Ontario Highway 18

Highway 18 shield

Highway 18

     Highway 18      Limited-access      King's Highway      Former highways
Route information
Length: 80.2 km[1] (49.8 mi)
Existed: 1930 – 1998
Major junctions
West end: Sandwich St. in Windsor
East end:  Highway 77 in Leamington
Location
Counties: Essex
Major cities: Windsor, LaSalle, Amherstburg, Malden Center, Harrow, Kingsville, Ruthven, Leamington
Highway system
  Highway 17 Highway 19  

King's Highway 18, commonly referred to as Highway 18 was the longest highway in Essex County, Ontario, and travelled through the most communities. Today, it is known as County Road 20. From 1930 to 1998, much of the road was Highway 18, but was turned back on April 1, 1998.

Route description

From here (the Windsor city limits), it becomes very unclear and contradictory as to whether Highway 18 travelled east along E.C. Row to the Huron Church Road interchange, or north-west along Sandwich Parkway to Sandwich Street and Riverside Drive, to terminate at the foot of Ouellette Avenue (Highway 3B).

This was compounded by the fact that E.C. Row had the secret 7000-series highway designation of Highway 7087. The City of Windsor had assumed all control of Highway 18 (Ojibway Parkway) within its limits, which are north of Morton Drive, but since Highway 18 was signed along E.C. Row to Highway 3 in the period of 1993 to 1998 (Huron Church Road), it is assumed that this is its terminus.

While Highway 18 was under provincial control, the road was simply known as Seacliff Drive in Leamington, and travelled from its intersection with Highway 18 (at Erie Street), to County Road 37, east of the town. When the road was deleted as a Provincial highway, the designation of CR 20 was extended on the entire path of Highway 18.

When the government began downloading provincial highways to the individual counties, districts, regions, towns, and cities on April 1, 1997, the part of road between Ruthven and Leamington was turned back and re-designated as an extension of Essex CR 20. In return, Highway 18 was briefly re-routed along Essex County Road 45 (which was Highway 18B from 1937 to 1954, and then Highway 107 until 1970), to Highway 3 in Ruthven. This was a temporary measure, as the rest of the Highway was gone from the network as of January 1, 1998.

The road is fairly heavily travelled, particularly between the major communities, such as Kingsville and Leamington, and from Amherstburg north to LaSalle and Windsor (where it continues as Ojibway Parkway). The road also contains the Heritage Highway and Detroit River Heritage Parkway designations for most of its length. The road is four-lanes from Amherstburg to Windsor, but is generally 2 lanes for the remainder of its routing.

History

The route of former Highway 18 is far different from its original one (at 54.9 km in length), which was commissioned in 1930. It was supposed to be an "alternate route" to Highway 2 from Windsor to Tilbury, but was much more direct, so Highway 2 was re-aligned along Highway 18's path. In turn, Highway 18 was extended to travel from Windsor to Amherstburg and Leamington before Highway 2 absorbed its former path from Windsor to Tilbury.

The new Windsor-Amherstburg-Leamington alignment was 79 km in length, and was almost entirely paved. There was one large gap of gravel from Amherstburg to Kingsville. The road started at Highway 3A (Later to become the Dougall Avenue Highway 3B designation) at the entrance of the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel, and ran along a huge loop along the western and southern edges of Essex County, to meet back up with Highway 3 in Leamington.

By 1935, Highway 18 was paved between Harrow and Kingsville, and from Amherstburg to Malden Center. The final gap of gravel was from Malden Center to Kingsville, and that was paved in 1937. The highway was gradually widened to accommodate rising traffic volumes, mainly from Amherstburg to Windsor.

In 1982, the E.C. Row Expressway was extended from Huron Church Road in Windsor, west to Ojibway Parkway (Highway 18). During the construction of the E. C. Row Expressway in the 1960s and 1970s, the road was upgraded to four lanes wide (undivided, and with residential and business accesses), as a temporary measure to see a potential extension of E.C. Row built all the way to Amherstburg. This never materialised, however, and the expressway simply feeds onto Ojibway Parkway and County Road 20.

Before being extended along the entire routing of Highway 18, Essex County Road 20 travelled from Erie Street (Highway 77) in downtown Leamington, for 7 km due-east along Seacliff Drive, before terminating at the intersection with County Road 37 (both roads share the intersection as their termini) near Hillman Marsh. West of the intersection with Erie Street, was Highway 18.

Major intersections

The following table lists the major junctions along Highway 18, as noted by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario.[1] 

DivisionLocationkm[1]miDestinationsNotes
EssexLeamington0.00.0 Highway 3 (Talbot Street)
2.11.3Seacliffe Drive
2.31.4Forest Avenue
Seacliffe6.03.7 County Road 31 north (Albuna Townline Road)
Union8.25.1County Road 45 (Union Avenue)Formerly Highway 107
Kingsville14.08.7 County Road 29 (Division Road)
15.09.3 County Road 50 south (Heritage Road)Formerly Highway 18A
Arner21.213.2 County Road 23 (Arner Townline Road)
Harrow28.317.6Herdman Street
29.118.1 County Road 11 north (Queen Street)
29.518.3 County Road 13 south (Erie Road)
29.918.6Roseborough Road
Essex36.122.4 County Road 41 south (Meadows Road)
38.223.7 County Road 9 north (Howard Avenue)
Malden Centre40.825.4 County Road 50 southFormerly Highway 18A
Amherstburg50.631.4Lowes Sideroad
52.132.4Richmond Street
Edgewater Beach56.935.4 County Road 10 east (Middle Side Road)
River Canard62.538.8 County Road 3 east (Maiden Road)
Windsor70.343.7Morton Drive
71.344.3 County Road 40
76.947.8 Highway 3 (Huron Church Road)To Ambassador Bridge to United States
80.249.8Highway 3B (Oullette Avenue)
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Provincial Highways Distance Table. Ministry of Transportation of Ontario. 1989. pp. 43–44. ISSN 0825-5350.
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