Crossing iowa

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Top, left: We’re on U.S. Route 30, with a Lincoln Highway sign indicating this is where the original road ran; some National Guardsmen are headed off for weekend warrioring. Top, center: Needing a nap, we headed off into the Loess Hills a short way and found a suitable babbling brook to lull me into a short sleep. Top, right: That’s the Iron Horse Social Club in Savanna, Illinois, where owner Jerry Gendreau keeps a great collection of 30-some old motorcycles.

Bottom, left: OId barns are an essential part of any farming community, but since paint is expensive, sometimes they look a little worn, although the roof doesn’t leak. Bottom, right: This is part of the old Lincoln Highway, with a Parker truss bridge going over the stream; these steel girder bridges were very popular in the 1920s.

STORY AND PHOTOS BY CLEMENT SALVADORI


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This page: A Harley-Davidson Road Glide with a tall windscreen was the perfect motorcycle for my mostly straight, rolling route across Iowa. With my feet on floorboards, a loping V-twin between my knees and a duffel serving as a back rest, traveling was easy. Right: Nebraska may be the Cornhusker State, but it’s Iowa that produces the most corn of any state.

I

was a little concerned about riding through Iowa in June. Nothing to do with bandits, earthquakes or extra-terrestrial beings, just two big rivers. Spring had brought flooding to middle America, with huge amounts of snow melting and heavy rains, and I was going to cross the two biggest rivers in this country: the Mississippi and the Missouri. (And I was hoping that the route I had chosen would not be washed out.) The main attraction for me in Iowa stretched from river to river: the old Lincoln Highway, now known as U.S. Route 30. That was the original ocean-to-ocean road, conceived in 1913, constantly revised, but still pretty much a two-lane road in today’s Iowa. By the way, the Iowa nickname of Hawkeye dates back to the 1830s when the land was still a territory, not yet a state, and honors a Sauk Indian, Chief Black Hawk.


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FALL 2017 ISSUE 02 / VOL. 02

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D U N LO P M OTO R CYC LETI R ES . C O M

The National Motorcycle Museum in Anamosa, Iowa, has more than 300 beautiful bikes on display, including this Thor, a company that was very active between 1907 and 1919.

Also, I wanted to visit the National Motorcycle Museum in Anamosa, Iowa, and this was my opportunity. We have the better part of a dozen major motorcycle museums in this country, as well as a couple of dozen less formal ones, but I had never been to that one. Not that I knew where Anamosa was. Having just escaped the confines of Chicago, I pulled over at a rest stop on Illinois’ Ronald Reagan Memorial Tollway (heck of a way to be remembered, constantly asking for money) to have a look at the map. I saw that Anamosa was on Route 64, a state route number shared by Illinois and Iowa, and the tollway was equidistant from U.S. 30 and Route 64—I went north and picked up 64.


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The Mighty Miss is almost at flood stage and that long bridge will carry us from Savanna, Illinois, to Sabula, Iowa. Eighty years ago we’d be waiting for a ferry.

This took me to the sleepy river-town of Savanna, where I saw the first advertising for the museum, as well as for a small Harley museum located in a restaurant/ bar called the Iron Horse Social Club. Being still morning, the club was not open. Savanna must have been a rip-snorting sort of place when the paddlewheelers would pull in 150 years ago. Then the railroad arrived in 1875, making this a real transportation hub. And a ferryboat would take you over to Iowa. That ferry service pretty much came to an end in the 1930s when FDR was busy creating jobs and the government provided money to build a bridge over the Mighty Miss. It’s still a good bridge, well kept up. On a normal day, the center span stands 65 feet above the water, but on my day of crossing I figured it was a good deal less than that because the river was running high. On the other side of the river is Sabula, Iowa, which is built on an island. The bridge leads on, a causeway leads off. The little island has three parallel streets and a population of only a few hundred, but apparently the land was high enough that nobody seemed worried about flooding. A train came along and crossed on the 100-year-old railroad bridge; the bridge has a section that swings, allowing riverboats to pass through.


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Right: Located in Stone City, St. Joseph’s Roman Catholic Church was built in 1913 using limestone from local quarries and later featured in a Grant Wood painting. Due to declining population, the parish was closed in 1992 and the church became an oratory. Below: In addition to the 385 miles of the Lincoln Highway Heritage Byway’s main route, there are 75 miles of “loops,” side trips to original stretches of the highway or other scenic locations.

