quirements made along the lines indicated in the preceding paragraphs. It remains, there- fore, to consider what benefits may be expected to arise from the proposed improvements, and what distribution of the improvements will af- ford the greatest amount of benefit to the great- est number of people. ROAD LEGISLATION 55 In the first place the improvement of the road may be expected to lower the cost of hauling, greatly increase facilities for transportation, and add to the comfort of those who must use the road for these purposes. As a basis for considering this phase of the subject it may be stated that in 1906 the Bureau of Statistics of the Department of Agriculture obtained data which indicated the average cost of hauling to be 23 cents per ton-mile, and the average haul 9%o miles. In the report issued by that Bureau it was stated that although ocean rates were higher than usual during the year 1905-1906, the mean charge for carrying wheat by regular steamship lines from New York to Liverpool was only 3%o cents per bushel, or l%o cents less than it costs the farmer to haul his wheat 9%o miles at 19 cents per ton-mile, from his farm to a neighbouring railroad station. Moreover, the cost for hauling wheat is less than the general average for all products. It is generally known that the load which two horses can draw on a smooth, hard road is double and sometimes treble the load which they can draw on an earth road. Engineers have made investigations on 56 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES this point which indicate that the difference in cost of hauling upon broken-stone roads, dry and in good condition, and an earth road con- taining ruts and mud, is the difference between 8 cents per ton-mile and 39 cents per ton-mile. Since the introduction of motor vehicles this cost has been still further lowered, and a special demonstration of motor trucks in California yielded a rate of about 2% cents per ton-mile. It is manifestly impracticable to improve all of our roads by surfacing with hard material, but such an extensive improvement is unnecessary, because of the fact that repeated investigations have shown that 20 per cent, of the roads carry 90 per cent, of the traffic. From the standpoint of the farmer, the in- creased loads which his team can draw, the pos- sibility of making a greater number of trips per day, and the decreased wear and tear on his team, his equipment and himself should furnish powerful arguments in favour of road improve- ment. Practical Value of Road Improvement. — In determining upon the location of proposed im- provements a careful traffic census should be EOAD LEGISLATION 57 taken, so that tlie most heavily travelled roads may receive the most thorough improvement, and the other roads be improved according to their importance. Increase in the value of lands adjacent to the public road invariably follows a marked im- provement in the road. This increase is un- questionably genuine and not, as many persons claim, a fictitious increase arbitrarily assumed by the assessor, and which imposes upon them an unwarranted increase in taxation. If the in- crease were fictitious, the farm would have no greater market value than it had before. As a matter of fact the farm, if it were put upon the market, would command a better price than if the improvement had not been made. The very fact that market and shipping points are made more accessible to the farm makes the latter more valuable to the prospective purchaser. This point should need no argument to support it, and rests upon the same reasons which make a lot on an active business street in a city more valuable than a lot of equal size on a little-fre- quented side-street. The fact that more land can be cultivated, that more profitable crops can be 58 KOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES grown, that regular delivery of such perishable products as milk and cream, small fruits, truck products, etc., is made possible adds materially to the value of the land. If the owner sells after the improvement he reaps the benefit of the in- creased valuation. If he retains the land and cultivates it under this improved condition, his yield in income is greatly increased, to say nothing of his comfort and happiness. Exam- ples are numerous of farm products that have gone to waste because the expense of transport- ing them to market was greater than the amount which would be derived from their sale. Cen- sus statistics show that vegetables yield a re- turn per acre about six times as great as the cereals, while small fruits yield a return over eleven times as great as the cereals. Neither of these two products can be grown to advan- tage except near a good road over which they can be delivered regularly, quickly, and in good condition to the consumer. That the agricultural regions which are afflicted with bad roads are not utilising their resources as they should has been ascertained in numerous investigations. A striking example ROAD Lt]GISLATION 59 of this was fonnd in an agricultural county sit- uated within easy reach of the cities of Wash- ington, Baltimore and Richmond. The roads of the county were almost impassable at certain seasons of the year, and as a consequence most of the agricultural land was untilled. An in- spection of the records of the local railway sta- tion at the principal town in the county revealed the fact that the incoming shipments of farm products such as could be produced within the county, exceeded the outgoing shipments by nearly 5,000 tons. In other words, the people of that particular county were actually buying from outsiders the food products which they should be producing and selling. A factor which should be considered in deal- ing with the subject of road improvement is the effect of such improvement upon population and the labour supply. The last census figures show that over 46 per cent, of our population live in cities of 2,500 inhabitants or more. The boys are leaving the farm for the more attrac- tive surroundings of the city. The immigrant, instead of settling in the country and thereby affording an adequate labour supply, is stay- 60 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES ing in the city, and by this unhealthy crowding is lowering the standard of living and of citizen- ship, and increasing the cost of living by in- creasing the ratio between the producer and the consumer of food. The rural sections which are improving their roads are not losing in population as are other sections. In an inspec- tion of the returns from the census of 1900 it was found that in 25 counties selected at ran- dom showing an average of only II/2 per cent, of improved roads, an actual decrease of 3,112 persons to the county occurred between the years 1890 and 1900 ; while in 25 other counties having 40 per cent, of their roads improved, located in the same States, an increase of popu- lation took place in the same period averaging 31,095 for each county. Better roads mean better schools, because the attendance is greater and the possibility for fewer buildings and more graded schools is increased. This point is manifested by inves- tigations made by the Government which show that in 5 States having a small percentage of improved roads, 59 out of each 100 of the pupils enrolled regularly attended the schools ; while in THE ROADS AND THE SCHOOLS. EOAD LEGISLATION 61 5 States having a very high percentage of im- proved roads, the attendance was 78 out of each 100 enrolled. In some prosperous communities having good roads the little one-room school- houses have been supplanted by six- and eight- room, graded schools, and a sufficient amount of money saved to provide conveyances for taking the children' to and from school. The benefits of road improvement are inca- pable of exact enumeration and definition, but they directly or indirectly affect the life of the rural dweller in every way. If he goes to church the condition of the road has its effect. If illness occurs in his family, the effect of the road is the relative quickness with which med- ical aid can be secured, and, in many cases, this also affects the cost of medical attention. The social intercourse with neighbours, and the pleasure of driving or automobiling depend upon the condition of the roads. All of these considerations must be taken into account when the question of road improvement is to be de- cided, and they must be weighed against the burdens incident to the improvement to be made. CHAPTER III LOCATIONS, SURVEYS, PLANS, SPECIFICATIONS Location. — A road should be so located as to permit the passage of traffic from one given point to another with the least possible ex- penditure of time and energy, but due consid- eration must be given to the initial outlay in the construction, and the subsequent outlay in the maintenance of the road, so that the total cost will not be greater than the resultant bene- fits. It must be apparent that many factors enter into the problem, frequently making it difficult for even the most skilled and thorough engineers to determine the right course to pursue. The economic considerations involved in road location are of two kinds: First, those relating to the accommodation of traffic; sec- ond, those relating to the road itself. The first deals with the utility of the road to the 62 LOCATIONS, SPECIFICATIONS 63 community, while the second deals with the cost of construction and maintenance of the road. In the consideration of the traffic requirements, due weight should be given to the relative popu- lations dwelling along possible lines of loca- tion, the possibilities of development, agricul- tural and otherwise, following the location of the road, the necessity of shortening the dis- tance between given points and, lastly, the con- siderations of pleasure and recreation. The second consideration deals with the relative difference in cost among the various possible routes both for construction and maintenance, and involves not only the question of grades, and the availability of materials, but also the type of construction necessary. In general the most economic location of a road is that over which the annual cost of transportation, the annual cost of maintenance and the interest on the first cost of construction, together with the annual sinking fund, are lowest. Thus, it will be seen that the problem of road location is one dealing largely with financial considerations which must be given 64 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES precedence over considerations of an engineer- ing character. It is ordinarily held that the following prin- ciples should be observed in deciding on the final location of a road : 1. Follow the route having the easiest grades. 2. Select the shortest and most direct route commensurate with easy grades. 3. Avoid all unnecessary ascents and de- scents. 4. Cross ridges in lowest passes. 5. Cross over or under railroads: a grade crossing means danger to every user of the road. 6. Cross streams at most favourable sites, and as nearly at right angles as possible. 7. Carry the balancing of cuts and fills only so far as it will reduce the cost of the total earth work to a minimum. When more earth is needed for a fill, it can readily be secured by slightly widening the cut, and where the cuts are in excess, convenient wastage can readily be found by widening the nearest fill. 8. Do not overestimate the advantage of straightness. The curved road around a hill LOCATIONS, SPECIFICATIONS 65 is often no longer tlian the straight road over it. In addition, a more or less sinuous course is an advantage from a maintenance stand- point, as on a winding road the wheel traffic has a tendency to spread over the entire sur- face, which is seldom the case on a straight road, particularly when the crown is high. 9. Under modern conditions of traffic, sharp curves are a source of constant danger. The radii of curves should never be less than 100 feet, and as low as this only where an unob- structed view can be had of the road ahead. 10. Carry the road along the southern or western slope of ridges, if possible, so that it may be least exposed to storms and dry out more quickly after heavy rains and the melting of snow. Surveys. — The purpose of a survey is to se- cure the necessary data for determining the best location, as defined above, to supply such other data as may be needed in the prepara- tion of the plans and estimates of cost, and finally, together with the specifications, to serve as a guide in the actual construction of the road. The cost of the survey will vary 66 ROADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES greatly with conditions. In tlie construction of an improved road through a new territory where the route is not clearly defined by natural topography, several surveys may be necessary, while if it involves the improvement of an al- ready existing road, the location of which can not be altered except to a very limited extent, a single survey may be sufficient. The more extensive surveys are usually divided into three parts : the reconnaissance, the preliminary, and the final survey. The reconnaissance is a more or less rapid exam- ination of the region to be traversed, for the purpose of obtaining information as to the general feasibility of the proposed route, and to secure the data neces- sary for the rapid and intelligent prosecution of more detailed surveys, should they prove necessary or ad- visable. Reconnaissance should, in general, include the examination of an area rather than of one or more routes. This is especially true where the road is of any considerable length, for, having familiarised himself with the entire area, the engineer will find no difficulty in choosing the one or more lines for which more detailed surveys are needed in order to deter- mine the final location. For this work the topo- graphical sheets of the United States Geological Sur- vey are extremely valuable, and if the region in ques- LOCATIONS, SPECIFICATIONS 67 tion is covered by such a survey, a copy should, by all means, be secured. The topographical sheets, covering approximately an area 30 miles square, can be obtained from the Superintendent of Documents, for the sum of 5 cents each. Sometimes a study of the topographic map will make it possible to dispense with the field reconnaissance entirely, or at least reduce it to a minimum. In making the reconnaissance the following data should be carefully noted and recorded in the field book: The location and approximate elevation of all low passes; the general trend of all ridges and streams; the inclination of the rock strata; conditions as to dryness, etc. Advantageous bridge sites should be deter- mined; all sources of supply of road material, stone for concrete, water supply, etc., should be carefully noted. The reconnaissance should determine on one or more lines to be surveyed in detail in order to establish finally the best and most econom- ical route. For these lines an instrumental survey is necessary, or at least advisable. This survey should be accurate enough to mark the exact location of the proposed improve- ment on the ground, and also to obtain all neces- 68 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES sary data for plotting the map and preparing profiles, estimates of the earth work, etc. The survey usually consists of a transit line with levels and cross-sections taken at every station and at such intermediate points as may be necessary to give the required accuracy in computing the earth work. Full notes are also taken in regard to the width and character of all streams crossed, low and high water marks, all crossroads, private ways, the character of the soil and of any material suitable for road metal or use in constructing culverts or bridges which may be found in the neighbourhood. Plans. — The surveys should furnish all data for supplying drawings from which the esti- mates can be closely computed. The necessary drawings consist of a map or plan of the road and as much of the contiguous territory as may be desirable, a profile and a number of cross- sections. If bridges, culverts or retaining walls are necessary, fully detailed drawings must also be made for these structures. The survey-notes should be so complete that the map, cross-sections, and profile can be plotted rapidly and with sufficient accuracy. It is the poorest kind of policy to depend on the memory to supply lacking data. Every- LOCATIONS, SPECIFICATIONS 69 thing should be taken in full in the field and entered in the notebook. The completed plans should be clear, con- cise and full of information. The profile especially should be a veritable encyclopaedia of information, both for the engineer and the contractor. It should show the present ground line, the finished grade, the depths of cuts and fills, the points of change of grade, location of all crossings and watercourses, together with elevation of high and low water levels, etc. The scale to which the drawings should be made will depend largely on the amount of de- tail to be shown. For most general purposes, a scale of 100 feet to the inch for the map and of 100 feet to the inch horizontally and 40 feet to the inch vertically for the profile will be found convenient. "Where much detail is to be shown, or on very difficult sections, this scale may be enlarged to any desired extent. The layman is apt to belittle the value of the preliminary work done on the surveys, and in making of plans, etc.; yet these are of the utmost importance and are absolutely neces- sary for an economical solution of the ques- 70 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES tions involved. A few extra days spent in this preliminary study of conditions will often re- sult in the saving of large sums of money, not only in the actual construction and in the maintenance of the road itself after it has been built, but in securing a much better route than one which might be secured without such study. Many of the questions involved in highway location are of an extremely difficult nature to solve, and it is needless to say that hard problems cannot, as a rule, be correctly solved without the requisite time and study. The following instructions for making road surveys are used by the Office of Public Eoads, United States Department of Agricul- ture: INSTRUCTIONS FOR MAKING ROAD SURVEYS All surveys for roads which it is proposed to im- prove with the cooperation of this Office should be made strictly in accordance with the following rules : All notes should indicate the date on which each part of the survey is made, the names of the men per- forming the work and the weather conditions. All of the work should be plotted and accompanied with a complete copy of the notes. LOCATIONS, SPECIFICATIONS 71 TRANSIT AND LOCATION SURVEY. 1. The transit line should be established following approximately the center of the road. At every hundred feet on this line temporary points are to be established. A spike driven into the road through a piece of red cloth or tape is a station mark that can be easily found after several weeks. - The measurement of this line is to be made either with a steel chain or tape, with a degree of accuracy of 1 in 3,000. 