Zero Milestone
The Zero Milestone is a monument in Washington, D.C. intended as the initial milestone from which all road distances in the United States should be reckoned when it was built, but now only roads in the Washington, D.C. area have distances measured from it.
Location
The monument stands just south of the White House at the north edge of the Ellipse, within President's Park. Atop the monument is a bronze 16-point compass rose with a very small worn-down pyramid at its center whose top serves as a National Geodetic Survey benchmark (HV1847).[1]
- Coordinates: (NAD 83)
- Altitude: 8.382 m (27.50 ft) above mean sea level
Description
Designed by Washington architect Horace W. Peaslee, the
monolith is about 2 feet square and about 4 feet high. It is made of precambrian
The monument has engravings on five surfaces:
- North: ZERO MILESTONE
- East: STARTING POINT OF SECOND TRANSCONTINENTAL MOTOR CONVOY OVER THE BANKHEAD HIGHWAY, JUNE 14, 1920
- South: POINT FOR THE MEASUREMENT OF DISTANCES FROM WASHINGTON ON HIGHWAYS OF THE UNITED STATES
- West: STARTING POINT OF FIRST TRANSCONTINENTAL MOTOR CONVOY OVER THE LINCOLN HIGHWAY, JULY 7, 1919
- Top (now illegible on the bronze disk):[2] THE U.S. COAST AND GEODETIC SURVEY DETERMINED THE LATITUDE LONGITUDE AND ELEVATION OF THE ZERO MILESTONE
History
In his plan for Washington, Pierre Charles L'Enfant intended a column to be placed 1 mile east of the Capitol, "from which all distances of places through the continent were to be calculated." Instead, in 1804, the Jefferson Stone or Jefferson Pier was placed on the meridian of the White House due west of the Capitol (119 m WNW of the center of the Washington Monument) to mark the Washington meridian, 77° 02' 12.0".
The current Zero Milestone monument was conceived by Good Roads Movement advocate
Dr. S. M. Johnson, formally proposed on June 7,
References
- ^ Washington Monument GPS Height Modernization Project
- ^ According to [1], but according to [2] the inscription is on a "brass plate placed on the ground at the north base". Although there is no evidence of a plate in modern pictures (south paving or north paving), the plate may have been on the edge of north paving no longer present but visible as a dark spot in the 1923 picture above.
- ^ Zero Milestone - Washington, DC. U.S. Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved on 2007-03-21.
See also
External links
- Dept. of Transportation: Zero Milestone
- North view with inscription "ZERO MILESTONE" and profile of compass rose
- Compass rose atop the Zero Milestone
- Many comments from geocachers and more pictures
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