Illinois Route 9

Illinois Route 9 marker

Illinois Route 9
Route information
Maintained by IDOT
Length: 218.31 mi[1] (351.34 km)
Existed: 1918[2] – present
Major junctions
West end: Iowa 2 in Niota
 
US 67 / IL 110 (CKC) in Good Hope
US 24 in Banner
US 24 in Bartonville
I-155 in Tremont
US 150 in Normal
I-55 / I-74 / US 51 in Bloomington
US 150 in Bloomington
I-57 in Paxton
US 45 in Paxton
East end: SR 26 / SR 352 in Hoopeston
Location
Counties: Vermilion, Ford, McLean, Tazewell, Peoria, Fulton, McDonough, Hancock
Highway system
IL 8IL 10

Illinois Route 9 is a cross-state, eastwest rural state highway in central Illinois. It runs from the Fort Madison Toll Bridge that crosses the Mississippi River into Iowa at Niota eastward across central Illinois to State Road 26 at the Indiana border. This is a distance of 218.31 miles (351.34 km).[1]

Route description

Illinois 9 is a major arterial route in rural central Illinois. It is a parallel highway to Illinois 116 to the north and U.S. Route 136 to its south.

Illinois Route 9 begins at the Fort Madison Toll Bridge

The road starts at the Indiana border near Cheneyville at Indiana 26 and Indiana 352 and runs as the main highway west, intersecting with Interstate 57 at Paxton; Interstate 55 and Interstate 74 at Bloomington; Interstate 155 at Tremont; and crossing the Illinois River on the John T. McNaughton Bridge between Bartonville and Pekin, where it becomes known as Court Street in the city. It is a two lane highway for most of its length.

History

Illinois 9 was established in 1918 as one of the original 46 SBI routes. The routing of Illinois 9 has had 2 major changes since its establishment.

The original western terminus was in Hamilton, IL at the old Keokuk Rail Bridge completed in 1916 and then preceded East through Carthage and Macomb (county seats of Hancock and McDonough counties), 9 miles (14 km) east of Macomb, southwest of New Philadelphia, the route turned north to Bushnell and then proceeded east along the current Illinois 9 alignment to Canton, Peoria County, and Pekin.

This current route moved north to terminate in Niota at the Fort Madison Toll Bridge (longest double-deck swing-span bridge in the world) after its completion in July 1928. The route parallels the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway and Mississippi River to Dallas City then turns slightly southeast to LaHarpe Illinois. From LaHarpe the route parallels the original Toledo, Peoria and Western Railway right-of way to Bushnell.

From 1935 to 1937, Illinois 9 ran a different route from Pekin to Bloomington, that original route is now posted as:

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[3]kmDestinationsNotes
LeeFort Madison US 61 / Iowa 2Continuation into Iowa
Mississippi RiverFort Madison Toll Bridge
HancockNiota0.91.4 IL 96Western end of IL 96 concurrency
Dallas City7.311.7 IL 96Eastern end of IL 96 concurrency
 14.022.5 IL 94Western end of IL 94 concurrency
La Harpe20.032.2 IL 94Eastern end of IL 94 concurrency
McDonoughGood Hope40.064.4
US 67 / IL 110 (CKC)
Bushnell49.780.0 IL 41Southwest end of IL 41 concurrency
 54.086.9 IL 41Northeast end of IL 41 concurrency
FultonCanton72.6116.8 IL 78
Banner80.8130.0 US 24Western end of US 24 concurrency
PeoriaOrchard Mines94.6152.2 US 24Eastern end of US 24 concurrency
TazewellTremont107.0172.2 I-155 / IL 121
McLeanBloomington Heights131.0210.8 US 150Western end of US 150 concurrency
133.0214.0 I-55 / I-74
Bloomington135217 US 51
135217 US 150Eastern end of US 150 concurrency
FordPaxton183295 I-57
VermilionHoopeston206332 IL 1
 215346 SR 26 / SR 352Continuation into Indiana
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Future

External links

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Illinois Technology Transfer Center (2007). "T2 GIS Data". Retrieved 2007-11-08.
  2. Carlson, Rick. Illinois Highways Page: Routes 1 thru 20. Last updated March 15, 2006. Retrieved March 28, 2006.
  3. Google Maps,