Great River Road

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Great River Road in Wisconsin, with Minnesota in the distance on the other side of the Mississippi River.
The Great River Road in Wisconsin, with Minnesota in the distance on the other side of the Mississippi River.
The distinctive route marker that is displayed along the entire 10 state routing of the Great River Road.
The distinctive route marker that is displayed along the entire 10 state routing of the Great River Road.
The Great River Road in Illinois above Alton.
The Great River Road in Illinois above Alton.

The Great River Road is a collection of state, provincial, federal, and local roads which follow the course of the Mississippi River through ten states of the United States and one Canadian province. They are Arkansas, Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Tennessee, Wisconsin, and Ontario. A five-state section of the road has been designated a National Scenic Byway.

Developed in 1938, the road has a separate commission in each state and province. These in turn cooperate through the Mississippi River Parkway Commission (MRPC). The 2,340 miles (3,765 km) are designated with a green and white sign showing a river steamboat inside a spoked wheel with the name of the state or province. The over-all logo reads "Canada to Gulf" where the local name would be.

Contents

The west bank route uses the following roads in Louisiana:[1]

The east bank route uses the following roads in Louisiana:[1]

Great River Road logo
Great River Road logo

Ontario also has a designated tourist route named the "Great River Road". It starts in Kenora, Ontario and travels along Highway 17/Trans-Canada Highway to Highway 71, where it heads south, staying close to Lake of the Woods. Upon meeting Highway 11 in Barwick, Ontario, the designation branches off into two directions: a spur heads west along Highway 11 to Rainy River, Ontario, while the main route travels east along Highway 11 to Fort Frances, Ontario.

It continues until it approaches Secondary Highway 502, travelling back up towards Dryden, Ontario, and looping back west along Highway 17 to Kenora.

Some road maps (Rand McNally's road atlas in particular) also show the Great River Road routed through Manitoba, as far north as Lake Winnipeg. However, it is unclear if the road is signed in that province.

  1. ^ a b Louisiana Acts 2003, No. 969, ยง1

  • "Discover America's Great River Road" by Pat Middleton, ISBN 0-9620823-8-4, Great River Publishing 1996
  • "Life on the Mississippi: For the ultimate cross-country driving trip, travel down the Great River Road" by Paul Lukas, Money Magazine June 1, 2002
  • "The Great River Road runs through 10 states -- and countless tales" by Zeke Wigglesworth, Knight-Ridder/Tribune News Service July 10, 1995

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