I did manage to get lost on the island, but after asking directions and crossing the causeway I was back on the mainland. Iowa is justly known for its produce, with corn and soy high on the list, and edible animals, with some five million cattle and 20 million hogs. More than 90 percent of the land is given over to crops and grazing, and that provides a beautiful view. The terrain is not flat, but rolling, with lots of low hills and rivers; fertile is an understatement. Tractors plowing, cattle deep in green grass, blue skies and a few white puffy clouds— all is well with the world. Arriving at the town of Maquoketa, a sign told me that I was now on the Grant Wood Scenic Byway. Anamosa, my destination, is also the birth and burial place of Grant Wood, one of America’s great artists. He is best known for his “American Gothic” painting of a very dour farmer with a pitchfork standing by his wife. In nearby Stone City, he set up an artists’ colony in the 1930s and painted a memorable landscape of the place with the Wapsipinicon River flowing down the middle. Much has changed in three-quarters of a century, but the old St. Joseph’s church of the painting is still there. I was wondering how to find the motorcycle museum, but as I came into an intersection with Route 64 and U.S. Route 151, a big sign told me I had to look no further. The place is housed in a former Walmart store, a perfect museum venue, with acres of flat floor. Although it was a weekday, a dozen bikes and a few cars were parked outside, and inside was a bike-lover’s dream. There were upwards of 300 beautiful motorcycles of all makes and ages spread out through the thousands of square feet, along with hundreds of moto-memorabilia items, from movie posters to racing leathers. The collection is eclectic, with lots of Indians, including one once belonging to Steve McQueen, half a dozen Vincents, a slew of Kawasaki triples—way too many marques to try to list here. They were well displayed, many of them on standalone platforms allowing the visitor to see all sides. All this is due to John Parham, CEO of the big aftermarket company J&P Cycles, who rescued the museum when it was financially foundering and turned it into a self-sustaining non-profit organization. Good work. Parham hired Mark Mederski, who had been working at the AMA’s museum in Ohio, to run the show, and Mederski does know his stuff. Also, there is a very cool shop attached, with all sorts of things to buy, from postcards to posters, T-shirts to tin signs. Can’t afford a 1911 Harley? Get a postcard of


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one for 50 cents. After the stop, it was time to get south to U.S. 30, which took me southeast to Cedar Rapids. Pulling out my reproduced “1916 Road Guide to the Lincoln Highway,” I read that Cedar Rapids was a biggish city even back then, with 40,000 people, even bigger today, with 120,000. The guidebook says: “Heavy rains can make this portion of the Highway difficult to travel.” Also, “Local speed limit 15-20 mph, enforced.” No problem today as U.S. 30 is a 65-mph freeway skirting the southern edge of town, before reverting to a two-laner. As I noted before, most of U.S. 30 in Iowa is still two lanes—the kind of road any sensible motorcyclist likes to travel on. Moving along through the countryside I aimed for a night in Marshalltown, where the guidebook said that back in 1916 the local speed limit of 15 mph was not enforced. While having supper at a diner I struck up a conversation with some regulars and asked about the upcoming political hoopla in nearby Ames, when all the Republican candidates would be showing up for some sort of straw-vote ballot. “Don’t affect us none,” was the response, “but those folks in Ames sure appreciate all the money that show brings in.” There are definitely unseen benefits to the multi-layered financing of political campaigns. One of the locals, a Vietnam vet, told me the last American casualty in Vietnam was a Marshalltown native, Lance Corporal Darwin Judge, a Marine guard at the U.S. Embassy during the fall of Saigon in 1975. Iowa has always served its country well in time of war, at great expense. A city park now honors his name. Just to add to that sad reminder, the vet told me that the first American death in World War II was also an Iowa native, U.S. Army Captain Robert Losey, from a little town called Andrew. He was a military attaché helping to evacuate U.S. embassy personnel from Norway after the German attack on that country in April of 1940. This is the price we pay for freedom. This old millhouse lies along State Route 64 in eastern Iowa, built more than a hundred years ago when water powered a whole lot of businesses.


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Top: U.S. 30 used to be one of the main east/west roads in Iowa, but when Interstate 80 opened up some 40 years ago, traffic dropped drastically and gas stations had to close. Bottom, left: We’ve just crossed the Missouri River on the Abe Lincoln bridge on U.S. 30, and here in Blair, Nebraska, they are piling sandbags to try to keep the flooding river away. Bottom, right: The house on the hill was built in 1885 by successful businessman W.A. McHenry, and is now the museum for the town of Denison.

