Starting in 1915, auto racing champion
Charles H. Bigelow drove the entire route many times to generate publicity for the road. The Arrowhead Trail initially took a longer route via present
U.S. Route 95 and former
U.S. Route 66 between Las Vegas and
Needles, California, as the more direct
Old Spanish Trail was in very poor condition. The "
Silver Lake cutoff", which would save about 90 miles (145 km), was proposed by 1920, and completed in 1925 as an
oiled road by
San Bernardino County. Both the U.S.
Bureau of Public Roads and the State of Nevada urged the inclusion of the cutoff route into each state's highway systems, the former as part of the
federal aid highway connecting Salt Lake City and Los Angeles, and the
California State Legislature did that in 1925, with it becoming an extension of
Route 31. (Across the state line in Nevada,
State Route 6 continued through Las Vegas to
Arizona.) The initial plan for the
U.S. Highway system simply stated that Route No. 91 would run from Las Vegas "to an intersection with Route No. 60" (which became US 66 in 1926), but in 1926 the cutoff was chosen, ending at US 66 at
Daggett, just east of Barstow. The original routing south from Las Vegas to Needles later became part of US 95 in 1940. The new "cutoff route" was added to the federal-aid secondary system in 1926, which helped pay for a mid-1930s widening and paving, including some realignments (parts of the old road are now known as Arrowhead Trail). The new routing generally followed the present
I-15, except through
Baker (where it used Baker Boulevard) and into Barstow (where it followed former
SR 58 to First Avenue, ending at Main Street, which carried US 66). It entered San Bernardino on Cajon Boulevard, then followed the route of Arrow Highway between San Bernardino and Los Angeles. This route is still called Arrow Route or Arrow Highway through parts of Rancho Cucamonga, Upland, Montclair and Claremont as well as other cities between Irwindale and San Bernardino. The
Clark County, Nevada sections of the trail are marked by
Nevada Historical Markers 168 and 197. A monument to the Arrowhead Trail lies across from the north end of the
Terrible's Hotel & Casino [formerly the Gold Strike Hotel and Gambling Hall] property's entrance in
Jean, Nevada. It is from here that Las Vegas Boulevard begins and proceeds north to the Las Vegas Strip. ==Gallery==