Page:Historic highways of America (Volume 5).djvu/195

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THE PENNSYLVANIA ROAD
191

see the olden track a few rods distant on his right or left; at points it lies several miles to the south. The present Pittsburg Pike passes through Greensburg, while old Hannastown on Forbes's Road lies three miles to the northwest. The old route was a little less careful as to hills than the new, and made a straighter line across the country; the telephone companies have taken advantage of this and send their wires along the easily discerned track of the old road at many points. There is no point perhaps where the old road of 1785 is so plainly to be remarked as on the side of the upper end of Long Hollow Run, Napier township, Bedford County, a few miles west of historic little Bedford.[1]

The Pennsylvania Road and its important branch, the "Turkey Foot" Road to the Youghiogheny, became one of the important highways to the Ohio basin in the pioneer era. With the digging of the Pennsylvania canal up the valley of the Juniata, the Pennsylvania Road became

  1. Several items of interest to students of Forbes's Road will be found in History of the County of Westmorland, Pennsylvania, pp. 28–31,