Idaho Highways

White Bird bypassed 1975

White Bird Hill Summit is a mountain pass in the northwest United States, located in north central Idaho on U.S. Highway 95. In Idaho County, it is midway between White Bird and Grangeville. The summit elevation of the highway is 4,245 feet (1,294 m) above sea level, through a substantial cut.

White Bird Hill Summit
White Bird Hill Summit is located in the United StatesWhite Bird Hill Summit
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Elevation
4,245 ft (1,294 m)
Traversed by
US 95
Location
Idaho County, Idaho, U.S.
Range
Clearwater Mountains
Coordinates
45.844°N 116.237°W

Nearing the summit of the climb from the south, about to enter the road cut at the top.
The modern multi-lane highway was completed 46 years ago,[1] following ten years of construction which concluded with the opening of the bridge at the base over White Bird Creek in June 1975.[2][3][4][5][6] The treeless northbound grade climbs 2,700 feet (825 m) in seven miles (11 km), an average gradient of over 7%.[5]

The contract for the original road, 22 miles (35 km) from the mouth of White Bird Creek at the Salmon River to Grangeville, was awarded in late 1918.[7] Completed in 1921 and first paved in 1938, it rose slightly higher to 4,429 feet (1,350 m), due to the absence of a summit cut. Located to the east, the old road was twice the length and had a multitude of switchbacks ascending a treeless slope. On the present highway, the descent north of the summit is less dramatic as the grade drops less than 850 feet (260 m) in the forest with few curves onto the Camas Prairie towards Grangeville at 3,400 feet (1,035 m).

White Bird Hill Summit marks the divide between the Salmon River and the Camas Prairie. The Battle of White Bird Canyon of the Nez Perce War occurred in the valley south of the summit in 1877. The summit is named after Chief White Bird, a leader of the Nez Perce tribe.[8]

 

Winchester bypassed 1960
Highway – US 95 – to Lewiston (north) and Grangeville (south)
The city is two miles (3 km) west of U.S. Route 95, which connects it to Craigmont to the east and Lewiston to the northwest, via the Lapwai Canyon.
Until 1960, US 95 was routed through Winchester on this spur and descended Culdesac Hill (46.332°N 116.633°W), considered the worst of the three major grades (White Bird, Lewiston), all of which were extremely twisty. The new route through Lapwai Canyon was built in three years and reduced the distance by over 4 miles (6.4 km) and saved 25 minutes of driving time. The earlier road was completed in 1923. The first organized road race on the old road took place in 1964; among the participants in the hill climb was Bob Knievel of Butte, Montana, later known as Evel Knievel.
The timber trestles of the former Camas Prairie Railroad are visible throughout the area.