Vermont Route 125

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Vermont Route 125 marker

Vermont Route 125
Route information
Maintained by VTrans
Length: 36.043 mi[1] (58.006 km)
Existed: 1935[2] – present
History: Extended over VT 19 by 1949[3][4]
Major junctions
West end: VT 17 in Addison
  US 7 in Middlebury
East end: VT 100 in Hancock
Location
Counties: Addison
Highway system

State highways in Vermont

VT 123 VT 127

Vermont Route 125 is a 36.043-mile (58.006 km) long state highway in Addison County, Vermont, United States. The route begins at an intersection for VT 17 in the town of Addison near the Champlain Bridge. The route runs through the towns of Bridport, Middlebury, Ripton and the Green Mountain National Forest before reaching a junction with VT 100 in Hancock. Parts of VT 125 from Bridport to Middlebury were designated as Vermont Route F-8 by 1926, but was truncated by 1931 to a segment between West Bridport and VT 30A (current-day VT 22A). The section between VT 30A and Middlebury had been designated as Vermont Route 19. VT 19 began at VT 17 in Chimney Point, terminating at VT 30 in Middlebury. VT 125 had been designated between US 7 in Middlebury to VT 100 in Hancock by 1935, but by 1949, had absorbed the entirety of VT 19 to Chimney Point.

Route description

VT 125 approaching the junction with VT 17 in Chimney Point

VT 125 begins at an intersection with VT 17 in the Chimney Point section of Addison just after the latter comes off the Champlain Bridge from Crown Point. VT 125 runs southeast through the Chimney Point State Historic Site as Bridge Road, a two-lane local road. Running along the western shore of Lake Champlain, the route passes several housing developments in the town of Addison, crossing south over a local tributary of the lake. Winding southeast, VT 125 crosses through the flats of Addison County, crossing into the town of Bridport. Turning away from the lake shore, VT 125 turns east at the junction with Lake Street, soon bending southeast through the flats in Bridport. At West Market Street, the route turns eastward again, reaching the hamlet of Bridport.[5]

In Bridport, VT 125 reaches a junction with VT 22A, where the two routes become concurrent, while VT 125's old right-of-way continues east as Market Road. VT 125 and VT 22A run south for a short stretch in Bridport, with VT 125 quickly turning to the east. Continuing through farms in the town of Bridport, the route runs up a ridge in town, making a southern bend at the ridge. Crossing the Lemon Fair River, VT 125 turns east again at West Street and begins paralleling the river. The river soon turns to the north, running east to Hamlin Road, where it turns northeast. The route soon enters dense woods, leaving them for fields again near Ridge Road. After a northeastern jog, VT 125 turns eastward at Lemon Fair Road. Now in the town of Cornwall, VT 125 runs east into the town of Middlebury.[5]

Through Middlebury, VT 125 gains the moniker of College Street, passing the southern border of Middlebury College as a two-lane local street. At the junction with Academy Street, the route reaches the southern terminus of VT 23. After VT 23, VT 125 continues east along College Street into a junction with VT 30 (Main Street). VT 125 and VT 30 become concurrent through Middlebury, running northeast along Main Street through the center of town, crossing over nearby Otter Creek. After Otter Creek, the routes make a bend to the northeast and reaching a junction with US 7 (North Pleasant Street). At this junction, VT 30 terminates while VT 125 runs south along a short concurrency with US 7. The routes turn east at Court Square, becoming a short one-way pair before turning southeast on Court Street. US 7 and VT 125 runs southeast along Court, becoming a two-lane residential street, turning closer to the east at Creek Road, becoming a main commercial street.[5]

VT 125, signed as SCENIC VT 125, at the junction with VT 100 in Hancock

US 7 and VT 125 soon crosses through Middlebury as a two-lane road which soon becomes residential. This soon relents for fields and farms, until a junction with East Main Street, where VT 125 turns eastward on East Main. Reaching East Middlebury, VT 125 soon reaches a junction with VT 116 (Church Street), a short distance from where it began at US 7. VT 125 continues southeast past VT 116 as the residential two-lane street paralleling the Middlebury River. At North Branch Road, VT 125 darts across the river, running along the southern shore of the waterway through dense woods. The route soon bends southeastward along the riverside, crossing into Green Mountain National Forest. Now signed as SCENIC VT 125, VT 125 runs northeast through the forest, crossing into the town of Ripton. Winding along the riverside, VT 125 runs mostly northeast before winding east over the Middlebury River.[5]

After Lincoln Road, VT 125 passes a small commercial and residential area of Ripton, crossing over the Middle Branch of the Middlebury River. However, VT 125 runs along the north shore of South Branch of the Middlebury River. Running south along the riverside, crossing a junction with Goshen Road, reaching through dense woods in Ripton. Running southeast through the park, VT 125 into the hamlet of Bread Loaf, crossing Steam Mill Road and turns southeast. Near College Inn Road, VT 125 runs southeast past some homes, before turning southeast into the woods along the South Branch of the Middlebury River. Passing the eastern end of the branch, the route crosses into the town of Hancock. VT 125 runs southeast through Hancock, turning east through the forest, turning northeast past Boyden Brook Road. The woods soon relent for fields and residences and turning northeast along a nearby stream. VT 116 turns southeast once more, leaving the Green Mountain National Forest, reaching a junction with VT 100 in Hancock. This junction marks the eastern terminus of VT 125.[5]