2. "Wherever it is necessary to make a bend in the transit line, the transit instrument is to be set up at the bend, and the angle of the course ahead with that of the rear course measured, always measuring from the back sight around to the right. The angles are to be measured to the nearest minute, and where local disturbances do not preclude doing so, magnetic bearings of each course should be observed. 3. Opposite the points established in the road, and on the side far enough removed to be clear of all construction work, stakes are to be driven. These stakes should be about 24 inches long, and driven for a depth of 12 to 15 inches. The stakes are to be numbered, beginning with zero, each hundred feet to be a unit. The offset dis- tance of centre of stake from the station point on the transit line is to be measured and recorded in the notes to the nearest 0.10 foot. 4. At all bends stakes should be set on both sides 72 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES of the road in a line through the point of de- flection and at right angles with the back course. These stakes will be used as reference stakes and should have a small nail driven in the top from which measurements to the nearest 0.01 foot are to be taken to the deflection point in the transit line. Reference stakes should be driven flush with the ground and another stake driven near by for a marker. 5. As a rule, deflection points should be made at even stations or half stations, a half station being designated by the number of the previous station with + 50. 6. After the location of the transit line as described, offset measurements are to be taken at each sta- tion or as much oftener as may be necessary to locate properly the sides of the travelled way and fences or walls alongside the road wherever such exist. 7. Measurements should be taken so as to locate all bridges, culverts and cross drains of whatever description, and the direction of flow through them should be shown by an arrow. The clear opening of all waterways should also be indi- cated. 8. The location of all crossroads and private en- trances should be indicated. 9. Landowners' names should be obtained and di- viding fences, where such exist, should be located. LOCATIONS, SPECIFICATIONS 73 LEVELS. After the transit and location survey is made the levels are run as follows : 10. Permanent bench marks at either end of the work and at convenient intermediate points are to be established well out of the way of any con- struction. The number of bench marks should be at 'least four or five to the mile and as much oftener as convenience may require. Bench marks should be on permanent objects on which a rod can be conveniently held, and located where they can be readily identified on the ground. The roots of trees with low-hanging limbs are not convenient, nor is a point so far back from a line of trees along a road as to shut off all view of the bench mark, except directly opposite it. 11. A line of check levels should be run touching every bench mark, and separate notes kept of these check levels. Elevations should check to 0.10 foot per mile. All readings on bench marks and turning points should be to nearest 0.01 foot. 12. Eeadings for ground elevations should be to nearest 0.10 foot. Ground elevations are to be taken at the centre of the road at each station or 100 feet and as much oftener as may be neces- sary to show irregularities in the profile or cross- section. 13. At each place where a centre reading is taken 74 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES side readings are to be taken to show accurately; the cross-section of the road. 14. To take a cross-section, first take reading of the rod on the top of the stake at that particular station and a ground reading at same point. Enough readings are to be taken at other points across the line of the road to show the true shape of the banks, gutters and ditches on each side and the road between. The distance of each reading from the transit line is to be recorded as well as the reading itself. 15. Elevations are to be taken of the following points : a. The bottom of openings at each end of all culverts, indicating them as east and west or north and south ends. b. Bridge floors, tops of abutments and bridge seats. c. The entrance and exit ditches on stream bottoms about 25 feet from either end of a cul- vert or bridge, so as to give the grade of the stream bed near the culvert. d. High and low water in streams (estimated). e. "Water surface of streams as found. Plan Scale— r' = 40' Profile Vertical Scale — 1'' == 4' Horizontal Scale— 1'' = 40' Cross-sections Scale — 1" = 4' Note. — A profile of road with a grade of more than 4 per cent, should be plotted with a vertical scale of 1" = 8'. LOCATIONS, SPECIFICATIONS 75 Specifications, — The purpose of a set of specifications is to set forth in clear and un- mistakable language the work to be done, the manner of doing it, and the character of the materials to be furnished. Usually the spec- ifications, together with the engineer's esti- mate, form the basis on which the contractors bid, and after the contract has been let, the specifications serve as a guide for both con- tractor and engineer in the further prosecution of the work. In how much detail the various operations are to be specified will depend upon conditions. Sometimes it may be advisable simply to set forth certain standards to which the finished work shall conform. In this event, the manner of carrying on the work is left en- tirely with the contractor. When there are unknown or hazardous conditions, such as are sometimes met with in the construction of foundations for bridges, or erecting bridges over streams subject to violent floods which may endanger the work in progress, it may at times be considered preferable to let the contractor assume the risk. In this case, however, great care should be taken to 76 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES secure a contractor of known integrity and re- sponsibility. More often, however, not only the standard to which the finished work is to comply, but also the character of the materials which are to enter into the construction, as well as the man- ner in which the work is to be carried on, are prescribed. Oftentimes the specifications are made so complete as to form a perfect formula for the contractor to follow. It should be kept in mind, however, that under such conditions, if for any reason the finished work does not comply with the requirements, the contractor cannot be held legally responsible so long as he has substantially complied with the various specifications. The courts have ruled that a man cannot be held responsible for the results of his work when he is not given any choice in the manner in which it must be done, but must follow regulations in every detail. The specifications when drawn should be ex- amined, first as a whole, and then each clause separately. No conflicts or ambiguities must exist, and nothing should be inserted which is not necessary. It is a good rule to specify only LOCATIONS, SPECIFICATIONS 77 what is really wanted, and to write these speci- fications so clearly that there can be no mis- take as to what is desired. One clause which is nearly always found in all specifications for road building involving any considerable amount of excavation, and which has in the past caused more friction than almost any other single clause, is that pertaining to the classifi- cation of the earth work. Quite often three classifications are given, as earth, loose rock, and solid rock, and sometimes a fourth is added — that of hard pan. These classifica- tions are in themselves all well and good, but the difficulty comes in describing the different classifications in such a manner that in the field one class may be readily distinguished from the next. Because of this difficulty it would seem advisable in road work to limit the classification of earth work as much as possi- ble. The drawing up of proper specifications is no small part of the work of the engineer, and the manner in which they are drawn will often not only save endless friction and hard feelings during the progress of the work, but save much money to the community. They 78 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES may seem simple at first glance, but tlie writing of proper specifications requires knowledge, skill, experience and ability. CHAPTER IV THE EARTH ROAD AccoEDii^G to a careful mileage census made by the U. S. Office of Public Roads, there were in 1909 about 2,210,000 miles of road in the United States, of which upwards of 2,000,000 miles may be classed as earth roads. It is evident from this showing that the task of sur- facing all of our roads with hard material, or even the major portion of them, is so great as to be impossible of accomplishment for a great many years to come. The best that we can do is to classify the roads so that only those which carry the heaviest traffic will be surfaced with hard material, while the remainder will be given such simple and efficient treatment as to render them capable of meeting requirements at small outlay. Already an enormous traffic is carried over the country roads in the United States, estimated at not 79 80 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES less than 250,000,000 tons annually. Impressive as this tonnage appears, it is but a fraction of the traffic which our country roads would be called upon to sus- tain if they were in fairly good condition. Proof of this is found in the experience of France, where an official census has brought out the fact that the public roads carry one and one-third times as much freight as the railroads. According to the reports of the In- terstate Commerce Commission, the railroads of this country carry upwards of 900,000,000 tons annually. If our public roads were used to the same extent as the French roads, it would mean a traffic of about 1,200,000,000 tons annually instead of the 250,000,000 tons, as at present. An earth road may be defined as a road com- posed of natural soil, to whicli no other kind of surfacing material has been applied, and with which no binder or filler has been mixed. It differs from a sand-clay road to the extent that the latter is composed of sand and clay mixed in suitable proportions. Location, — It is important that the road be located so as to serve the needs of traffic best, to permit due economy in construction and maintenance, to obtain a grade as nearly level as practicable, and to permit thorough drain- age. The considerations which should govern THE EAETH EOAD 81 the location of roads are fully dealt witli in Chapter III. By far the greater proportion of our roads have been located at haphazard, in many cases following Indian trails, paths of wild animals and farm boundaries. This is particularly true in the Eastern States, which were settled first. The result is that instead T5p CK^URTACe O/TCV. *Si/e<5Qa. •6iifEDR°JN. Tincm. \5£cnoN Fm S/De-Zf/u. aud Qmuum.' Slope LoofTiajts. of the roads being adapted to the traffic require- ments, the traffic is compelled to adapt itself to the road. In the West the roads are laid out on section lines. These sections are all square, and consequently the roads are all at right angles. If a person desires to cross the coun- try, it is necessary for him to follow the boundaries of a series of rectangles, instead of going directly to the point he desires to reach. If it were possible to relocate the pub- lic roads according to the needs of traffic and 82 KOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES agricultural development, so that distances might be shortened and easier grades obtained, our total mileage could be cut down at least 100,000 miles, and communication rendered far less difficult and costly in every section of the country. Such general relocation is impossi- ble, and the best that can be done is to avoid unwise location of new roads, and to relocate old roads whenever conditions require and per- mit. Grades, — The term '^ grade,'' as used in this chapter, means the slope of the road along its length. A steep road would be described as a road having a steep grade. Among road builders the grade is expressed in terms of percentage, as 1 per cent., 5 per cent., 10 per cent. ; each per cent, meaning a rise of 1 foot in each 100 feet of length. In the construction of new roads and the re- grading of old roads it is customary to specify a certain per cent, as the maximum grade al- lowable at any point on the road. A minimum grade means the least that can be allowed for good drainage. A number of considerations are influential in determining the maximum THE EAETH EOAD 83 grade whicli may be allowed, but the most im- portant is expense, as it is necessary to adapt the work in hand to the means available. The topography of the country has an important bearing on the question of grades, as a much more nearly level road can be specified in a flat or rolling country than in a mountainous region. The character of the soil also has some bearing upon the question. By common consent it is agreed among highway engineers that no road should exceed a grade of 5 per cent, except in extreme cases where, by reason of natural difficulties or lack of funds, it is im- practicable to reduce the grades to that point. Steep grades are a powerful handicap to traffic, and wherever possible they should be eliminated. While it is a matter of common ob- servation that the load which a team of horses can draw on a steep hill is very much smaller than the usual load on level ground, it is not generally known that on an average macadam road it requires approximately four times as much power to draw a load up a 10 per cent, grade as is required to draw the same load on a level. This means that an eight-horse team 84 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES would be required to draw up a 10 per cent, hill the same load that two horses could draw on a level road. It may be said, in modification of this, however, that for short distances a horse is able to exert about twice his natural pull, so that if the grade were short, four horses might, by exerting their maximum pull, accomplish the same result. But the loss of tractive power on steep grades is greater than shown by theory, since the power of a horse decreases very rap- idly on steep inclines. The leading authorities on highway engineering express the matter about as follows: Assuming 1,400 lbs. to be the load which one horse can draw on a level earth road, he should be able to draw 650 lbs. on a 5 per cent, grade and 340 lbs. on a 10 per cent, grade, with about the same degree of ease. While it is frequently expensive to obtain easy grades, the fact should be borne in mind that the work is permanent in character. No matter what surface material may be applied to a road, it will wear out and have to be replaced. Not so with the grade; it is a permanent step, not only toward the building of a good earth I ^ - _... — TRANSFORMATION OP' AN EARTH ROAD. 1. (Top.) Preseiit condition, improved by drainage and a macadam surface. 2. Past condition, sunken and water-soaked. THE EAETH EOAD 85 road, but also toward any type of improved road which may be determined upon at some later time. A steep road is much more difficult to maintain than a road with a flatter slope, as the former is much more likely to be damaged by the action of water, which tends to wash and gully the surface. The injurious action of horses' hoofs and narrow-tired, heavily loaded wagons is also more pronounced on steep grades. There are three ways by which an easy grade may be obtained: First, to locate the road so that it will go round the hill, instead of over it; second, to have it run diagonally up the face of the hill, doubling back and forth a sufficient number of times to keep the grade down to the desired per cent.; third, to cut down the hill. Another plan, which might be considered a modifi- cation of the second, is to begin the ascent of the hill quite a distance from the base. It is a matter of common observation that many country roads run straight to the base of a hill before beginning the ascent. In almost every case they could, by leaving a straight line some distance back, approach the hill on an easy grade. The question of cost will largely 86 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES determine which of these three methods should be adopted. If the hill is a long one, it will usually be found cheaper and more practicable to go around it. This will not necessarily result in lengthening the road, as shown by the familiar example of the bucket bail, which is the same length when resting on the rim of the bucket as when in a vertical position. If the hill is short, it will probably be cheaper and more satisfactory to cut it down, using the material from the cut to fill in the approaches on each side. Where the road leads from lower ground to a plateau, the method of carrying a road up the face of the hill diagonally will sometimes be found most feasible, but each case must be decided in conformity with the local topography. If it is necessary to lengthen the road to even a considerable extent in order to secure easy grades, it may be found in many cases to be real economy to do so. The same energy which would be expended by a horse in drawing the load up a steep grade would suffice to draw it a far greater distance on a comparatively level road. Many scientific tests have been made to demonstrate this in exact terms. The point will be made sufficiently clear, however, by the statement that to lift a ton a distance of one foot requires an expenditure of energy amount- THE EAETH EOAD 87 ing to 2,000 foot-pounds. Therefore, in draw- ing a ton a distance of 100 feet on a 10% grade, the load would have to be lifted ten feet, in- volving an expenditure of 20,000 foot-pounds of energy, and all this is in addition to the force required to draw the load a distance of 100 feet on a level. It must, therefore, appear that the burden imposed by distance is not nearly as great as that imposed by steep grades. Of course it should be borne in mind that a mate- rial lengthening of the road may add to the cost of construction and the cost of mainte- nance. The best course is to give due weight to all factors in the problem. Drainage, — Water is destructive to all roads, and particularly to earth roads, so much so that good drainage is the keynote of success in road construction. To remove quickly the water which reaches the surface of the road, and to intercept the flow of water from higher grounds toward the road, a system of surface drainage must be provided. Water attacks the foundation of the road as well as the surface, in many cases, and to meet this danger sub- drainage must be provided. The subject of 88 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES drainage is, therefore, subdivided into surface drainage and subdrainage. Surface Drainage, — Most country roads are too flat to sbed water; in fact, many of them are concave, owing to the fact that traffic is kept consistently in the centre and wears down the surface until the road is more in the nature of a ditch than a highway. As the roads are usu- ally repaired only once or twice a year, grass and weeds are permitted to grow close up to the travelled way, still further preventing the flow of water from