In 1820, a stagecoach road connected Sevierville with Maryville to the west.
It was strategically located near the end of the stagecoach road that once led east to Philadelphia and Virginia.
It was originally used as a stagecoach road.
It also served as the stagecoach road to reach the steamboats on the Ohio River before the railroad era.
Part of the trail is an old stagecoach road between eastern and western Vermont.
Then came a new courthouse across the stagecoach road west in 1846.
At its southern end, it connected to a major stagecoach road that connected Albany to the Canadian border.
One of these highways was the old north-south stagecoach road from Albany to Canada.
The site chosen for the town was where the railroad tracks intersected a local stagecoach road.
Three stagecoach roads were built in the mid-1870s to provide better access for the growing number of visitors to Yosemite Valley.