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The 14 trunk line routes of the original state highway system of Connecticut. In 1900, the State Highway Department proposed a statewide system of trunk line routes. By 1913, the system consisted of 10 north-south highways and 4 east-west highways, including the lower Boston Post Road. The system covered roughly 1,400 miles (2,300 km).
Route 11, also known as the ConnDOT Employees Memorial Highway, is a freeway in east-central Connecticut, serving traffic between the Hartford and New London areas (which also use Route 2). Route 11 originally was planned run from Colchester to Waterford. However, only about half of the highway was constructed; one end is in Salem. As a result ...
Point Grove Road at the Massachusetts state line in Suffield: Babbs Road — — SR 597: 0.58: 0.93 Route 10 in Southington: I-84 in Southington — — — SR 598: 0.76: 1.22 Pulaski Circle in Hartford: I-91 in Hartford: Whitehead Highway — — SR 600: 0.67: 1.08 Route 138 in Lisbon: Route 169 in Lisbon: Kinsman Hill Road — — SR 602: 3 ...
Route 20 is a 31.56-mile (50.79 km) state highway in the U.S. state of Connecticut. It extends from Route 8 in rural Winchester [3] to Interstate 91 (I-91) in Windsor Locks. Route 20 consists of two distinct sections: a long, winding, scenic rural road, and a section of the freeway linking I-91 to Bradley International Airport.
United States Numbered Highways in the U.S. state of Connecticut, are numbered by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) and maintained by the Connecticut Department of Transportation, a total of 547.75 miles (881.52 km) as a system of state highways and are numbered from 1 to 202.
Route 154 is a state highway in Connecticut running for 28.24 miles (45.45 km). It serves as one of the main thoroughfares in the town of Old Saybrook, intersecting twice with U.S. Route 1 (US 1). North of Interstate 95 (I-95), Route 154 runs parallel to Route 9, along to the west bank of the Connecticut River. The route ends in Higganum at ...
A previous road called State Highway 137 was created in the 1920s, which followed contemporary Route 101 between Route 169 and Route 12. [4] This route, in eastern Connecticut, shared no overlap with contemporary Route 137. In late 1931, a route roughly corresponding to contemporary Route 137 was proposed as Route 27. [4]
In the 1920s, the road from downtown New London to Ocean Beach Park (Ocean Avenue from Route 1) was designated as a secondary state highway known as Highway 340. In the 1932 state highway renumbering , [ 2 ] Ocean Avenue (old Highway 340) and an extension north of U.S. Route 1 along Jefferson Avenue up to Route 85 was designated as Route 213.