Skip to main content

Former California State Route 180 on Dunlap Road


When California State Route 180 was commissioned in August 1934 the alignment in took in Sierra Nevada range was very different than from today.  The original highway alignment from Squaw Valley (now Yokuts Valley) to east Grant Grove (then part of General Grant National Park) originally followed what is now Ruth Hill Road, Dunlap Road, Pinehurst Road (modern California State Route 245), Dark Canyon Road (partially now Forest Road 14S45).  After funding fell through for the planned Kings Canyon Road the was corridor eventually picked up as a 30-mile-long cooperative project between the Division of Highways and Federal Government.  The current alignment of California State Route 180 bypassing Squaw Valley and Dunlap was complete by 1941. 

Ruth Hill Road has carried numerous names through the years.  The corridor often appears on older maps as Old Dunlap Road or the Squaw Valley Grade.  The corridor is named after the approximately 2,600-foot-high Ruth Hill.  

Modern Ruth Hill Road is entirely paved but has numerous single lane grades which approach an incline of 10%.  The Ruth Hill corridor coupled with nearby Dunlap Road act as good analogs for what early State Highways in the western Sierra Nevada were once like.  California State Route 180 along Dunlap Road between Dunlap and Miramonte can be seen as the cover photo as it was featured in the November 1938 California Highways & Public Works. 




Part 1; the history of early California State Route 180 along Dunlap Road

During 1905 Legislative Chapter 598 would authorize a survey to locate a route for a highway to be constructed from Grant Grove of General Grant National Park into the Kings River Canyon.  This corridor would be formally added as a planned state highway by way of 1909 Legislative Chapter 223 as Legislative Route Number 41.  

Planned Legislative Route Number 41 appears on the 1918 California Highway Commission map as a special appropriations road.  



The 1919 Third State Highway Bond Act would provide funding for construction of the Kings River Canyon Road.  In 1933 Legislative Route Number 41 would be extended to Tracy via Fresno.  The state highway west of Grant Grove followed Dark Canyon Road (now partially Forest Road 14S45), Pinehurst Road (now California State Route 245) Dunlap Road, and Old Dunlap Road (now Ruth Hill Road) through to Centerville.  The initial Grant Grove-Centerville alignment of Legislative Route Number 41 passes through the communities of Pinehurst, Miramonte, Dunlap and Squaw Valley (now Yokuts Valley).  

Legislative Route Number 41 east of Fresno would be assigned as California State Route 180 when the initial Sign State Routes were announced in the August 1934 California Highways & Public Works.


The initial alignment of California State Route 180 east of Fresno can be seen on the 1935 Division of Highways map of Fresno County (unbroken red line).  The state highway corridor is shown following what is now Ruth Hill Road through Squaw Valley into Dunlap.  From Dunlap the State Highway corridor is seen continuing on Dunlap Road towards Miramonte and Pinehurst.  



A planned new alignment of California State Route 180 from Boulder Creek east to the Sequoia National Forest boundary near Dunlap appears budgeted for the 89th-90th Fiscal Years in the January 1937 California Highways & Public Works.  The project corridor is shown to be broken up into zones spanning a total of 11 miles.  


California State Route 180 along the slopes of Ruth Hill appears on the cover of the November 1938 California Highways & Public Works.  The cover caption notes construction of the planned new alignment was shelved due to funding falling short.  The existing corridor is called the "Squaw Valley Grade" in the caption.  



The realignment of California State Route 180 from the outskirts of Squaw Valley to Grant Grove appears as budgeted 30-mile project zone for the 91st-92nd Fiscal Years in the February 1939 California Highways & Public Works.  


The Squaw Valley-Grant Grove realignment of California State Route 180 was featured in the June 1940 California Highways & Public Works as being a cooperative project between the Federal Government and State of California.  The chosen alignment is noted to first have been first surveyed by the Federal Government in 1931 to provide better access to General Grant National Park.  The existing highway is noted to be extremely winding and have grades in excess of 10%.  General Grant National Park was reorganized and in expanded during 1940 into Kings Canyon National Park.  




The November 1941 California Highways & Public Works details the opening of the new alignment of California State Route 180 bypassing Squaw Valley and Dunlap.  The then new highway is referenced in the article as "Kings Canyon Road" and is noted to have been completed on August 28, 1941.  This is the first known instance of Kings Canyon Road nomenclature being used.  The name is still used for much of California State Route 180 east of downtown Fresno in modern times. 







