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I-95 – New Haven, New London: Exit 75 on I-95: Waterford: 97.36: 156.69: Route 156 west (Rope Ferry Road) – Flanders, Niantic: Eastern terminus of Route 156: New London: 98.70: 158.84: Route 213 south (Ocean Avenue) – Harkness Memorial State Park: Northern terminus of Route 213: 99.99: 160.92: Route 85 north (Broad Street) – Waterford ...
New London - Uncasville - Norwich: Route 32: First toll road in New England and second in the country (the first was the road over Snicker's Gap, Virginia, chartered in 1785) Greenwich Road: October 1792: Boston Post Road in Greenwich: U.S. Route 1: Became part of the Connecticut Turnpike in 1806 New London and Windham County Turnpike: May 1795
Route information; Maintained by CTDOT: Length: 20.10 mi [1] (32.35 km) Existed: 1934–present: Major junctions; South end: Route 184 in Stonington: Route 2 in North Stonington Route 165 in Griswold I-395 in Griswold: North end: Route 12 in Griswold: Location; Country: United States: State: Connecticut: Counties: New London: Highway system
1: Norwich to New London via Route 32; 2: Norwich to New London via Route 12 and Groton; 3: New London to Niantic via Boston Post Road and Crossroads Wal-Mart; 108: New London to Foxwoods via Groton and Old Mystic Village (also an Amtrak Thruway route) Norwich/Jewett City. These routes, except Route 8, originate from the Norwich Transit Center.
In 1922, a loop route of the Boston Post Road (New England Route 1) serving the coastal settlements of the towns of Old Lyme, East Lyme, and Waterford was designated as State Highway 333. At the same time, the road serving the village of Hamburg in the town of Lyme on the east side of the Connecticut River was designated as State Highway 150 .
Western terminus of Route 166: Essex: 4.33: 6.97: Westbrook Road (SR 604 north) 5.23: 8.42: Route 9 south / Route 154 north – Centerbrook, Old Saybrook: Access to Route 154 via SR 621; exit 3 on Route 9: 5.27: 8.48: Route 9 north / Route 154 – Centerbrook, Old Saybrook, Middletown: Northern terminus; exit 3 on Route 9: 1.000 mi = 1.609 km ...
The new shelter would be 15,000 square ft, she added — a significantly larger building than Petersburg’s current shelter — and would be a “state of the art facility” that will include 45 ...
Modern Route 130 was originally part of New England Route 1. In 1927, the U.S. Highway system was created and New England Route 1 became part of U.S. Route 1 (US 1). In 1932, an alternate route of US 1 (US 1 Alt. was designated along North Avenue, Boston Avenue, and Barnum Avenue further inland (now modern US 1). In 1963, US 1A in the ...