Up early and away, and in less than an hour I was crossing over the Skunk River in Ames, and then on to the open farmland, white barns and houses scattered alongside the road. U.S. 30 gently rises and falls, and I seemed to cross a new river every 20 miles or so. Off to my right was Beaver, whose moment of distinction came in 1914, a year after the Lincoln Highway was officially designated, by being the first town to be bypassed by a major highway. Local authorities felt that straightening the road and avoiding a couple of railroad crossings (now Union Pacific RR) would be a good idea, so they moved the road north of town and built the Marsh Bridge over Beaver Creek in 1915. The bridge, called a rainbow because of its curved design, is still there, though extensively renovated in 1999. Present-day U.S. 30 does not pretend to follow the original route of the Lincoln Highway, which originally was not much more than a one-lane dirt track. Today it runs south of Beaver, the little town still being home to some 20 families. Signs along U.S. 30 point to many of the original portions of the highway, mostly still unpaved but easily negotiable with a street bike. Coming to the town of Glidden, a large memorial stands on the north side of the road to commemorate the life and death of Private Merle D. Haye, one of the first two American soldiers to be killed in World War I, serving with the First Infantry Division, or Big Red One. Since two soldiers were killed in the same attack, nobody is quite sure who had the dubious honor of being first. Going by Arcadia, the road descends to cross and parallel the East Boyer River, and a dozen miles later Harley and I were entering Denison and the confluence with the main Boyer River, which we would follow for the next 50 miles to Missouri Valley. But first a look at Denison. On a hill in the middle of town is the W. A. McHenry House, built by a successful businessman in 1885 and now a museum with fine displays of late 19th-century furnishings. But the town is more famous as the birthplace of Academy Award-winner Donna Reed, who every classic-movie buff knows was famous for her roles in “From Here To Eternity,” “It’s A Wonderful Life” and other movies and TV shows. That was all happenstance as Reed never intended to be an actress, but after high school went to Los Angeles to live with an aunt and go to college. And the rest is in her biography. After her death her husband set up a performing arts center in the town, which is acclaimed to this day.


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Left: This is where old tractors go to donate parts to keep other tractors going, the mechanical equivalent of our own organ donation program. Below: The Sabula Rail Bridge crosses the Mississippi River between Sabula, Iowa, and Savanna, Illinois. The section with the operator shack swings 90 degrees to let barges and other river traffic pass through.

Now we were heading southwest into the Loess Hills, a beautiful 200-mile chain of hills on the east side of the Missouri River. I stopped at a state-run welcome center a few miles before the town of Missouri Valley, and the lady there almost convinced me that I should not miss the Loess Hills Scenic Byway. Her descriptions were very appealing, but I had places to be. As I went through Missouri Valley I saw a dozen sportbike riders having a soda at an outdoor café—I bet I knew where they were going. Missouri Valley has changed a bit since 1916. The population dropping from 4,000 to 3,000 left few stores catering to the locals’ needs. Half a dozen gas stations and a couple of motels cater to the travelers, but that is about the extent of business. Interstate 29 now runs north-south along the west side, with the big city of Council Bluffs less than 20 miles to the south. At Missouri Valley, I deviated from the original 1916 Lincoln Highway, as I wanted to avoid crowded places like Council Bluffs and Omaha, Nebraska, and instead turned west toward California Junction. Originally U.S. 30, as the Lincoln Highway was designated in 1925, the road went down to Council Bluffs where a bridge crossed the Missouri. However, when another bridge was built between California Junction and Blair, Nebraska, in 1929, the mapmakers in Washington changed the course of U.S. 30. The old bridge, called the Abraham Lincoln Memorial Bridge, a suitable name for a bridge on the Lincoln Highway, was a steel truss with a grate surface, but that was torn down and replaced in 1991 with steel-stringer construction. The whole Missouri River valley is prone to flooding, and the last 10 miles to the river are dead straight, dead flat. The new bridge, with an asphalt surface preferred by motorcyclists, rises well above the river, although the road leading to it can get covered with water—as it did several times in 2011. The railroad parallels the car road, and the original train bridge, built in 1883, is still in use. The river was up, way up, much more than the Mississippi, and on the Nebraska side I saw crews working hard to build temporary embankments to protect a fuel depot on the river’s edge. I was moving on, heading for higher, drier land. But I do have to get back to do the Loess Hills byway some day.


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