The 1926 Rand McNally atlas used the 1925 preliminary numbers for the U.S. Highway system, not the final ones which hadn't been decided by the time the 1926 atlas ( chem.sunysb.edu/lauher/roadmaps/ ) was issued. See Question 7.3 for more details on the planning of the U.S. system. Sep 13, 2004 14.2 Q: Where can I find current maps?
A: There are a great number of mapping websites such as MapQuest.com, MapBlast! , and MapsOnUs. These have greatly improved since their launches.
Go to dmoz.org/Reference/Maps/ and http://dmoz.org/Regional/North_America/United_States/Maps_and_Views/ for a list of many of these. For official maps go to http://www.roadfan.com/offlmaps.html for online scans or http://www.aaroads.com/kick-off/maplinks.html for print-copy order information. Also, the United States Geological Survey ( http://www.usgs.gov/ ) publishes topographic maps at various scales.
Although these are not updated frequently, they are still useful for finding wandering rural ... more.
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