- Pennsylvania Route 1 redirects here. For the short-lived Pennsylvania Traffic Route, now U.S. Route 30, see Pennsylvania Route 1 (1920s).
U.S. Route 1 (also called U.S. Highway 1, and abbreviated US 1) is a United States highway which parallels the east coast of the United States. It runs 2,390 miles (3,846 km) from Key West, Florida in the south, to Fort Kent, Maine at the Canadian border in the north. US 1 generally parallels Interstate 95, though it is significantly further inland (west) between Savannah, Georgia and Petersburg, Virginia. It connects the major cities of the east coast, including: Miami, Florida; Jacksonville, Florida; Raleigh, North Carolina; Richmond, Virginia; Washington, DC; Baltimore, Maryland; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; New York, New York; Providence, Rhode Island; and Boston, Massachusetts.
Theoretically, the highway is numbered US 1 because it is the furthest east U.S. Route, and north-south highways are numbered east to west; however, several two-digit U.S. Routes run east of US 1, such as U.S. Route 13 and most of U.S. Route 17, partly because the routes ending in 1 were intended as major routes. The location of the road was influenced by the location of the fall line at the foot of the Appalachian Mountains.[E. W. James on designating the Federal-aid system and developing the U.S. numbered highway plan]
US 1 replaced the pre-existing "NE 1" of the New England Interstate Highway System instituted in 1922. US 1 largely follows the route of the Atlantic Highway and originally shared the same termini of Fort Kent, Maine and Miami, Florida. The only major difference was between Augusta, Georgia and Jacksonville, Florida, where a more inland route was selected (the Atlantic Highway ran via Savannah). Early auto trails often overlapped; as a result, in Virginia, it was also known as Jefferson Davis Highway. The section from Miami, Florida to Jacksonville, Florida duplicates the Dixie Highway; that from New York City to Providence, Rhode Island duplicates the Boston Post Road. The names of the old auto trails are still used locally in many places.
Termini
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| 66.06[New Jersey Department of Transportation, 2005 Straight Line Diagrams]
| 106.31
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| 117.37[Connecticut State Numbered Routes and Roads as of December 31, 2004 (PDF)]
| 188.89
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As of 2005, the highway's northern
terminus is in
Fort Kent, Maine at the
Canadian border, where it crosses the
Saint John River and intersects Provincial Highway 205. Its southern terminus was originally
Miami, Florida and was later extended to
Key West,
Florida, the southwesternmost
island in the
Florida Keys, where it is known as the
Overseas Highway.
Major cities
- Miami, Florida
- Jacksonville, Florida
- Augusta, Georgia
- Columbia, South Carolina
- Raleigh, North Carolina
- Richmond, Virginia
- Washington, D.C.
- Baltimore, Maryland
- Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- New York City
- Providence, Rhode Island
- Boston, Massachusetts
- Portland, Maine
Route description
Florida
In
Florida, where signs for U.S. Highways formerly had different colors for each highway, the "shield" for US 1 was red. Florida began using the colored shields in
1956, but during the 1980's the
MUTCD was revised to specify only a black and white color scheme for
U.S. Highway shields. As such, Federal funds were no longer available to maintain the colored signs. On
August 27,
1993, the decision was made to no longer produce colored signs. Since then, the remaining colored signs have gradually been replaced by black-and-white signs; at present, there are a few rare colored ones still in place.
US 1 is a designated Blue Star Memorial Highway along its entire route through the state. Markers are placed at various locations, including one in Rockledge, Florida and Fort Lauderdale, Florida. As is the case with all Florida roads with Federal designations, the entirety of US 1 has a hidden Florida Department of Transportation designation: Florida State Road 5 south of Callahan (except for 11 miles as SR 805 in Palm Beach County); Florida State Road 15 north of Callahan.
