A19 road
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The A19 is a major road in England, running parallel to and east of the A1 road.
[edit] Section 1: Doncaster - Selby
The A19 starts at a junction with the A630 Church Way/A638 just to the north of Doncaster itself near to the parish church; this junction has been improved in recent years. It leaves the A638 at the next roundabout as Bentley Road and then winds its way over the East Coast Main Line, which it will follow through Selby and York, through the suburb of Bentley passing the Shell Bentley Service Station and out into the countryside to the north of the urban area.
Much of the A19's course round here runs through the old Yorkshire coalfield, and there's evidence of this on the way with old slag-heaps and colliery buildings.
It then sets off north towards the village of Askern, itself with a history of mining in the area. It meets the B1220 for Carcroft and goes through Owston, passing the Owston Park Lodge. Here it passes the Askern Hotel, Red Lion Hotel and Jet Askern Service Station and goes over a level crossing. There is a left turn for Norton. There are some long straights north of here, and the surrounds are mostly flat as the road heads towards the M62. It enters North Yorkshire and the district of Selby where it crosses the River Went near Walden Stubbs. It passes through Whitley Thorpe and Whitley. It meets the M62 at junction 34.
From the M62, the village of Eggborough has been bypassed in recent years, with the new road travelling from this roundabout to near the power station to the right (there are three power stations in a row at this point, running west-east: Ferrybridge, Eggborough, and Drax, with its enormous chimney, to the east). Close by is Whitley Bridge and the A19 then meets the A645 at a roundabout and its previous alignment to the north of the village, before travelling through Chapel Haddlesey and the small village of Burn, then before Brayton, it joins the A63. The £44m six mile A63 Selby bypass, to the south of the town opened on June 11th 2004. Before this happened, the road, and all the traffic, headed straight towards the centre of Selby, over a level-crossing and on to a busy traffic-light junction with the A63 from Leeds. The former A19 took the major of the multiplex through the town centre, whilst crossing the old toll bridge and heading on north towards York.
[edit] Section 2: Selby - Seaton Burn
The £5m five mile Riccall and Barlby bypass opened in October 1987. This provided better junctions with the A63 (Howden) and A163 (Holme-on-Spalding-Moor). At Escrick, it enters the borough of York, and passes the Q8 York Road Garage , the Parsonage Hotel and the church of St Helen. Next is Deighton, passing the White Swan Inn, then Crockey Hill. The York Northern By-Pass as the A1237 is a substitute for the A19 through York – this road is poorly engineered and has frequent roundabouts. The A19 still goes through York, beginning with the junction with the A64 close to a shopping centre, then Fulford, meeting the B1222. It crosses the East Coast Main Line and passes through Clifton and Rawcliffe. North of York, the road passes the Riverside Arms pub, then goes through Skelton as Shipton Road passing the Blacksmith's Arms and Ramada York Hotel. It re-enters North Yorkshire and the district of Hambleton and goes straight through the middle of Shipton by Beningbrough as Main Street, to the annoyance of many residents. It passes the Sidings Hotel and Dawnay Arms. There is a left turn for Tollerton. Heading northward the section between York and Thirsk was not helped much by the opening of the £5m three mile Easingwold Bypass in November 1994, as the road remained single carriageway, starting at a roundabout. There is a left turn for Raskelf. The residents of Thormanby look forward to their village being bypassed. Here it passes the Black Bull pub. There is the small dwelling of Birdforth and crossroads for Hutton Seesay and Carlton Husthwaite. It meets the A168 from the south, and the old route through Thirsk is now the A170 and the A61. It meets the A61 and A168 (for Northallerton) at a junction near South Kilvington.
North of Thirsk, the A19 becomes a fast dual carriageway with mostly grade separated interchanges, passing North Kilvington, climbing slightly past the junction at Knayton and skirting the western edge of the North York Moors, meeting the A684 (for Northallerton), then dropping towards the Cleveland Tontine at the junction with the A172 (for Stokesley and Guisborough). A mile later, it passes the BP Exelby Services on both sides of the road. Eventually after passing the Crathorne/Yarm exit the road hurtles towards Teesside over the Leven Viaduct. About a couple of miles from the Parkway Turn (A174) the road is raised slightly, overlooking Thornaby Industrial Estate and one of Europe's biggest housing estates known as Ingleby Barwick, giving clues that Teesside is imminent. At the Parkway the lighting columns appear then the road widens to 3 lanes, then at Acklam at the A1130 interchange it becomes four before two peel off for the A66 for Stockton-on-Tees and Middlesbrough. At this point the area is surrounded by retail parks - Teesside Park with a Morrisons, and masses of industry arranged round the A66/A19 interchange. This interchange is one of the few free-flow interchanges in Britain not found on the motorway network, and is similar to a four-level stack interchange, but with a single loop ramp covering the A19 south to A66 west movement. This road was improved in 1998 by widening from 2 to 3 & 4 lanes each way the four mile section between the Parkway and Norton. Even in rush hour the road still flows quite well. The grade-separated four-mile £19m Billingham Diversion was officially opened in February 1983, which diverted the traffic through a sub-standard section with roundabouts built in the 1970s.
Past Teesside the road climbs to a rural landscape, passing the Ron Perry & Sons service stations on both sides near Elwick, before hitting Peterlee and the surrounding ex-coal-mining villages all competing with place marketing billboards for industries to locate. Of course further up the road at Sunderland Nissan plant sits beside the A19, just before the Testo's Roundabout. At this point the A19 ended here as the A1 took over to run through the Tyne Tunnel, but the A1 moved to become an accident blackspot by the Angel of the North and the congestion hotspot known as the Western By-pass. To the east the A19 now approaches the Tyne Tunnel, soon to be duplicated to offer a real alternative to the A1 during the peak rush. The A19 continues to rejoin the A1 just north of Newcastle.
[edit] External links
- Selby bypass opens June 2004.
- Problems with the Selby bypass.
- New Tyne crossing on CBRD.
- Shipton by Beningbrough villagers angry over bypass postponement in 2001.
- Shipton by Beningbrough villagers losing their patience in 2003.
- Multiple murderer Mark Hobson is caught at a petrol station on A19 at Shipton by Beningbrough.
- SABRE article on the A19
A roads in Zone 1 of the Great Britain road numbering scheme |
||
A1 | ||
A10 - A11 - A12 - A13 - A14 - A15 - A16 - A17 - A18 - A19 | ||
A100 - A101 - A102 - A105 - A109 - A118 - A120 - A124 - A127 - A129 | ||
A135 - A140 - A143 - A146 - A149 - A151 - A159 - A160 - A165 - A167 | ||
A171 - A179 - A180 - A182 - A189 - A194 | ||
A1000 - A1018 - A1058 - A1066 - A1068 - A1079 | ||
A1081 - A1086 - A1101 - A1107 - A1156 - A1198 | ||
A1200 - A1202 - A1205 - A1303 - A1309 | ||
List of A roads in Zone 1 |