the road to the ditches. If the road is comparatively level, so that the water stands upon it, the surface soon becomes soft, causing deep holes and ruts to form under the impact of traffic. When this incipient damage is done, every heavy rain thereafter hastens the destruction of the road, because the water follows the wheel ruts, widening and deepening them. Eventually, if preventive measures are not taken, this will totally de- stroy the road. In any event, under such con- ditions the cost of repair will be large. This damage to the surface can be easily prevented by giving the road a crown or slope THE EAKTH EOAD 89 from the centre to the sides sufficient to cause the water to drain quickly to the side ditches, instead of running down the middle of the road ; but it is necessary to exercise judgment in determining upon the slope or crown to be adopted. If the crown is made too steep, the water will rush off to the side so quickly as to cause damage to the shoulders or sides of the road. If it is too slight, the water will flow down the centre instead of to the sides. In a perfectly flat country a somewhat slighter crown is necessary than on the hillsides, be- cause in the former case there is no tendency of the water to flow down the centre, while in the latter case the slope at the sides must be at least equal to the longitudinal slope. Other- wise, the water will follow a diagonal course and may carry otf some of the surface material. The best practice is to allow a slope, averaging from % inch to 1 inch to the foot, but the indi- vidual judgment is necessary to determine whether it is advisable in specific cases to in- crease or decrease these standards slightly. The road builder should avoid the mistake of crowning his roads too steeply, not only because 90 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES of the consequent damage to the shoulders, al- ready referred to, but because in such cases the wagons will ^^ track" or keep to the centre and eventually cause the road to be flat or hollowed out on the most heavily travelled portion. A natural mistake is sometimes made by reason of the literal following of text-books in giving a uniform slope from the centre to the sides, which results in making the road like a roof, in which the centre of the road forms the comb. In actual practice the road should be curved and the total slope from centre to sides should be such as to give the required average slope per foot. By actual measurement it might appear that the slope will be only % of an inch to the foot near the centre and considerably more than an inch to the foot at the side of the road. This is all right, as long as the road maintains its convex shape. On sharp hillside curves it is usually advisable to give a single inward slope to the road. Ditches. — The next most important point in providing for surface drainage is to construct suitable side ditches. All these side ditches should have a fall or slope of at least six inches THE EAETH EOAD 91 in eacli 100 feet in length ; if the fall is less, the water will not flow quickly enough and trouble will be had, particularly in winter or early in the spring when the snow melts. These side ditches must be ample in size to provide for the greatest volume of water that may reason- ably be expected by reason of heavy rains, storms or the melting of snows. In order to provide sufficient capacity, the ditches should be made wide, rather than deep, as deep ditches beside a road are dangerous to traffic and are more expensive to construct and maintain. The best plan is to have frequent outlets from the ditches, either by means of culverts, pipes, or by turning the ditches into lower ground, rather than to allow the water to flow along the road any great distance. Five 12-inch pipes in a mile of roadway are about as cheap and far more effective than one 24-inch pipe, because the water is disposed of before it gains force or headway or has time to damage the road. The maximum velocity for a 24-inch vitrified tile, flowing full without head on a grade of 1-inch per 100 feet, is 3.6 feet per second, or about 2i/2 miles per hour; when the grade or slope is increased to 36 inches in a distance of 100 feet, the velocity becomes 20 feet 92 KOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES per second, or about 13% miles per hour. The dis- charge for the 24-inch pipe in the first instance, will be 5,086 gallons per minute, while in the second in- stance it will be 28,260 gallons per minute. It will, therefore, be seen that a 24-inch pipe, laid on a grade of 36 inches to the 100 feet, will have over five times the capacity of the same pipe laid on a grade of 1 inch to the 100 feet. Under the same conditions, the maximum velocity for a 12-inch tile on a grade of 1 inch per 100 feet, equals 1^/4 feet per second, or about % of a mile per hour, and for the same tile on a grade of 36 inches to the 100 feet, the velocity would be 7% feet per second, or about 5% miles per hour. The discharge for the 12-inch tile in the first instance would be 442 gallons per minute, and in the second instance 2,650 gal- lons per minute, or about five times as much. It will thus be seen that comparing the 12-inch pipe and the 24-inch pipe on a grade of 36 inches to the 100 feet, the five 12-inch pipes would remove in the aggre- gate 13,250 gallons per minute, as compared with 28,260 gallons per minute by the one 24-inch pipe, but the advantage of the former lies in the fact that the water is removed at five points instead of one. Another important point in the foregoing is, that by increasing the grade or slope of the pipe, the capacity for removing the surface water is enormously increased. In order to protect culverts or pipes from damage, when AX EARTH ROAD WITH PROPER CROWX. ] km^iJ^ 1 L ~; %:. v'.m ■ ^L * ' < Max. Min. Av. 09 05 3 124 33 60 Peridotite (trap). Diabase (trap) . . . Diorite (trap) . . . Schist 3.55 3.20 3.35 3.20 2.80 3.10 3.10 3.00 3.25 2.60 2.70 2.65 2.50 2.50 2.00 2.00 3.40 2.95 2.85 2.90 2.65 2.70 2.65 2.65 221 200 209 200 175 193 193 187 •203 162 168 165 156 156 125 125 212 184 178 181 165 168 165 165 2,984 2,700 2,821 2,700 2,362 2,605 2,605 2,524 2,741 2,187 2,268 2,227 2,106 2,106 1,687 1.687 2,862 2,484 2,403 2,443 11 Felsite 2,227 53 358 106 Quartzite Limestone Granite 2,268 2,227 2.227P 1 Tons of 2,000 pounds. 150 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES The above table gives the weights of the solid rock as it is found in the quarry. If it is assumed that the volume of the stone, after it is crushed and lies in the bins, has a void of 50 per cent., and the average weight of peridotite is compared with the average weight of granite, it will be seen that the crushed peridotite weighs 1.43 tons to the cubic yard, while the granite weighs only 1.11 tons. The heaviest diorite weighs 1.41 tons to the cubic yard, and the light- est only 1.13 tons. Ditferences as marked as these emphasize the great need of careful deter- mination of the weight of the material before any contracts are let. When broken stone is purchased by measure- ment, from cars or in wagons, the specifications should always state where the measurements are to take place. It is evident that the stone will occupy considerably more space when it is first loaded into either the car or the wagon than after it has been jolted about in transpor- tation, either by rail or on the wagon road. Earth Work, — No earth work should be un- dertaken until the grades have been definitely established and the grade stakes set. Such THE BROKEN-STONE EOAD 151 work of course belongs to the engineer, and this holds true whether it be in regard to the construction of a new road or the reconstruction of an old one. In fixing the grades, care should be taken to adjust the cuts and fills so that there will be no undue amount of waste or borrow as explained in Chapter IV. No extreme refine- ment, such as is sometimes practised on railroad work in balancing the cuts and fills, is necessary in highway construction. In most States, the right of way provided is wider than the width necessary for the roadway. Therefore, where more fill is needed, the additional material can readily be secured by simply widening the adja- cent cut to the desired extent, and, where the cuts are in excess, convenient wastage can read- ily be found by simply widening the adjacent fills. This does not mean, however, that the work is to be done in a haphazard manner, but that the computations and surveys shall be carefully made and where additional widenings are needed they shall be immediately staked out on the ground. It is obvious that the subgrade, or foundation, of a road is the part most nearly permanent. 152 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES The grades should, therefore, be studied most carefully, since they cannot be changed without great expense. Drainage. — Drainage is absolutely essential to macadam, as well as to any other form of road. The road should be so constructed that it will shed the water to the side ditches as rap- idly as possible, and the side ditches in turn must be of such size and slope as to remove the water from the road quickly and completely. For a narrow macadam road, a crown or side slope of % of an inch to the foot for the mac- adam portion will be about right. For a wide road this will give too much crown, and the side slope must be reduced to % or perhaps % inch per foot. The slope of the shoulders should be equal to, or perhaps in general, a little greater than that of the macadam. The slope of the side ditches must be made to vary somewhat with local conditions. If possible the slope should be sufficient, so that the ditches will be self-cleansing, and not have a tendency to fill with detritus washed from the road. On the other hand, the slope should not be so great as to cause erosion. Where steep grades THE BROKEN-STONE ROAD 153 cannot be avoided, the gutters or side ditches must be either paved, or else stops placed at occasional intervals to check the velocity of the water. Nor should the practice, which is so often found, of carrying the water along the road for long distances, be tolerated. Water is always an element of danger to a road, and should be gotten rid of as quickly as possible. Every outlet should be utilised for this purpose, even though it involves the construction of a few more cross-drains. Surface water is not the only danger to a macadam road. In many places special atten- tion must also be given to the underground waters. It is sometimes possible to drain the road with open side ditches, but deep ditches on the roadside are an element of danger, and, where the ground waters are to be removed from the road, it will usually be preferable to employ tile drains. Sometimes the direction of the movement of the underground water is such that a single drain on one side of the road will be sufficient. In other cases, a drain will be required on both sides. The best practice in road drainage is to remove the ground water 154 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDaSS to such a depth that there will be no danger from the heaving action of the winter frosts. The drains usually consist of narrow trenches filled more or less completely with broken stone or gravel, and having a drain tile near the bot- tom. The tile used is ordinarily the open-joint drain tile, which must be laid true to grade, and provided with free outlet. Sometimes the pipe is omitted and the trench is filled entirely with stone, when it is called a blind drain. This practice, however, is not to be recommended where large quantities of water need to be re- moved at any time during the year. Cross-drains may be made of concrete, or, if not large, iron pipe or vitrified clay tiles may be used. Recent improvements in the manufac- ture of non-corrosive steel have made that material available for this purpose. Vitrified clay tile has also been used, as well as abused, to a large extent in past years. It should never be laid close to the road surface, nor where there is the least danger of the drain ever clogging in cold, winter weather. Many failures of clay tile have been caused in the northwestern States by a winter thaw during THE BROKEN-STONE ROAD 155 which the tiles become clogged with slush, ice and water, and then this thaw is followed by a freeze, which, of course, bursts the tile. Of all materials at present, concrete seems the most durable, as well as, in the majority of cases, the most economical. Where large bridges or cul- verts are required, detailed desigTis should al- ways be made before construction. Suhgrade of Macadam, — The surface upon which the broken stone is to be placed must be hard, smooth and carefully crowned. This is necessary to prevent excessive use of stone on the one hand, or the undue waste of stone on the other. If the foundation is not hard and firm, the stone will be pressed into it by the roller^ and thus wasted. If it is not properly crowned, an unnecessary quantity of stone will be re- quired. "When macadam is to be of uniform thickness throughout its cross-section, the crown of the subgrade must be the same as that of the finished roadway. If the macadam is to be thicker at the centre than at the sides, a part of the crown will be of the macadam itself, and the centre of the subgrade should be raised only enough to produce the surface crown when the 156 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES stone is in place. As has already been stated, the road machine is a most useful implement in shaping the subgrade. After the roadbed is shaped to the approxi- mate cross-section, it should be rolled until it is hard, firm and smooth. If soft places are found, or if depressions develop during the roll- ing, these should be filled with good material, and then further consolidated with the roller until the subgrade has the required cross-sec- tion as nearly as practicable. Placing the Stone. — The stone should be placed in courses not to exceed 6 inches in depth when loose, as this is about the greatest depth which can be thoroughly consolidated with a roller. On the prepared subgrade, which has been properly rolled and consolidated, is spread the first course of stone, usually varying in size from 1% inches to 3 inches in the largest dimensions. Much larger stone than this should not be used in the foundation unless the road is to be very thick. In practice two meth- ods are used for spreading broken stone. One is to dump the stone on a board platform and then shovel it into place on the road. The other THE BROKEN-STONE ROAD 157 is to use either an automatic spreader, or else dump tlie load directly on the roadway and simply spread it by pushing a portion of the stone in the different directions, or until the required thickness of loose stone is obtained. When the stone is spread by simply raking off the top of the loads dumped directly on the roadway, the proper consolidation is not secured by rolling; the stone will be denser and more compact where the load is dropped. An uneven roadway sometimes results, and in some ex- treme cases the position of each load can be clearly seen after the road has been in use for some time. To obtain the best results each load of stone should be dumped in three or four piles. This facilitates the spreading and in- sures a more uniform distribution of the material. When about 100 feet or so of the first course have been spread, the rolling should begin. The roller should commence on the outer edge of the macadam with the outer wheel well up on the shoulder, and gradually work towards the centre of the roadway. When the centre has been reached, the road should be crossed over, 158 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES and the other side rolled in the same manner as the first. After both sides of the roadway are moderately firm, the roller should be moved gradually towards the centre, until the entire lower course is thoroughly compacted. "Where the foundation is poor, or a bad silt soil is encountered, it is well to use a filler in the bot- tom course. This should consist preferably of a good dry sand which is spread over the stone after it has been rolled fairly well. The rolling is then continued until the voids have been forced completely full of sand or stone screen- ings. No clay, loam or perishable foreign ma- terial should be allowed in the filler. Not only will a filler prevent a slippery clay from work- ing up into the interstices of the stone, but it will also assist in consolidating a stone which does not possess good mechanical bonding quali- ties, such as quartzite. If depressions develop as a result of the roll- ing, additional stone of the same size used in the course should be added and the rolling con- tinued, so that before the second course is applied the lower course is smooth and true to cross-section. THE BEOKEN-STONE EOAD 159 After about 100 feet of the first course of stone is rolled, the second course, consisting of stones varying in size from 1% inches down to % inch, is spread and rolled in the same manner as the lower course. The thickness of the sec- ond course usually varies from two to four inches compacted. The stone should be care- fully spread and considerable vigilance is nec- essary if the spreaders are not accustomed to their work, in order to prevent the surface hav- ing a wavy appearance when the rolling is com- pleted. It is quite a temptation with the workmen to fill these small depressions with screenings rather than with the stones of the proper size. When the surface is thoroughly compacted, which is usually judged by the absence of any wavy motion in front of the roller, the screen- ings or binder course is applied. Only suffi- cient screenings should be applied to fill the voids in the stone and form a very slight covering on the surface. Screenings should be spread in successive thin coats with alternate rolling. Sometimes it is a good plan to pass the roller once or twice over the screenings 160 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES as they have been spread on the roadway while they are dry. The sprinkler is then put on in advance of the roller, and as much as possible of this dust of the screenings is flushed into the crevices of the stones. The sprinkling and roll- ing should continue until the surface puddles, showing that the voids are substantially filled. The process of binding the top course is the most critical one of the entire job. The ability of the roller operator is a very important factor in macadam work. The appearance of the road surface depends to a large extent on his skill. As soon as the road has been puddled, it should be allowed to dry a few days, and may then be opened to traffic. In fact, if a road can be opened in sections as completed, it is more preferable than to wait until the entire road is done, and then throw it open. Where it is opened in sections, it will be found possible at times to run back over it with the sprinkler and roller. Traffic on a green road always produces more or less roughness or even ravelling, so that permitting travel on the road while it can still occasionally be reached with the roller, is one THE BEOKEN-STONE EOAD 161 of the most rapid ways of obtaining the final set to the road. On a very clayey or silty soil