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New Milford: Bergen: Multi-girder: Main Street Bridge (Califon, New Jersey) part of the Califon Historic District: 1887 1976-10-14 Califon: Hunterdon: Pratt truss, HAER NJ-56: Main Street Bridge (Clinton, New Jersey) part of the Clinton Historic District: 1870
US 206 on the Milford-Montague Toll Bridge in Montague Township: 1934: current US 322: 62.81: 101.08 US 322 on the Commodore Barry Bridge in Bridgeport: Atlantic Avenue and Pacific Avenue in Atlantic City: 1936 [3] current US 611 — — US 611 on the Portland-Columbia Toll Bridge in Columbia
Three Bridges is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) [5] located within Readington Township in Hunterdon County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey, [6] on the South Branch Raritan River. It is named for the three original bridges which crossed the river.
Former Central Railroad of New Jersey: Jersey City: Hudson: NJ-106: New Jersey Route 35 Bridge Replaced Steel built-up girder: 1937 1996 US 9 southbound US 1 (Jansen Avenue) northbound Woodbridge Township: Hudson
Lincoln Highway Passaic River Bridge: U.S. Route 1-9 Truck Lincoln Highway: Kearny Point & Newark Ironbound: Pulaski Skyway: U.S. Route 1/9: Kearny Point & Newark Ironbound: 2.6 Point-No-Point Bridge: Passaic and Harsimus Line: Kearny Meadows & Newark Ironbound: Chaplain Washington–Harry Laderman Bridge: Interstate 95 New Jersey Turnpike ...
U.S. Route 9 (US 9) is a United States Numbered Highway in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States, running from Laurel, Delaware, to Champlain, New York.In New Jersey, the route runs 166.80 miles (268.44 km) from the Cape May–Lewes Ferry terminal in North Cape May, Cape May County, where the ferry carries US 9 across the Delaware Bay to Lewes, Delaware, north to the George Washington ...
U.S. Route 130 (US 130) is a U.S. Highway that is a spur route of U.S. Route 30, located completely within the state of New Jersey.It is signed with north and south cardinal directions, following a general northeast–southwest diagonal path, with north corresponding to the general eastward direction and vice versa.
The original bridge over the Hackensack River was destroyed by 1940. [5] There was a proposal to rebuild the bridge as part of an extension to the Hudson–Bergen Light Rail, [6] but this was superseded by the new Meadowlands Rail Line, which traverses the Hackensack River via the Berrys Creek railroad bridge. [7]