From the mid-1840s and to mid 1850s, the United States experienced the
Plank Road Boom and a subsequent bust. The first plank road in the US was built in
North Syracuse, New York, to transport salt and other goods; it appears to have copied earlier roads in Canada, which had copied Russian ones. The plank road boom, like many other early technologies, promised to transform the way people lived and worked and led to permissive changes in legislation seeking to spur development, speculative investment by private individuals, etc. Ultimately, the technology failed to live up to its promise, and millions of dollars in investments evaporated almost overnight. Three plank roads, the
Hackensack, the
Paterson, and the
Newark, were major arteries in northern
New Jersey. The roads travelled over the
New Jersey Meadowlands, connecting the cities for which they were named to the
Hudson River waterfront.
U.S. Route 1 in Virginia follows the Boydton Plank Road from Petersburg southwards to just north of the North Carolina line. On the U.S. West Coast the
Canyon Road of
Portland, Oregon was another important but short artery and was built between 1851 and 1856. ,
Alaska Kingston Road (Toronto) (Governor's Road) and
Danforth Avenue, in
Toronto, were plank roads built by the
Don and Danforth Plank Road Company in the late 18th and the early 19th centuries.
Highway 2 from Toronto eastwards was a plank road in the 19th century that was later paved. In 1833
Scarborough-Markham Plank Road was authorized to build a road from Danforth Road to Highway 7 to Ringwood and east on Stouffville Road to Main Street Stouffville. Plank roads are used exclusively in the Canadian fishing
outport of
Harrington Harbour,
Quebec because the town is built directly over a hilly, rocky shore. ATVs are the only mode of transportation there. ==In Australia==