Richmond-Petersburg Turnpike

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The Richmond-Petersburg Turnpike was a toll road located in the Richmond-Petersburg region of central Virginia in the USA.

After World War II, along a heavily-traveled East Coast highway corridor between Florida and the northeastern United States, along the fall line in Central Virginia, major traffic overloads occurred in the area around Richmond and Petersburg along U.S. Route 1 and U.S. Route 301. This was particularly true where these two major routes shared the same roadway for much of the distance between the two cities, as well as bridges across the James River and Appomattox River.

To help alleviate the problems, in 1955 the Virginia General Assembly created a political subdivision, the Richmond Petersburg Turnpike Authority. The authority was administered by a board of directors. Its members were appointed by the local governing bodies of the jurisdictions through which the turnpike passed. One member from each locality. It was given the mission sell toll revenue bonds to build and operate a new toll highway parallel to the existing Routes 1 and 301 between Henrico County just north of Richmond and Dinwiddie County just south of Petersburg, with new bridges over the two major rivers. Opened in 1958, and funded through toll revenue bonds, it was conceived prior to the creation of the Interstate Highway System.

Tolls were removed completely in 1992. Today, the former Richmond-Petersburg Turnpike forms 30 miles of Interstate 95 in central Virginia, as well as the northernmost 5 miles of Interstate 85 in Petersburg and Dinwiddie County.

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[edit] History

In the 1800s, a privately-operated toll road known as the Richmond Petersburg Turnpike extended through Chesterfield County between Richmond and Petersburg, Virginia. Later much of that route was renamed Jefferson Davis Highway and included portions of U.S. Routes 1 and 301. Some Chesterfield County land deeds still reference that name for properties along Jefferson Davis Highway. Historical accounts of area Civil War events mention that name as well. [1]

[edit] Richmond-Petersburg Turnpike Authority

After World War II, the busy north-south corridor in central Virginia shared by US 1 and US 301 and the Jefferson Davis Memorial Highway through the cities of Richmond, Colonial Heights and Petersburg and along the Jefferson Davis Highway between the cities was heavily-developed commercially. With only four traffic lanes and long stretches of undivided roadway, it became a major area of traffic congestion, as well as the site of occasional spectacular and deadly head-on collisions. [2]

In 1955, prior to the creation of the U.S. Interstate Highway System, the Virginia General Assembly created the Richmond-Petersburg Turnpike Authority as an independent state agency to administer (design, finance, acquire right-of-way, construct, operate, collect tolls, and maintain) the new Turnpike of the same name. The new toll road was planned with only 15 exits, and most of these were well away from the highly developed commercial areas along parallel U.S. 1-301.

Signage on the southbound Turnpike near Petersburg is aimed at long-distance travelers. The distant destinations of Miami, Florida and Atlanta, Georgia are signed.
Signage on the southbound Turnpike near Petersburg is aimed at long-distance travelers. The distant destinations of Miami, Florida and Atlanta, Georgia are signed.

Funded with proceeds from toll revenue bonds sold by the Authority, the 34.7 mile-long road cost $76.7 million to build, including new bridges over the James River in Richmond and the Appomattox River between Colonial Heights and Petersburg. It featured six lanes from the northern entrance to just south of the new James River Bridge in Richmond, and four lanes from that point south. At Petersburg, the new Turnpike split into two branches, one leading to US 301 south towards Emporia and Weldon, North Carolina, and the other to US 1 south, which led to South Hill and Greensboro, North Carolina.

The new expressway opened on July 1, 1958, and in August, the State Highway Commission designated it as part of Interstate 95.[3] A piece near Petersburg was designated Interstate 85, and the Turnpike became a grandfathered part of the U.S. Interstate Highway System even though no federal aid was used to build it. The new roadway achieved the intended diversion of long distance traffic. As earlier feared, hotels, motels, tourist homes and cabins, and restaurants along the bypassed highways suffered tremendous loss of business, and many failed. However, due to the relatively high rate of tolls on the Turnpike, the blow was softened by a continually increasing traffic flow and patronage of motorists wanting to avoid the tolls, who continued to use the old roads. This practice of avoiding roads and bridges with tolls is known as "shunpiking".

