U.S. Route 1 in Maryland
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U.S. Route 1 |
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Rhode Island Ave., Baltimore-Washington Blvd., Southwestern Blvd., Monroe St. / Fulton Ave., North Ave., Belair Rd., Conowingo Rd. Maintained by MDSHA, Baltimore DOT |
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Length: | 84 mi[1] (135 km) | ||||||||||||
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Formed: | 1926 | ||||||||||||
South end: | US 1 in Mount Rainier | ||||||||||||
Major junctions: |
I-95/I-495 in College Park MD 32 near Savage MD 100 near Elkridge I-895 near Relay I-195 in Relay I-695 near Arbutus US 40 in Baltimore I-83 in Baltimore MD 2 in Baltimore I-695 near White Marsh US 222/MD 222 in Conowingo |
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North end: | US 1 near Rising Sun | ||||||||||||
Counties: | Prince George's, Howard, Baltimore, Baltimore City, Baltimore (again), Harford, Cecil | ||||||||||||
Major cities: | Mount Rainier, Hyattsville, College Park, Beltsville, Laurel, Savage, Elkridge, Baltimore, Bel Air, Hickory, Conowingo, Rising Sun | ||||||||||||
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U.S. Route 1 in Maryland is an 84-mile segment of the U.S. highway that runs through central Maryland.
Contents |
[edit] Route description
From Washington, D.C., U.S. Route 1 (a.k.a. Rhode Island Avenue) enters Maryland in the community of Mount Rainier. From there, it passes through Hyattsville (where it merges with Baltimore Avenue), Riverdale Park, College Park (including the University of Maryland campus), Beltsville, Muirkirk, Laurel, Savage, Jessup, Dorsey, and Elkridge, before entering Baltimore, where it follows Southwestern Boulevard, Wilkens Avenue, Monroe Street, Fulton Street, and North Avenue (the old northern boundary of Baltimore). It exits Baltimore to the northeast along Bel Air Road, through the towns of Overlea/Fullerton, Perry Hall, and Kingsville, until just north of Fallston, where Route 1 becomes the Bel Air Bypass. Finally, it becomes Conowingo Road after crossing MD Route 543. From that point north, the highway travels through rural areas to the Pennsylvania border, on a stretch which includes crossing the Susquehanna River atop the Conowingo Dam.
US 1 is paralleled by several major highways as it passes through Maryland, including Interstate 95, the Baltimore-Washington Parkway, U.S. Route 29 and U.S. Route 301. Thus, US 1 has lost its significance as a long distance route through the state. It is often congested, however, because it remains a major route in the individual towns it traverses.
Between Baltimore and Washington, D.C., Route 1 is also known as the Baltimore-Washington Boulevard and (closer to D.C.) Baltimore Avenue and Rhode Island Avenue.
[edit] Junction list
County | Location | Destinations | Notes | |
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Washington D.C. border | ||||
Prince George's | Mount Rainier | MD 208 north (38th Street) – Hyattsville | ||
Hyattsville | US 1 Alt. south (Baltimore Avenue) – Bladensburg, Washington D.C. |
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Riverdale Park | MD 410 (East-West Highway) to US 50 – Bethesda, Glenarden | |||
College Park | MD 430 (Greenbelt Road) to MD 193 | Corner of US 1/MD 193 intersection | ||
MD 193 (University Boulevard) – Takoma Park, Greenbelt | Interchange | |||
North College Park | I-95 (Capital Beltway) / I-495 – Baltimore, Richmond | Interchange | ||
MD 212 (Powder Mill Road) – Beltsville | ||||
Laurel | To MD 197 (Muirkirk Road east) | |||
To MD 197 (Contee Road) - Laurel Regional Hospital, Maryland National Memorial Park | ||||
To MD 197 (Cherry Lane) - Laurel Mall | ||||
MD 198 (Fort Meade Road) – Spencerville, Fort Meade | ||||
Howard | To MD 198 (Whiskey Bottom Road) – North Laurel Park | |||
Savage | Gorman Road - Savage Mill via Bollman Truss Bridge | |||
MD 32 (Patuxent Freeway) – Clarksville, Fort Meade | Interchange | |||
Guilford Road - Columbia, Annapolis Junction | ||||
Waterloo | MD 175 (Waterloo Road) – Columbia, Jessup | |||
MD 103 (Meadowridge Road, Dorsey Road) to MD 100 – Ellicott City | ||||
Elkridge | MD 100 – Ellicott City, Glen Burnie | Interchange | ||
To MD 103 (Montgomery Road) | ||||
I-895 north (Harbor Tunnel Thruway) – Baltimore | northbound entrance, southbound exit | |||
Baltimore | Relay | I-195 (Metropolitan Boulevard) – Baltimore - BWI Airport | Interchange | |
US 1 Alt. north (Washington Boulevard) to I-695 |
northbound entrance, southbound exit | |||
Arbutus | I-695 (Baltimore Beltway) to I-83 to I-70 to I-97 – Towson, Glen Burnie | minimal connections present; use US 1 Alt. | ||
Baltimore City | Baltimore City | MD 372 west (Wilkens Avenue) – Catonsville | ||
US 1 Alt. south (Caton Avenue) to I-95 |
