The first state road was authorized on March 26, 1895, by the
California State Legislature when it enacted a law which created the post of "Lake Tahoe Wagon Road Commissioner" to maintain the
Lake Tahoe Wagon Road (the 1852
Johnson's Cut-off of the
California Trail), now
US 50 from
Smith Flat — east of
Placerville — to the
Nevada state line. The 58 mile (93 km) road had been operated as a
toll road until 1886, when
El Dorado County bought it; the county
deeded the road to the state on February 28, 1896. Funding was only enough for minimal improvements, including a
stone bridge over the
South Fork American River in 1901. in
Riverside County, 1896 Also in 1895, on March 27, the legislature created the three-person
Bureau of Highways to coordinate efforts by the
counties to build
good roads. The bureau traveled to every county of the state in 1895 and 1896 and prepared a map of a recommended system of state roads, which they submitted to the
governor on November 25, 1896. The legislature replaced the Bureau of Highways with the
Department of Highways on April 1, 1897, three days after it passed a law creating a second state highway from
Sacramento to
Folsom — another part of what became US 50 — to be maintained by three "Folsom Highway Commissioners". This was the last highway maintained by a separate authority, as the next state road, the
Mono Lake Basin State Road (now part of
SR 120), was designated by the legislature in 1899 to be built and maintained by the Department of Highways. Several more state highways were legislated in the next decade, and the legislature passed a law creating the
Department of Engineering on March 11, 1907. This new department, in addition to non-highway duties, was to maintain all state highways, including the Lake Tahoe Wagon Road. On March 22, 1909, the "State Highways Act" was passed, taking effect on December 31, 1910, after a successful vote by the people of the state in November. This law authorized the Department of Engineering to issue $18 million in
bonds for a "continuous and connected state highway system" that would connect all
county seats. To this end, the department created the three-member
California Highway Commission on August 8, 1911, to take full charge of the construction and maintenance of this system. As with the 1896 plan by the Bureau of Highways, the Highway Commission traveled the state to determine the best routes, which ended up stretching about . Construction began in mid-1912, with
groundbreaking on Contract One — now part of
SR 82 in
San Mateo County — occurring on August 7. Noteworthy portions of the system built by the commission included the
Ridge Route in
southern California and the
Yolo Causeway west from
Sacramento. , ca. 1920 Because the first bond issue did not provide enough funding, the "State Highways Act of 1915" was approved by the legislature on May 20, 1915, and the voters in November 1916, taking effect on December 31. This gave the Department of Engineering an additional $12 million to complete the original system and $3 million for a further approximately specified by the law. At this time, each route was assigned a number from 1 to 34; this system of labeling routes, although never marked with signs, remained until the
1964 renumbering. In 1917, the legislature gave the California Highway Commission statutory recognition, and turned over the approximately 750 miles (1200 km) of roads adopted by legislative act, until then maintained by the State Engineer, to the commission. The three bond issues together totaled , of which just over 40% (60% if the 1919 bond issue is left out) was completed or under construction in mid-1920. ==1920 to 1958==