U.S. Route 6 in Connecticut

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Route 6
Length: 116.33 mi (187.21 km)
Formed: 1926
West end: US 6/US 202 in Danbury
Major
junctions:
US 7 in Danbury
I-91 in Hartford
I-395 in Killingly
East end: US 6 in Killingly
Routes in Connecticut
< Route 5 Route 7 >
MinorService RoadsState Roads

Route 6 is the portion of the cross-country U.S. Route 6 within the state of Connecticut. West of Hartford, the route either closely parallels or runs along Interstate 84. Interstate 84 has largely supplanted Route 6 as a through route in western Connecticut. East of Hartford, the route serves as a primary route for travel between Hartford and Providence. Route 6 is 116.33 miles in length.

Contents

[edit] Route description

[edit] Danbury area

Route 6 begins at the New York state line east of the village of Brewster, entering the city of Danbury overlapped with U.S. Route 202. US 6/202 runs for 3.8 miles in Danbury as a minor arterial road then overlaps with Interstate 84/Route 7 (at Exit 4). The 4-way concurrency of I-84/US 7/US 6/US 202 continues for 3.3 miles, after which Routes 7 and 202 split off from I-84. Route 6 follows I-84 for another 0.8 miles before returning to surface roads (at Exit 8). The route then goes through the towns of Bethel and Newtown and then overlaps with I-84 again for 6.4 miles between Newtown and Southbury (from Exits 10 to 15).

[edit] Waterbury area

After exiting I-84 in Southbury, Route 6 is a surface road again as it passes through the northern Waterbury area suburbs of Southbury, Woodbury, Watertown and Thomaston. US 6 has a 1.0 mile overlap with the Route 8 expressway in Thomaston.

[edit] Hartford area

Route 6 continues as a surface road through the towns of Plymouth, Bristol and Farmington. In Farmington, Route 6 again joins I-84 as it passes through West Hartford, Hartford, East Hartford and Manchester (13.4-mile overlap from Exits 38 to 60). U.S. Route 44 briefly joins I-84/US 6 (for 0.2 miles) as they cross the Connecticut River on the Bulkeley Bridge. After exiting I-84 in Manchester, Route 6 is joined again by Route 44 for 6.9 miles up to Bolton near the eastern terminus of I-384.

[edit] Willimantic area

In Bolton, Routes 6 and 44 split. Route 44 follows a more northerly route while Route 6 continues through Bolton, Coventry, Andover and Columbia. It then becomes a freeway in Columbia (at a junction with Route 66), passing through Coventry (again), Windham, Mansfield and Windham (again), ending at the eastern terminus of Route 66. This freeway portion is 5.3 miles long and bypasses Willimantic center. Route 66 is the local alternate route serving the town center.

[edit] Danielson area

Route 6 then continues as a surface road to the towns of Chaplin, Hampton, Brooklyn and Killingly. The unsigned portion of the Connecticut Turnpike (SR 695) then meets with Route 6 just at the Rhode Island state line. Route 6 is a two-lane freeway in the vicinity of its junction with Interstate 395 in Killingly.

[edit] History

Before the creation of the U.S. Highway system in 1926, most of the proposed routing in Connecticut was part of New England Interstate Route 3 (NE-3). There were two places where NE-3 and US 6 were not overlapped. NE-3 began in Bedford, New York at New York State Route 22 and entered the state via modern Route 35. It then continued north to Danbury via modern U.S. Route 7. US 6, on the other hand, traveled from Brewster, New York on its current alignment, meeting with NE-3 in downtown Danbury.

Another difference in routing is between Manchester and Windham. US 6 uses a more northern alignment, running along present U.S. Route 44 then modern Route 31. NE-3 used current US 6 for its routing. East of Windham, the routes overlapped into Rhode Island. Between 1926 and 1932, NE-3 and US 6 were cosigned where they overlapped. NE-3 was finally decommissioned in 1932.

As originally signed in 1926, Route 6 took the following route in Connecticut:

[edit] Alternate routes

There have been several routes signed as US 6A in the state. No bannered routes currently exist.

  • Newtown-Southbury: original surface routing before creation of expressway later to become I-84; currently SR 816
  • Plymouth-Hartford: Currently US 6. At this time, the old US 6 went along Route 64 to downtown Waterbury then along Route 10 to Farmington.
  • Woodbury-Willimantic: West of Meriden, this was the original alignment of US 6. When US 6 was reassigned to the former 6A from Plymouth-Farmington, this became 6A. This 6A was subsequently extended through Meriden to Willimantic along modern Route 66. An expressway upgrade was planned for this 6A. Only a portion of the highway was built and is now Interstate 691.
  • Coventry-Windham: became 6A when NE-3 was decommissioned. Swapped with the old US 6 in 1939 and finally decommissioned in 1942 when 6A became Route 31.
  • Danielson: old routing prior to construction of the 2-lane freeway

[edit] Junction list

See Interstate 84 exit list for junctions while overlapped with I-84.

