Maryland Route 33
Maryland Route 33 | ||||
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Maryland Route 33 highlighted in red | ||||
Route information | ||||
Maintained by MDSHA | ||||
Length: | 23.17 mi[1] (37.29 km) | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end: | Black Walnut Point Road on Tilghman Island | |||
MD 579 near Saint Michaels | ||||
East end: | Washington Street in Easton | |||
Location | ||||
Counties: | Talbot | |||
Highway system | ||||
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Maryland Route 33 (MD 33) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Maryland. The state highway runs 23.17 mi (37.29 km) from Tilghman Island east to Washington Street in Easton. MD 33 connects Easton, the county seat of Talbot County, with all communities on the peninsula that juts west into the Chesapeake Bay between the Miles River and Eastern Bay on the north and the Tred Avon River and Choptank River on the south. The state highway passes through the historic town of Saint Michaels, home of the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum, and enters Tilghman Island by passing over Knapps Narrows on the busiest drawbridge in the United States.
MD 33 between Easton and Saint Michaels was one of the original state roads outlined by the Maryland State Roads Commission in 1909. The state highway was constructed between Easton and Claiborne, the terminus of a ferry to Annapolis, in the late 1910s and early 1920s, and was originally designated MD 17. The portion of the highway between Claiborne and Tilghman Island was constructed as MD 451 in the early 1930s. The state highway was extended north to MD 404 in Matapeake on Kent Island when the western terminus of the ferry from Claiborne was moved to Romancoke in the late 1930s. MD 33 received its present number in a 1940 number swap with present MD 17. Following the shutdown of the ferry, MD 33 was extended west along MD 451 to Tilghman Island and the Romancoke–Matapeake highway was redesignated MD 8. In Easton, MD 33 was extended north along Washington Street in the late 1940s and then along Easton Parkway, presently MD 322, in the mid-1960s, before the eastern terminus returned to its present location in the late 1970s.
Route description
MD 33 begins at the start of state maintenance 0.10 mi (0.16 km) south of Wharf Road and Phillips Road on Tilghman Island. The roadway continues south as Black Walnut Point Road, a county highway that leads to the namesake point at the south end of the island. MD 33 heads north through the village of Tilghman Island as two-lane Tilghman Island Road, passing Tilghman Elementary School and many businesses before leaving the island by crossing Knapps Narrows on a single bascule drawbridge that is the busiest drawbridge in the United States.[2] Shortly after leaving Tilghman Island, the state highway passes through a mix of forest and farmland, passing the hamlets of Sherwood and Wittman and several pieces of old alignment of the highway. MD 33 curves to the east around the head of Harris Creek and passes through McDaniel before reaching Claiborne Road, which was formerly MD 451 and heads northwest to the village of Claiborne.[1][3]
History
The next section of present-day MD 33 was constructed between Claiborne and the highway's present western terminus on Tilghman Island as MD 451. The sections from Claiborne to a point between Wittman and Sherman and on Tilghman Island were completed around 1930.[4] The gap between Knapps Narrows and Sherman was filled in 1933.[10][11] MD 451 was completed when a new single bascule drawbridge was completed over Knapps Narrows in 1934.[2] MD 17 was extended from Claiborne across Eastern Bay along Romancoke Road to MD 404 in Matapeake on Kent Island in 1938.[12][13] This section was added in response to the replacement of the Claiborne–Annapolis ferry route with a Claiborne–Romancoke route in 1938, with traffic following the new section of MD 17 to Matapeake to take a second ferry across the Chesapeake Bay to Annapolis.[12][14] MD 17 switched numbers with MD 33, the highway connecting Brunswick and Wolfsville in Frederick County that is presently MD 17 in 1940.[15]
Easton Parkway was constructed as a western bypass of Easton in the 1960s. MD 33 was moved from Washington Street to the part of the bypass north of present MD 33 when that section of Easton Parkway opened in 1965.[24] MD 322, which was assigned to the southern part of Easton Parkway, replaced MD 33 on Bay Street between Easton Parkway and Washington Street, the latter of which became a northern extension of MD 565.[25] In 1978, MD 322 was assigned to all of Easton Parkway and MD 33 assumed its present eastern terminus.[26] The Knapps Narrows drawbridge was replaced by a new drawbridge in 1998.[2] The 1934 drawbridge was transferred to the entrance of the Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum in Saint Michaels.[2][27]
Junction list
The entire route is in Talbot County.
Location | Mile[1] | km | Destinations | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tilghman Island | 0.00 | 0.00 | Black Walnut Point Road south | Western terminus | |
0.87 | 1.40 | Drawbridge over Knapps Narrows | |||
10.81 | 17.40 | MD 579 south (Bozman Neavitt Road) – Bozman, Neavitt | |||
Newcomb | 16.33 | 26.28 | MD 329 east (Royal Oak Road) – Royal Oak, Bellevue | ||
18.43 | 29.66 | MD 329 west (Royal Oak Road) – Royal Oak | |||
20.93 | 33.68 | MD 370 north (Unionville Road) – Unionville | |||
Easton | 22.66 | 36.47 | MD 322 (Easton Parkway) to US 50 – Cambridge, Bay Bridge | ||
23.17 | 37.29 | Washington Street | Eastern terminus; former MD 565 and US 213 | ||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi | |||||
See also
- Maryland Roads portal
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Highway Information Services Division (2011). Highway Location Reference. Maryland State Highway Administration. Retrieved 2012-03-02.
