Tag Archives: Boston Post Road

Starring On TV: The Post Road

Alert “06880” reader David Meth sent along info about an interesting show airing tomorrow night on PBS.

“10 Streets That Changed America” looks at some very different roads, from coast to coast, and from colonial days to 2018. It “explores the ways real estate, technology, and travel alter ways we get around, and in turn, shape modern life.”

Right there — among Broadway and Wilshire Boulevard — is the Post Road.

Opened in 1673, the New York to Boston route dramatically cut the time of moving people, goods and information. 100 years later, Ben Franklin helped it become “an even more efficient, economical means of transporting ideas and publications, just in time to ferment the debate and dialogue that fed the American Revolution.”

That was then …

The show’s website promises to highlight “the importance of infrastructure, and how today’s planners are, in many ways, coming full circle in their efforts to return many of the country’s great roads to walkable, pedestrian thoroughfares.”

I guess the key word in that sentence is “many.”

Not “all.”

(“10 Streets That Changed America” airs tomorrow — Tuesday, July 10 — at 8 p.m. on Channel 13. Click here for more information.)

… this is now.

 

A Post On The Post Road

If you think writers can run out of subjects for books, I have 4 words for you:  “The King’s Best Highway.”

That’s the title of Eric Jaffe’s 1st work.  The subtitle tells more:  “The Lost History of the Boston Post Road, The Route That Made America.”

Yes, it is possible to write 267 pages about a road.

Jaffe — a former editor of Smithsonian.com — was warned not to write a “boring” book.  He hasn’t.

He follows the New York-to-Boston Post Road from a number of angles:  Indian trails.  Stagecoach lines.  The Revolutionary War.  The Civil War.  Railroads.  Interstates.

He channels John Winthrop, Nathan Hale, Abe Lincoln, P.T. Barnum, J.P. Morgan, FDR and Robert Moses.

He covers newspapers, textiles, mass-produced bicycles and guns, railroads — even Manhattan’s modern grid.

The Post Road defined Westport long before there was a Westport.  A major conduit for commerce, it featured a not-uncommon toll bridge over the Saugatuck River.

The Post Road, looking east, in 1944. On the left is the old library (now Starbucks, among other things). On the right is the Club Grill and, beyond it, Thompson's Pharmacy (now Tiffany). Note the trolley tracks, which remained through the 1950s.

Downtown grew up along the “King’s Highway.”  Stores and shopping centers sprouted elsewhere on the road.

By the 1950s the Post Road (at that time called State Street) was so clogged with traffic — cars, buses and trucks all competed with cars parked on both sides of the street — something had to be done.

That something was the Connecticut Turnpike (now called I-95).  It seems intuitive today that the route through Westport hugs the shore.  Where else could it go?

Incredibly, an early-’50s plan had the Turnpike following the Post Road  exactly.  The new interstate would be double-decked over it, directly through downtown.

The mind boggles.

A 1970s “Greening of the Post Road” project brought trees and flowers to the Westport portion of US1.  Enough time has passed that some greenery has now been chopped down — CL&P’s underground power line project was an egregious culprit — but new re-greening, like that near Fresh Market, should bear fruit soon.

Jaffe’s book mentions Westport fleetingly.  There’s F. Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald’s “mad rides” along the Post Road; a successful 1945 “Stop the Road” drive to halt an early version of the Turnpike, and a sarcastic  reference to the “Please Slow Down, We Enforce Our Speed Laws” sign at the town line.

That’s fine.  Don’t buy “The King’s Best Highway” to read about Westport.  Buy it for the entire 380-year history of the Post Road.

The official publication date is June 22.  It will be available at Barnes & Noble.

The address is 1076 Post Road East.

The Post Road's Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Bridge -- so crowded when you're on it -- seems almost invisible in this shot, taken from the wooden walkway off Parker Harding Plaza.