road

48 States in 48 Days

ā€œItā€™s the journey, not the destination.ā€ These simple words found at the Route 66 Museum in Clinton, Okla., summed up the road trip of a lifetime I took in fall 2020. In the middle of the pandemic, I drove all of the ā€œlower 48ā€ in as many days. I took the trip to celebrate my retirement.

The idea came to me 20 years ago, when retirement seemed as far away as Seattle. Some influences were books: Bill Brysonā€™s ā€œThe Lost Continent: Travels in Small-Town America,ā€ Charles Kuraltā€™s ā€œAmericaā€ and John Steinbeckā€™s ā€œTravels with Charley.ā€ I thought, “I need a trip with purpose.” I was confident I could hit all 48 states in 48 days. At least itā€™d be a challenge. In the end, I knew that Iā€™d enjoy it, if I followed my motherā€™s rule of travel, ā€œIf you donā€™t have fun, itā€™s your own fault.ā€

Negative comments from friends and family ranged from ā€œCan that even be done?ā€ ā€“ the mildest ā€“ to “Why on Earth would anyone do that?ā€ ā€“ which was the harshest. I admit the why is the harder question. The how was easy.

I shelved the trip for decades, but when our daughter went off to college and I retired, I decided ā€œIā€™m going to do this.ā€

A simple rule: spend one night and only one night in each state. But the rule was hard to implement. I studied maps and traced my way through the United States, calculating mileage, and the few sites I had to see ā€“ or at least thought I had to see. I listed calculated mileage between towns from state to state to crank out a plan. The pre-trip version of the plan? The longest day would clock in at 600 miles. The total trip would come in at 12,000 miles.

The Plan

Nate Williams ready to go
Getting ready to close the tailgate on the RAV4 just before leaving.

I gave myself a 50% chance of pulling it off when I retired in July. This was the year of COVID-19, and I was not going to be reckless. By the end of August, case numbers were coming down, and interstate travel was not prohibited. I decided to do it, and of course, I could always turn around if the pandemic made it unsafe.

I would leave after Labor Day to avoid summer crowds, hit the northern states before the snow and complete the southern states after the worst of the hurricane season. On Sept. 8, I hit the road.

From my home outside of Boston, I headed north to Maine. From there, it was across the North, dipping as far south as St. Louis, Mo., before heading west and north again (like Lewis and Clark, but in a Toyota RAV4). When I hit the Northwest, I turned around and headed home.

I fell into a rhythm. Get to the hotel for the night, write a blog post to keep my friends and family up to date, go to dinner, then plan my next day. In addition to my old-school Rand-McNally road atlas, I had two excellent resources, ā€œ1,000 Places to See in North America Before You Dieā€ and ā€œ50 States 5000 ideas.ā€ The internet is better at many things, but old-school maps and guidebooks still have a place on a road trip.

I booked hotels only three nights in advance, choosing mostly inexpensive brand name hotels (using my AAA discount). A silver lining to traveling during the pandemic? Empty hotels, low gas prices and no traffic. Downsides? Some museums and key sites closed, and I couldnā€™t hang out in bars to talk with locals and fellow travelers. Most nights I ate takeout in my room, or if lucky, found an empty place with outdoor dining. I embraced being an introvert and closed attractions reinforced the philosophy tacked up on a wall in Oklahoma. It was about the journey.

Bethlehem Steel's abandoned stacks
Bethlehem Steel Stacks

My car climbed Mount Washington in New Hampshire; I saw where Woodstock happened in Bethel, N.Y.; I went on a Rust Belt tour through Bethlehem, Pa.; Youngstown, Ohio; Flint, Mich.; and Gary, Ind. I spent a lot of time near the mighty Mississippi, winding my way back and forth across that waterway through Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa and Missouri, and later, between Memphis, Tenn., and New Orleans, La. I hit bucket list items: See the Badlands and stand in front of Mount Rushmore in South Dakota and visit the Columbia River Gorge in Oregon. More often than not, though, it was the unexpected sites that left a lasting impression.

