M-19 (Michigan highway)
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M-19 |
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Maintained by MDOT | |||||||||
Length: | 84.82 mi[1] (136.50 km) | ||||||||
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Formed: | 1926[2] | ||||||||
South end: | I-94 near New Haven | ||||||||
Major junctions: |
I-69 near Port Huron M-90 near Brown City |
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North end: | M-142 near Bad Axe | ||||||||
Counties: | Macomb, St. Clair, Sanilac, Huron | ||||||||
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M-19 is a state trunkline route in the U.S. state of Michigan. It begins northeast of Detroit at a junction with I-94 and runs northward to a junction with M-142 just east of Bad Axe in the thumb.
Contents |
[edit] Route
M-19 begins at a junction with I-94 north of Detroit at exit 247. From there it runs parallel to I-94 until passing through the city of Richmond where it turns northward. Continuing north, beyond Richmond, M-19 travels through mostly rural areas and agricultural fields and continues as such, through the community of Memphis until its junction with I-69, at exit 184, about 15 miles west of Port Huron.
From here the route continues north, passing through small, rural communities such as Emmett and Brockway where it has a junction with M-136. North of Brockway the road jogs to the west passing east of the Yale Airport, a small grass landing strip just southeast of the village of Yale. The road jogs to the west again as it passes through Yale where it serves as Main Street in the small community.
After passing through Yale, the surroundings open up into agricultural fields once again as the road continues its trek northward, again passing through small rural communities such as Peck and Speaker. About 26 miles north of Yale, the road approaches the city of Sandusky, the county seat of Sanilac County. Near the center of town the route meets up with M-46, and turns west, to form a concurrency that lasts for about five miles.
After the two routes go their separate ways, M-19 heads back to the north as it enters rural and agricultural areas again. The road heads due north for the next 30 miles passing through small communities such as Elmer, Argyle and Ubly, before reaching its northern terminus at M-142 just east of the city of Bad Axe, the county seat of Huron County and the largest city on the route since Richland.[3]
[edit] History
Prior to its current alignment, M-19 existed in a much longer format. Prior to the implementation of the U.S. Highway System in 1926, M-19 began in downtown Detroit and traveled all the way to Port Huron via Gratiot Road, a portion of which is designated M-3 today. The road then traveled to the west via Lapeer and Brandon Roads, part of what used to be M-21 just north of I-69, before turning north on a road similar to its present day alignment. It continued on this road through Yale, Sandusky and Ubly to a junction with M-31, what is now M-142. The route then ran west through town and north along present day M-53 where it terminated in Port Austin at a junction with what was then M-27 (which would later become US 25 and then M-25).
After 1926, when the U.S. Highway System was implemented, a large portion of the southern section of the route was converted into U.S. Route 25, the road was then realigned to run straighter to the south through Emmett and Memphis before terminating at the newly designated U.S. Route 25 near Richmond. The portion between Port Huron and Goodells was decommissioned while it retained the M-21 designation. Portions that were bypassed with the new alignment through Emmett and Memphis were turned back to local control. The northern terminus of the route was truncated back to its present day location. In 1963, the southern terminus was extended along former U.S. Route 25 southeasterly along New Haven Road to connect with the newly completed I-94 freeway.[2]
[edit] Major intersection
County | Location | Mile[1] | Roads | Notes |
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Macomb | Chesterfield Township | 0.00 | I-94 | Southern terminus |
St. Clair | Riley Township | 20.95 | I-69 | |
Brockway Township | 27.47 | M-136 | ||
Sanilac | Speaker Township | 38.60 | M-90 | Southern terminus of concurrency |
Peck | 41.49 | M-90 | Northern terminus of concurrency | |
Sandusky | 53.26 | M-46 | Southern terminus of concurrency | |
Moore Township | 58.24 | M-46 | Northern terminus of concurrency | |
Huron | Verona Township | 84.82 | M-142 | Northern terminus |
Legend | |||||
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Crossing, no access | Concurrency terminus | Deleted | Unconstructed | Closed |
[edit] References
- ^ a b MiGDL - Center for Geographic Information - Geographic Data Library. Michigan Department of Information Technology (May 2007). Retrieved on 2008-02-09.
- ^ a b Bessert, Christopher J. (2006-04-23). Michigan Highways: Highways 10 through 19. Michigan Highways. Retrieved on 2006-07-25.
- ^ Google Maps. Google Maps. Retrieved on 2008-02-23.