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New Hampshire Route 4 (NH 4) is a 3.78-mile (6.08 km) state highway located in eastern Strafford County, New Hampshire. Its western terminus is at an intersection with New Hampshire Route 9 and New Hampshire Route 108 in Dover. Its northern terminus is at the Maine state border in Rollinsford, where it continues as Maine State Route 4.
New Hampshire Route 155 is an 11.259-mile-long (18.120 km) secondary north–south highway in southeastern New Hampshire, almost entirely within Strafford County. The highway runs from New Hampshire Route 125 in Epping to New Hampshire Route 9 in Dover. A secondary loop of NH 155 runs into Durham, designated as New Hampshire Route 155A (see below).
New Hampshire uses the standard U.S. Route shield, a six-point white shield over a black square background. New Hampshire contains parts of the four lowest-numbered primary US highways: US 1, US 2, US 3 and US 4. US 2 is the only primary US highway within New Hampshire with any spur routes in the state, of which two are present: US 202 and US ...
The U.S. Highways in New Hampshire comprise six current and one former United States Numbered Highway in New Hampshire. There are three additional highway designations for pair of business routes and a bypass, and there were two other bypasses and a fourth business loop in the past.
Maintains Maine State Route designation. Two segments within New Hampshire totaling 6.0 miles (9.7 km) in NH. Unrelated to NH 113. NH 113B is a loop of SR 113 NH 114: 60.433: 97.257 NH 101 in Bedford: NH 10 in Grantham: 1931: current NH 115: 9.697: 15.606 US 3 in Carroll: US 2 in Jefferson — — NH 116: 48.605: 78.222 NH 10 in Haverhill: US 2 ...
New Hampshire Route 9 (abbreviated NH 9 and also known as the Franklin Pierce Highway [2]) is a 109.910-mile-long (176.883 km) state highway located in southern New Hampshire. It runs across the state from west to east and is a multi-state route with Vermont and Maine , part of 1920s-era New England Interstate Route 9 .
New Hampshire Route 4A (NH 4A) is a 24-mile-long (39 km) route between Lebanon and Andover, New Hampshire, serving as a shortcut around several villages on US 4. Until I-89 was built in the early 1970s, this was part of the main route between the Lebanon– Hanover area and the southeastern portion of New Hampshire.
It also includes the routes that were decommissioned during the 1964 state highway renumbering. Each U.S. Route in California is maintained by the California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) and is assigned a Route (officially State Highway Route [2] [3]) number in the Streets and Highways Code (Sections 300-635).