[edit] Expansion

The original toll revenue bonds were retired in 1975. However, in 1973, the General Assembly passed legislation which transferred the Authority's duties to the Virginia Department of Highways, the predecessor agency to the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT). The Authority as an independent entity ceased to exist and the Board of Directors disbanded. In December 1973, additional bonds were issued to provide much-needed improvements to the heavily traveled highway. Unlike the original toll revenue bonds which were backed only by toll revenue, the new bonds were backed by the Commonwealth of Virginia. They were still funded by toll revenue but the bondholders had more security with state backing and thus offered lower interest rates. A primary factor in turning the turnpike over to the Virginia Department of Highways was to obtain full state control since the state was taking the risk on the bonds.

The improvements included widening to six lanes of 22 miles from just south of the James River Bridge at Richmond and complete reconstruction of the I-85 and I-95 interchange in downtown Petersburg. Several other major interchanges including Chester/Hopewell and Broad Street at downtown Richmond were also reconstructed.

Once the bonds were paid off, toll revenue funded safety improvements on the entire tunpike which included sign and guardrail replacements as well as replacing most of the median guardrail with Jersey style concrete median barriers. Toll money was also spent on nearby road projects such as the Temple Avenue extension (State Route 144). Since interstate travelers were paying most of the tolls that was then being spent on other projects, toll removal became a local political issue that the General Assembly eventually decided to approximately coincide with the opening of the parallel Interstate 295.

[edit] Tolls removed, modernization

Tolls were removed from all portions of the former Richmond-Petersburg Turnpike in 1992, although the road now connects with several newer locally oriented toll facilities, including Richmond Metropolitan Authority's Downtown Expressway (State Route 195) which interchanges with the former Turnpike on the I-95 James River Bridge, and the Pocahontas Parkway (State Route 895) which connects I-95 at exit 67 with Interstate 295 and the Richmond International Airport.

Today, the former Richmond-Petersburg Turnpike with the I-95 designation, and parallel Interstate 295 (which forms an eastern bypass of Richmond and Petersburg) carry some of the heaviest traffic flows of any portion of the busy eastern U.S. corridor between Florida and New England.

[edit] Exit list

Number Mile Destinations Notes
Old
63 1 U.S. Route 1 (U.S. Route 460 Business) split into 63A and 63B
former Dinwiddie County barrier toll
65 Squirrel Level Road
68 2 Interstate 95 south; U.S. Route 460 east - Rocky Mount, North Carolina; Norfolk; Miami, Florida I-85 ends northbound and begins southbound; I-95 joins northbound and leaves southbound; US 460 leaves northbound and joins southbound; Turnpike takes exit 51 from I-95 south
69 3 Wythe Street; Washington Street - Downtown (U.S. Route 301; U.S. Route 460 Business) exit 52 southbound
52 Bank Street northbound exit only
53 Southpark Boulevard
54 4 Route 144 - Temple Avenue former Colonial Heights barrier toll between the exit and entrance ramps| This is the primary exit ramp for Southpark Mall and much of the other new commercial development in the Tri-cities area that has occurred since the toll roads were removed.
58 5 Route 746; Route 620 - Ruffin Mill Road; Woods Edge Road split into 58A and 58B southbound. Interchange was originally named Walthall.
61 6 Route 10 - Hopewell; Chester split into 61A and 61B (old 6E and 6W; originally 6 with only one exit)
62 6 Route 288 - Chesterfield; to Powhite Parkway
64 6A Route 613 - Willis Road
67A Route 895 east
67B 7 Route 150 north; Chippenham Parkway to U.S. Route 60; U.S. Route 360 west formerly exit 67; former Falling Creek barrier toll between the exit and entrance ramps
69 8 Route 161 - Bells Road
73 9 Maury Street; Commerce Road
74A 9A Route 195 to Interstate 195 north - Downtown Expressway to Powhite Parkway
74B 10A Franklin Street southbound exit only
74C 10 U.S. Route 33; U.S. Route 250 - Broad Street
75 11 Interstate 64 east - Williamsburg; Norfolk; Virginia Beach; 7th Street I-64 joins northbound and leaves southbound
76A 12 Chamberlayne Avenue northbound exit and southbound entrance
76B 13 U.S. Route 1; U.S. Route 301 - Belvidere Street no northbound exit
former Belvidere barrier toll
78 14 Boulevard (Route 161)
79 15A Interstate 64 west; Interstate 195 south to Powhite Parkway - Charlottesville I-64 joins southbound and leaves northbound
80 15 Route 161 - Hermitage Road; Lakeside Avenue northbound exit and southbound entrance
81 16 U.S. Route 1 northbound exit and southbound entrance
82 17 U.S. Route 301; Route 2 - Chamberlayne Avenue

[edit] References

[edit] External links