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Lapeer Road in Port Huron Township: I-94/I-69 in Port Huron Township 1966 [243] current Labeled as "Lapeer Connector" on maps; replaced M-146; [243] previously Connector 9 [234] Connector 75: 2.992: 4.815 I-75 in Erie Township: M-125 in Erie Township 1956 [244] current Replaced part of US 24A; [244] previously Connector 2 [234] Connector 85: 0.219
The Michigan State Highway Department (MSHD) was created in 1905, and the department paid counties and townships to improve roads to state standards. On May 13, 1913, the State Reward Trunk Line Highways Act was passed, creating the State Trunkline Highway System.
In Howell, Grand River Avenue meets Hartland Road which carries M-59; the highway also met M-155 in downtown, which at the time provided access to the Howell State Hospital. In the approach to Brighton, Grand River Avenue passes through rural southeast Michigan lake country. In Brighton, Grand River Avenue crossed the western end of the I-96 ...
The Grand River Road was a major route for settlers headed inland to Grand Rapids in 1836, as the shortest route for travelers coming from Detroit. [ 20 ] In 1850, the Michigan State Legislature established the Lansing and Howell Plank Road Company, [ 21 ] which set about converting various Indian trails into the Lansing–Howell Plank Road, a ...
M-231 begins along M-45 (Lake Michigan Drive) in Robinson Township near the intersection with 120th Avenue. It runs due north through a mix of farm fields and forest lands in Ottawa County . [ 4 ] The highway is a two-lane, limited-access highway . [ 5 ]
12 Mile Road–Kalamazoo River Bridge: ... Antietam Street–Grand Trunk Railroad: 1930 2000-02-18 ... Ocqueoc Township, Michigan
M-6, or the Paul B. Henry Freeway, is a 19.7-mile-long (31.7 km) east–west freeway and state trunkline highway in the United States that serves portions of southern Kent and eastern Ottawa counties south of Grand Rapids, Michigan.
M-44 is known in Grand Rapids as the "East Beltline" and intersects with its related highway, Connector M-44, in Plainfield Township. This highway runs concurrently with M-37 between M-11 and Interstate 96 (I-96). As a state highway, M-44 dates back to around July 1, 1919, and it was routed along a section of its modern route at that time.