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The Black Horse Pike is a designation used for a number of different roadways that had been part of a historic route connecting the Camden area to the area of Atlantic City, New Jersey. Roadways now bearing the Black Horse Pike designation include portions of Route 168 , Route 42 , U.S. Route 322 (US 322), and US 40 .
Black Horse Pike rebuild scope, cost grew to fit Monroe, DEP. NJDOT spokeswoman Lizzy Galamba said the project originally was to cover several miles just inside Washington and at a lower cost of ...
The Black Horse Pike is undergoing a makeover thanks to the federal INFRA grant. Read to see what work will be done. $8 million in improvements coming to Camden County Black Horse Pike
The Route 54 bridge over the Black Horse Pike (US 322) in Folsom, showing the former Route 42 designation used before the 1953 renumbering With the 1953 New Jersey state highway renumbering , which eliminated long concurrencies between U.S. Routes and State Routes, the southern terminus of Route 42 was cut back to Williamstown to avoid the ...
Route 168 southbound at Route 76C in Haddon Township. The predecessor to today's Route 168 was a set of Lenni Lenape trails that followed the Timber Creek. [3] In 1855, the Camden and Blackwoodstown Turnpike Company was established by entrepreneurs who had helped create the White Horse Pike to build a gravel road that would run from Camden south to Blackwoodtown and eventually to Atlantic City ...
A Washington Township property that's been out of use for years might soon be redeveloped.
In 1917, pre-1927 Route 3 was legislated to run from Camden to Absecon on the White Horse Pike, while US 30 was designated in New Jersey in 1926 to connect Camden and Atlantic City via the White Horse Pike. A year later, pre-1927 Route 3 was replaced by Route 43, which ran between US 130 near Camden and US 9 (now Route 157) in Absecon, and ...
U.S. Route 40 (US 40) is a U.S. highway running from Silver Summit, Utah east to Atlantic City, New Jersey.The easternmost segment of the route runs 64.32 miles (103.51 km) through the southern part of New Jersey between the Delaware Memorial Bridge over the Delaware River in Pennsville Township, Salem County, where it continues into Delaware along with Interstate 295 (I-295), east to Atlantic ...