Town Road names Major junctions Milepost
Danbury
(5.76 miles)
Mill Plain Rd, Lake Ave Ext, I-84/Yankee Expwy, Newtown Rd I-84 at Exit 2 3.77
I-84 overlap (Exits 4 to 8) 4.15-8.26
SR 806 (Old Route 6) 8.50
Bethel
(1.26 miles)
Stony Hill Rd    
Newtown
(2.04 miles)
Mount Pleasant Rd, Main St, Church Hill Rd, I-84/Yankee Expwy Route 25 11.57-14.26
SR 816 (Old Route 6) 15.19
I-84 overlap (Exits 10 to 15) 15.52-21.96
Southbury
(2.06 miles)
I-84/Yankee Expwy, Main St North
Route 67 22.19-23.76
Woodbury
(5.10 miles)
Main St South, Main St North Route 64 25.94
Route 317 26.90
Route 47 27.60
Route 61 31.48
Watertown
(3.91 miles)
Woodbury Rd, DeForest St, Cutler St, Thomaston Rd Route 63 34.57
Route 262 35.81
Thomaston
(1.60 miles)
Watertown Rd, Pine Hill Rd, Route 8/James Darcey Memorial Hwy, East Main St Route 109 38.61
Route 254 39.12
Route 8 overlap (Exits 38-39) 39.40-40.39
Route 222 40.61
Plymouth
(2.64 miles)
Main St Route 262 41.28
Route 72 44.15
Bristol
(2.64 miles)
Terryville Ave, North St, Farmington Ave Route 69 44.86-47.25
Route 229 48.30
Farmington
(2.64 miles)
Scott Swamp Rd, Colt Hwy, I-84/Yankee Expwy Route 177 50.95
Route 10 (grade separated) 53.08
SR 549 (to Route 4) 55.15
I-84 overlap (Exits 38 to 60) 56.34-69.71
West Hartford I-84/Yankee Expwy
Hartford
East Hartford I-84/Wilbur Cross Hwy
Manchester I-84/Wilbur Cross Hwy, Middle Tpke West, Center St, East Center St, Middle Tpke, New Bolton Rd
U.S. Route 44 (begin overlap) 70.09
Route 83 72.67
Bolton New Bolton Rd, Boston Tpke, Hop River Rd Route 85 75.84
I-384 76.76
U.S. Route 44 (end overlap) 76.99
Coventry Willimantic Tpke    
Andover Jonathan Trumbull Hwy, Willimantic Rd Route 316 82.68
Route 87 83.91
Columbia Willimantic Rd, Route 6 Expressway Route 66 87.81
Coventry Route 6 Expressway    
Windham Route 32 (grade separated) 89.73
Mansfield Route 195 (grade separated) 91.94
Windham Route 6 Expressway, Boston Post Rd Route 66 93.15
Route 203 95.00
Chaplin Willimantic Rd, Hampton Rd Route 198 96.96
Hampton Hartford Tpke, Providence Tpke Route 97 101.30
Brooklyn Hartford Rd, Providence Rd Route 169 107.44
Killingly Providence Pike Route 12 110.97-111.32
I-395 (at Exit 91) 111.81
SR 607 (Old Route 6) 113.42
SR 695 116.06

[edit] Notes

An 11-mile stretch of highway that traverses Bolton, Coventry, Andover, and Columbia is known as "Suicide 6".[citation needed] Along with other sections of U.S. 6, including one which runs through western Rhode Island, this stretch has one of the highest rates of fatal injuries of any road in the country and was listed as one of "America's Most Dangerous Highways" by Reader's Digest in November 2000. Because Route 6 connects two major cities, Hartford and Providence, the road is used as an expressway despite the fact that most of it is a two-way highway with houses and businesses abutting it. With a lack of stop signs and traffic lights, there is major concern involving drivers pulling out of one of the many small side roads into high speed traffic lanes. Posted signs tell drivers they must keep headlights on at all times. The Connecticut Department of Transportation plans to upgrade the length of "Suicide 6" to an expressway, connecting I-384 to the existing expressway segment in Windham.[citation needed]

[edit] References


    U.S. Route 6
    Previous state:
    New York
    Connecticut Next state:
    Rhode Island