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To I-95 south (South Monroe Street) to MD 295 | ||||
To MD 2 (W. Pratt Street) - B&O Railroad Museum, National Aquarium | ||||
W. Lombard St. - University of Maryland Medical Center | ||||
MD 144 west (Frederick Avenue) – Catonsville | ||||
US 40 (W. Franklin Street, W. Mulberry Street) | Interchange, former I-170 | |||
MD 140 north (Reisterstown Road) – Reisterstown, Westminster | ||||
To US 40 (Pennsylvania Avenue) | ||||
MD 129 north (Park Heights Avenue) – Worthington | ||||
I-83 (Jones Falls Expwy.) – Timonium, York PA | ||||
MD 139 (St. Paul Street, Calvert Street) to I-695 – Towson | ||||
MD 2 south (St. Paul Street, Calvert Street) – Glen Burnie | ||||
MD 45 north (Greenmount Avenue) – Towson, Timonium | Former US 111 | |||
MD 147 north (Harford Road) – Parkville | ||||
To US 40 (Broadway) - Johns Hopkins Hospital | ||||
N. Gay St. | ||||
MD 151 (Erdman Avenue) – Sparrows Point | ||||
To MD 147 (Moravia Road) to I-95 to I-895 - Bnai Israel Cemetery, Most Holy Redeemer Cemetery, Micheo Kadison Cemetery | ||||
To MD 41 (Northern Parkway) | ||||
Baltimore | Fullerton | I-695 (Baltimore Beltway) to I-70 to I-83 – Towson, Essex, Francis Scott Key Bridge | Interchange | |
Rossville Boulevard - Rossville | ||||
MD 43 (White Marsh Boulevard) – White Marsh, Martin State Airport | ||||
Joppa Road - Towson | Former MD 148 | |||
Harford | Pleasant Hills | MD 152 (Mountain Road) to I-95 to US 40 – Fallston, Aberdeen Proving Ground | ||
Bel Air | US 1 Bus. north (Baltimore Pike) – Bel Air | |||
MD 24 south (Vietnam Vets Memorial Highway) to I-95 to US 40 - Aberdeen Proving Ground, Rocks State Park | South end of MD 24 overlap | |||
MD 24 north / MD 924 south (Rock Spring Road) – Bel Air, Rocks State Park | Interchange, north end of MD 24 overlap | |||
Hickory | US 1 Bus. (Conowingo Road) – Bel Air, Hickory | |||
MD 23 west (Jarrettsville Road) – Jarrettsville | ||||
MD 543 (N Fountain Green Road) to MD 22 | ||||
US 1 Bus. south (Conowingo Road) – Hickory | ||||
MD 136 (Priestford Road) – Dublin, Churchville | ||||
Dublin | MD 440 west (Dublin Road) – Dublin | |||
MD 161 south (Darlington Road) / MD 623 north (Castleton Road) – Darlington, Castleton | ||||
Conowingo Hydroelectric Dam over Susquehanna River | ||||
Cecil | Conowingo | MD 222 south (Susquehanna River Road) to I-95 – Port Deposit, Perryville | South end of MD 222 overlap; Former US 222 |
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US 222 north (Rock Springs Road) – Oakwood | North end of US 222 overlap | |||
MD 591 north (Colora Road) | Former US 1 | |||
MD 591 south (Porters Bridge Road) | Former US 1 | |||
Rising Sun | MD 273 east (Rising Sun Road) to MD 213 – Rising Sun, Newark DE | |||
MD 276 south (Jacob Tome Memorial Highway) to MD 273 – Rising Sun, Port Deposit | ||||
Pennsylvania state line |
[edit] History
The Washington and Baltimore Turnpike was chartered by the state on December 17, 1812, and ran from the intersection of Pratt and Eutaw Streets, then on the Baltimore city line, to the D.C. border.[2]
North of Baltimore City, the Baltimore and Jerusalem Turnpike Company was incorporated by the Maryland General Assembly in 1867. It ran from the eastern city line at the modern-day town of Overlea/Fullerton, through Perry Hall, (running immediately adjacent to the original Perry Hall Mansion) near where most settlement existed at the time, through rural Kingsville, and ended at the Harford County line. In 1909, the State Roads Commission opted to use the right-of-way of this turnpike for the construction of U.S. 1 northeast of the city.[3]
The original Baltimore-Washington Blvd. was first paved by the state of Maryland in 1914, and became part of US 1 when the U.S. highway system was formed in 1926.
The earliest reference to a numbered route along this corridor was the unmarked State Road No. 1 in 1908 between Baltimore and Washington.[1][2] The route was routed along the general path of present-day US 1 between Baltimore and Washington.
Today, US 1's alignment between the Baltimore city line and the southern terminus of US 1 Business south of Bel Air, 13.5 miles in length, is one of the few arterial highways in Maryland that has not been bypassed in any way. It has remained in this form due to the presence of I-95 and US 40.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, United States Numbered Highways, 1989 Edition
- ^ Prince George's County Circuit Court, Land Survey, Subdivision, and Condominium Plats, Plat Drawer 11, File 17, Turnpike Road from the District of Columbia to the City of Baltimore
- ^ "Crossroads: The History of Perry Hall, Maryland," by David Marks, pp. 75-77; 89-90. Published by Gateway Press, Inc., 1999.
[edit] External links
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U.S. Route 1 | ||
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