One difficulty in the way of an immediate improvement has arisen from the fact that the townships in Porter county through which the old route passes would be unable to issue bonds for a sufficient amount at the present time. Each of them have a heavy gravel road indebtedness and until some of this is paid off, or the valuation greatly increased, no extensive improvements are possible. It is said that neither Portage nor Westchester townships will be able to consider any improvement of this kind for at least another year, and possibly longer.
It has been suggested, and the plan seems to have some very good features, that the building of this highway across Lake, Porter and Laporte counties would afford an excellent opportunity to try an experiment in the use of the convicts in the state prison in road building. The proposed thoroughfare is more than a mere county road. It is of state wide importance. The question of using the inmates of the state institution in making public improvements, instead of selling their labor on the contract system, has been openly advocated among prison officials and labor unions. The plan has met with remarkable success where it has been tried in other penal institutions. In Colorado hundreds of miles of fine roads have been built by the state, at no greater expense than the bare cost of the material used. There the experiment has resulted in not only establishing one of the finest systems of the highways in the world, but in a marked improvement in the health and conditions of the inmates of the penitentiary, by reason of the outdoor labor.
The use of prison labor in rebuilding the old Detroit-Chicago trail would afford an opportunity for a thorough trial of the idea in this state. In fact, a better opportunity could hardly be secured.
Just what steps would be necessary to secure this are not clear at this time, but if the newspapers and the road building authorities of the three counties would unite in a vigorous effort to secure it the thing is not impossible.
Steel signs 10 by 20 inches are being used along the route, which passes through Michigan City, New Buffalo, Three Oaks, Baroda, Stevensville and on the lake shore into this city.4 The route will later be marked on through to South Haven.
The work has been completed between Chicago and Michigan City, and the crew start from St. Joseph today working back. There is an almost complete drive of stone road now through Berrien county to the Indiana line and will be finished when the present road contracts are completed.
2I sure would like to see a copy of that survey.
3That was all true, except for the popular story of how our Coffee Creek (and every other Coffee Creek in the U.S.) got its name, which is a total crock.
4Boy, I'd sure like to see one of those signs or a photo or even a description. South of the Michigan state line, this road later became the Dunes Highway.
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Posted 2 January, 1999. Last updated 11th October, 2004.