List of U.S. Highways in Connecticut
United States Numbered Highway System | |
---|---|
US Route markers | |
System information | |
Length: | 547.75 mi (881.52 km) |
Notes: | U.S. Highways in Connecticut maintained by ConnDOT |
Highway names | |
Interstates: | Interstate X |
US Routes: | U.S. Route X |
State: | State Route X |
System links | |
|
United States Numbered Highways in the U.S. state of Connecticut, are numbered by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) and maintained by the Connecticut Department of Transportation, a total of 547.75 miles (881.52 km) as a system of state highways and are numbered from 1 to 202.
History
In 1926, the U.S. highway system was implemented. U.S. Routes 1, 5, 6, and 7, plus 202 were used as designations on several primary state highways, replacing New England routes 1, 2, 3, and 4, respectively. The other New England routes that were not re-designated as U.S. routes became ordinary state highways but kept their number designation, which are used even today (with some realignment).
Current U.S. Highways
Highway | Major Cities | Length (mi) | Length (km) | Description | Date established | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
U.S. 1 | Greenwich, Stamford, Norwalk, Fairfield, Bridgeport, Stratford, Milford, West Haven, New Haven, East Haven, New London, Groton | 117.37 | 188.89 | U.S. 1 enters from New York and runs parallel to the Long Island Sound throughout its length in Connecticut. Crossing the Housatonic River on the Washington Bridge It crosses the Connecticut River on the Raymond E. Baldwin Bridge. U.S. 1 leaves the state at the Rhode Island border. | 1964 | |
U.S. 5 | New Haven, Wallingford, Meriden, Newington, Hartford, East Hartford, Windsor, Enfield | 54.59 | 87.85 | U.S. 5 runs from I-91 overlapping with CT 15 to the Massachusetts border. | 1926 | |
U.S. 6 | Danbury, Newtown, Southbury, Thomaston, Bristol, West Hartford, Hartford, East Hartford, Manchester, Bolton, Willimantic, Danielson, Killingly | 116.33 | 187.21 | U.S. 6 enters from New York. After a four way concurrency with I-84, US 7, and US 202 in Danbury, U.S. 6 continues to Thomaston, Bristol and Farmington, where it becomes a duel-leveled viaduct. It continues to Hartford and crosses the Connecticut River on the Bulkeley Bridge and continues to the Rhode Island border. | 1926 | |
U.S. 7 | Norwalk, Danbury, New Milford, Kent, Canaan | 78.29 | 126.00 | U.S. 7 runs from I-95 (Connecticut Turnpike) overlapping a four way concurrency with I-84 US 6 and US 202 in Danbury, continuing through northwestern Connecticut to the Massachusetts border. | 1930 | |
U.S. 44 | Windsted, Canton, Avon, West Hartford, Hartford, East Hartford, Manchester, Bolton, Ashford, Putnam | 106.03 | 170.64 | U.S. 44 runs from the New York border and northwestern rural Connecticut and it overlaps with I-84 and US 6 in Hartford and E. Hartford and northeastern rural Connecticut to the Rhode Island border. | 1935 | |
U.S. 202 | Danbury, New Milford, Torrington, Canton, Avon, Simsbury, Granby | 75.14 | 120.93 | U.S. 202 enters from New York overlapping a four way concurrency with I-84 US 6 and US 7 in Danbury at Exits 4 and 7. They remain a freeway for a short stretch but then 202 splits off to a two-lane road in New Milford, continues through Torrington and on to Cherry Brook, where it then runs concurrently with US 44 for several miles before turning northward at Avon overlapping with CT 10 to the Massachusetts state line. | 1935 |
Former U.S. Highway
See also
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to U.S. Highways in Connecticut. |
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, December 31, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.