Tom Jones came across a now-famous road called the Suhua Highway (Provincial Highway 9). It is called by many as the most beautiful highway in Taiwan.
Today it's about 73 miles long (118 km). The Japanese built it and it was open for traffic in 1932. However, not all of it was 2-lane.
The northern part was one lane only and getting from point A to B was tricky. Cars traveled in bunches of 6, and pulled off the road onto areas where they could wave to cars coming the other way.
The entire road was widened in the late 1980s into 1990. Michael Turton has a wonderful article on the highway as it looks today. To read the text and see the photos, click HERE.
East and south of Keelung is the beginning of Suhua Highway in Suao Township.
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Some 73 miles later is the southern terminus in Hualien City.
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Photo courtesy of Tom Jones
Look to the immediate left of this picture and notice the footpath leading up from the road. Made in Taiwan by Taiwanese
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Photo courtesy of Tom Jones
Look closely and you'll see a car in the distance. This may have been an area to pull off to allow opposing traffic to pass.
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Photo courtesy of Tom Jones
This section of the gravel-covered road had a concrete barrier which was unusual.
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Photo courtesy of Tom Jones
Whatever the sign indicates, let's hope it says " STOP!" With the power lines overhead and a tunnel in the distance, it looks similar to many other pictures.
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Photo courtesy of Tom Jones
Years later, at approximately the same site with the tunnel, Jeff Wang took this picture of an abandoned section of the old road. Just compare it with the photo above.
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The sign in the 8th image says Tunnel No. 4. I suppose the aboriginal woman belongs to the Taroko tribe by the attire she wears.
ReplyDeletehttp://dho.ca/wp/2010/05/26/hualien-taroko-gorge-mukumuyu-taiwan/
The comment was much appreciated. We have almost depleted our supply of Mr. Jones' pictures. They were truly a wonderful gift. He certainly got around back in 1957-58.
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