U.S. Route 9

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U.S. Route 9
Length: 521 mi[1] (838 km)
Formed: 1926[1]
South end: US 13 US 13 at Laurel, DE
Major
junctions:
US 40/US 322 in Atlantic City, NJ
US 1 in Woodbridge, NJ
I-78 in Newark, NJ
I-95 in New York City, NY
I-84 near Beacon, NY
I-90 in Albany, NY
North end: I-87 in Champlain, NY
United States Numbered Highways

U.S. Route 9 is a north-south United States highway in the states of Delaware, New Jersey, and New York in the United States. It is one of only two U.S. highways with a ferry connection (the Cape May-Lewes Ferry, between Lewes, Delaware and Cape May, New Jersey); the other being U.S. 10. US 9 is signed east-west in Delaware and north-south on the rest of its route.

Contents

[edit] Termini

As of 2006, the highway's northern terminus is a dead end in Champlain, NY, just short of the United States-Canada border. Originally, the road continued north across the border (as Quebec Route 9 towards Montreal) through the customs facilities now used by Interstate 87/Quebec Autoroute 15. The official northern terminus (the point where the END US 9 sign is posted) is just south of the interchange with I-87, less than a mile from customs. US 9's southern terminus is in Laurel, Delaware at an intersection with U.S. Route 13. Prior to the opening of the Cape May-Lewes Ferry in 1964, US 9 ended on Lafayette Street in Cape May, New Jersey. It was re-routed to the west, via Sandman Boulevard and Lincoln Avenues, to meet the new ferry, and its southern stub into Cape May was renumbered as NJ 109.[2]

[edit] Route description

The portion of New York City's Broadway north of the George Washington Bridge is part of US 9, from the northern tip of Manhattan via the toll-free Broadway Bridge, through the Bronx and into Westchester County, New York, where in some towns it is known as Albany Post Road. This road's original route from New York to Albany was a post road dating from the early days of American independence, and some of the original milestones are still visible along it.

U.S. 9 crosses the Edison Bridge in New Jersey near Perth Amboy and the George Washington Bridge into New York City. US 9 leaves the Trans-Manhattan Expressway (I-95, US 1, US 9) just after the GWB at an un-numbered exit immediately after the Henry Hudson Parkway (NY 9A).

Throughout much of central New Jersey, U.S. 9 varies between a two or three lane divided highway and is a major choke point for commuters; traffic reports commonly refer to "slowdowns at the lights along Route 9." US-9 is also a "choke point" for commuters through much of Dutchess County, due to the fact that the stoplights are timed to stay green longer for sidestreets.

Route 9 is a highway until Bayville, New Jersey, where it becomes a small, two-lane road.

The highway is mentioned in the lyrics of the classic song "Born to Run" by Bruce Springsteen: Sprung from cages out on Highway 9 / Chrome wheeled, fuel injected and steppin' out over the line.

[edit] U.S. Route 1 and U.S. Route 9 concurrency

A type of sign found on and near the concurrent US 1 and 9 in New Jersey
Enlarge
A type of sign found on and near the concurrent US 1 and 9 in New Jersey
A US 1-9 shield on the concurrency
Enlarge
A US 1-9 shield on the concurrency

A large section in northeast New Jersey is concurrent with U.S. Route 1, known as U.S. Route 1/9, and commonly referred to as "1 and 9". Route shields on this section, which includes the Pulaski Skyway, often show both numbers in the same shield, with a dash or ampersand between (1-9 or 1&9). The US 1-9 shield (shown on this page) can be glimpsed briefly in the opening sequence of the HBO series, The Sopranos.

[edit] Bannered routes

For defunct routes, see List of bannered U.S. Highways.

