more at
http://travel.quickfound.net/
"
Travelogue, made for theatrical showing and commissioned by
Chevrolet, promoting tourism by car
..."
Reupload of a previously uploaded film with improved video & sound.
Public domain film from the
Prelinger Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and one-pass brightness-contrast-color correction & mild video noise reduction applied.
The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and/or equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original).
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/
3.0/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pennsylvania_Turnpike
The
Pennsylvania Turnpike is a toll highway system operated by the
Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission in the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
United States. The three sections of the turnpike system total 532 miles (856 km). The main section extends from
Ohio (west) to
New Jersey (east) and is 359 miles (578 km) long. The 110-mile (
180 km)
Northeast Extension extends from
Plymouth Meeting in the southeast to Wilkes-Barre and
Scranton in the northeast. The various access segments in
Western Pennsylvania total 62 miles (
100 km).
The highway serves most of
Pennsylvania's major urban areas. The main east/west section serves the
Pittsburgh,
Harrisburg, and
Philadelphia areas, while its Northeast Extension serves the
Allentown/
Bethlehem and Scranton/Wilkes-Barre areas.
This system has an optional payment method called E-ZPass, where tolls are paid electronically through a transponder attached to the car either behind its rear-view mirror or to the front bumper.
The Pennsylvania Turnpike is part of the
U.S. Interstate Highway System, and is signed with the following route numbers:
-
Interstate 76. Interstate 76 comprises the majority of the system, starting at the turnpike's western terminus at the
Ohio state line, and continuing to the
Valley Forge exit, where Interstate 76 leaves the turnpike.
-
Interstate 70 joins the turnpike at
New Stanton,
Exit 75, and runs concurrently with Interstate 76 until leaving the turnpike at
Breezewood, Exit 161 (the only other tolled section of
I-70 is on the
Kansas Turnpike). This section is internally known as
State Route 7076.[2]
-
Interstate 276. Interstate 76 leaves the turnpike mainline at Valley Forge/Philadelphia, Exit 326, where it begins to follow the
Schuylkill Expressway. At that
point, the turnpike becomes Interstate 276 for 32.65 mi (52.55 km)[3] until it meets with a spur of the
New Jersey Turnpike at the
Delaware River, at the turnpike's eastern end. Some maps have the
I-276 shield on the New Jersey Turnpike extension. This section is internally known as State Route 7276.[2]
-
Interstate 376. Interstate 376 is a recent addition to the Pennsylvania Turnpike system, known as the
James E. Ross Highway, formerly signed as
Pennsylvania Route 60.
-
Interstate 476.
The Northeast Extension, which meets the turnpike mainline at milepost
333.5 (the interchange is designated as Exit-20, the milepost marker for
I-476), is signed as part of Interstate 476. This section was originally signed as
Pennsylvania Route 9 before redesignation in the
1990s. This section is internally known as State Route 7476.[2]
-
Interstate 95.
The turnpike mainline currently crosses Interstate 95; however, there is no direct connection between the two routes.
Once the Pennsylvania Turnpike/Interstate 95
Interchange Project northeast of Philadelphia is completed, which will add a direct connection, the section of the turnpike east of that interchange (now Interstate 276) will be redesignated Interstate 95...
History
Governor Earle signed the
Turnpike into law on May 21,
1937, and construction began shortly after, with the first section from the Pittsburgh suburb of
Irwin, Pennsylvania to
Carlisle, Pennsylvania opening in
1940, and from Ohio line to the New Jersey line in
1956. When the first section opened in 1940, it was built to higher design standards and extended over a longer distance than any other limited-access divided highway in the United States, and was the first inter-city expressway comparable to the
German Autobahn. Before
World War II it was popularly known as the "tunnel highway" because of the seven mountain tunnels along its route.
First section
The turnpike was partly constructed on an unused railroad grade intended for the aborted
South Pennsylvania Railroad project, and six of its seven original tunnels (all except the
Allegheny Mountain tunnel) were first bored for that railroad. The construction began in the
1880s but was never completed. A combined total of
4.5 miles (7.2 km) of tunnel had been dug through seven mountains...
- published: 11 Dec 2015
- views: 640