considerable care must be exercised in order to prevent the water from reaching the subgrade in quanti- ties sufficient to soften it. If much water reaches the subgrade, there is great danger that the clay will be forced up into the stone, and depressions will result, and the undesirable clay will penetrate into the stones. Cost of Macadam, — No formula has yet been devised whereby the cost of macadam roads can be computed for any locality without a detailed survey and close examination of conditions. There are too many uncertain factors which enter into the construction of the road in such varying proportions to make a table of cost of macadam roads of any great practical value. Each road is a problem in itself, and while one mile of road may cost a given amount, the adjoining mile may often cost twice as much, for no other reason than the variation of neces- sary factors. Eoughly, it may be stated that in various parts of the United States the cost of 162 EOADS, PATHS AND BBIDGES macadam roads, having a width of 15 feet and a thickness of seven or eight inches, ranges from $2,000 to $10,000 per mile. CHAPTER VIII SELECTION OF MATERIALS FOR MAC- ADAM ROADS It is impossible to construct a satisfactory macadam road with inferior materials. If a very soft rock is used, the road will wear rapidly and soon have to be renewed. If the rock does not possess sufficient binding power and no ade- quate binder is used, it will not consolidate, and the road will soon go to pieces. Enormous sums of money have been wasted through the use of unsuitable materials, and there are many examples of unnecessary expense through the use of material brought from a long distance when one locally available would have answered the purpose equally well. It has been found that, in a general way, certain classes and types of rock are more suit- able than others for road building. For example, trap rock is considered to be an excellent material for macadam roads, while 163 164 ROADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES quartzite is of very little value except in the foundation. Unfortunately, the trap stones are not common to all sections of the United States. Some of the fine-grained granites usually give good results, as do the felsites, some of the harder limestones and the dolo- mites. In general the micaceous, schistose and meta- morphic rocks have but little value as sur- facing material. Sometimes, however, the harder of these may be used for the lower course of the macadam, while the upper course is built of a better grade of stone. Some of the coarsely crystalline granites and some of the limestones, if very soft or if crys- talline to any extent, are of very little value. On the other hand, however, there are instances recorded where certain schistose rocks have been used with excellent results. The following table gives in compact form the classification of all rocks used in the construction of macadam roads : SELECTION OF MATEEIALS 165 GENEKAL CLASSIFICATION OF EOCKS. Class. I. Igneous. Type. Intrusive (plutonic) Extrusive . (volcanic) Family. ' a. Granite b. Syenite c. Diorite d. Gabbro ^e, Peridotite a. Rhyolite b. Trachyte c. Andesite d. Basalt and -L base dia- II. Sedimentary Calcareous { ^- Limestone l b. Dolomite 2. Siliceous a. Shale Sandstone Chert (flint) m. Metamorphic 1. Foliated {!: Gneiss Schist Amphibolite ra. Slate 2. Nonfoliated J ^- Quartzite I c. Eclogite L d. Marble Igneous or fire-formed rocks are those which at one time have been in a molten state and have solidified, either underground or on the earth's surface. Heat, pressure, and the chemical composition of the rock, together with the pres- ence of vapours, were the causes which gov- erned the final structure of the material. Those rocks which were consolidated deep underground are known as plutonic and are formed of coarse crystals. Examples of plu- tonic rocks are granite, syenite, and diorite. 166 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES The rocks wliicli have solidified at the surface include rhyolite, andesite, and basalt. The colour of igneous rocks varies from light grey, pink and brown to dark steel grey or black. The dark varieties are generally called trap, a term derived from trappa, a Swedish word meaning stair, as the formation frequently resembles stairs. Sedimentary rocks are composed of fine rock particles and fragments which have been pro- duced by the disintegration of rocks of various types, carried by running water and deposited in layers on sea or lake bottoms. Examples of sedimentary rocks are limestone, sandstone and shale. Metamorphic rocks are those which have been formed by the action of chemical or physical forces on igneous and sedimentary rocks. Ex- amples of this class are gneiss, slate, quartzite and marble. As far as it is possible to determine the rela- tive value of the various rocks for road building according to their mineral classification, it may be said that the following is the order in which they should be ranked: SELECTION OF MATERIALS 167 1. Trap. 2. Syenite. 3. Non-crystalline Limestone. 4. Chert. 5. Granite. 6. Mica Schist. 7. Quartzite. Stone from a ledge, because of its uniformity, is usually ^better than field stones, but if the ledge is of an inferior grade of rock it should not be used merely because it is ledge stone, in preference to field stones of better quality. The aim in the selection of a road material should always be to get a rock of uniform qual- ity. Badly weathered stone from the surface or outcrop of a ledge should never be mixed indiscriminately with the fresh stone from the interior. Physical Qualities, — The mineral classifica- tion of rocks is by no means a conclusive test of their fitness for road building, as there is a wide variation in the qualities of different out- crops and deposits of materials belonging to the same class and type. It is the aim of the road builder to obtain a road with a surface as nearly smooth as pos- 168 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES sible, not too hard, too slippery, or too noisy, and which will be as free as possible from mud and dust. These results are to be obtained and maintained at as small a cost as possible. In order to produce even approximately such con- ditions, it is necessary that only rock possessing certain essential physical qualities, irrespective of mineral properties, be used. In order to determine what qualities are essential in a road material, it must be borne in mind that the road will be called upon to withstand the wearing action of wheels and horses' hoofs, as well as the action of the ele- ments, in the form of rain, wind and frost. Hardness is the quality possessed by rock which enables it to resist the wearing action of the wheels and horses ' hoofs. It is evident that hardness is an essential quality, and particu- larly so if the road is heavily travelled. Toughness is that quality in the rock by which adhesion between the crystalline and fine par- ticles of the rock is so great as to give it power to resist fracture when submitted to the blows of traffic. Its quality is different from hardness. The difference is illustrated by the SELECTION OF MATERIALS 169 statement that the resistance by rock to the grinding of an emery wheel would be consid- ered hardness, while the resistance to fracture when the rock is struck by a hammer is tough- ness. A third and very important quality in road material is the cementing or binding poiver, which is the property possessed by rock dust to form a cement or bond when wet, whereby the coarser fragments of the surface course are bound together and the whole forms a smooth, water-proof shell or crust. Since it is abso- lutely necessary to protect the subgrade from water, it will readily be seen that the rock which does not possess sufficient binding power is likely to form a loose surface, which will permit the water to sink through and soften the sub- grade or foundation, thereby destroying the stability of the whole road. It is important in the selection of material for a macadam road to consider the character of traffic which the road will be called upon to sustain. To make this point clear, the theory upon which the macadam road rests may be again explained as follows : The rock dust which 170 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES Cross Section, Roman Road (Appian Way). Cross Section, French Road (Roman Method), previous to 1775. Cross Section, Tresaguet Road, 1775. Cross Section, Telford Road, 1820. Cross Section, Macadam Road, 1816. Cross Section of Modem Macadam (Massachusetts) Road with V-shaped foundation. Cross Section of Modem Macadam Road. SELECTION OF MATERIALS 171 fills the voids between the angular fragments of stone and forms a cement or binding material when wet is gradually carried away by wind, rain and the action of traffic. It is known, however, that the hoofs of the horses and the iron-tired wheels of vehicles wear a sufficient amount of new dust from the fragments of rock to replace -that which is lost in this manner. Consequently, the bond of the road is automatic- ally renewed. If, therefore, a very hard rock is used in the construction of a macadam road, heavy traffic will be necessary in order that there may be sufficient wear to produce the essential rock dust. If, on the other hand, a soft material is used for a heavy traffic road, the rock will be worn away far more rapidly than is necessary for the automatic binding of the road. Practical road builders realise that for very heavily trafficked roads a hard ma- terial, such as trap rock, is essential, and that for light trafficked roads limestone or other ma- terial which is not as hard as trap rock will serve every purpose. An important series of experiments con- ducted by the United States Office of Public 172 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES Roads developed the fact that the addition of limestone screenings to hard material, such as granite or diabase, increases the cementing quality to a marked degree. The experiments were carried still further and lime water was mixed with the granite. The tests showed in every case a marked increase in the cementing value of the granites treated, and the inference is that the addition of lime will greatly in- crease the binding power of certain road-build- ing rocks. As a result of these experiments, the conclusion was reached that mixtures of acid and basic rocks give a higher cementing value than either rock alone. To enable the road builder to determine the value of a rock as a road material, a number of tests have been devised. These tests, however, require special apparatus, and much skill and good judgment on the part of the operator. The Office of Public Roads of the United States Department of Agriculture maintains a splen- didly equipped laboratory where tests and an- alyses of rocks are made free of charge. No construction of any importance should ever be undertaken without having the rock tested, un- SELECTION OF MATEEIALS 173 less it has already been subjected to that best of all tests, actual use on the road for a number of years. Directions are issued by the United States Office of Public Eoads for the selection and shipment of specimens of road material for laboratory tests, and if followed carefully, the selection of the best available material should be insured. In order to have road materials tested in the laboratory of the Office of Public Eoads, the instructions below must be carefully followed : 1. All samples should be selected to represent as nearly as possible an average of the material. 2. A sample of rock for laboratory tests must con- sist of stones which will pass through a three-inch but not through an inch and a half ring — excepting one piece, which should measure, approximately, four by six inches on one face and be about three inches thick. The whole sample should weigh not less than thirty pounds. It is desired that samples of rock be shipped in burlap bags. 3. A sample of gravel must weigh not less than twenty-five pounds, and should not contain stones over one inch in diameter. Such samples must be shipped in boxes, sufficiently tight to prevent the finer material from sifting out. 174 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES 4. A blank form and addressed tag-envelope will be supplied by the Office for each sample. The blank form must be filled and placed in the tag-envelope, which must be used as the address for the sample. It is essential that the blank form be filled with the utmost care, as they are filed as records of the samples. 5. The Office desires to keep a record of the actual wear on roads built of the materials tested. If the material which this sample represents has been or is about to be used on roads, this Office would desire to be informed of the addresses of those in charge of the construction and maintenance of such roads. 6. Samples must be shipped, freight or expressage PREPAID, and bills of lading or express receipts forwarded by mail to the Office of Public Roads, De- partment of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. 7. The Office makes no charge for tests. Distribution of Road Materials. Trap RocJc, — Trap rock is abundant tbroughout the most of New England, except in the northern part of Maine. The best quality is found in the valley of the Connecticut, south of the Vermont and New Hampshire line, and along the coast between Boston and Eastport, Me. Excellent trap is found in the upland portion of New Jersey and in parts of Maryland and Pennsyl- vania. New York is not so well supplied except along the Hudson in the vicinity of the Pali- SELECTION OF MATERIALS 175 sades. South of the Potomac River trap rock is limited to the Blue Ridge Mountains and to the Piedmont country east of the Appalachian Mountains. In the country between the Appa- lachian Mountains and the Mississippi River, very few trap dykes occur. The northern part of Michigan is abundantly supplied with trap rock. West of the Mississippi, in southern Mis- souri, Arkansas and Oklahoma, there are a few scattered rocks of this nature, but in the Rocky Mountains, and on the Pacific Coast, excellent trap rock abounds. Granitic Roclcs, — Granitic rocks, which in- clude granites, syenites, and the harder gneiss, follow in general the same distribution as the trap rocks, and it is said that between the traps and granites about one-third of the area of the United States is well supplied with road-build- ing stone. Quartzites, — The quartzites are found partic- ularly in the mountainous districts of the Appa- lachian and Cordilleran regions, and in the Ozarks and Adirondacks. Limestones. — Limestone is found in many parts of the Mississippi Valley, in the southern 176 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES parts of Indiana, Ohio, tlie Valley of Virginia, in Kentucky, eastern Tennessee, and northern Alabama. CHAPTER IX MAINTENANCE AND REPAIR The terms maintenance and repair are very frequently used as synonyms, but there is a wide distinction between the two operations. To maintain a road means to keep it always in good condition, while to repair a road means to make it good only occasionally. In other words, repair sets in after maintenance fails to keep the road in proper condition. To maintain a road, therefore, means not to let it become bad ; to repair it, means to improve it after it has be- come bad. There is no phase of the subject of road im- provement so important, and which is so often neglected, as that of maintenance. Roads may be constructed in a most scientific manner, and out of the best materials available, but unless they are properly maintained, they will sooner or later go to pieces. On the other hand, roads may be very poor, but with systematic main- 177 178 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES tenance and repair, they may be rendered passable at all seasons of the year for ordinary traffic. No road bas ever been so well con- structed that it did not need to be maintained. Even tlie tremendously massive roads of the Eomans have almost disappeared owing to this lack. It has been the universal practice in America to repair the roads at such times as will inter- fere least with individual duties, and this has crystallised into repairing the roads once or twice a year. So hard and fast has this custom become in many of the States that, even if costly macadam roads are constructed at great ex- pense, they are allowed to go to ruin because minor defects are permitted to go unrepaired until they result in practical destruction of the road. A 'road is no more than completed before the destructive forces set in. These destruc- tive agencies are largely due to traffic and the elements. They act and react upon each other in such manner as to make the determination of the wear due to each a very difficult matter. It has been estimated that MAINTENANCE AND EEPAIR 179 ordinarily about 80 per cent, is due to traffic and 20 per cent, to weathering. Of the former about 56 per cent, is believed to be due to the effects of the horses' feet, especially the calks, and 44 per cent, due to the abrasion of the wheels. Ordinarily the forces of destruction may be given in the order of their importance, as the shoes of the horses, the wheels of the vehicles, and the weather. Even the most superficial examination of our roads tells us that the wear on our highways is no negligible amount. The hardest rock will wear, and the most important road problem before highway engineers to-day is one of road maintenance, rather than of road construction. It is worse than folly to build expensive roads and then expect them to take care of themselves. Not a few States are awakening to the sad reali- sation, hastened, to be sure, by the automobile, that even State-aid roads must be maintained after they are built. No more admirable system of maintenance could be devised than that which is followed in France. Every mile of road is inspected daily, and the slightest defect is mended at its incep- 180 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES tion. The maintenance-of-way departments of our great railroad systems do not provide a more thorough inspection of railroad tracks than do the French for their public roads. The changes which should come in the American system will mean the adoption of a continuous system of repair and a methodical inspection of all roads. American Methods of Maintenance. — There are three systems of road maintenance in use in this country, viz.: the contract system, the labour-tax or personal-service system, and the system which provides men permanently em- ployed to look after particular sections of road. The contract system has been used to some extent in various States, but it has never been found entirely satisfactory. As a general rule, the amount paid for this work is small and such poor service is rendered that in many cases the roads have become worse rather than better. Some of the European countries adopted it dur- ing the last century, but the experiment proved a failure. The working out of personal or property taxes upon the public roads has never proved satis- EFFECT OF TREATMENT WITH A SPLIT-LOG DRAG, A rnad in Iowa before and after dragging. MAINTENANCE AND EEPAIE 181 factory. No State or community has ever built