Manitoba Highway 44
Highway 44 | ||||
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Route information | ||||
Length: | 152 km (94 mi) | |||
Existed: | 1968 – present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end: | PTH 9 at Lockport | |||
PTH 59 PTH 12 PTH 11 | ||||
East end: | PTH 1 (TCH) near the Ontario boundary | |||
Location | ||||
Towns: | Beausejour, Whitemouth, West Hawk Lake | |||
Highway system | ||||
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Provincial Trunk Highway 44 (PTH 44) is a provincial highway in the Canadian province of Manitoba.
It begins at Highway 9 (Main St.) in the town of Lockport, just north of Winnipeg. From Lockport the highway travels east, passing through Beausejour before heading south-east after Highway 11 branches north towards Lac Du Bonnet and Pine Falls. It is the main highway through Whiteshell Provincial Park and ends at the Trans-Canada Highway just west of the Ontario boundary. It becomes very narrow as it passes through the Wilderness of the Park, and is very hilly and winding. The speed limit along Highway 44 is 100 km/h (60 mph).
History
Highway 44 was originally part of Provincial Trunk Highway 1.[1] When the new southerly alignment of Highway 1 was completed as part of the Trans-Canada Highway project in 1958, this section of Highway 1 became part of transprovincial Highway 4 (along with current Highways 9, 16, and 26).[2] The highway was renumbered to its current designation in 1968.[3]
Major intersections
Division | Location | km | mi | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Whiteshell Provincial Park | 0 | 0 | PTH 1 (TCH) (Trans-Canada Highway) – Winnipeg, Falcon Lake, Kenora | PTH 44 begins highway travels north for the first 10 kilometres | |
Star Lake | 2 | 1 | PR 301 west – Falcon Lake | ||
8 | 5 | PR 312 east – Ingolf | PTH 44 turns west 2 km past PR 312 junction | ||
31 | 19 | PR 307 north – Seven Sisters Falls, White Lake | |||
Whitemouth | 61 | 38 | PTH 11 south – Elma, Hadashville | begin PTH 11 north concurrence | |
65 | 40 | PR 406 south – Elma | PTH 11 / PTH 44 turns northwest | ||
Whitemouth | 67 | 42 | |||
73 | 45 | PR 408 north – River Falls, Seven Sisters Falls | |||
83 | 52 | PTH 11 north – Lac du Bonnet, Powerview-Pine Falls | PTH 44 turns west end PTH 11 north concurrence | ||
Brokenhead | Seddons Corner | 99 | 62 | PR 214 north (Milner Ridge Rd) | original PTH 11 |
Beausejour | 114 | 71 | PR 215 west / PR 302 south – La Broquerie, Richer, To PTH 12 south | PTH 44 turns north | |
116 | 72 | PTH 12 north – Grand Beach | PTH 44 turns west begin PTH 12 south concurrence | ||
126 | 78 | PTH 12 south – Anola, Ste. Anne, Steinbach | end PTH 12 south concurrence | ||
Garson | 130 | 81 | |||
St. Clements | 136 | 85 | PR 212 – Cooks Creek, East Selkirk | ||
141 | 88 | PR 206 south – Dugald, Landmark, Oakbank | |||
Kirkness | 143 | 89 | PTH 59 – Birds Hill, East Selkirk, Victoria Beach, Winnipeg | ||
148 | 92 | PR 204 north – Selkirk | begin PR 204 south concurrence | ||
Lockport | 149 | 93 | PR 204 south – East St. Paul, Winnipeg | end PR 204 south concurrence PTH 44 crosses the Red River | |
St. Andrews | 150 | 93 | PR 238 south (River Rd.) | ||
152 | 94 | PTH 9 – Gimli, Selkirk, Winnipeg | PTH 44 ends | ||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi |
References
- ↑ "The Province of Manitoba Official Highway Map; 1956". Infrastructure and Transportation, Province of Manitoba.
- ↑ "The Province of Manitoba Official Highway Map; 1959". Infrastructure and Transportation, Province of Manitoba.
- ↑ "The Province of Manitoba Official Highway Map; 1968". Infrastructure and Transportation, Province of Manitoba.
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