Preston Bypass

Britain's first motorway, the Preston Bypass, turned 50 years old on 5 December 2008. Today, it's part of the M6 and M55, just another link in the motorway system joining England to Scotland and connecting the various parts of Lancashire.

The story of how it came to be built, how we ended up with the concept of motorways as we know them, and why Preston was the first, is a fascinating one. Equally interesting is the immediate change that it, and the other very early motorways, had on the country in the years that followed. Nobody knew how drivers would behave on this new road specially designed for speed and ease of movement, and nobody could have predicted its incredible popularity.

So, to mark the fiftieth anniversary of the opening of the first motorway, here is the story of the Preston Bypass.

Introduction

Sources

  • Delegation to visit German Autobahn network, 1937: National Archives file MT 39/96.
  • Plans for a national motorway network produced in 1942; suggestions for motorways to be included in initial programme: National Archives file MT 39/657.
  • Special Roads Act 1949; legislative and political processes leading up to it: National Archives file T 228/219.
  • Drake's 1950s campaign for the Preston Bypass to be built; colour engineering drawings of proposed road: National Archives file MT 117/21.
  • Proposals for tolling M6 through Lancashire and number of entry points: National Archives file MT 117/35.
  • Inauguration and opening ceremonies; Motorway Code: National Archives file MT 121/22.
  • Widening and reconstruction of hard shoulders during the 1960s: National Archives file MT 121/40.
  • Construction progress and controversy: various articles in The Times from 1956 to 1959.
  • Opening ceremony and description of the road as built: Manchester Guardian 5 December 1958.
  • Overview of the whole subject and serious historical and engineering detail: the Motorway Archive Trust; G Charlesworth's A History of British Motorways; and Drake, Yeadon & Evans' Motorways.

Picture credits

Routes

Special thanks must go to Peter Hewitt for his invaluable assistance and suggestions.

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