or kept in repair a system of first-class im- proved roads under the personal-service or labour-tax system. In fact, this system is not applicable even to earth roads. Its principles are unsound, its operations unjust, its practice wasteful, and the results obtained under it are unsatisfactory in every particular. Undoubtedly the best system of maintenance is that which provides for the permanent em- ployment of skilled labourers or caretakers, who may have charge of particular sections of road or who may be assigned to any part of a county or district where the work is most needed. Men employed in this way become experts in their particular line of work, and if they make mistakes one year, they are pretty apt to correct them the next ; but, under the labour-tax system, these mistakes are repeated continuously. If one man is employed to look after a particular stretch of road, or to do a particular class of work, he will soon learn to take pride and in- terest in his work. This system has been adopted in this coun- try only to a limited extent. It has been used 182 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES by the Massachusetts Highway Commission for several years. The New York State Highway Commission introduced it in the year 1910 for the maintenance of State roads, and Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, employs it for the main- tenance of about 100 miles of county roads. While it would be manifestly impossible to adopt this system throughout the entire country on account of limited resources and sparse pop- ulation, still it is believed that there are many places where it might be used with great suc- cess. It would be difficult to find a county which is so poor that it could not afford to em- ploy continuously eight or ten labourers and three or four teams to maintain and repair its roads; and many counties could well afford to employ ten times such a force. That such a plan would be more effective than either the labour-tax or the contract system would appear to be self-evident. Neglect of Earth Roads, — Of all our roads, the earth roads are probably the most neg- lected. Experience has shown that by proper maintenance a well-constructed earth road can be transformed into something better than MAINTENANCE AND EEPAIR 183 elongated mud-holes. The first and last com- mandment in the maintenance of earth roads is to keep the surface well drained. Water is the great enemy to our clay and heavy-soil earth roads, and must be removed immediately, or much mud is the result. To insure good drain- age, the ditches must be looked to and obstruc- tions removed, and the smooth, raised crown of the road maintained. For this purpose the split-log drag, or some similar device, is very useful, and at the same time inexpensive. The drag should be used while the road is wet from recent rain and while the clay is plastic and too wet for the use of a road machine, but not in such a state as to adhere very much to the drag. The theory of the drag is simply this: Most clays and heavy soils will puddle and set very hard. The drag is essentially a puddling machine, and hence must be used while the earth contains enough moisture to puddle. The drag should be driven up one side of the road and down the other, inclined at an angle of about 45 degrees to the line of the road, so that a little earth is always moved toward the centre. In this way, the crown will be maintained, ruts 184 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES and depressions filled, and the entire surface plastered over with a thin coat of puddled clay or earth, which packs very hard under passing traffic. The drying action of the sun and wind bakes the surface into a hard crust. Continued use of the drag will soon cause the road to be literally shingled over with successive layers of puddled earth as hard and dense as earth can be made without costly treatment. The following points should be borne in mind in dragging a road: ^ 1. Make a light drag which is hauled over the road at an angle so that only a small amount of earth is pushed to the centre of the road. 2. Eide on the drag and never drive faster than a walk. 3. Begin on one side of the road or wheel track, returning on the opposite side. 4. Drag the road as soon as possible after every long wet spell, when the mud is in such a condition as to puddle well and still not adhere too much to the drag. A few draggings on any given road will give the operator a clue to the proper way and best time to drag. 5. Drag at all seasons of the year, but do not drag a dry road. If a road is dragged immediately before a cold spell, the road will freeze in a smooth condi- MAINTENANCE AND EEPAIR 185 tion and do away with our extremely rough winter roads. 6. Always drag a little earth toward the centre, with the aim of keeping the slope of the crown from 34 inch to 1 inch to the foot. If the drag cuts too much, shorten the hitch or change your position on the drag. The best results from dragging are obtained only by repeated applications. One or two an- nually will not maintain an earth road in its best condition, unless the traffic is light. Some gravel roads may be considerably improved by dragging, especially if the gravel contains any clay, but it will do no good on a well-bonded macadam road. The Sand-Clay Road, — The best method of maintaining a sand-clay road is by means of a split-log drag or a reversible road grader. The small ruts and depressions which are liable to form undei* heavy traffic, particularly in wet weather, should be filled as soon as possible after they are formed; otherwise the traffic is liable to cut through the sand-clay surface and destroy whole sections of the road, making it necessary to resurface it. The drag or road machine should be used in damp weather so that 186 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES the surface will pack and bake while the road is drying out. If the surface becomes loose in dry weather, this is an indication that there is not enough clay in the mixture. This defect may usually be remedied by a thin application of clay, raked in with a tooth harrow or worked in by means of a disc harrow. The mixing should be done in damp weather, and just before the road dries out it should be scraped with a reversible grader or a split-log drag. If the road becomes sticky or muddy in wet weather, this indicates that there is not enough sand in the mixture. A thin layer of sand ap- plied in wet weather will usually remedy this de- fect. The sand can ordinarily be worked into the surface by traffic, although quicker results can be obtained by *^ discing'' or harrowing. Small holes and depressions in the surface may be remedied usually by the application of a small quantity of sand and clay of the proper mixture raked into position with a garden rake. These patches should be carefully made so that when they finally consolidate, the surface will be smooth and free from bumps or depressions. MAINTENANCE AND EEPAIR 187 Care of Gravel Roads. — A gravel road re- quires more attention the first year after its construction than for many years thereafter. Small ruts and depressions should be filled as soon after they are formed as possible; other- wise, they will catch water, which soaks through to the foundation, softens the subgrade, and causes the whole surface to wear rapidly or to give way entirely. A small quantity of mate- rial will fill incipient ruts and holes, but if neg- lected, a cartload of material may be required to repair a hole, which might otherwise have been filled by a shovelful. Small depressions may be filled by adding fresh gravel, but, as a general rule, all that is needed is to rake the loose gravel from the side of the road into them. A split-log drag or some similar device is very useful for this pur- pose. If fresh gravel is added, all coarse mate- rial should be eliminated and the gravel should contain enough fine material to cement it to- gether. A little clay is sometimes helpful, but too much clay will render the road dusty in summer and muddy in winter. A gravel road should not be considered fin- 188 ROADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES islied until it has been in use for at least one year. If the road has been properly main- tained, it will be found, after about a year's service, that the wheels of heavily loaded wag- ons wiU not form ruts or depressions in the surface. The road will require but little at- tention for several years after it has passed through this formative period. Attention should still be given, however, to the side ditches and to culverts. They should be kept open and free, so as to permit water to drain quickly away from the road, especially during the spring of the year, when the snow and ice are melting. After a few years it will be found that the gravel will work toward the sides of the road, leaving a depression in the centre, which will prevent or interfere with the flow of the water from the surface to the side ditches. This will not be the case, however, if the road is dragged with a split-log drag, or surfaced from time to time with a reversible grader. .If the reversible grader is used for this pur- pose, care should be taken not to shove earth, sods, or weeds from the side ditches to the cen- tre of the road, or if this is done, then such trash GOOD AND BAD MAINTENANCE. 1. (Top.) A French highway and one of its caretaking patrolmen. 2. An American example of worn-out macadam. 3, Rude road-mend- ing in the southern United States. MAINTENANCE AND EEPAIR 189 should be, by all means, removed. Hundreds of miles of fairly good gravel roads are seri- ously injured every year by this practice of pil- ing sods and trash in the centre. The Split-log Drag The best time to use the drag or road machine on a gravel road is just after a heavy rain, when the surface is comparatively soft and when the material which is scraped towards the centre will pack again into a hard crust. This work should never be done in dry weather, for the reason that the loose material will soon turn to dust or mud. The crown of the average gravel road should be maintained at about an inch or three-quar- 190 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES ters of an inch to the foot. That is, a road which is 18 feet wide from shoulder to shoulder should have a crown of not less than 6 inches nor more than 9 inches. If the crown be greater than 9 inches, the traffic will be forced to use the centre of the road, which will soon cause ruts or depressions to form in the surface. If the crown is less than 6 inches, the surface will not properly drain itself. By making the slope about three-quarters of an inch to the foot, it will be found that the traffic will use the whole surface of the road and will, in that way, distribute the wear much better than with a higher crown. If gravel roads are neglected, especially while they are new, they will soon go to pieces and the money and labour expended upon them will be wasted. Constant attention should be the watchword. If it is estimated that a 5-mile stretch of road will require a hundred days' labour each year to keep it in repair, then it is much better to distribute that labour through- out the year than to have the work done all at one time. One man can do better work in main- taining a gravel road by working 313 days an- MAINTENANCE AND EEPAIE 191 nually than 313 men can in working one day annually. The old adage, '*A stitch in time saves nine," applies with equal force to the maintenance of a gravel road. Even though a gravel road may be main- tained in good condition, it will require resur- facing from time to time, especially if the road is heavily travelled, or if the material is poor. For this repair work the very best gravel avail- able should be used, and the work should, if possible, be done when the ground is damp, so that the new material will knit and bond itself to the old road surface. It is the usual custom in many communities in repairing an old gravel road to dump wagon-load after wagon-load of material in a windrow in the middle of the road, and then to leave it in that condition to be spread by the traffic. This practice cannot be too severely condemned. These large piles of gravel in the middle of the road are dangerous, especially at night to those travelling in buggies or automo- biles, and many serious accidents are due to this cause. The material if piled up in this way is gradually pushed by the traffic towards the 192 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES side ditches, and by the time the road is con- solidated, at least 50 per cent, of the gravel is wasted by being ground and pounded by the wheels of vehicles, the hoofs of horses and the tires of automobiles. Even after the road is consolidated, the surface is full of bumps and holes, which render it disagreeable to travel and difficult to maintain. The best practice in repairing is to dump each load of gravel in three or four places and then to pull the material into position with a garden or other suitable rake, eliminating all pebbles larger than two inches in diameter. Another good practice is to spread the material over the surface with a reversible grader and then rake it with a tooth harrow. In no case, should the load from one wagon be dumped in one place, as this produces a bumpy surface. The repairing should by all means be under- taken in the spring of the year, so that the gravel will have time to consolidate before dry weather sets in. If the gravel is spread in the summer or early fall, it will remain loose until the winter rains come. The water will then penetrate to the foundation, rendering it so soft MAINTENANCE AND REPAIR 193 that mncli of the gravel will disappear during the ensuing winter. Where extensive repairs are to be made, a steam roller with spiked wheels may be used to good advantage in tearing up the old roadbed. A tooth harrow may then be drawn over the surface, which will permit the dirt, clay and sand to sift to the bottom and will bring the loose gravel to the surface. The road may then be rolled, and a layer of suitable binding gravel applied, after which it should be sprinkled and again rolled until it is ready for traffic. The roller and sprinkler will not be needed if the materials pack well under traffic, although bet- ter results can usually be obtained by their use. Some gravel roads may be considerably im- proved by surfacing them with a thin layer of hard, tough rock screenings, such as the traps and better grades of granite. This method has been pursued for parks and boulevard roads in the District of Columbia. A large mileage of gravel roads has been surfaced with trap-rock screenings. These roads have the appearance of macadam and wear practically as well, and at the same time are much cheaper than if they 194 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES were built entirely of broken stone. Some of them have been oiled recently and with very gratifying results. Maintaining Macadam Roads. — The causes of wear on macadam roads are the weather, the wheels of vehicles and the hoofs of horses. The weather acts to some extent directly on the materials, but to a much greater degree indi- rectly. Frost is one of the most active of these agencies. The expansion and contraction caused by frost leads to a general disintegra- tion of the road surface. This is especially true where much clay was allowed in the binder, where the road surface was porous or the drain- age poor. When such a road thaws out after a hard freeze, the macadam will practically be a layer of loose stones into which the traffic will cut, forming ruts. Eain, following a frost and thaw, is especially damaging, and a series of thaws, rains and frosts, will entirely destroy the bond in a road when once the water has gained access into the stone. Frost has but little, if any, effect on a dry, well-kept road. The solution is self-evident. Look after the drainage very carefully in the fall and be sure MAINTENANCE AND EEPAIR 195 that the surface is as nearly waterproof as pos- sible, so that the road will, at the beginning of winter, be dry and not full of water. Violent rains on exposed localities wash out the binder, and sometimes the smaller stones as well, leav- ing the surface both rough and porous. Over- flows from blocked gutters or choked cross- drains cause much damage in the same way. The amount of material lost from the roads by this means is often larger than the toll exacted by traffic. If an excess of water is detrimental to a road, however, an extended drought is little or no better. The winds remove the binding mate- rial both by blowing it directly from the surface of the road and by carrying off the dust raised by traffic. This causes the road to '^ ravel.'' These loose stones should be removed, as leav- ing them on the road not only makes traffic dis- agreeable, but also tends to loosen still others. The stones which are picked off the road will rarely prove of value for repair work, as they are too much rounded to bond readily. The wheels of passing vehicles produce on the road several effects, which should be 196 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES understood. First, there is the grinding and crushing action on the surface, and second, the pressure throughout the entire body of the road covering. If for any reason the materials are not thoroughly consolidated, there is a third action of displacement accompanied by internal wear as the stones rub against each other. If the road surface is hard, smooth and water- proof, the wear will be the least possible and will be confined to the surface. The aim should, therefore, be directed toward a constant main- tenance of a hard, smooth, waterproof surface. The actual amount of wear on any given road surface depends on several conditions, viz., the amount and kind of traffic, climate and other local conditions, and the kind of road material used. Generally speaking, however, the amount of wear is less in proportion as the road is kept in good condition as to surface, solidity, and drainage. It is usually less on slight grades than on dead level, because of the better drain- age, but on steep hills it is increased by the effects of running water. Strange to say a hill usually looks better after a heavy rain than the flat below. This is because the hill is washed MAINTENANCE AND EEPAIE 197 clean, while the flat is more or less covered with the debris and mud carried down from above. This often leads to a neglect of the hills until they are so badly worn as to require resurfac- ing. The amount of maintenance required will vary with the season and the local conditions. Ordinarily there is more wear in winter than summer, and more in wet places than in dry. The reverse, however, is true on roads with heavy automobile traffic, when dry weather proves especially injurious. The amount of wear is also greatly aug- mented by the prevailing tendency of the traffic to follow in the same track, especially where the surface is soft, so that the tracks become visible. In parts of Germany the road labour- ers have a custom of placing large stones on to the road whenever a rut or depression tends to form, because of the concentration of the traffic along this one line. The stones serve to deflect the traffic and so keep the wear uniformly dis- tributed over the entire road surface. Proper maintenance consists in replacing the materials lost by unequal wear, so that the road 198 KOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES is always in a good smooth condition. In mak- ing repairs, the materials should be spread only on the places which require them. Thus no por- tion of the surface is neglected, and no mate- rials are wastefully applied to portions already thick enough to stand the traffic. Uniformity in both strength and smoothness with the least use of materials and least cost is the thing to be sought. In spreading new stone, the old method of waiting until the road has entirely lost its shape and then spreading a thick coat which is left to be worked in wholly by the traffic cannot be too severely condemned. This method is very wasteful of material, as well as extremely inconvenient to traffic. A great deal of the material is ground up and crushed be- fore it is consolidated, and even after consolida- tion the surface is rarely if ever left smooth. The materials necessary to replace the loss by wear of ordinary traffic should be spread in comparatively small quantities where hollows or weak places occur, or where required to keep the cross section of the road in proper form. If laid in with care and in small patches, the inconvenience to traffic will scarcely be notice- MAINTENANCE AND EEPAIE 199 able. If the task of consolidating the materials laid is to be left to the public, it is only proper that they should demand that the process be made as easy and speedy as possible, which is readily attained by good arrangement and care in spreading the materials, and close atten- tion afterwards until they are consolidated. Where, because of neglect, or other reasons, it is necessary to make extensive repairs or re- surfacing, the steam roller should always be employed to do the consolidation. Especially is this true if the road is extensively used by automobiles. The steam roller is also a very useful machine in the maintenance of roads softened by winter frosts. A few trips in the spring of the year soon after the frost has left the ground will remove the slight ruts beginning to form, and recompact the road's surface, rendering it hard, smooth and waterproof. All loose stones should be removed before the road is rolled. The following instructions to road men, is- sued by The Eoad Improvement Association of London, should be found useful in the mainte- nance and repair of macadam roads : 200 ROADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES 1. Never allow a hollow, a rut, or a puddle to re- main on a road, but fill it up at once with chips from the stone-heap. 2. Always use chips for patching, and for all re- pairs during the summer months. 