Ontario Highway 519

Highway 519 shield

Highway 519
Route information
Maintained by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario
Length: 30.5 km[1] (19.0 mi)
Major junctions
West end:  Highway 17 near Obatanga Provincial Park
East end: Dubreuilville
Highway system
Highway 518Highway 520

Secondary Highway 519, commonly referred to as Highway 519, is a provincially maintained highway in the Canadian province of Ontario. The highway is 30.5 km (19.0 mi) in length, connecting Highway 17 near Obatanga Provincial Park with Dubreuilville station. A private logging road continues east from there.

Highway 519 was assumed in 1956, and has remained unchanged since then. The route is paved throughout its length and encounters no communities of any size along its length, aside from Dubreuilville.

Route description

Highway 519 is a short paved highway in the northern section of Algoma District which provides access to the remote village of Dubreuilville. The route begins east of Obatanga Provincial Park at Highway 17, 40 km (25 mi) north of Wawa and 45 km (28 mi) south of White River. From the it travels 30.5 km (19.0 mi) eastward through a hilly and heavily forested region.[2] The highway ends at Green Lake Road, just before entering Dubreuilville, a village built to service the Dubreuil Brothers lumber operations in the surrounding boreal forest. An access road continues east of the village to the Chapleau Crown Game Preserve, the largest game preserve in the world.[3]

History

Highway 519 is one of several dozen secondary highways designated at the beginning of 1956.[4][5] The highway has remained the same since it was designated, and was unaffected by highway downloading in the late-1990s.[2]

Major intersections

The following table lists the major junctions along Highway 519. The entirety of the highway is located within Algoma District.[2]

Location[2] km[1] Destinations Notes
Unorganized Algoma 0.0  Highway 17  Wawa, White River
Dubreuilville 30.5 Green Lake Road Access to Chapleau Crown Game Preserve
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

Route map: Google

KML is from Wikidata
  1. 1 2 Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (2007). "Annual Average Daily Traffic (AADT) counts". Government of Ontario. Retrieved March 14, 2011.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Ontario Back Road Atlas (Map). Cartography by MapArt. Peter Heiler. 2010. p. 108. § H13. ISBN 978-1-55198-226-7.
  3. Chapleau Regional Development Corporation, "Welcome to Chapleau - Four Seasons Guide to Northern Adventure", Chapleau, Ontario
  4. Ontario Road Map (Map). Cartography by C.P. Robins. Ontario Department of Highways. 1956. § J1314.
  5. "Ontario Secondary Roads Now Designated 500, 600". 112 (33,119). The Globe and Mail. February 4, 1956. p. 4. Two new Ontario road numbers appear on the province's 1956 official road map which will be ready for distribution next week. The new numbers are the 500 and 600 series and designate hundreds of miles of secondary roads which are wholly maintained by the Highways Department. More than 100 secondary roads will have their own numbers and signs this year. All of these secondary roads were taken into the province's main highways system because they form important connecting links with the King's Highways
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