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State Route 115 (SR 115) is a state highway in southern Maine, United States. It runs west to east for just over 18 miles (29 km), from U.S. Route 302 (US 302) and SR 35 in North Windham to SR 88 in Yarmouth .
Longest state highway in Maine, state highway designation for former New England Route 11, extended to modern length in 1933-1934 SR 15: 180.12: 289.88 Main / West Main / School Streets in Stonington: US 201 / SR 6 in Jackman: 1933: current SR 16: 189.78: 305.42 NH 16 in Wentworth Location, NH: US 2 in Orono: c. 1933: current SR 17: 130.70
Rhode Island Route 115; South Dakota Highway 115; Tennessee State Route 115; Texas State Highway 115. Texas State Highway Spur 115. Texas State Highway Spur 115 (1940–1942) (former) Farm to Market Road 115; Utah State Route 115; Vermont Route 115 (former) Virginia State Route 115. Virginia State Route 115 (1923-1928) (former) Virginia State ...
Maine's route marker is a simple black-on-white design, nearly identical to route markers used in Massachusetts. One- and two-digit numbered routes use 24-by-24-inch (610 mm × 610 mm) or 36-by-36-inch (910 mm × 910 mm) signs while three-digit numbered routes use 30-by-24-inch (760 mm × 610 mm) or 45-by-36-inch (1,140 mm × 910 mm) signs.
80.1 US 1 in Mars Hill: US 1 in Van Buren: 1940: current Mars Hill-Van Buren segment, formerly US 1. US 1A Bus. — — — — 1955 — Unsigned designation for a former alignment of US 1 in Bangor, now unnumbered. US 2A: 4.6: 7.4 US 2 in Orono: US 2 / SR 43 in Old Town: 1954: current Southern segment, formerly US 2 US 2A: 43.5
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Maine was one of the first states to mark their state highway system. From 1914 to 1925, Maine used a system of lettered highways to designate cross-state routes. This system was the first of its kind in the United States coordinated by a single state, [citation needed] predating Wisconsin's system by three years.
The East–West Highway is a long-proposed east–west highway corridor in northern New England (Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont), intended to link remote northern communities in those states with markets in the Maritimes, Quebec, and upstate New York.