Dodge Street

Dodge was a strong supporter of westward expansion beyond the Missouri River to the Pacific Ocean who originally introduced the bill which led to the Kansas-Nebraska Act.

Sources frequently erroneously list the street's namesake as Grenville Dodge, the chief engineer for the Union Pacific Railroad.

[1] Six miles of Dodge were paved with macadam in June 1894;[2] however, by 1917 citizens were circulating a petition for the road to be graded.

[citation needed] Dodge Street begins as a westbound one-way offramp from I-480 right after it crosses the Missouri River from Iowa.

Omaha's Capitol Hill was originally located at the intersection of 20th and Dodge, at the building where the Nebraska Territory legislature convened.

The steep grade of Dodge Street was reduced from 12% to 7% in the 1920s, dramatically altering the face of the grounds surrounding Omaha Central High School.

Omaha's notable Saddle Creek Underpass was built to facilitate traffic along Dodge Street by the Works Progress Administration in 1934.

Dodge Street is the major street diverging from I-480 in Downtown Omaha .
Dodge Street near 76th Street in Omaha