The Unexpected

I learned that Indiana has sand dunes; outside Lincoln, Neb., there is an unbelievably good museum of flight; Bismarck, N.D., has green spaces; and Oklahoma City has fantastic restaurants by canals.

Planes on display at the Aerospace Museum
Strategic Air Command & Aerospace Museum

I listened to books on my iPhone ā€“ everything from Teddy Roosevelt and the National Park System, ā€œThe Johnstown Flood,ā€ by David McCullough, books on racism in America and ā€œBury My Heart at Wounded Knee.ā€ I incorporated what I read and saw many of the sites discussed in person. I listened to a lot of Bruce Springsteen, and then visited Bruceā€™s hometown in New Jersey and the club where he became not just Bruce, but ā€œThe Boss.ā€

These visits were not planned; they just came about, which made them even more rewarding.

It was about two weeks into the trip when I woke up one morning with a realization: What a gift I was giving myself. I was so excited about whatever might come next. All I had to do was hit the road and drive toward the next destination, with nothing to worry about, knowing whatever was ahead would be extraordinary. Itā€™s a rare opportunity to have nothing to worry about but the road ahead.

The Unmasked

Due to the pandemic, I didnā€™t see a lot of people until I got to the Badlands. My first busy bar. A bartender and a waitress in the tiny town of Hill City told me it was much busier than usual, and they were unprepared. I was surprised at the lack of people wearing masks in the Dakotas, even in the wake of the Sturgis Motorcycle rally, which was identified as a superspreader event.

Throughout my trip, I noticed a wide variety of mask usage. Hotels and national restaurant chains were pretty consistent, but gas stations and convenience stores were really different, not even state-to-state but county-to–county. A bartender in the panhandle of Florida told me no one was wearing masks because they think they all had COVID in fall 2019. Despite the lack of masks, I never felt strange wearing mine, and my out-of-state plates never drew unwanted attention.

America the Beautiful

Yellowstone National Park
Yellowstone National Park

By the time I left the Dakotas, I really began to appreciate the beauty of the United States. On previous trips across the country, I saw America from the interstate. On this trip, I drove state roads across the land. Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska became interesting, not just places to get through. I gave a lot of thought to the landscape and the people who lived in the heartland year-round. In many ways, they were some of the best places Iā€™ve seen.

After my trip, people would often ask what was my favorite part was. I usually respond that the section from Livingston, Mont., down through Yellowstone National Park, over to Boise, Idaho, and then up into Washington state and down the Columbia River Gorge to the Oregon coast was the prettiest part of the journey.

Sign for the Extraterrestrial Highway

But I also found the Great Plains and my 200 miles on the Extraterrestrial Highway through the Nevada desert beautiful. In truth, my favorite part was what I talked about earlier ā€“ the feeling of being excited for whatever might come next.

For the most part, the trip went as planned. On the coast of Oregon, I had to divert from my plan to see the Redwoods because of forest fires. Later, I had to change my route because of a hurricane. Despite such diversions, I lived the rule. I visited every state and spent only one night in each.

Other personal highlights: I stood on a street corner in Winslow, Ariz.; I visited my old apartment outside of Chicago and where I lived for a time in college in Durango, Colo. In Memphis, I saw Graceland, but also the wonderful Civil Rights Museum, which sits on the grounds of the Lorraine Motel where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated. The Civil Rights Museum was meaningful and memorable. I was able to head south down the Blues Highway (named for all of the Mississippi Delta blues singers that traveled this road north to Memphis and Chicago) and north on the Country Music Highway which passes the birthplaces of country music stars like the ā€œCoal Minerā€™s Daughter,ā€ Lorretta Lynn.

Bryce Canyon, Utah
Bryce Canyon, Utah

From New Orleans to the panhandle of Florida, I saw the aftermath of recent hurricanes, and soon after, drove the Blue Ridge Parkway and viewed spectacular fall scenery. I couldnā€™t drive the whole country without stopping in Washington, D.C., even if it was just for a quick tour around the National Mall. I did not sleep in the capital as it is not a state. Yet.

