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The PA Route 6 Tourist Association and the PA Route 6 Task Force developed the DO 6 Mile Marker Program, which installed "Do 6" mile markers along the entire length of US 6 in Pennsylvania, in addition to US 6N. The mile markers begin at mile marker 1 near the Ohio border and increase east to mile marker 400 near the New York border, while US ...
The Route 6 trolley, c. 1970s The Route 6 trolley in Cheltenham Township As one of the newer trolleys to be adopted by SEPTA, the Route 6 trolley was established by the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company (PRT) in 1907, although some sources [1] claim it was established in 1924, as the Glenside Line between the Willow Grove Depot and the City Line and Ogontz Avenue via Limekiln Pike.
US 6 in Tunkhannock: 2000: current Original route of US 6 through downtown Tunkhannock that was replaced by a wider bypass US 6 Bus. 14: 23 I-81/US 6/US 11 in Scranton: US 6 in Carbondale Township: 1999: current Original route of US 6 that was replaced by an expressway US 13 Bus. 3: 4.8 US 13/PA 291 in Trainer: US 13 in Chester
State Route 2004, U.S. Route 11, State Route 2035, U.S. Route 11, PA Route 307, State Route 6011: 6 Oak Street (LR 6 - State Route 3033) and Keyser Avenue (LR 671 - State Route 6307) Scranton: Main Street (LR 6/LR 7 - U.S. Route 6/PA Route 191) and 9th Street Honesdale: State Route 3033, U.S. Route 6: 7
Pennsylvania Route 19: Lewistown - Scranton, Anthracite Trail (after 1924) Pennsylvania Route 22: Keystone Trail (1927) Pennsylvania Route 24: Washington-Harrisburg Route (after 1924) Pennsylvania Route 33: Lykens Valley Trail (1927) Pennsylvania Route 41: Reading - Harrisburg (after 1924) Pennsylvania Route 44: Highway to the Stars (Potter County)
PennDOT confirms via its 511 website that Route 6 is closed in both directions starting at the junction of Route 170 and Route 6, and west on Route 6 to the junction with Township Road 462 at the ...
Interstate 676 (I-676) is an Interstate Highway that serves as a major thoroughfare through Center City Philadelphia, where it is known as the Vine Street Expressway, and Camden, New Jersey, where it is known as the northern segment of the North–South Freeway, as well as the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Highway in honor of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
A route bypassing Philadelphia was announced in 1952, ... over US 6/US 11, which at the time was the tallest bridge on the Pennsylvania Turnpike system at 135 feet ...