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The state of Maryland has several unsigned suffixed Interstate designations that are designated by the Maryland State Highway Administration, rather than by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). There were once many more suffixed Interstates, as the three-digit Interstates were not designated until after all major routes were assigned numbers.
During the middle part of the 20th century the state numbered routes expanded to new roads around the state. When the United States Numbered Highway System was introduced in the late 1920s many of the new US Routes were already part of the state system and the US number was just added to signposts. During 1930s as the US Highway System matured ...
Served one state: Connecticut, was planned for one state: Rhode Island Redesignated as I-84 in 1968 I-83: 85.03: 136.84 President Street and Fayette Street in Baltimore, Maryland: I-81 in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania: 1959: current Serves two states: Maryland, Pennsylvania Associated route: I-283: I-84: 769.62: 1,238.58 I-5 in Portland, Oregon: I ...
Route includes Cape May–Lewes Ferry across the Delaware Bay; New York signs the northern end at a dead-ending parking lot just south of the border crossing US 10: 711 [c] 1,144 I-94/BL I-94/US 52 in West Fargo, ND: I-75/BL I-75/US 23/M-25 near Bay City, MI: 1926: current Route includes the SS Badger across Lake Michigan: US 11: 1,645 [d] 2,647
Auxiliary Interstate Highways (also called three-digit Interstate Highways) are a subset of highways within the United States' Interstate Highway System.The 323 auxiliary routes generally fall into three types: spur routes, which connect to or intersect the parent route at one end; bypasses, which connect to the parent route at both ends; and beltways, which form a circle that intersects the ...
Major north–south routes generally have numbers ending in "1", while major east–west routes usually have numbers ending in "0". [1] [c] Three-digit numbered highways are generally spur routes of parent highways; for example, U.S. Route 264 (US 264) is a spur off US 64.
MA 2 at the Massachusetts state line at Petersburgh 1930 early 1940s NY 99: NY 30 in Duane NY 3 in Franklin 1930 1994 NY 104 (early 1930s) Atlantic Beach Bridge in Lawrence NY 27 in Queens early 1930s by 1932 NY 104 (1932-1936) NY 137 in Pound Ridge CT 29 at the Connecticut state line at Pound Ridge ca. 1932 ca. 1936 NY 113 (1930–1972) NY 27 ...
A few points of note on street suffixes in mainland Europe: In some languages the "street suffix" precedes the name and is thus a "street prefix" (rue Pasteur) In some languages the street suffix is not a separate word but is included in the same word as the rest of the name (Marktstrasse).