Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Maryland Route 235 (MD 235) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Maryland.Known as Three Notch Road, the state highway runs 30.63 miles (49.29 km) between its southern intersection with MD 5 in Ridge and its northern intersection with MD 5 near Mechanicsville.
MD 489 begins at an intersection with MD 5 (Point Lookout Road) in the unincorporated community of Park Hall Estates between St. Mary's City and Great Mills. The state highway heads east as a two-lane undivided road through a mix of farmland and forest. MD 489 reaches its eastern terminus at MD 235 (Three Notch Road) between Ridge and Lexington ...
The first section widen to four-lane was a two-mile (3.2 km) section north of Columbia, in 1940. Between 1940 and 1946, US 1 was rerouted in Columbia; originally using Gervais Street, Assembly Street, Taylor Street, and Two Notch Road, switching to Gervais Street, Harden Street, Taylor Street, and Two Notch Road.
Maryland Route 5 (MD 5) is a 74.34-mile (119.64 km) long state highway that runs north–south in the U.S. state of Maryland.The highway runs from Point Lookout in St. Mary's County north to the Washington, D.C. border in Suitland, Prince George's County.
Maryland Route 6 (MD 6) (sometimes called Port Tobacco Road) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Maryland. The state highway runs 47.36 miles (76.22 km) from a dead end at the Potomac River in Riverside east to MD 235 in Oraville .
US Brick, which is a manufacturer of residential and commercial bricks, will expand its facility at 9931 Two Notch Road in Columbia, according to a release from Richland County’s economic ...
Maryland Route 712 (MD 712) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Maryland.Known as Forest Park Road, the state highway runs 1.11 miles (1.79 km) from MD 235 north to an entrance to Naval Air Station Patuxent River (NAS Patuxent River) within Lexington Park in eastern St. Mary's County.
A now-removed portion of the road located in Short Pump. Three Notch'd Road (also called Three Chopt Road) was a colonial-era major east-west route across central Virginia.It is believed to have taken its name from a distinctive marking of three notches cut into trees to blaze the trail. [1]