Part 2; a drive on the original alignment of California State Route 180 along Dunlap Road

Westbound Dunlap Road begins at California State Route 245 near Pinehurst.  This would have been the original terminus of California State Route 65 following California State Route 180 being moved to a bypass of Dunlap in 1941.  California State Route 65 for a time was extended through Dark Canyon Road towards Grant Grove.  Miramonte is noted as being 3 miles to the west whereas Dunlap is noted to be 9 miles away.   


Westbound Dunlap Road crosses Mill Creek and enters the small community of Miramonte.  Miramonte was founded in the 1890s as a mill community which took advantage of the then booming lumber business out of nearby Converse Basin.  The community had Postal Service originally from 1909 through 1912.  The service resumed in 1923 and has remained active to modern times.  
















Dunlap Road west of Miramonte runs alongside Mill Creek into Dunlap Canyon.  The first significant intersection can be found at Sand Creek Road.
















Westbound Dunlap Road crosses Mill Creek and intersects Millwood Road at the outskirts of Dunlap.  Dunlap was plotted as a stage stop on the road to Millwood and Converse Basin the 1880s.  The community obtained Postal Service in 1882 and is named after local schoolteacher George Dunlap Moss. 










Dunlap Road intersects Ruth Hill Road in the center of Dunlap.  Ruth Hill Road originally carried California State Route 180 west through Squaw Valley. 



Modern Dunlap Road continued west to a terminus at California State Route 180.






Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Petroleum Club Road (former California State Route 33 and US Route 399 past the Lakeview Gusher)

Petroleum Club Road is an approximately 5.3-mile rural highway located in the Sunset Oil Field of western Kern County.  This corridor was constructed as a frontage road of the Sunset Railroad and would be the site of the Lakeview Gusher in 1910.  Petroleum Club Road was the original alignment of California State Route 33 and US Route 399 between 1934-1938.  In 1938 the West Side Highway was constructed west of Lakeview Gusher and still serves as the current alignment of California State Route 33.   Part 1; the history of Petroleum Club Road Petroleum Club Road is the original highway which linked the oil communities of Maricopa and Taft.  Both cities were developed around the early boom of the Sunset Oil Field.  The early Sunset Oil Field can be seen centered along Cienega Canyon Road southwest of Buena Vista Lake in Township 11 North, Range 23 West on the 1898 Kern County Surveyors map .  In 1901 Post Office Service would be established at the Su...

Did Caltrans just kill the G26 cutout US Route shields?

The US Route System was formally created by the American Association of State Highway Officials during November 1926.  Through the history of the system the only state to which has elected to maintain cutout US Route shields has been California.  The G26 series cutout US Route shields have become a favorite in the road enthusiast hobby and are generally considered to be much more visually pleasing than the standard Federal Highway Administration variant.  However, the G26 shield series appears to have been killed off on January 18, 2026, when Caltrans updated their Manual of Uniform Traffic Control Devices.  This blog will examine the history of the US Route shield specifications in California and what is happening with the 2026 changes.  The blog cover photo is facing towards the terminus of California State Route 136 and at a G26-2 specification US Route 395 shield.  In the background Mount Whitney can be seen in the Sierra Nevada range.   ...

Kuakini Highway (former Hawaii Route 11 in Kailua-Kona)

Kuakini Highway east of Palani Road in Kailua-Kona is the original alignment of Hawaii Route 11.  The highway upon being commissioned in 1955 began at the Palani Road (then Hawaii Route 19) and followed Kuakini Highway southeast towards Holualoa.  Hawaii Route 11 was shifted to an extension of Queen Kaahumanu Highway during the late 1970s which bypassed downtown Kailua-Kona.   This page is part of the Gribblenation Hawaii Roads series.  A compellation of all Hawaii-related media from both Gribblenation and RoadwayWiz can be found by clicking  here .  Part 1; the history of Hawaii Route 11 and Kuakini Highway in Kailua-Kona Hawaii Route 11 is part of Mamalahoa Highway (the Hawaii Belt Road) and is the longest Hawaiian State Route at 121.97 miles.  The highway begins at the mutual junction of Hawaii Route 19 and Hawaii Route 190 in Kailua-Kona.  From Kailua-Kona the routing of Hawaii Route 11 crosses the volcanic landscapes of southern side of ...