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The New Hampshire Turnpike System is a system of 93 miles (150 km) of limited-access highway, ... I-95 at Salisbury, MA: I-95 at Kittery, ME: 1957: current
Mostly follows the old New England Route 16; Southernmost 33.259 miles (53.525 km) concurrent with Spaulding Turnpike: NH 17: 0.2: 0.32 MA 17 (now US 1) in Salisbury, MA: US 1 in Seabrook: 1953: 1959 Section of US 1 was designated MA 17/NH 17 during construction of I-95: NH 18: 20.116: 32.374 I-93 / US 3 in Franconia: VT 18 in Waterford, VT
In Hampton Falls, I-95 crosses over NH 84 and NH 88 without connecting interchanges; it then serves a pair of state-run liquor stores operated by the New Hampshire Liquor Commission. [ 3 ] [ 5 ] The northbound Hampton outlet is considered the state's flagship store , with annual sales of $33.5 million, and largely serves out-of-state customers.
The freeway has an interchange with Route 2 (Concord Turnpike) at exit 45 (old exit 29). Upon entering the town of Burlington, I-95 and Route 128 have an interchange with US 3, the Northwestern Expressway, at exit 50A (old exit 32A). US 3 provides a direct freeway connection with the Lowell–Nashua, New Hampshire, metro area. Access to the ...
For a period of time during the 1950s, a segment of US 1 in Massachusetts and New Hampshire was routed onto what later became I-95. The roadway that had been US 1 was designated as Route 17 from Danvers to Salisbury [ 8 ] and New Hampshire Route 17 (NH 17) for a short distance in Seabrook .
New Hampshire Route 4A (NH 4A) is a 24-mile-long (39 km) route between Lebanon and Andover, New Hampshire, serving as a shortcut around several villages on US 4. Until I-89 was built in the early 1970s, this was part of the main route between the Lebanon– Hanover area and the southeastern portion of New Hampshire.
Ezekiel A. Straw (1819–1882), engineer, businessman, 34th governor of New Hampshire; Daniel Webster (1782–1852), US congressman, senator from Massachusetts; 14th and 19th US Secretary of State; born in 1782 in what was then part of Salisbury, now within the city limits of Franklin
Route 286 is a 3.7-mile-long (6.0 km) east–west state highway in Salisbury, Massachusetts and Seabrook, New Hampshire. The route was previously known as Route 86 and was renumbered to avoid a numerical conflict with the designation of a freeway as Interstate 86 in the 1970s. Route 286 is the highest numbered New Hampshire state highway.