There's a whole archaeology buried in old highway signage, and nobody talks about it. Somewhere around 1978, a photographer pointed a camera at a cluster of road signs along U.S. Highway 75, Interstate 45, and Texas State Highways 3, 146, and 6 — the tangle of routes that connect Texas City, LaMarque, Hitchcock, and Houston down in the Gulf Coast lowlands. The result is one of those archival images that looks unremarkable until you actually stop and look at it. Because here's the thing about highway signs: they're basically a government-issued snapshot of how a region understood itself at a particular moment. Who mattered enough to get a sign pointing toward them. Which roads had been upgraded to interstate status and which were still just state highways with ambitions. What the planners of 1978 thought you needed to know before you committed to an exit. U.S. 75 and I-45 share a complicated relationship down this corridor — one of those highway marriages where two routes run concurrent for a stretch, sharing the same asphalt but carrying different bureaucratic identities, federal versus interstate. By 1978, the interstate system was still relatively young in Texas, and you can see that transition era fossilized in signage like this. Old U.S. route numbers holding on next to the newer interstate shields, both pointing at the same road. Texas City. LaMarque. Hitchcock. These are not the places that end up in the tourism brochures. They're working Gulf Coast communities — industrial, petrochemical, connected to the port and the refineries and the flat wet land between Houston and the water. The kind of places you pass through on I-45 heading toward Galveston without necessarily thinking about them as destinations with their own gravity. But in 1978, someone thought it was worth documenting exactly which signs told you how to get there. Vintage highway photography has this strange power to make the ordinary feel monumental. A green sign with white lettering. Standard typeface. Distances in miles. Nothing fancy. And yet forty-some years later, you're looking at it like it's a relic — because it is. The roads are still there. Some of the signs have changed. The towns have changed. The cars in the frame, if there are any, are long gone. What does it mean that we preserve images of signs telling us where to go, long after the moment of needing directions has passed?