History

VT 125 dates back to as early as 1926 from VT 30A to VT 30 and VT F-7 as VT F-8, a gravel route than ran from Lake Champlain at West Bridport to Middlebury. The rest of the current VT 125 was unnumbered.[6] By 1931, a segment of VT 125 from VT 17 (former VT F-7) to VT 27 in Middlebury as VT 19. A short segment from US 7 to East Middlebury as a segment of VT 116.[7][8][9] By 1931, VT-F8 had been consolidated to a section from West Bridport to VT 30A,[8] and the rest of current VT 125 had remained without a designation.[10][11] In 1935, as part of a 700-mile (1,100 km) addition to the Vermont state highway system, VT 125 had been designated from US 7 in Middlebury to VT 100 in Hancock.[2][12] By 1949, VT 125 had been extended over VT 19 to VT 17 in Chimney Point.[3][4]

Major intersections

The entire route is in Addison County.

LocationMile[1]kmDestinationsNotes
Addison0.0000.000 VT 17
Bridport7.12311.463 VT 22A northNorthern terminus of overlap
7.58112.200 VT 22A southSouthern terminus of overlap
Middlebury15.70125.268 VT 23Southern terminus of VT 23
15.80425.434 VT 30 south (Main Street)Western terminus of overlap
16.06325.851 US 7 north (North Pleasant Street)Eastern terminus of VT 30 / VT 125 overlap; northern terminus of VT 30; northern terminus of US 7 / VT 125 overlap
19.91732.053 US 7 south (Court Street)Southern terminus of overlap
20.48432.966 VT 116 (Church Street)
Hancock36.04358.006 VT 100
     Concurrency terminus     Closed     Unopened

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "2012 (Route Log) AADTs – State Highways" (PDF). Vermont Agency of Transportation. May 2013. Retrieved December 27, 2013. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 State Highways History (1931 1000-mile addition and 1935 700-mile addition (Report). Vermont Agency of Transportation. ftp://vtransmaps.vermont.gov/Maps/Publications/Historical/History_Details_1931_1935.pdf. Retrieved January 2, 2014.
  3. 3.0 3.1 Vermont State Highway Department (1949). Middlebury (Map). Cartography by District 6.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Vermont State Highway Department (1949). Bridport (Map). Cartography by District 6.
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 Microsoft. "overview map of Route 125". Bing Maps (Map). Cartography by Nokia. http://binged.it/1cZjHLN. Retrieved December 28, 2013.
  6. The Bureau of Public Roads, United States Department of Agriculture (1927). Report of a Survey of Transportation on the State Highways of Vermont (Report). Vermont State Highway Department. ftp://vtransmaps.vermont.gov/Maps/Publications/Historical/1927Doc_full.pdf. Retrieved December 28, 2013.
  7. Vermont State Highway Department (January 23, 1931). Middlebury Town (Map). Cartography by F.C. Fenn and Keese. ftp://vtransmap01.aot.state.vt.us/Maps/TownMapSeries/ADDISON_Co/MIDDLEBURY/MIDDLEBURY_1931.pdf. Retrieved December 28, 2013.
  8. 8.0 8.1 Vermont State Highway Department (March 20, 1931). Bridport (Map). Cartography by H.W. Murick. ftp://vtransmap01.aot.state.vt.us/Maps/TownMapSeries/ADDISON_Co/BRIDPORT/BRIDPORT_1931.pdf. Retrieved December 28, 2013.
  9. Vermont State Highway Department (September 29, 1931). Addison (Map). Cartography by F.L. Wilmarth. ftp://vtransmap01.aot.state.vt.us/Maps/TownMapSeries/ADDISON_Co/ADDISON/ADDISON_1931.pdf. Retrieved December 28, 2013.
  10. Vermont State Highway Department (September 15, 1931). Ripton (Map). Cartography by D.C. Mills. ftp://vtransmap01.aot.state.vt.us/Maps/TownMapSeries/ADDISON_Co/RIPTON/RIPTON_1931.pdf. Retrieved December 28, 2013.
  11. Vermont State Highway Department (November 16, 1931). Hancock (Map). Cartography by O.A. Harding. ftp://vtransmap01.aot.state.vt.us/Maps/TownMapSeries/ADDISON_Co/HANCOCK/HANCOCK_1931.pdf. Retrieved December 28, 2013.
  12. State Farm Insurance Company (1939). Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont (Map). Cartography by Rand McNally. http://www.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/detail/RUMSEY~8~1~258631~5522105:Rand-McNally-Road-map--Maine,-New-H?sort=Pub_List_No_InitialSort%2CPub_Date%2CPub_List_No%2CSeries_No&qvq=w4s:/what/Atlas%20Map/where/United%20States/Vermont;sort:Pub_List_No_InitialSort%2CPub_Date%2CPub_List_No%2CSeries_No;lc:RUMSEY~8~1&mi=15&trs=16. Retrieved December 28, 2013.

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