[edit] Related U.S. Highways

[edit] Intersections with major roads

[edit] Delaware

Location Milepost Intersecting road Notes
Laurel US 13
Georgetown
TRUCK US 9/US 113
SR 18/SR 404 begin SR 404 concurrency

TRUCK US 9
Gravel Hill SR 30
Harbeson SR 5
Five Points SR 1D/SR 23

BUS US 9/SR 1
end SR 404 concurrency
begin SR 1 concurrency
Carpenters Corner SR 1 end SR 1 concurrency
Lewes
BUS US 9

[edit] New Jersey

[edit] New York

Location Milepost Intersecting road Notes
New York I-95/US 1/NY-9A/Henry Hudson Parkway I-95 exit 1A
9A/Henry Hudson exit 14
end US 1 and I-95 concurrencies
Bronx County
Bronx Henry Hudson Parkway Broadway exit
Westchester County
Tarrytown Route 119/I-87/I-287/New York State Thruway Thruway exit 9
Sleepy Hollow Route 448
Route 117
Ossining Route 133
Route 134
NY-9A Begin NY-9A concurrency
Begin limited access
Croton-on-Hudson NY-9A End NY-9A concurrency
NY-9A Senasqua Road exit
Montrose NY-9A
Buchanan NY-9A
Peekskill US 6/US 202/NY 35 Short concurrency with US 6 and US 202, including Annsville Circle
Western terminus of NY 35
End limited access
Bear Mountain Parkway (western section)
Putnam County
Garrison Route 403
Cold Spring Route 301
Dutchess County
Fishkill I-84 I-84 exit 13
Route 52 Main Street
Wappingers Falls Route 9D
Poughkeepsie CR 77
Route 113 Spackenkill Road exit
Begin limited access
US 44/Route 55 Mid-Hudson Bridge exit
End limited access
Route 9G old Route 9F
Rhinebeck Route 308
Red Hook Route 199
Columbia County
Rensselaer County
Schodack I-90, US 20 I-90 exit 12; begin US 20 concurrency
Rensselaer I-787 I-787 exits 3 and 4
Albany County Hudson River
Albany NY 32 End US 20 concurrency
Colonie Routes 377, 378, 155, and 2 Hamlets of Latham and Loudonville
Saratoga County Mohawk River
Halfmoon Routes 236 and 146
Clifton Park
Malta Route 67, I-87 I-87 exit 13
Saratoga Springs Routes 50, 9P, 29, and 9N Concurrent with NY 29 between Washington Avenue and Lake Avenue
Concurrent with NY 50 between Ballston Avenue and Marion Avenue
Greenfield
Wilton
Moreau I-87, Route 197 I-87 exit 17
South Glens Falls Route 32 Begin NY 32 concurrency
Warren County Hudson River
Glens Falls Route 9L End NY 32 concurrency
Queensbury Routes 254 and 149 NY 149 concurrency for 1 mile (1.6 km) in Lake George
Lake George Routes 9N and 9L Concurrency with NY 9N and NY 9L
Warrensburg Route 28
Chester Route 8 Concurrency with NY-8 for 3.82 miles (6.11 km)
I-87 exit 26
Essex County
Schroon
North Hudson, New York Route 73 I-87 exit 30
Elizabethtown
Lewis
Chesterfield
Keeseville Route 22 Concurrency with Route 22 for 4.56 miles (7.3 km)
Clinton County Ausable River
Keeseville
Essex County Ausable River
Chesterfield, New York Route 373
Clinton County
Ausable
Peru Route 442
Plattsburgh (town and city) Routes 3 and 314
Beekmantown Route 456
Chazy Route 191
Champlain Route 9B Brief concurrency with US 11 in the Village of Champlain
I-87 I-87 exit 43, last exit before customs.
US 9 officially ends just before the onramp.

[edit] Miscellanea

In Albany, New York, part of US 9 and the north end of US 9W were intended to be rerouted onto a formerly proposed limited-access highway called the Mid-Crosstown Arterial.


[edit] See also

[edit] Local names of US 9

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b US Highways From US 1 to US 830 Robert V. Droz
  2. ^ Endpoints of US highways - US 9



Main U.S. Routes
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38
40 41 42 43 44 45 46 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59
60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79
80 81 82 83 84 85 87 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99
101 163 400 412 425
Lists  U.S. Routes - Bannered - Divided - Replaced
Browse numbered routes
< NJ 7 NJ US 9W >
< NY 8 NY NY 9A >