In California, the Lincoln Highway followed two different routes over the
Sierra Nevada. The
Sierra Nevada Northern Route from
Verdi, Nevada to
Sacramento followed the old Dog Valley / Henness Pass route from Verdi to
Truckee, then westbound on Donner Pass Road (old
US 40) up to the top of
Donner Pass, then continuing west on Donner Pass Rd, Hampshire Rocks Rd and various other mountain roads parallelling
I-80 through
Emigrant Gap, Magra,
Colfax,
Weimar,
Applegate, and
Auburn. The route then continued southwest on what became old US 40 through the northeastern Sacramento outreaches of Newcastle, Loomis, Rocklin, and Roseville, then turned south on Auburn Blvd to Citrus Heights, then turned southwest, following Auburn Blvd, Del Paso Blvd, and 12th Street into downtown Sacramento to the
California State Capitol. The
Sierra Nevada Southern Route from
Stateline, Nevada and
Lake Tahoe to Sacramento followed the Pioneer Trail and Meyers Grade Road to the top of
Echo Summit, then westbound on Johnson Pass Rd to
US 50, then westbound on 50 (with many adjacent parallel jogs on mountain roads) through Twin Bridges, Strawberry, Kyburz, Whitehall, Riverton, and Pacific House. At Pollock Pines, the route followed the
Pony Express Trail and Carson Road to Broadway and Main Street in Placerville. West of Placerville the route followed Forni Rd, Pleasant Valley Rd, Mother Lode Dr, Durock Rd, Country Club Dr, Old Bass Lake Rd, White Rock Rd, Placerville Rd, and East Bidwell St into Folsom. It turned west through downtown Folsom, then southwest on Folsom Blvd following it all the way into downtown Sacramento, arriving at the California State Capitol on M St (now Capitol Mall). From Sacramento to
San Francisco, the original
1913–1927 Central Valley Route departed Sacramento southbound on Stockton Blvd to
Rt 99, then southbound on 99 to Galt, then south on Lower Sacramento Rd to Pacific Ave and El Dorado St into downtown
Stockton. From Stockton, the route departed southbound on Center St to French Camp Turnpike, Manthey Rd, and French Camp Rd to the town of French Camp, then Harlan Rd and Manthey Rd (again) southwest to 11th St into Banta, jogging through Banta, then west on 11th (again) into Tracy (old US 50). From Tracy, it followed Byron Rd, Grant Line Rd and Altamont Pass Rd to the top of
Altamont Pass. It continued west on Altamont Pass Rd arriving in Livermore via Northfront Rd, Vasco Rd, First St and Junction Ave. From Livermore, the route followed today's
I-580 westbound into Dublin, then into Castro Valley via Dublin Canyon Blvd., to East Castro Valley Blvd., Grove Way, and A Street into downtown Hayward. From Hayward to
downtown Oakland it followed Foothill Blvd, I-580 (again), MacArthur Blvd, Foothill Blvd (again), First Ave, 13th St, Harrison St, 9th St and Broadway to a ferry pier on the
Oakland Estuary (now
Jack London Square) for an automobile ferry to the Ferry Slips at the south end of the
Ferry Building, at the base of
Market Street, in San Francisco. Upon the completion of the first
Carquinez Strait Bridge at
Vallejo in 1927, the Lincoln Highway from
Sacramento to
San Francisco was re-routed over this much shorter alignment. The
1928 Central Valley Route departed the California State Capitol in Sacramento heading westbound on Capitol Mall, West Capitol Avenue, and across the
Yolo Causeway to
Davis on Olive Drive. West of Davis the route followed old US 40 as it "stairstepped" through the towns of
Dixon from I 80, beginning at CA 113 south to
Vacaville,
Fairfield,
Rockville, and Cordelia. From Cordelia the route followed Rt 12 (Jameson Canyon Rd) into the base of Napa Valley to an area that includes the city of
American Canyon, then turned south to follow Rt 29 and Broadway into Vallejo where it followed Alameda St and Fifth St to the Carquinez Strait Bridge. South of the bridge, it followed
San Pablo Avenue all the way through Rodeo, Pinole, San Pablo, Richmond, El Cerrito and Albany to Berkeley, where it turned west on University Ave to end at the
Berkeley Pier for a ferry to the
Hyde Street Pier in San Francisco.
Arriving in San Francisco from 1913 to 1921, you departed the ferry from Oakland at the Ferry Slips at the south end of the Ferry Building, drove west on Market St, right on Van Ness Ave, left on Chestnut St (past the
1915 Panama-Pacific Exhibition), entered the
Presidio via the Lombard Gates, departed the Presidio via the Arguello Gates, right on Lake St, left on El Camino del Mar, entering into
Lincoln Park from the northwest.
Arriving in San Francisco from 1922 to 1927, you departed the ferry from Oakland at the Ferry Slips at the south end of the Ferry Building, drove west on Market St, right on Post St (a traffic movement that is impossible today, as Post runs one-way eastbound), left on Presidio Ave, right on
Geary Boulevard, right on 36th Ave, entering into Lincoln Park from the south (now enter via 34th).
Arriving in San Francisco in 1928, you departed the ferry from Berkeley at the
Hyde Street Pier, drove south on Hyde, right on North Point St, left on Van Ness Ave, right on California St, right on 32nd Avenue, left on El Camino del Mar, entering into Lincoln Park from the northwest. Since 1915, the
Lincoln Highway Western Terminus has been the plaza and fountain in front of where the
Legion of Honor now stands in
Lincoln Park. The Western Terminus Marker and the Interpretive Plaque is located at the southeast corner of the plaza, next to the bus stop, adjacent to the entrance drive leading up from 34th Ave. ==References==