Interstate 5 in Oregon Traditional Cache
Tenacious-T: Time to say goodbye to this one.
More
Please note Use of geocaching.com services is subject to the terms and conditions
in our disclaimer.
You are looking for a cammo'd matchstick container. Please only remove the cap so the container stays in place.
CONGRATS TO INQUISITOR CLAYTON FOR THE FTF !!!!!
Interstate 5 is a 308-mile-long segment of highway that runs between the California state line and the Columbia River. Construction of I-5 in Oregon was completed in 1966.
In the 1952-1954 Biennial Report, State Highway Engineer R.H. Baldock reported plans to build a “New Pacific Highway.” The new road would generally follow U.S. 99 but would be built on an “entirely new alignment, and entirely new pavement, all to be built to expressway standards.”
Oregon’s early highways were typical of pre-interstate development, with crossroads, stoplights, and roadside businesses. “Expressways” were envisioned as “limited access highways” that would create faster, safer routes unimpeded by visual clutter and potential hazards.
A major focus of post-World War II transportation design was the twin ideas of grade separation and controlled access. On the interstate, drivers would enter and exit at designated points to ensure smooth transitions into traffic. On-ramps and off-ramps entered the language, and interstates became a new focal point for commercial development. Grade separation—that is, sending cross streets over or under the highway—reduced accidents and allowed traffic to flow uninterrupted at uniform speed. These concepts played a major role in Oregon’s traffic planning after 1947, when the Oregon legislature gave OSHD the authority to build grade-separated and controlled-access routes.
By 1953, Oregon was actively building limited access and grade-separated highways, most of which bypassed existing routes. These new highways included the Portland-Salem Expressway (later called the Baldock Freeway) and the Banfield Freeway, east of downtown Portland.
To make the construction process manageable, OSHD divided the interstate in Oregon into segments—lengths of road that were contracted, built, and opened independently—to allow progress despite difficulties associated with certain portions.
Other segments, particularly the elevated viaduct through Medford, were the somewhat imperfect result of compromise. The route through the Siskiyou Mountains, still the steepest grade anywhere on Interstate 5, cost more per mile than any other portion and was so difficult to build that the completion date was delayed. That route was the result of pressure from southern Oregon interests who wanted the new interstate to run parallel to U.S. 99, through the Rogue Valley, rather than parallel to U.S. 97 through central Oregon. Later connecting routes, including I-105, I-205, and I-405 in the Portland and Eugene areas, were also funded by the interstate program.
In October 1966, the final link in I-5—the dual-decked Marquam Bridge, which carried the highway over the Willamette River in downtown Portland—was completed. Four days later, at the Cow Creek Safety Rest Area south of Canyonville, Governor Mark O. Hatfield presided over a ceremony to formally dedicate Oregon’s completion of the highway. On that rainy Saturday, amid other speeches, Eugene Bauer, the mayor of Gladstone and president of the League of Oregon Cities, called Interstate 5 “one of the greatest of economic arteries.”
Additional Hints
(Decrypt)
Ernpu hc
Treasures
You'll collect a digital Treasure from one of these collections when you find and log this geocache:

Loading Treasures