US 1 begins in Key West as a local road (at the intersection of Fleming Street and Whitehead Street, turning onto Truman Avenue which itself becomes Roosevelt Boulevard) then becoming the Overseas Highway, the main highway serving the Florida Keys. The highway goes up to Florida City, becoming the Dixie Highway on the mainland. The Dixie Highway continues to Miami, with junctions to the termini of several Florida freeways along the way (Florida's Turnpike, Palmetto Expressway, Snapper Creek Expressway, and Interstate 95). In Miami, US 1 becomes Biscayne Boulevard as it continues near the shoreline of Biscayne Bay.
In Fort Lauderdale, there is a complex interchange with Interstate 595 at the Ft. Lauderdale International Airport. US 1 continues north as Federal Highway (also signed as SE 6th Avenue or NE 6th Avenue until merging with Sunrise Boulevard) or Dixie Highway serving the beach communities along the eastern coast. It has a junction with the Bee Line Expressway in Brevard. US 1 eventually reaches the city of Jacksonville as the Philips Highway. US 1 then travels through downtown Jacksonville along Main Street, crossing St. Johns River on the Main Street Bridge until it reaches the 20th Street Expressway. US 1 then goes along the route of Florida State Road 15, traveling much further inland than Interstate 95 as it heads into the state of Georgia. US 1 will not meet up with Interstate 95 again until it reaches the state of Virginia.
A freeway alternate route in Jacksonville that bypasses the downtown area goes along the Hart Bridge Expressway, then along the Martin Luther King Jr. Parkway, which becomes the 20th Street Expressway.
Florida State Road A1A runs next to the Atlantic Ocean, roughly parallel to US 1 for much of its path through Florida.
Georgia
In
Georgia, US 1 is generally a very rural highway, running through historical
plantation areas. It also passes by the
Fort Gordon Army installation and the
Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge. US 1 is also signed as
Georgia State Route 4 for its entire length in the state. There is an interchange with
Interstate 520 in
Augusta and with
Interstate 16 in
Toombs County. US 1 enters the state from Florida at
Folkston and exits the state into South Carolina at Augusta.
South Carolina
US 1 enters South Carolina in
North Augusta. From North Augusta through
Columbia up to
Camden, US 1 parallels
Interstate 20, crossing it several times. It also has junctions with
Interstate 26 and
Interstate 77 in Columbia. From Camden, it continues northeast to the town of
Cheraw and
Cheraw State Park before entering the state of North Carolina. In much of South Carolina, US 1 is known as
Two Notch since the road used to be marked by posts into which two notches were carved.
North Carolina
From the South Carolina state line, US 1 passes through the towns/cities of
Rockingham,
Southern Pines and
Sanford. In stretches in
Southern Pines and
Sanford, the highway shares it route with US Hwy 15-501. From Sanford to
Raleigh, US 1 becomes a freeway, traveling on the
Claude E. Pope Memorial Highway. It overlaps a portion of
Interstate 440 in Raleigh, then heads north out of the city on Capital Boulevard. US 1 travels north to
Henderson, where the highway then parallels
Interstate 85 into the state of Virginia. US 1 is known as the "Fall Line Highway", since it generally follows the
fall line between the
Piedmont and the
Atlantic Coastal Plain on its course through central North Carolina. US 1 runs for 208 miles in the state.
Virginia
From the North Carolina state line to
Petersburg, US 1 parallels
Interstate 85 and is known as
VA One and
Boydton Plank Road. From Petersburg northward, US 1 parallels
Interstate 95 and is known in most places as the
Jefferson Davis Highway. In the city of Fredericksburg, between Richmond and the District of Columbia, it borders the western edge of the
University of Mary Washington campus. Just before entering the District of Columbia, it runs along the
Southwest Freeway.
