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Salem Turnpike: Boston–Lynn–Salem 1802–1868 Broadway–Route 107: Norfolk and Bristol Turnpike: Dedham: Washington Street–US 1 / Route 1A: Quincy Turnpike: Quincy: Fourteenth Massachusetts Turnpike: Shelburne: Camden Turnpike: Camden, Maine: First Cumberland Turnpike: Cumberland, Maine: Belchertown and Greenwich Turnpike: Belchertown
The Central Turnpike was a private toll road in Massachusetts that was chartered by the Massachusetts State Legislature on June 12, 1824. [1] The route began in Wellesley (at the time known as West Needham ), heading west to Dudley , where it continued into Connecticut as the Center Turnpike.
The public services in Sutton include the police, fire, and highway departments. The Police Department is located at 489 Central Turnpike. The Fire Department has three stations, one in the center of town, one in the Wilkinsonville village, and one in the Manchaug village. The Sutton Highway Department is located at 25 Pleasant Valley Road. [20]
The Everett Turnpike in New Hampshire, also known as the Central New Hampshire Turnpike The Central Turnpike System, the unofficial joint designation for the Kansas Turnpike , the Turnpikes of Oklahoma , and the Toll roads in Texas , as toll collection systems in those three states are interoperable with one another
The West Sutton Historic District encompasses the rural southwestern section of Sutton, Massachusetts, United States, including the rural village of West Sutton, which stretches along Central Turnpike from Manchaug Road to the Oxford town line. Most of its 460 acres (190 ha) are taken up by farmsteads and the associated agricultural lands.
February 25, 1982 : 7 Willow St. and 67-83 Blake St. 20: Munroe Street Historic District: Munroe Street Historic District: December 2, 1996 : Bounded by Market, Oxford, and Washington Sts., and the MBTA commuter rail line
The turnpike passes through Ludlow at exit 54 before crossing the Quaboag River to exit 63 in Palmer. [9] [10] The turnpike first enters Worcester County in Sturbridge, where exit 78 serves as the eastern terminus of I-84. [15] In Auburn, exit 90 has a two-Interstate interchange with I-395 traveling southbound and I-290 traveling eastbound. [15]
I-195 runs from I-95 in Providence to I-495/Route 25 in the Cape Cod region. I-295 runs as a loop around Providence, and ends at I-95 in Massachusetts. I-395 runs from I-95/Connecticut Turnpike in East Lyme, and ends at I-90, where it becomes I-290. I-495 serves as an outer beltway of Boston, and is the second longest auxiliary interstate highway.