3. Never put fresh stones on the road, if by cross- picking and a thorough use of the rake the surface can be made smooth and kept at the proper strength and section. 4. Remember that the rake is the most useful tool in your collection, and that it should be kept close at hand the whole year round. 5. Do not spread large patches of stone over the whole width of the road, but coat the middle or horse track first, and when this has worn in, coat each of the sides in turn. 6. Always arrange that the bulk of the stones may be laid down before Christmas. 7. In moderately dry weather and on hard roads, always pick up the old surface into ridges six inches apart, and remove all large and projecting stones be- fore applying a new coating. 8. Never spread stones more than one stone deep, but add a second layer when the first has worn in, if one coat be not enough. 9. Use a steel-pronged fork to load the materials at the stone-heap, so that the siftings may be avail- able for "binding" and for summer repairs. 10. Go over the whole of the new coating every day or two with the rake, and never leave the stones in ridges. MAINTENANCE AND EEPAIE 201 11. Kemove all large stones, blocks of wood, and other obstructions (used for diverting the traffic) at nightfall, or the consequences may be serious. 12. Never put a stone upon the road for repairing purposes that will not pass freely in every direction through a 2-inch ring and remember that still smaller stones should be used for patching and for all slight repairs. 13. Eecollect that hard stone should be broken to a finer gauge than soft, but that the 2-inch gauge is the largest that should be employed under any circum- stances where no steam roller is employed. 14. Use chips, if possible, for binding newly laid stones together, and remember that road-sweepings, horse-droppings, sods of grass, and other rubbish, when used for this purpose, will ruin the best road ever constructed. 15. Remember that water- worn or rounded stones should never be used upon steep gradients, or they will fail to bind together. 16. Never allow dust or mud to lie on the surface of the road, for either of these will double the cost of maintenance. 17. Recollect that dust becomes mud at the first shower, and that mud forms a wet blanket which will keep a road in a filthy condition for weeks at a time, instead of allowing it to dry in a few hours. 18. See that all sweepings and scrapings are put into heaps and carted away immediately. 19. Remember that the middle of the road should 202 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES always be a little higher than the sides, so that the rain may run into the side gutters at once. 20. Never allow the water-tables, gutters and ditches to clog up, but keep them clear the whole year through. 21. Always be upon your road in wet weather, and at once fill up with ''chips" any hollows or ruts where the rain may lie. 22. "When the main coatings of stone have worn in, go over the whole road, and gather together all the loose stones, for loose stones are a source of danger and annoyance and should never be allowed to lie on any road. The Problem of the Automobile. — In the last few years the need of proper maintenance and possibly even a radical departure from some of the former methods of maintenance, especially on roads near large cities and the principal thoroughfares between cities, has been greatly emphasised by the advent of the automobile. We are confronted by a dust problem due to this new vehicle. Dust has always existed. The chemical, physical and mechanical agencies which produce the dust are in no way new. The automobile, when not equipped with chain tires, is not a dust producer in that it grinds up the road material; it takes the dust made by MAINTENANCE AND EEPAIR 203 other agencies and disseminates it over tlie sur- rounding country. The broad-tired, swiftly moving automobile throws the dust from be- tween the stones and the strong, deflected wind current from the car blows the dust from the road surface into the air to be carried away by the wind to the detriment of the road, the travel- lers, nearby^ residents and bordering foliage. No one will seriously question the statement that the automobile has come to stay. Nor will it be wise, even though it should prove pos- sible, to limit the speed below that consistent with the proper safety of all concerned. The solution must be found, either by a change in the design of the cars so as to raise less dust, or by the highway engineer in the construction and maintenance of the roads in such a manner as to prevent the formation of the dust, or so as to retain it on the roadway when formed. Probably the ultimate solution will come from both sources. The other part of the solution rests with the highway engineer. Present in- dications point to two lines of procedure : pre- venting the formation of dust, and laying the dust when formed. 204 KOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES The prevention of the formation of dnst in- cludes the selection and use of materials which give very little dust, that is, those which bond very well and are very resistant to abrasion, and second, the use of binding materials other than rock dust in road construction. One of the evil effects of the automobile traffic at pres- ent is that the binder is all blown away, leaving the surface free to ravel, which in turn produces more dust to be blown away by the automobile. By using only the best materials, the dust nui- sance can be lessened to a considerable extent. Before a dust preventive of any kind is applied, however, the road must be in good condition, i.e., good repair. Dust preventives are simply another step in road maintenance, and in no way vitiate the need for a smooth, properly drained and properly repaired road surface. Having secured this, you are ready to take the advance step of applying some dust-layer or surface dressing to prevent its rapid formation; in other words, to lessen the wear on the road, for much dust usually means that the road surface is wearing rapidly. The dust on the road has MAINTENANCE AND REPAIR 205 but two sources, viz., the foreign material brought on and ground up, such as horse drop- pings, etc., and the material abraded from the road surface. It is the latter which chiefly concerns the highway engineer. The rate at which it is formed is in a manner a measure of the wear of the road. The evil ^ effects however, go much further than the mere destruction of the road surface. Travel for health and pleasure is practically prohibited by the thick clouds which fog up from the disintegrating surface. This dust is carried by winds to the neighbouring fields and houses, to the extreme annoyance of the road- side dwellers and to the detriment of the crops and foliage along the way. In not a few places, the values of otherwise desirable properties have declined greatly because of the dust which, in extreme cases, prohibits the use of front porches and open doors or windows on the side toward the road. The question of public health is even a more vital one, however. Dust and disease are most intimately connected. Tyn- dall, the great scientist, once declared that the 206 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES ravages of war are small compared to the vic- tims claimed by that insidious, relentless arch enemy of mankind, dust. The proper use of the various substances which are used as binders or dust layers is dis- cussed in the chapter on Modern Eoad Prob- lems. CHAPTER X ROADSIDE TREATMENT Roadside treatment has received compara- tively little -attention in the United States, and yet proper attention to the roadside is not only essential to the beauty of the road and to the pleasure and comfort of the travellers, but also to the preservation of the road itself. Roadsides. — After a road is completed, rub- bish should be removed, and excavations and embankments, except such as are necessary to the road, should be smoothed over and sown with grass, and all unsightly brush and weeds removed. In short, wherever possible, the road should run between strips of smooth green sward, and suitable shade trees should be planted at intervals, so as to provide a pleasing appearance, shade for the traveller, and pro- tection to the road from drying out too rapidly, provided it is macadam or gravel. Clay and earth roads should be free of shade. Shade 207 208 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES trees are an important factor in reducing the cost of maintenance of macadam roads, by rea- son of the fact that they prevent the road from drying out and becoming dusty. In the selection of shade trees care should be taken to secure only those which are suitable to local conditions. In all cases it is well to choose a tree that is hardy, grows rapidly, and has abundant foliage. A good plan is to plant trees with tops fifty feet apart, but alternating on each side of the road, so that there will be a tree every twenty-five feet. In some portions of Germany fruit trees are planted extensively along the roadside, and a considerable revenue is derived from the sale of fruit. In Saxony apple, pear and cherry trees are planted along the road from 90 to 120 feet apart, and plum trees about 25 feet apart. Upwards of $21,000 a year has been obtained from the State roads of Saxony from this source, and still larger amounts from local roads. In India the Gov- ernment allows abutting property owners to take the produce of fruit trees in exchange for protecting and caring for the trees. The irre- pressible American boy is a factor which would EOADSIDE TEEATMENT 209 have to be taken into consideration, if sncli a plan were ever contemplated in this country. With onr present inadequate system of mainte- nance which does not provide for daily patrol, it would probably be better to resort to forestry rather than to horticulture for guidance in road- side tree planting. Effect of .Trees on Roads, — The beneficial effect which is most generally apparent from the planting of trees is the prevention of dust in summer. On the other hand, it is contended that they prevent muddy roads from drying out. The presence of trees along the roadside is generally a partial preventive of damage to the road from hard, driving rains. A road shaded by trees is cooler by day and warmer by night during the summer, and is warmer both day and night in winter. By preventing the loss of heat by radiation, trees and tall hedges reduce the freezing of the road surface and, consequently, protect the road in a measure against the destructive action of frost. Shade also prevents the destructive effect due to rapid thawing of the road by strong sunshine in the spring. A great deal of damage is done to un- 210 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES shaded roads by traffic passing over them while the rapid thawing process is going on. Protection From Wind and Snow. — When de- termining upon the kind of roadside treatment to be adopted, consideration should be given to the protection of the road from snowdrifts in sections of country where the snowfall is heavy. A study of the relative positions of snowdrifts, the direction and velocity of winds, and the relative location of the road, would aid in de- termining what course to pursue ; for example, whether trees or hedges would be most advis- able, and if trees, what kind should be used, or if hedges, the kind, height, location, and method of planting. The protection of stone and gravel roads from wind is very important, as the continued prevalence of high winds tend to strip the road surface of the rock dust which is essential to the bond of the road. The injurious etfect from wind is most pronounced in summer when the roads are dry. Consequently, if the road- side is planted with trees or hedges, the foliage will be thickest in summer, so as to afford a screen which will materially lessen the force EOADSIDE TREATMENT 211 of the wind before it reaches the road surface. The Kind of Tree to Select. — ^As previously stated, the important considerations in the se- lection of roadside trees are: first, adaptabil- ity to local conditions ; second, hardiness ; third, good foliage ; fourth, rapid growth. Wherever practicable, trees of local origin should be used. There are a great variety of conditions in the United States, and it would be impossi- ble to designate a list of trees which would be adaptable to all the road conditions which might exist in this country, unless it were de- sirable to limit the list to fruit or nut-bearing trees. If this were the case, the fruit-bearing trees which would be best adapted to road con- ditions would be the apple, and possibly the pear, in some localities. Apples would cover all that section of the eastern United States north of the Carolinas, and even south of this in the Appalachian region. West of the moun- tains the apple would serve as far south as the Gulf States, and west to the base of the Rocky Mountains, with perhaps the exception of the extreme northern part of Minnesota, the Dako- tas and Montana, where some other plants 212 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES would have to be substituted for tbe apple, un- less tbe crab were used. The nut-bearing trees which are adapted to this use in the eastern United States are hickory, walnut and butter- nut for the New England States, and along the Appalachian Mountains as far south as Georgia ; but the distribution of these nut trees would take a northern turn on the west side of the Alleghany Mountains, and they should not be used, perhaps, south of central Kentucky, and no further west than Colorado. The hick- ory will not thrive in northern Iowa, north- ern Wisconsin, Minnesota or the Bakotas. The black walnut, however, will grow well as far north as the southern part of Minnesota, over the eastern part of South Dakota, eastern Nebraska and Kansas. On the Pacific Coast the English walnut can be used as a substitute for the nut trees grown in the eastern part of the United States, and in the South Atlantic States and the Gulf States pecans may serve as a substitute for the other nut trees men- tioned. Ordinarily it is better to select some long- lived shade tree than to attempt to combine fruit EOADSIDE TEEATMENT 213 production with shade. For the New England and Middle States the sugar maple is one of the most extensively used and one of the most desirable shade trees for this purpose. Elm is very desirable, but it does not produce as dense a canopy as the maples. If a more dense shade is desired than that produced by the sugar maple, the Norway maple may be sub- stituted. In localities from Washington, D. C, southward to the Carolinas, a variety of shade trees may be employed, such as silver maple, which is perhaps the least desirable of all ; the elm and red oak, similar to the varieties growing on Twelfth Street, Washington, D. C, along the side of the Smithsonian and Department of Agriculture grounds; the willow oak, a fine example of which is standing just across from the Henry Monument in the Smithsonian grounds, Washington, D. C. ; the Norway maple, which has long been considered as one of the finest shade trees for that locality; the pin oak, which is being so extensively used on the streets of Washington; and the sycamore, which has a natural distribution throughout the Middle States. After the confines of the Carolmas 214 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES have been reached, there is nothing which com- pares with the live oak. This should be planted to the exclusion of everything else throughout the southern part of the United States, because it is typical of the region and is one of the most beautiful trees grown in America. For California probably the pepper tree will supersede everything else as a road- side tree, while in Florida, the camphor tree might well be used as a substitute for the pep- per tree in California. In extreme southern Texas the native palm could be used very effect- ively for roadside decoration. Where this is not desirable, the hackberry, both native and Mexican varieties, may be used to good advan- tage. For the extreme Northwest, including the Dakotas and northern Minnesota, perhaps the best roadside tree would be the American elm or the green ash. CHAPTER XI MODERN ROAD PROBLEMS On roads wliicli are subjected to heavy auto- mobile traffic, the most important problem con- fronting highway engineers is the prevention of dust and the preservation of the road from the destructive action of automobiles moving at high rates of speed. The standard macadam road has been found inadequate to withstand this new form of traffic, especially when the automobile traffic is dense. As previously explained in this volume, the macadam road was designed for the purpose of withstanding the wear of iron-tired horse- vehicles. On a macadam road properly con- structed with suitable material, the amount of dust worn from the rock fragments is only sufficient to replace that which is carried away by wind and rain, so that the bond of the road is continuously preserved. The advent of the automobile has brought about new conditions. 