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The New England road marking system, while limited to New England, was designed for expansion to the whole country. One- and two-digit numbers were assigned to major interstate routes, with three-digit routes for state routes (marked in a rectangle, with the state abbreviation below the number). In general, odd numbers ran east–west and even ...
1974 Southern New England Mobil map - Mitchazenia (talk · contribs) South Central U.S. 1958 AAA regional map (Colorado Springs to St. Louis and points south) - 25or6to4 ( talk · contribs )
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The New England road marking system, while limited to New England, was designed for expansion to the whole country. One- and two-digit numbers were assigned to major interstate routes, with three-digit routes for state routes (marked in a rectangle, with the state abbreviation below the number). In general, odd numbers ran east–west and even ...
Researching old maps and cartographic records at the National Archives; NASA World Wind overlays satellite, aerial and topographic maps of the United States; Google Earth: a visual 3D interactive atlas. Atlas World: a directory of atlases currently in print. List of official state road maps of the United States; Scanned official transportation ...
From 1922 until 1935, much of what is now US 302 was a part of the New England road marking system, designated as Route 18, from Portland, Maine, northwest to Littleton, New Hampshire, roughly 112 miles (180 km). From Littleton west to Montpelier in Vermont, US 302 and Route 18 took different paths.
A Map of New England. A Map of New England, officially entitled A map of New-England, being the first that ever was here cut, and done by the best pattern that could be had, which being in some places defective, it made the other less exact: Yet doth it sufficiently show the situation of the country & conveniently well the distances of places, is an early regional map of New England, published ...
The majority of Route 38 was originally designated as Route 6B in the New England road marking system, an alternate to New England Interstate Route 6.It began at Route 6 somewhere in Cambridge and made its way to present Route 38 in Somerville, running north on much the same alignment as is followed now, with the only real differences in Medford (where it used High Street rather than the ...