- Talbot County (PDF)
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Bailey, Steve (May/June 2010). "Ups & Downs". Chesapeake Life (Baltimore: Alter Communications). Retrieved 2010-09-14.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Google Inc. "Maryland Route 33". Google Maps (Map). Cartography by Google, Inc. http://maps.google.com/maps?f=d&source=s_d&saddr=Black+Walnut+Point+Rd&daddr=Bay+St&geocode=Ff-iTgId1ypz-w%3BFaiwTwIdHCt3-w&hl=en&mra=ls&sll=38.707966,-76.338488&sspn=0.00048,0.001206&ie=UTF8&t=h&z=12. Retrieved 2010-09-09.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Uhl, G. Clinton; Bruce, Howard; Shaw, John K. (October 1, 1930). Report of the State Roads Commission of Maryland (1927–1930 ed.). Baltimore: Maryland State Roads Commission. pp. 20–21, 229. Retrieved 2010-09-04.
- ↑ Weller, O.E.; Parran, Thomas; Miller, W.B.; Perry, John M.; Ramsay, Andrew; Smith, J. Frank (May 1916). Annual Reports of the State Roads Commission of Maryland (1912–1915 ed.). Baltimore: Maryland State Roads Commission. p. 54. Retrieved 2010-09-04.
- ↑ Maryland Geological Survey. Map of Maryland (Map) (1910 ed.).
- ↑ Zouck, Frank H.; Uhl, G. Clinton; Mudd, John F. (January 1920). Annual Reports of the State Roads Commission of Maryland (1916–1919 ed.). Baltimore: Maryland State Roads Commission. p. 48. Retrieved 2010-09-09.
- ↑ Mackall, John N.; Darnall, R. Bennett; Brown, W.W. (January 1927). Annual Reports of the State Roads Commission of Maryland (1924–1926 ed.). Baltimore: Maryland State Roads Commission. p. 34. Retrieved 2010-09-09.
- ↑ Maryland Geological Survey. Map of Maryland: Showing State Road System and State Aid Roads (Map) (1927 ed.).
- ↑ Byron, William D.; Lacy, Robert (December 28, 1934). Report of the State Roads Commission of Maryland (1931–1934 ed.). Baltimore: Maryland State Roads Commission. p. 356. Retrieved 2010-09-09.
- ↑ Maryland Geological Survey. Map of Maryland Showing State Road System: State Aid Roads and Improved County Road Connections (Map) (1933 ed.).
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 Maryland State Roads Commission. Map of Maryland Showing State Road System (Map) (1938 ed.).
- ↑ Beall, J. Glenn; Jarboe, Elmer R.; Obrecht, George F., Sr. (March 4, 1939). Report of the State Roads Commission of Maryland (1937–1938 ed.). Baltimore: Maryland State Roads Commission. p. 105. Retrieved 2010-09-09.
- ↑ Maryland State Roads Commission. General Highway Map: State of Maryland (Map) (1939 ed.).
- ↑ Maryland State Roads Commission. Map of Maryland Showing Highways and Points of Interest (Map) (1940 ed.).
- ↑ Maryland State Roads Commission. Maryland: Official Highway Map (Map) (1948 ed.).
- ↑ Reindollar, Robert M.; George, Joseph M.; McCain, Russell H. (February 15, 1949). Report of the State Roads Commission of Maryland (1947–1948 ed.). Baltimore: Maryland State Roads Commission. p. 106. Retrieved 2010-09-09.
- ↑ Maryland State Roads Commission. Maryland: Official Highway Map (Map) (1949 ed.).
- ↑ Maryland State Roads Commission. Maryland: Official Highway Map (Map) (1954 ed.).
- ↑ Maryland State Roads Commission. Maryland: Official Highway Map (Map) (1957 ed.).
- ↑ Maryland State Roads Commission. Maryland: Official Highway Map (Map) (1960 ed.).
- ↑ Maryland State Highway Administration. Maryland: Official Highway Map (Map) (1997 ed.).
- ↑ Highway Information Services Division (1999). Highway Location Reference. Maryland State Highway Administration. Retrieved 2012-03-02.
- Talbot County (PDF)
- ↑ Maryland State Roads Commission. Maryland: Official Highway Map (Map) (1965 ed.).
- ↑ United States Geological Survey (1974-07-01). Easton, Maryland, United States (Map). Topo Map. http://msrmaps.com/image.aspx?T=2&S=12&Z=18&X=507&Y=5365&W=3&qs=. Retrieved 2010-09-09.
- ↑ Maryland State Highway Administration. Maryland: Official Highway Map (Map) (1978 ed.).
- ↑ Google Inc. "1934 Drawbridge at entrance to Chesapeake Bay Maritime Museum". Google Maps (Map). Cartography by Google, Inc. http://maps.google.com/maps?ie=UTF8&hq=&hnear=7600+Maple+Ave,+Takoma+Park,+Montgomery,+Maryland+20912&ll=38.788582,-76.224362&spn=0.00096,0.002411&t=h&z=19. Retrieved 2010-09-09.
External links
Route map: Google / BingKML file (edit) |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Maryland Route 33. |
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