Harman Patil (Editor)

Ashland UDC Jefferson Davis Highway Marker

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Area
  
less than one acre

NRHP Reference #
  
13000642

Added to NRHP
  
27 August 2013

Built
  
1927

Opened
  
1927

Ashland UDC Jefferson Davis Highway Marker

Location
  
Junction of Cedar Lane & Washington Highway (US Route 1), Ashland, Virginia

MPS
  
UDC Commemorative Highway Markers along the Jefferson Davis Highway in Virginia

The Ashland UDC Jefferson Davis Highway Marker is a commemorative marker on the Jefferson Davis Highway, in Hanover County, Virginia, outside of Richmond, Virginia. It is a 42-inch-high (1.1 m) gray granite stone, with a slanted top, with two bronze plaques. The Jefferson Davis Highway was conceived and marked by the United Daughters of the Confederacy, as a counter to the Lincoln Highway in the north, during 1913-1925. In that era, named highways were being marked as automobile travel increased, and the advent of numbered highways eventually loomed. The marker was placed at the junction of what is now US Route 1 and Cedar Lane (Virginia Route 623), between Richmond and Ashland, in 1927. It has been moved twice: in the 1970s it was moved to accommodate the widening of Route 1, and it was moved across Route 1 in the 1980s.

The marker is one of a number of markers studied in a National Park Service study, UDC Commemorative Highway Markers along the Jefferson Davis Highway in Virginia.

Ashland udc jefferson davis highway marker top 6 facts


References

Ashland UDC Jefferson Davis Highway Marker Wikipedia