What state was this in? Just curious. In most rural areas where I have lived in New York, Vermont, and Michigan - towns rarely own any roads. They just have unrecorded "easements by prescription" over lands actually owned by homeowners and landowners. I own several miles of public highways. A town can add to its easement simply by widening a road and then, if seven years goes by and no owners complain, it becomes part of the unrecorded easement (that is New York statue).
When a town has such an easement on a road and has it listed as a pubic highway, it stays that way forever unless they officially abandon it. Just not taking care of it anymore does not count. Again, I am citing New York law but many states are similar.
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Today's Featured Article - Field Modifications (Sins of the Farmer) - by Staff. Picture a new Chevrolet driving down the street without it's grill, right fender and trunk lid. Imagine a crude hole made in the hood to accommodate a new taller air cleaner, the fender wells cut away to make way for larger tires, and half of a sliding glass door used to replace the windshield. Top that off with an old set of '36 Ford headlight shells bolted to the hood. Pretty unlikely for a car... but for a tractor, this is pretty normal. It seems that more often than not they a
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