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Around 5:50 p.m. on the same day, 67-year-old Patrick Quinn of Hammonton died in a single-car crash on the eastbound Atlantic City Expressway. Quinn's vehicle hit a tree off the highway near ...
The Atlantic City Expressway, officially numbered, but unsigned, as Route 446 and abbreviated A.C. Expressway, ACE, or ACX, and known locally as the Expressway, is a 44.1-mile (70.97 km) controlled-access toll road in the U.S. state of New Jersey, managed and operated by the South Jersey Transportation Authority.
Martin, the married father of three, was driving eastbound on the Atlantic City Expressway around 6:45 p.m. when his car struck a tree in the center median, according to New Jersey State Police.
The crash happened just past the Hammonton exit on the eastbound lanes of the Atlantic City Expressway around 3 p.m.
In 1962, the New Jersey Expressway Authority Act was signed into law. This act created the New Jersey Expressway Authority, which was to manage both the Atlantic City and Cape May expressways. [11] While the Atlantic City Expressway was completed by the authority in 1965, the Cape May Expressway was turned over to the state about this time.
The Atlantic City Expressway (officially numbered, but unsigned, as Route 446 and abbreviated A.C. Expressway, ACE, or ACX, and known locally as "the Expressway") is a 44.19-mile (71.12 km), controlled-access toll road in New Jersey, managed and operated by the South Jersey Transportation Authority.
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The Authority's transportation network includes public highways, including the Atlantic City Expressway, and transportation projects, such as the Atlantic City International Airport; parking facilities and functions once performed by ACTA; other public transportation facilities, and related economic development facilities in South Jersey. [1] [2]