Washington, DC
From
Arlington, Virginia, US 1 enters Washington, DC, running parallel to
I-395. It follows 14th Street to Constitution Avenue, where it runs concurrently with
US 50. This
concurrency continues up 6th and 9th Streets before ending at
New York Avenue, where US 50 turns east towards
Annapolis, Maryland. US 1 continues its solo route up 6th Street, and finally crosses from the District into the Maryland suburbs via Rhode Island Avenue.
Maryland
From
Washington D.C., US Route 1 enters Maryland in the community of
Mount Rainier. From there, it passes through
Hyattsville,
College Park (including the
University of Maryland campus),
Beltsville,
Laurel, and
Elkridge, before entering
Baltimore, where it follows Southwestern Boulevard, Wilkens Avenue, Monroe Street, Fulton Street, and North Avenue (the old northern boundary of Baltimore). It exits Baltimore to the northeast along Bel Air Road, which it follows until
Fallston, MD, where Route 1 becomes the Bel Air Bypass. Finally, it becomes Conowingo Road after crossing MD 543. From that point north, the highway travels through rural areas to the Pennsylvania border, on a stretch which includes crossing the
Susquehanna River atop the
Conowingo Dam, which in 1928 was the first dam to have a highway laid out on its top.
Pennsylvania
Route 1 enters Pennsylvania in southwest
Chester County. At the border it becomes the
John H. Ware III Memorial Highway (formerly Kennet-Oxford Bypass) and widens to a 4 lane divided highway. A mile into Pennsylvania, the Ware Highway diverts north of
Baltimore Pike (formerly US 1) and becomes a 4 lane limited access highway. At
Kennett Square it rejoins Baltimore Pike and becomes a 4 lane divided highway. It then passes by
Longwood Gardens, a year-round botanical garden, and
Brandywine Battlefield before intersecting with
U.S. Highway 202 in
Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania (at an intersection commonly known as "Painter's Crossing"). The road winds through Chadds Ford and
Wawa, Pennsylvania, wherein it provides an address to the Wawa Dairy Farms, which went on to create
Wawa Food Markets, one of the most successful local convenience store chains in the
United States. Before arriving in
Media, Pennsylvania, it becomes the "Media Bypass," a superhighway that runs to the north of busy downtown Media. Baltimore Pike, meanwhile, becomes a local road, running parallel to, and south of, Route 1 through Media and
Springfield, Pennsylvania before terminating in West
Philadelphia near the
University of Pennsylvania.
After providing drivers access to Interstate 476 (this interchange is one of the busiest on I-476), the route becomes a local road again, dubbed "Township Line Road", as it continues north through towns such as Springfield, Drexel Hill, and Upper Darby. For a long time, this portion of Route 1 was the only place in all of Delaware County, Pennsylvania containing a Subway restaurant.
Passing PA Route 3 in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania, not too far from the SEPTA transit system's 69th Street Terminal, Route 1 drops the "Township Line Road" moniker at Haverford Avenue, which separates Philadelphia and Delaware counties. It is now "City Avenue" (locally known as "City Line Avenue") and acts as a border between the city of Philadelphia and the suburbs of Montgomery County. St. Joseph's University makes its home on this particular stretch of the route, as do Philadelphia television stations WPVI-TV and WCAU-TV, whose studios happen to be on opposite sides of the roadway. Many of the city's radio stations are located just off of City Avenue, mainly in Bala Cynwyd, Pennsylvania.
At the Schuylkill River, Route 1 interchanges (and is even a temporary part of) Interstate 76 (the Schuylkill Expressway portion). This, too, is one of the busiest interchanges in the region, witnessing traffic backups in all directions during morning and afternoon rush hours. Now completely within the Philadelphia city limits, it becomes the Roosevelt Expressway over the river and finally just Roosevelt Boulevard. This portion of Route 1 is the proverbial lifeline of those wishing to access Northeast Philadelphia and regularly sees traffic tie-ups at all of its major intersections. The Roosevelt Boulevard portion of Route 1 is separated into two sections in each direction (a superhighway "inner drive" portion and a local road "outer drive" portion) and is home to the intersections of Northeast Philadelphia streets Red Lion Road and Grant Avenue, two of the top three most dangerous intersections in the United States. Riders will also pass by the large outdoor Roosevelt Mall and the Northeast Philadelphia Airport before Route 1 junctions with the Pennsylvania Turnpike (at the toll road's "Philadelphia" interchange) just across the Philadelphia/Bucks county line.