215 216 EOADS, PATHS AND BKIDGES The driving wheels of motor cars moving at high rates of speed exert a powerful tractive force on the road surface, which displaces the materials composing the surface. The result is that the finer particles and dust are thrown into the air to be carried off the road by cross currents of air. The rubber tire of the auto- mobile does not wear any appreciable amount of dust from the rock fragments, and conse- quently, the loss of the rock dust is a permanent loss to the road. Under these conditions, the road soon ravels, making travel difficult and allowing water to make its way to the earth subgrade or foundation. In spite of the fact that the automobile is responsible for these and other unfortunate conditions, it must be realised that the automo- bile is one of the most useful inventions of the age, as it brings distant communities in closer touch, and places at the disposal of man a power for the transportation of himself and his products of infinitely greater possibilities than animal power. The automobile has come to stay, and we could no more legislate it out of existence than we could abolish the railroad and MODEEN EOAD PROBLEMS 217 the locomotive. At the present time it is esti- mated that from 12,000 to 13,000 automobiles are manufactured every month, and the number is constantly increasing. Up to the present time most of the manufacturers have devoted their energies to supplying the demand for passenger ears, but the time will undoubtedly come when the automobile will be used quite generally for the transportation of farm prod- ucts to market over good roads. It is neces- sary, therefore, that attention be directed toward providing roadways suitable for this new form of traffic. Methods of Meeting Conditions, — ^All rem- edies which have been tried or suggested in this connection may be considered in two classes: first, those which deal with the construction of new roads, so as to minimise the formation of dust, and second, those which deal with the treat- ment of the surfaces of existing roads, to bring about the same results. In the construction of new roads various bituminous binders have been employed with crushed stone, and this type of road is known as the bituminous macadam. In the treatment of old roads various bituminous 218 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES and other binders have been applied to the sur- face, according to a number of different meth- ods. The materials which are applied to roads for the purpose of preventing the formation of dust may be considered in two classes: first, those that are applied in their original condi- tion, and second, those that are applied in emul- sion or solution in water. Mineral Oil. — This material has been quite generally used in the treatment of road sur- faces, with varying success. The oils that have given the most satisfactory results are those having an asphalt base. Asphalt forms an ex- cellent binder, while paraffin has practically no binding power, and would merely result in mak- ing the road greasy. The eastern oils contain almost a pure paraffin base. Some of the Ken- tucky oils, and most of those in Texas, have a mixed paraffin and asphalt base, while many of the California oils contain a high percentage of asphalt. The oil is applied either in the crude state or after distillation at refineries, where the lighter and more volatile parts are removed. An oil which has been refined in this way is known as a residual oil, is heavier and MODERN EOAD PROBLEMS 219 thicker tlian in its original state, and possesses a larger percentage of the base. Consequently, it is, as a rule, better suited for road treatment. When the oil is not too heavy, it can be applied to the road surface with an ordinary sprinkling cart, but when it is too heavy for use in this way, it is uaual to heat it and apply it to the road by means of a sprayer, either with or with- out pressure. In the application of surface binders the best practice is to sweep the road clean, so that the binder may penetrate and be incorporated in the body of the road. After the material has been applied in this way, it is usual to place a thin covering of gravel, sand or rock screenings, and rock dust on the road. In California, oil has been applied to earth roads which have previously been ploughed up, and the materials thoroughly tamped and mixed by means of a tamping or sheep-foot roller. This method of construction has not proved successful in the East. Coal Tar, — Many engineers favour the use of coal tar for the prevention of dust and the preservation of roads, but one of the greatest difficulties is to obtain a universally good mate- 220 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES rial from different producers. Coal tar is a thick, black liquid, obtained as a by-product from the distillation of coal during the manu- facture of illuminating gas and coke. The base of coal tar gives its value as a road binder. This base, which is known as coal-tar pitch, corresponds to the asphalt base of oils. In the application of coal tar to roads, the dust should be removed and the tar applied in practically the same manner as oil. The refined tar is usually superior to the crude product, but is more expensive. The application of tar to a surface should be made only in dry, warm weather, and when the road surface is perfectly dry, as good results cannot be obtained other- wise. It would hold true, consequently, that the tar itself should not contain any water, as the road surface absorbs water more rapidly than other materials. It is almost always nec- essary to heat the tar before it can be applied to the road, and the method is usually to provide large iron kettles, equipped with portable fire boxes and mounted on wheels, or, where the tar is supplied in tank cars, the heating is done before the tar is removed from the tank. It is MODEEN ROAD PROBLEMS 221 applied to the road either by means of a sprinkling device, or by hand sprinklers and spread with brooms. The tar should be al- lowed to dry for a few days before traffic is per- mitted on the road. The best practice is to spread a light course of sand or rock screenings over the surface after it has been treated with tar. Solutions and Emulsions. — Materials other than tars, asphalts and heavy oils, are generally included under the term ** palliatives." Pre- vious to the introduction of motor vehicles, water was the agency generally relied upon to keep the dust down on stone roads. Owing to the fact that water evaporates rapidly, a num- ber of chemical salts, having the property of absorbing and retaining moisture in the atmos- phere, have been used. Calcium Chloride. — Probably the best exam- ple of this form of dust preventive is known as calcium chloride, a by-product produced in the manufacture of soda. Calcium chloride has a great affinity for water, and absorbs and retains moisture from the atmosphere for a consider- able length of time. It is, however, only tempo- 222 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES rary in its effect, as compared with the heavier binders. It is prepared for application to the road by mixing with water, and is applied by means of the ordinary sprinkling cart. Waste Sulphite Liquor. — ^A waste product from the wood-pulp paper-mills has been re- cently used with some success, but as the base of this material is soluble in water, it can be classed only as a temporary binder. The best results have been obtained from this material by the application of a concentrated solution of about 1.13 specific gravity, at the rate of % gal- lon per square yard. Under favourable con- ditions, this treatment will keep the dust down for a whole season, and the material may, there- fore, be considered as a semi-permanent binder. Permanent Binders, — Coming now to the permanent binders, we may consider their use according to two general methods of construc- tion, known as the penetration or grouting method, and the mixing method. Among the permanent bituminous binders which we have so far employed are the heavier residual oils and tars of semi-solid or solid consistency, fluxed oil and tar pitches and solid native bitu- MODERN EOAD PROBLEMS 223 mens, and fluid cut-back products, wMcli are capable of increasing in consistency after ap- plication, by volatilisation of the lighter con- stituents. When employing tbe penetration method, the best practice is to construct the road as follows : Upon the subgrade, prepared as for ordinary macadam work, a foundation course of No. 1 crushed stone is placed to the desired depth and well rolled. Sufficient screenings are then applied to fill the surface voids, and care is taken that there is no excess of fine material which will prevent the wearing course from keying into the foundation course. The road is then rolled until absolutely firm, and more screenings are applied if necessary to take the place of those worked into the foundation. The wearing course of No. 2 crushed stone, clean and free from dust and screenings, is then applied to a finished depth of two or three inches and this course is lightly rolled. The hot bitumen is next poured or sprayed upon the road at the rate of from 1 to 11/2 gallons per square yard, after which a light coat of clean i^-iiich stone chips, free from dust, is applied and the road is well 224 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES rolled. A seal coat of bitumen is then painted upon tlie surface at the rate of from a third to half a gallon per square yard, after which screenings are applied and rolled in until the road is. smooth and firm. Such a method of construction should pro- duce a durable road on which dust formation is reduced to a minimum. The mixing method is, however, to be preferred because of the greater certainty of obtaining an absolutely uniform wearing surface in which each individual frag- ment is known to be covered with the binder. In general the mixing method is conducted as follows; Upon a foundation course of crushed stone, prepared as just described, a mixture of crushed stone and bitumen is laid to a finished depth of from two to three inches, and rolled with the addition of screenings. A paint coat of bitumen is then applied and the road is finished in the manner previously de- scribed. The mixture of stone and bitumen may be prepared either by manual labour or machinery, preferably by the latter. The min- eral aggregate may be graded in any approved manner. For country road work, the crusher THE AUTOMOBILE AND THE ROAD. 1. Motoring on a road of bituminous macadam. 2. Tearing up the pike. 3. Hqw last, av.toraobile travel affects a macadamized surface. MODEEN EOAD PEOBLEMS 225 run of stone from 2 inches or II/2 inches to dust may sometimes be satisfactorily used. In the experimental work of the Office of Public Eoads a mixture of 27 parts crusher run of from II/2 inches to % inch with 10 parts crusher run of from % inch to dust has been found to produce a very dense, aggregate. Such an aggregate should be mixed with not less than six per cent, of bitumen, and neither the stone nor bitumen should be heated above 350° C. The application of rock asphalt in macadam- road construction may in a certain sense be considered as a combination of the penetration and mixing methods. This material, if contain- ing a good grade of bitumen, will serve as a permanent binder. It has been mixed by na- ture so that each individual fragment is thor- oughly coated with the binder. It is seldom suitable for use as a wearing surface of any considerable thickness, owing to the softness of the bitumen and to the fineness of the min- eral particles, which are not, as a rule, well graded. If forced into the wearing course of a newly constructed macadam road, to which no screenings have been applied, it may, as has 226 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES been demonstrated, prove to be a very service- able road material which prevents excessive dust formation by reducing wear and disinte- gration. In order that bituminous roads may be kept dustless it is necessary that they, in common with all other roads, be treated from time to time according to one of the first two methods mentioned earlier in this chapter, that is, they must either be scavenged, or their surfaces treated with temporary or semi-permanent binders. It will be found that the use of a good semi-permanent bituminous binder in compara- tively small amounts will not only lay the dust satisfactorily upon these roads, but that such treatment will appreciably lengthen the life of the road by revivifying the old binder originally used during construction. Portland cement is in some respects an almost ideal permanent road binder, especially when motor traffic only is encountered. When mixed in proper proportions with a suitable mineral aggregate it produces a hard rigid concrete, well designed to withstand the shearing strains exerted upon it by the driving wheels of auto- MODEEN EOAD PEOBLEMg 227 mobiles, and practically unacted npon by tbe large pneumatic tires of such vehicles. Under steel-shod horse-drawn traffic it is, ' however, far from ideal, owing to its lack of resiliency and tendency to spall under impact and abra- sion. Investigations are now being conducted by the Office of Public Roads with a view to finding some way of overcoming these undesirable properties. While much experimental work will yet have to be done along this line, what has already been accom- pHshed would seem to indicate that certain fluid petroleum residuums may be used to advantage in wet cement concrete mixtures, both for the purpose of waterproofing the concrete and reducing its ten- dency to spall. It has been found that there is little difficulty in incorporatiug petroleum residues with such mixtures, providing they are sufficiently fluid to be handled when cold, and some of the oils seem to produce no loss in the strength of the concrete in which they are used. We hope in the near future to try out some of these mixtures in the construction of experimental roads where it will be possible to study the results produced under actual service conditions. Until this is done it is, of course, impossible to draw any definite conclusions in regard to the practical value of mineral oils as road preservatives and dust preventives in the construction of cement concrete pavements. 228 EOADS, PATHS AND BKIDGES In conclusion a word may be said in regard to the value of an oil binder in eartb-road con- struction. While the experiments conducted by the Office along this line have been in no sense failures, it would seem that in the eastern part of the United States at least, the oiled earth road is not destined to prove a success. This is due both to the character of the oils which have to be used and to the rather severe climatic conditions encountered here. CHAPTEE XII PATHS There are many sections of the country where the roads are so poor as to render them prac- tically impassable for pedestrians, especially during the winter months. In other parts of the country where the roads are improved, the auto- mobile and wagon traffic is very frequently so heavy as to render the roads not only disagree- able but dangerous to travel on foot. School attendance in many rural districts is sometimes interfered with, and in some instances the schools have to be closed on account of bad roads for varying periods during the winter months. With the expenditure of a comparatively small amount of money, sidewalks or side paths could be built to accommodate pedestrians along the main roads where the conditions above de- scribed prevail. Side paths would facilitate school attendance and at the same time encour- age the healthful exercise of walking, a pastime 229 230 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES that is too seldom indulged in by tlie average American. Paths should he located on the highest side of the road on the slope or shoulder just outside of the surface ditch. A strip of sod a few feet in width should be provided between the path and the road, as otherwise it will be found, if the path is on the same level as the road, that teamsters will drive their heavy wagons and horses over the line of the path and destroy it. The width of such paths need not be greater than 2 or 3 feet. A Sand-Clay Path, — For all ordinary pur- poses, a path built out of a mixture of sand and clay, or out of fine gravel, will serve every pur- pose. No foundation will usually be required, as the paths are not subject to heavy loads. If the ground over which the path is located is composed of clay or loam, and the surfacing is to be made with sand and clay, or sand and loam, the ground should be ploughed up slightly and then covered with a thin layer of sand. This sand should be mixed with loam or clay by means of a garden rake. The mixing should be done when the soil i^ comparatively damp^ and < Q (—1 m W I— I K K PATHS 231 the mixture should contain from 85 to 90 per cent, of sand and from 10 to 15 per cent, of clay or loam. After the mixing process has been completed, a thin layer of sand should be applied to keep the clay or loam from becoming muddy or sticky in wet weather. The path should be slightly crowned so as to shed surface water, and small tile culverts should be placed under it at low places, so as to prevent washing. It will be unnecessary, as a general rule, to con- struct bridges and culverts for the paths, as the ordinary bridges and culverts of the roadway can be used by pedestrians. It will sometimes be found that the surface soil by the roadside contains about the right mixture of sand, gravel and clay to make a good path, and under such circumstances, all that is needed is to clear the right of way and remove weeds, rocks and other obstructions, and crown the surface. Where gravel is used, all large pebbles should be raked out and discarded or used for the foundation. There is nothing quite so disagreeable as to walk on a road where the surface is covered with large stones or peb- bles. 232 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES Stone Screenings, Cinders, etc, — Cinders are very frequently used for side paths, but as they are lighter and more friable than gravel, sand or crushed-stone screenings, they are more liable to wash, and consequently do not give as satis- factory results. Crushed sandstone, limestone chips and screenings, or other screenings, make good materials for paths, provided no piece is larger than % or % inch in diameter, and that the mixture contains enough fine material to cover the coarser screenings. As a general rule, 2 or 3 inches of any of the materials above mentioned will be sufficient. The materials may be laid directly on the sod or soil, as this insures better drainage than would be secured by digging a trench into which these materials are placed. When side paths are built in thickly settled regions, or in the neighbourhood of towns and villages, it is often found desirable to construct them out of more permanent materials than those referred to above. The materials ordi- narily used for this purpose are brick and con- crete. This advice applies in a general way to the PATHS 233 construction of paths about one's house and grounds. Brich Walks, — In building brick paths, an excavation of 4 or 5 inches should be made to the desired width of 3 or 4 feet. The founda- tion may be composed of cinders, gravel or crushed stone, placed to a depth of from 2 to 3 inches, and covered with a layer of sand to a depth of about 1 inch. A curb should then be laid on both sides of the walk, composed of bricks set on end with the upper ends flush with the surface of the ground. The bricks for the walk should be laid flat and not on edge. Every alternate brick should be laid lengthwise of the pavement, so as to avoid long cleavage lines or cracks. The bricks should then be tamped into position under a board, or, if possible, rolled with a light roller. The surface is then cov- ered with a thin layer of fine sand which is broomed into the cracks. Walks of Portland Cement, — The success of a cement sidewalk is largely dependent upon the provision of the following essential features of construction: 234 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES 1. A firm, but porous foundation, to provide means for draining off rain water. 