I switched up my mode of transportation in Delaware. I found a ferry to take me over to Cape May, N.J. On a beautiful fall day, it was hard to beat the trip across the Delaware Sound. And Cape May is not the New Jersey Iā€™m used to seeing from the turnpike.

Going the Extra Miles

In many ways, I was lucky. I kept safe from the virus that was soon going to spike again, safe from really bad weather that would soon lead to heavy snow in the West and safe driving a trip that turned out to be 15,000 miles instead of the planned 12,000 miles.

What was America like from the road during the pandemic and a difficult political time? America is still America. Sure, the wearing of masks varied from county to county and political billboards dotted the countryside, but Americans will still be pleasant to an outsider. As good as it felt to accomplish a challenge, I had been working on for 20 years, in the end, I came home with a deeper appreciation for what a great and varied country we live in. I canā€™t think of anywhere else in the world where I could see so much, so easily. The feeling of waking up and just being excited about what might come next is something that will stay with me for a long time. I think I made Mom proud.

So, whatā€™s next for me? I still havenā€™t been to Alaska or driven across Canada.

Field of Dreams ball field surrounded by corn
Field of Dreams ballpark

If You Go

Read
ā€œ1,000 Places to See Before You Die,ā€ Patricia Schultz, Workman Publishing, New York, 2007
ā€œ50 States 5000 Ideas,ā€ Joe Yogerst, National Geographic, Washington D.C., 2017

See
Bethlehem Steel, SteelStacks, Bethlehem, Pa.
Indiana Dunes National Park, Chestertown, Ind.
Field of Dreams Movie Site, Dyersville, Iowa
Strategic Air Command & Aerospace Museum, Ashland, Neb.
Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area, Oregon
Extraterrestrial Highway between Tonopah, Nev., and Cedar City, Utah
Route 66 Museum, Clinton, Okla.
National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum, Oklahoma City
Civil Rights Museum, Memphis, Tenn.
Flora-Bama beach bar, Pensacola, Fla.
Cape May-Lewes Ferry from Lewes, Del., to Cape May, N.J.

Nate Williams is a AAA member from Massachusetts. We welcome member stories. Click here to submit yours.

Feeling inspired to take a road trip? Tell us about it in the comments.

12 Thoughts on “48 States in 48 Days

  1. I used a new credit card for this trip any only charged while one the trip. Total spend was $8500. $4300 lodging, $1700 food, $1050 gas and rest was misc.Changed the oil once at 10,000 miles. I stayed at Hampton Inn or Holiday Inn Express. Lodging and Gas were cheaper because of the Pandemic and I had been gifted a few restaurant gift cards. Buy a National Park Pass – pays for itself after 3rd park.

  2. I love a good road trip, and I love to drive! This inspires me to do the same when I retire in a few years, although I think I would stay longer in each state, like 2 nights (why not? I’d be retired with no where to be!) Practical question…How much did it cost on average? (meals, lodging, gas, 1 or 2 oil changes at least). Every day is a winding road…it is truly about the journey!!

  3. What a trip! I so appreciate your dream, planning, and follow-through! As others have suggested, a book with more photos and observations about your fantastic goal-fulfilling journey would be such a treat. I’d be sure to read it and add to my 200- plus books containing other people’s travel memoirs, accumulated and grateful for, because I was too chicken to ever set out, myself.

  4. Awesome article. Please write a book with your itinerary, pics, stories, etc. A trip of a lifetime that we all wish we could make. I’d love to read more about this epic journey!

  5. Will you be publishing a book with everything you saw each day with pics? I think that would be awesome! This is exactly what my husband and I would like to do when we retire.

  6. Doing something that others may not understand was an aspect of this story I very much enjoyed. It seems as if music is important to the author, given how many references to related historic sites there are. It did take me a couple of minutes of thought before why standing on a corner in Winslow, Arizona was of note, then I found myself thinking I have to do that myself. Writings such as this are too rarely found.

  7. Nate
    Iā€™m impressed and jealous by your trip and determination. Iā€™ve been to 46 of our 50 states at various times in my life, but not all at the same time! Great country and driving is the way to see it best. Glad you enjoyed it.
    Bruce

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