In Bucks County, Pennsylvania, Route 1 becomes Lincoln Highway, an accident-prone superhighway that ferries motorists to and from northeastern Bucks County towns such as Bensalem and Langhorne. The latter suburb is home to suburban Philadelphia landmarks Oxford Valley Mall and the Sesame Place amusement park, based on characters from PBS' Sesame Street program. Crossing Interstate 95, it proceeds through Morrisville, Pennsylvania before crossing the Delaware River on the Trenton-Morrisville Toll Bridge into Trenton, New Jersey. Sadly, on this stretch of road, there are many Route 1 signs mistakenly bearing the Pennsylvania state highway shield, and not the US highway shield.
List of major junctions
New Jersey
US 1 is 66.1 miles in New Jersey. US 1 begins as the 5.5-mile long
Trenton Freeway from the Pennsylvania state line through the city of
Trenton up to
Lawrence Township in
Mercer County. It then alternates between a 4-lane and 6-lane (mostly due to old bridges that weren't reconstructed when the highway was widened) principal arterial highway traveling through the Lawrence and
West Windsor townships in Mercer County, the
Plainsboro,
South Brunswick,
North Brunswick townships, the city of
New Brunswick, and
Edison and
Woodbridge townships in
Middlesex County, and the cities of
Rahway,
Linden, and
Elizabeth in
Union County. This segment is also known as the Herbert Highway and is 40.0 miles in length.
In this section, in Woodbridge, is the southern end of the portion of US 1 that is concurrent with US 9. The two routes run together between this point and just east of the George Washington Bridge in the city of New York. Some signage on this joint portion has a typical US route marker with a "1-9" designation.
In Newark (Essex County), US 1 becomes a freeway for 3.5 miles and then continues as the General Pulaski Skyway (freeway) after the junction with Interstate 78. The Pulaski Skyway continues for another 5.6 miles into Kearny and Jersey City in Hudson County. Trucks, prohibited from the Skyway, must use the parallel Truck 1-9 between the eastern end of Newark and Tonnelle Circle in Jersey City.
In Jersey City, US 1 leaves the Pulaski Skyway and heads north as a 4-lane principal arterial road (Tonelle Avenue and Broad Avenue) into North Bergen township in Hudson County and Fairview, Ridgefield, Palisades Park and Fort Lee in Bergen County. This section is 10.3 miles long.
US 1 then joins US 46 for a short distance, (for those keep track, that means three U.S. Highways are concurrent: 1, 9, and 46), and then joins Interstate 95 for about 1.2 miles before crossing the New York state line on the George Washington Bridge. US 46 terminates at the state line while US 1 and US 9 continue into New York City.
List of major junctions:
- Mercer County
- Middlesex County
- Union County
- Essex County
- Hudson County
- Bergen County
New York
US 1 is 21.7 miles in New York. US 1 enters
Manhattan on the
George Washington Bridge together with
US 9 and
Interstate 95. US 9 separates 0.8 miles from the New Jersey state line heading north on
Broadway, while US 1 and Interstate 95 continue for another 1.8 miles to the
Bronx. US 1 then leaves Interstate 95 (at Exit 2B) traveling for another 6.3 miles in the Bronx before entering
Westchester County. US 1 travels for 12.7 miles in Westchester County, going through the villages/cities of Pelham Manor, New Rochelle, Larchmont, Mamaroneck, Rye and Port Chester before entering the state of
Connecticut. From the Bronx to the Connecticut state line, the road is known as
Boston Post Road or Boston Road, in reference to a major roadway used to deliver mail between New York and Boston dating back to the 17th Century.
