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King's Highway 5, commonly referred to as Highway 5 and historically as the Dundas Highway and Governor's Road, is a provincially maintained highway in the Canadian province of Ontario. The east–west highway travels a distance of 12.7 km (7.9 mi) between Highway 8 at Peters Corners , north of Hamilton , and Highway 6 at Clappison's Corners .
Cootes Drive, formerly known as the Dundas Diversion, is a city street in Hamilton, Ontario.The route connects York Road and King Street in Dundas with Main Street (formerly Highway 2 and Highway 8) to the southeast, and is considered one of the first divided highways in Canada.
The following other wikis use this file: Usage on bar.wikipedia.org Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry United Counties; Usage on de.wikipedia.org Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry United Counties
Download as PDF; Printable version ... The section of Highway 427 between Highway 401 and Dundas Street is a heavily traversed ... 22.0: 13.7: 23 Regional Road 72 ...
County Road 2 County Road 31 Morrisburg 5: Oak Valley Road County Road 16 County Road 31 Oak Valley, Winchester Springs 6: County Road 6 Finch-Cambridge Boundary Road County Road 15 none minor rural route 7: County Road 7 Dunbar Road County Road 31 Marionville Road Elma, Dunbar, Chesterville, The Ninth, Morewood 8: Church Road County Road 2 ...
On November 26, 1930, the Department of Highways assumed the road between Lancaster and Hawkesbury as King's Highway 34, providing a connection between Highway 2 and Highway 17 immediately west of the Ontario–Quebec border. The route was 55.7 kilometres (34.6 mi) long at the time of its assumption. [1]
The following is a list of freeways in Ontario as defined by the Official Road Map of Ontario published by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (MTO). [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The MTO defines a freeway as a divided highway with at least two lanes in each direction.
An 1800 map shows Dundas connecting with the newly built Yonge Street, although the map does not show the route of this section within Toronto with any detail. [18] An 1816 map of York shows a "Burlington Road", which was a westward extension of today's Queen Street.