Highway 23 |
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Route information | ||||
Maintained by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario | ||||
Length: | 97.7 km[2] (60.7 mi) | |||
Existed: | June 22, 1927[1] – present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end: | Highway 7 near Elginfield | |||
Highway 8 in Mitchell | ||||
North end: | Highway 9 in Harriston (continues as Highway 89) |
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Location | ||||
Major cities: | Harriston, Listowel, Mitchell, St. Mary's | |||
Highway system | ||||
Ontario provincial highways
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King's Highway 23, commonly referred to as Highway 23, is a provincially maintained highway in the Canadian province of Ontario. The route travels from Highway 7 east of Elginfield north to Highway 9 in Harriston. The total length of Highway 23 is 97.7 kilometres (60.7 mi).
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Highway 23 begins at Highway 7, east of Elginfield and travels north to Highway 9 in Harriston. It passes through the municipalities of Whalen Corners, Woodham, Kirkton, Mitchell, Bornholm, Monkton, Newry, Atwood, Listowel and Gowanstown.
Highway 23 proceeds through the counties of Middlesex, Perth and Wellington. North of Middlesex County, from Whalen Corners, Highway 23 coincides with the border between Huron and Perth counties until a point north of Kirkton.
Highway 23 was first established on June 22, 1927, when the Department of Highways assumed the road from Mitchell to Teviotdale through Perth and Wellington counties, via Monkton, Listowel and Palmerston, connecting Highway 8 and Highway 9.[1] As part of depression relief work undertaken by the department during the early 1930s, Highway 23 was extended from Highway 8 to Highway 7 east of Elginfield on July 11, 1934.[3]
Highway 23 remained unaltered between 1934 and 1998. On January 1, 1998, the section from the Highway 89 junction west of Palmerston to Highway 9 in Teviotdale was decommissioned, resulting in the northern terminus of Highway 23 becoming the western terminus of Highway 89.[4] During the spring of 2003, the segment of Highway 89 between this junction and Harriston was renumbered as Highway 23,[5] resulting in the current routing.
The following table lists the major junctions along Highway 23. In addition, it includes some minor junctions that are noted by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario.[2] The entirety of Highway 19 is located within Oxford County.[6]
Division | Location | km[2] | Destinations | Notes |
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Middlesex | Lucan Biddulph | 0.0 | Highway 7 – London, Elginfield, Stratford | |
Perth | Russeldale | 26.4 | County Road 20 – Fullarton | |
Mitchell | 36.0 | Frank Street | Beginning of Mitchell Connecting Link agreement | |
37.0 | Highway 8 west – Clinton, Goderich | Beginning of concurrency with Highway 8 | ||
37.2 | Highway 8 east – Stratford, Kitchener | End of concurrency with Highway 8 | ||
38.4 | Frances Street | End of Mitchell Connecting Link agreement | ||
Bornholm | 45.6 | County Road 44 | ||
Monkton | 54.3 | County Road 55 (Maddison Street East) | ||
Newry | 63.4 | County Road 72 – Brussels | ||
Listowel | 73.6 | County Road 86 – Wingham | Formerly Highway 86; beginning of Listowel Connecting Link agreement | |
76.0 | David Street | End of Listowel Connecting Link agreement | ||
Gowanstown | 80.1 | County Road 88 | ||
Palmerston | 88.0 | County Road 93 / County Road 123 | ||
Wellington | ||||
Minto | 96.1 | County Road 87 (Harriston Road) | ||
Harriston | 97.7 | Highway 9 (Elora Street North) – Clifford County Road 109 (Elora Street South) – Teviotdale |
Continues as Highway 89 |
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