Found this on the quote you happy site when looking for a quote.
"One of our A-roads is missing!
Article date: 26/08/2005 17:15:13
Britain's roads may come in for a fair bit of stick – pot holed, congested and badly signposted as they are – but at the very least they don’t generally disappear.
Or do they? The government this week has issued a public appeal for information on 21 missing A-roads that, ummm, have apparently gone missing.
A shamefaced Department for Transport (DfT) has been forced to confess that the location of 21 numbered A-roads is a complete mystery to them, the paperwork having apparently gone missing in an office renovation.
Whether the DfT has consulted an AA atlas is not known.
The DfT has found general clues about the routes of 17 of the roads. For example, it knows the A622 went from Bakewell to Hathersage, in Derbyshire's Peak District, but can't say which of today's routes between the towns it was.
Precise details about the A108, A122, A150, A175, A241, A263, A294, A333, A364, A398, A434, A440, A471, A492, A524, A564, A604, A613, A648 and A668 have also gone, and any motorists with information are urged to get in touch.
A Government officer said: "I've been unable to locate a record of the routes these numbers were allocated to." He suggested the details may be found in the National Archives at Kew, London, where millions of secret papers are stored.
"
Someone please send them a map.