List of major junctions:
- Manhattan
- NY 9A
- US 9 (northbound)
- Harlem River Drive
- Bronx
- Interstate 87
- Interstate 95 (northbound)
- Bronx River Parkway
- Westchester County
- Hutchinson River Parkway
- Interstate 95 (New Rochelle)
- Interstate 95 and Interstate 287 (Rye)
Connecticut
US 1 runs 117.37 miles in Connecticut. US 1 in Connecticut stays close to Interstate 95 throughout the state and has many junctions with it. It goes through the following towns as the roads listed below. From Greenwich to Branford, US 1 is mostly a 4-lane or 6-lane principal arterial road (with some 2-lane sections in dense areas). From Branford to Stonington, US 1 becomes a 2-lane or 4-lane minor arterial road (it is classified as a principal arterial road within Waterford town).
Route
Greenwich: 5.67 miles; New York State line to Stamford city line
- West Putnam Avenue and East Putnam Avenue
- Junction with Interstate 95 at Exit 5
Stamford: 3.30 miles; Greenwich town line to Darien town line
- West Main Street, Tresser Boulevard and East Main Street
- Junction with Interstate 95 at Exit 9
Darien: 3.91 miles; Stamford city line to Norwalk city line
- Boston Post Road
- Junction with Interstate 95 at Exit 11 and 13
Norwalk: 5.11 miles; Darien town line to Westport town line
- Connecticut Avenue, Van Buren Avenue, Belden Avenue, Cross Street, North Avenue and Westport Avenue
Westport: 4.78 miles; Norwalk city line to Fairfield town line
- Post Road West and Post Road East
Fairfield: 5.43 miles; Westport town line to Bridgeport city line
- Post Road, Kings Highway Cutoff and Kings Highway East
- Junction with Interstate 95 at Exit 19, 23, and 24
Bridgeport: 4.73 miles; Fairfield town line to Stratford town line
- North Avenue and Boston Avenue
Stratford: 2.41 miles; Bridgeport city line to Milford city line
- Boston Avenue and Barnum Avenue
- Junction with Interstate 95 at Exit 33
Milford: 6.26 miles; Stratford town line to Orange town line
- Bridgeport Avenue and Boston Post Road
- Junction with Interstate 95 at Exit 34 and 39
Orange: 2.86 miles; Milford city line to West Haven city line
West Haven: 2.07 miles; Orange town line to New Haven city line
New Haven: 4.08 miles; West Haven city line to East Haven town line
- Orange Avenue, Columbus Avenue, Church Street South, Columbus Plaza, Water Street and Forbes Avenue
East Haven: 1.55 miles; New Haven city line to Branford town line
- Saltonstall Parkway
- Junction with Interstate 95 at Exit 51
Branford: 6.96 miles; East Haven town line to North Branford town line
- West Main Street, North Main Street and East Main Street
- Junction with Interstate 95 at Exit 53, 54, and 55
North Branford: 0.06 miles; Branford town line to Guilford town line
Guilford: 5.83 miles; North Branford town line to Madison town line
- Boston Post Road
- Junction with Interstate 95 at Exit 57 and 59
Madison: 5.65 miles; Guilford town line to Clinton town line
- Boston Post Road
- Junction with Interstate 95 at Exit 62
Clinton: 3.30 miles; Madison town line to Westbrook town line
- West Main Street and East Main Street
Westbrook: 3.91 miles; Clinton town line to Old Saybrook town line
Old Saybrook: 4.99 miles; Westbrook town line to Old Lyme town line
- Boston Post Road and Interstate 95
Old Lyme: 5.78 miles; Old Saybrook town line to East Lyme town line
- Interstate 95, Neck Road, Halls Road and Boston Post Road
- Junction with Interstate 95 at Exit 70
East Lyme: 4.83 miles; Old Lyme town line to Waterford town line
- Boston Post Road
- Junction with Interstate 95 at Exit 75