2. A sufficiently thick base of well-made, strong concrete. 3. A wearing coat of rich mortar, troweled to a smooth, dense surface. 4. The division of the walk into blocks, with lines of weakness between them, so that all cracks due to settlement, shrinkage or frost, will be made to occur at the joints, and will thus not be notice- able. If proper drainage is not provided under a cement sidewalk, rainwater will accumulate, and in consequence the frost action will be severe in causing heaving in cold weather, and unequal settlement of the walk will occur when the ground is wet. Good drainage may be secured by laying a foundation of cinders, broken stone, gravel or coarse sand. Before laying the foundation, the ground is excavated to the proper depth and is well consolidated by ramming. The depth of the foundation course is dependent on the climate and the nature of the soil. In cold climates, or where the ground is soft, the foundation should be from 4 to 8 inches deep, while, in the more temperate cli- mates^ where no frost occurs and the soil PATHS 235 is sandy and not likely to become soft or water- soaked, no foundation is required. The foundation course should be thoroughly rammed to present a firm, unyielding surface, and if sand or cinders are used, they should be thoroughly wet when being compacted. The main body of the concrete walk is made of coarse concrete and is called the base. The usual proportions for the cement base are one part of cement, two or three parts of sand, and ^Ye parts of broken stone or gravel. Nothing but good Portland cement should be used in sidewalk construction. Natural cements are unsuitable, since they will not stand the wear, while Puzzolan cements are likely to suf- fer deterioration through the action of wear and weather. The sand used in the concrete mixture should be clean and coarse; the stone should be hard and tough, and as free from dust as possible If gravel is used, it should be thoroughly screened and should be free from clay or other matter likely to interfere with the proper adhe- sion of the mortar. Gravel as it comes from the banks should not be mixed with the cement 236 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES to form concrete, but the sand should be screened out and recombined with the coarse particles in the desired proportion. The cement, sand and stone, or gravel, should be mixed with enough water to form a mixture of quaking or jelly-like consistency. Care should be taken to mix the materials thoroughly, so that each piece of stone will be coated with mortar. Forms should be provided along the sides of the walk to confine the concrete. These may be made of wooden strips 1% inches thick and of suitable depth, depending on the thickness of the concrete base. The strips should be nailed to wooden stakes, so that the tops are level with the finished surface of the walk. It is necessary to lay the concrete base in blocks with definite lines of separation, so that in the event of settlement, shrinkage or tem- perature changes, the irregular cracks which would otherwise form will be made to occur in straight, well-defined lines. The separation into blocks may be made by steel plates or strips about 1/4 inch thick, which are removed just be- fore the final finish and joint is made. Another PATHS 237 metliod is to lay the blocks alternately and fill in between them. Good results can be obtained by cutting the concrete course to a width of % inch, and finishing the top coat into the cut to the depth of 1 or 2 inches, and cutting with a trowel through both to separate the blocks when finished. The size of the blocks depends upon the width of the walk. Blocks nearly square in shape have a better appearance than elongated blocks. The limit of size for a 4-inch walk is generally placed at 6 feet square. The mortar wearing-surface should be placed as soon as a few of the concrete blocks have been placed, and before they have set. This surface consists of a mixture of cement and sand, cement and finely crushed stone, or cement and a mix- ture of sand and finely crushed stone. Care should be taken to proportion the materials exactly, and thoroughly mix them so that the surface will be of uniform colour throughout. The size of crushed stone usually specified is that which will pass a ^-inch sieve. The consistency of the mortar to be used is such as is ordinarily employed by a mason in 238 BOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES laying brick. The mortar after being depos- ited on top of the concrete base is smoothed to the level of the side form by means of a straight edge guided by the top of the forms. The sur- face is then roughly floated with a plasterer's trowel, and soon after levelled with the straight edge. The final floating is not performed until the mortar has been in place from two to five hours, when it has partially set. For this ope- ration a wooden float is first used and then a metal float, or plasterer's trowel. It is some- times the custom to sprinkle a thin layer of ** dryer," a dry mixture of 1: 1 mortar, which is trowelled over the surface. This is not desir- able, since it tends to make the walk glassy after floating. The surface should be grooved. The mason locates the joints between the blocks of concrete by marks previously placed on the wooden side forms. The exact location of the joints is found by running a small trowel down into the joints in the concrete. By the use of a steel straight-edge the mortar coat is cut through in order to form the individual blocks. The cor- ners of the cuts are rounded ofi by the use of PATHS 239 a groover and edging trowel, wHch is a small float with one of its edges curved. A metal float is used over the entire surface to give it a final finish. To obtain a rough surface, a dotted or grooved roller may be employed. It is advisable to protect the walk from the hot sun for ^several days after its completion; otherwise the surface is likely to dry out too quickly, with the consequent formation of shrinkage cracks. The following table is compiled from the spec- ifications for cement sidewalk construction, as practised in some of the larger cities throughout the country. 240 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES •SJB8iC UI 88:^nBJBTl£) xn I— I H M Q P o I— I > H % P a CO M H o I o .9 Q0.2 be V c y suoi:; pu«S -jodojj; ^uauxa3 CO (N (M r-( ssaujioiqj. CIS Buopjodojj ssau^ioiqx ^ ;fJ »o \o 10 W - Tjt (M 10 (N (N 00 CO (M rH 1-1 tH iH T-l I-l iH •3 fl .2 4^ CQ 08 73 S 3 f («« ssaujioiqj, M M ^ ^ W m d c3 02 000 -^ ^ pq « ^ ^ M O (M -^ 00 -"^ CHAPTEE XIII CULVERTS AND BRIDGES Bridge construction is a very teclinical and highly specialized field of engineering in which the layman is not likely to make great head- way. Nevertheless, there are many considera- tions regarding the construction and mainte- nance of culverts and small bridges which the layman can comprehend as well as the expert, and to these we desire especially to call the read- er ^s attention. By far the greater number of culverts and bridges on our public roads have a span of less than 50 feet. In the past these structures have, in general, been built of wood, but lumber so exposed is subject to rapid decay. Conse- quently, these structures require a great deal of repair and frequent renewals. The ever-in- creasing price of lumber is making the further use of wood for this class of structures more and more indefensible. The loads which our 241 242 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES highway structures are called upon to sustain are also increasing. In many localities the movement of steam road-rollers and heavy trac- tion engines is seriously hampered because of weak bridges and culverts. Thus, considera- tions of both economy and safety demand the use of other materials than wood in the con- struction of our culverts and bridges. Road Bridges. — Eoad authorities should, in general, adopt some systematic plan of replac- ing all wooden structures as fast as they require renewal with permanent materials, such as con- crete, and they should take particular pains to make sure that all new structures have sufficient strength to carry a heavy road-roller. Wood should never be employed, except for very good reasons. When it is found necessary to use wood for the smaller culverts and bridges, certain practical, rather than theoretical, considerations should govern the builder. All beams and stringers should be carefully inspected and only those free from bad knots and other defects should be used. For flooring, select a lumber that is hard and tough. Planks that show a tendency to splinter should not be used. For 2- and 3-inch flooring, the spacing of the stringers should not exceed 2 feet in the clear. If the stringers are spaced as wide apart as the strength CULVERTS AND BRIDGES 243 of the new plank permits, then in a short time when the plank is worn by traffic, failure will occur. Hence, to get the greatest possible amount of wear out of your flooring space the stringers closely. Culverts. — Three prime requirements are necessary in the design of road culverts, viz., ample waterway, strength and durability. All culverts and bridges should be designed and built strong enough to carry safely the heaviest load which is ever likely to be hauled over the road. For short spans, this is usually a heavy steam road-roller. Many of the existing culverts and bridges are far too light to carry the loads which they should legitimately be required to carry. This is especially true where traction engines are numerous. Durability is of the greatest economic im- portance. In many sections a large portion of the annual road levy is expended in repair and renewal of wooden culverts and minor bridges, and it is not unusual to find this practice de- fended on the grounds that the county or dis- trict cannot afford to build the higher-priced permanent culverts. This is simply a false sense of economy. True, the first cost of the 244 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES permanent strncture is greater, but tliere the outlay ends, while with wooden culverts, there is a large annual outlay for repair, as well as frequent renewals. Anyone interested in road improvements will find it most interesting to secure the following data for his own county or district: The number of culverts, cost of labour and material for repair and renewal each year, average life of wooden culvert, and the average life of wooden bridge floors. Then he could compute how long it would be before the actual present expenditure would pay for per- manent culverts. One of the frequent causes of the failure of culverts and bridges is due to inadequate water- way. Great care should be taken to provide a waterway ample to carry safely the largest storm-flow ever likely to occur. If the water- way is too small there is constant danger of a washout with interruption to traffic and high cost for repairs. On the other hand, if the waterway is made unnecessarily large, the cost of construction may be needlessly increased. Economical designs are those which provide COXCKETE CULYEKTS AND BRIDGES. 1. (Top.) Bridge of concrete on the State highway at Bucklin, JSIass. 2. Tile culvert. 3. Arched culvert. 4. Culvert of the box type. CULVERTS AND BEIDGES 245 adequately, but not extravagantly for all neces- sary requirements. It is inadvisable to carry storm water any considerable distance along the road. Water, especially where the volume is ever likely to be large and the velocity high, is a grave source of danger. Every effort should be made to turn water away from the road before it gathers in sufficient volume to be dangerous. To lead water long distances along the road, so as to require but few culverts, is the poorest kind of economy, as well as faulty engineering. It is courting trouble and inviting disaster. Pipe Culverts. — In many sections pipe culverts Cit099 Section End E4.Ev/mo^c Sketch Sxowinci foK Pipe, Cvuve R.TS. are proving very serviceable for sizes ranging from 12 to 24 inches in diameter. Because of the ease with which the smaller sizes of pipe 246 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES clog and so become unserviceable, it is in general inadvisable to nse for culverts sizes less than 12 inches in diameter, even though the amount of water to be removed could be carried by a smaller pipe. The kinds of pipe most com- monly used are terra-cotta, concrete and iron. Terra-cotta, or tile culverts, should be laid very carefully with the earth well tamped around them and provided with masonry or con- crete end walls. There are three common causes for the failure of tile culverts : washouts, breakage by passing traffic, and breakage due to the expansive action of ice. These can, in general, be easily prevented. Washouts can be prevented by using a tile of proper size with careful placing, and the construction of suitable end walls — a point of great importance. End walls should 'be carried well below the pipe to a good foundation, and provision should be made against possible undermining by erosion. If the soil is fine sand, or very friable, the joints should be laid in cement. When the soil is tough clay, hard pan or similar formation, this is not necessary, but in every case the earth CULVEKTS AND BEIDGES 247 should be carefully tamped beneath and around the tile. To prevent breakage by passing traffic, it is in general only necessary to place the tile at a greater depth below the surface than has been customary. The most frequent causes of break- age is on earth roads, where the wheels of heavily loaded wagons cut deep ruts, sometimes actually striking the pipe, when, of course, failure takes place. The remedy is obvious. On earth roads, place the tile at such depth that wheels will not cut to or near it. To prevent the softening of the earth, provide good surface drainage. A load or two of gravel spread over the road at this point will also be of much assistance. In general, never place a tile culvert nearer than 18 inches to the surface on an earth road. In cold climates, and especially in the prairie regions, tile culverts are often broken by the expansive action of the ice in winter. A tile culvert should never be placed where there is danger of the drainage being obstructed in such manner as to allow water or slush to accumulate in the pipe and then freeze. When the pipe is as much as two-thirds full of water 248 EOADS, PATHS AND BEIDGES or slush, hard freezing will invariably burst it. For this reason, tile culverts must be used with caution in all cold countries, and especially in the flat prairie regions, where the natural drain- age is poor. Iron-Pipe Culverts. — With regard to iron- pipe culverts, the same care should be taken CoiMCKE-TE Culvert Steeu l-BEflrts Incased In Coimcrete. in laying and placing the end walls as with tile culverts. Improvements in the manu- facture of iron have made this material more generally available for use in culvert construe- CULVEETS AND BRIDGES 249 tion. A special quality of iron, very low in carbon, is found to resist corrosion so well as to make its use advisable in many cases. The old style of cast-iron pipes is too heavy ever to come into general use. Corrugated iron pipe, bow- ever, wben made from material of tbe proper quality, possesses strength together with dura- bility and lightness. Corrugated iron pipe can be laid with somewhat less covering than tile pipe, and will successfully resist the expansive action of ice. It can, therefore, be used in places where it would be foUy to place tile. Concrete-Pipe Culverts. — Concrete, both plain and reinforced, is used to some extent in the manufacture of culvert pipes. When care- fully made of proper materials, they are very serviceable. In general, it may be said that for the use of plain concrete culvert pipe, the same considerations govern as for the tile pipes, while the reinforced concrete culverts may be used wherever under other considerations the cor- rugated iron pipe could be used. End Walls, — What the foundation is to a house the end walls are to a culvert. Without suitable end walls, a culvert is without protec- 250 EOADS, PATHS AND BRIDGES tion and is placed in danger at every severe storm. Where the fill is high, wing walls may be used to hold it back, but for most pipe culverts they are not needed. In friable soils, and when- ever the velocity of the water is high, the space at the outlet end of the pipe should be paved to prevent erosion and danger of undermining the end walls. The end walls should be carried down to soil sufficiently firm to prevent any set- tlement. The materials for end walls may be brick, stone or concrete. If bricks are used, they should be hard burned and laid in cement mor- tar. Concrete is in general the best material for use in the construction of wing and end walls. The concrete should be about a 1:2% :5 mixture The length of end wall should be about D + 3 H, where D equals diameter of pipe and H equals height of fill above bottom of pipe. Concrete Culverts, — In general the best ma- terial for use in the construction of culverts and the smaller bridges is reinforced concrete. The first cost of a reinforced concrete structure is naturally higher than that for a wooden one, but if properly built in the first place, the struc- CULVEETS AND BEIDGES 251 ture will be permanent and the items of repair and renewals will be eliminated. Safety, whicb is of tlie greatest importance, will also be secured from the outset. There are four general types of concrete culverts and bridges, i. e., box, T-beam, I-beam t t^^?^ ^. ff r-±-^ ^ JGBbls. Port/one/ Clement ' ' '. rcfsSana tf^?'??s^fi^