The ALCAN: The Road That Connected a Country and Erased the People Who Built It
One thousand, three hundred, and eighty-seven miles. Built in just eight months during the height of World War II, the Alaska Highway (ALCAN) is more than an engineering marvel—it is a landscape of compressed history, wartime urgency, and human endurance.
In this special extended episode of Drive-Thru Towns, host Andrew Wilcox drives the entire length of the highway, from the wheat fields of Dawson Creek, BC, to the bison crossings of Delta Junction, AK. We uncover the stories the monuments often omit: the 3,000 Black soldiers in segregated regiments who built the most grueling sections of the road, the 5,000-year-old Indigenous trading villages displaced by the route, and the homesick 21-year-old soldier who nailed one sign to a post and accidentally created a global landmark.
Mile Zero (Dawson Creek, BC): Why a humble grain elevator is the true heart of the highway's origin.
The Sign Post Forest (Watson Lake, YT): How one soldier’s sign for Danville, Illinois, turned into a collection of over 100,000 hometown memories.
The Meeting Place (Champagne, YT): The tragic story of Shadhäla-ra, a village that survived 5,000 years of history only to be "killed" twice by the highway’s arrival and its eventual bypass.
Tok, Alaska: The town of three names (none of them certain) and the "miracle wind" that saved it from a wildfire.
The Terminus (Delta Junction, AK): Ending the journey among a herd of Montana bison that treat the highway like a temporary neighbor.
We take a deep look at the racial dynamics of the construction effort. In 1942, the U.S. Army was still segregated. Black regiments, like the 93rd, 95th, and 388th Engineers, were often given the most difficult, swampy, and remote terrain to conquer. Despite facing systemic doubt from their own leadership, these men completed the most challenging bridges and mountain passes, physically connecting the continent at the legendary "handshake" near Beaver Creek.
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