Virginia Historical Highway Markers
Stafford County
E 50
From Indian Path to Highway
This marker is near one of Stafford County's baseball fields that my son used to play and I coached, only a few miles south of Stafford's courthouse on Route 1. When you pass this marker heading south you pass over Accokeek Creek. If you look to your right you will see a very old bridge that used to be Route 1. If I had to guess, it's at least 75+ years old.
The sign reads:
In 1664, a colonial road here probably followed the trace of an old Indian path. Two years later, the road was extended to Aquia Creek. It became a post road in 1750, and in Sept. 1781 Gen. George Washington passed over it on the march to Yorktown. By 1900, a crude dirt road followed this route. The 1914 American Automobile Association Blue Book described it as mostly "very poor and dangerous; should not be attempted except in dry weather." By 1925, auto camps and cabins, the predecessors of auto courts and motels, stood at frequent intervals along present-day U.S. Route 1 between Washington, D.C., and Richmond.

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Sam there are old bridges all over the area. I wonder if VDOT as info on these???