* * Searching for Milepost 0
So where is this Crooked Road?
My upcoming book is entitled, *Harmonic Highways, Motorcycling Virginia’s Crooked Road*. So as you can imagine, it helps to know where it is!
The Crooked Road is a tourism initiative established almost ten years ago by the state legislature to showcase the traditional music heritage in Southwest Virginia. It nominally runs from Rocky Mount in Franklin County westward to Floyd, Galax, Abingdon, and Bristol, where it fish-hooks to the north to Norton and eventually the western terminus at Breaks Interstate Park on the Kentucky border. My plan is to travel the road from east to west, so yesterday I went to Rocky Mount looking for Milepost 0.
Jonathan Romeo, until recently the interim executive director of The Crooked Road, couldn't tell me where it was. He said to his knowledge, there was no official starting point. I told him, “I suggest the Franklin County Courthouse.” My reason was that most courthouses were their communities’ most important, and often most impressive buildings. So yesterday, I drove my grey Honda CBX to Rocky Mount to have a look.
My first stop was a visit with newspaper reporter Morris Stephenson who I met on an earlier trip. He insisted the beginning is definitely the intersection of SR-40 and Business US-220, the corner of Main and Franklin Streets, near downtown.
The intersection of SR-40 and US-220 was by an overpass where 220 swept over an active railroad line. On one corner was an old Exxon station.
Then I followed-up on my own idea, of the courthouse. The courthouse was an impressive, white structure with gleaming Doric columns. Morris told me that the original Civil War monument out front had been hit by a pickup truck driver in 2007 and was replaced with a replica in June and dedicated a month ago. It was a pristine white.
In Morris’ article, he quoted dedication keynote speaker Bud Robertson saying the War eliminated slavery and established a union. “‘Union’ is the single most important word that describes the war,” Robertson said. “It's the single threat that now binds us all.” My guess is that Robertson said, “thread” rather than “threat”.
I told Jonathan that I didn’t want to embarrass anyone by reporting that The Crooked Road staff didn’t know where it started. He said he’d take up the matter with the executive committee, “Hang in there with us and I promise we will find the answers to your questions.”
Stay tuned.