Waterford: 4.78 miles; East Lyme town line to New London city line
New London: 3.62 miles; Waterford town line to Groton town line
Groton: 7.23 miles; New London city line to Stonington town line
- Interstate 95, ramp (Long Hill Road, Gold Star Highway), Long Hill Road, Poquonnock Road, Fort Hill Road, New London Road and West Main Street
- Junction with Interstate 95 at Exit 85 and 86
Stonington: 8.27 miles; Groton town line to Rhode Island State line
- East Main Street, Broadway, Roosevelt Street, Williams Avenue, Stonington-Westerly Road, South Broad Street and West Broad Street
- US 1A (1.93 miles) loop route (North Water Street, Trumbull Avenue, Alpha Avenue and Elm Street)
Rhode Island
US 1 runs 56.8 miles in the
U.S. state of
Rhode Island. It has a business/bypass split in
Warwick where US 1 Business runs along Post Road and US 1 Bypass runs along Post Road Bypass. The business route is officially recognized by the
Rhode Island Department of Transportation as US 1.
Route
US 1 takes the following route through the State (South to North):
- Westerly: 6.4 miles; Connecticut State line to Charlestown town line
- Broad Street, Street, Union Street (Broad Street), Broad Street, Granite Street, Franklin Street, Post Road and Shore Road
- Charlestown: 7.1 miles; Westerly city line to South Kingstown town line
- South Kingstown: 7.7 miles; Charlestown town line to Narragansett town line
- Commander Perry Memorial Highway
- Narragansett: 0.8 miles; South Kingstown town line to South Kingstown town line
- Commander Perry Memorial Highway
- South Kingstown: 4.6 miles; Narragansett town line to North Kingstown town line
- Commander Perry Memorial Highway and Tower Hill Road
- North Kingstown: 9.8 miles; South Kingstown line to East Greenwich town line
- Tower Hill Road and Post Road
- East Greenwich: 2.4 miles; North Kingstown town line to Warwick city line
- Post Road and Main Street
- Warwick: 7.5 miles; East Greenwich town line to Cranston city line
- Post Road, Road, West Shore Road (Greenwich Avenue, Veterans Memorial Drive), Post Road and Elmwood Avenue
- Cranston: 1.1 miles; Warwick city line to Providence city line
- Providence: 6.3 miles; Cranston city line to Pawtucket city line
- Elmwood Avenue, Broad Street, Street, Franklin Street, Service Road #8 (Service Road #7, Broadway), Broadway, Street (Sabin Street), Francis Street, Gaspee Street, Smith Street and North Main Street
- Pawtucket: 3.1 miles; Providence city line to Massachusetts State line
- Pawtucket Avenue, George Street, Avenue (Park Place West, Dexter Street, Goff Avenue, Summer Street, High Street), Main Street, Street, Walcott Street, North-South Expressway (Walcott Street, Broadway) and Broadway
Massachusetts
US 1 enters the state from Rhode Island at
Attleboro. It closely parallels
Interstate 95 as it goes through the towns of North Attleboro, Plainville, Wrentham, Foxboro, Walpole, Sharon, Norwood (where a segment is known as the Norwood Automile), and Westwood. US 1 then has a
Wrong-way concurrency with Interstate 95 up to the junction with
Interstate 93 then travels along Interstate 93 from
Canton through downtown
Boston separating from the Interstate just after passing through the
Central Artery tunnel. The route crosses the
Tobin Bridge travelling over Chelsea and Revere as the
Northeast Expressway, then as a surface road through Malden, Melrose, Saugus and Lynnfield. From Lynnfield, US 1 again closely parallels Interstate 95 going through the towns of Peabody, Danvers, Topsfield, Ipswich, Rowley, and Newbury, before it enters the state of New Hampshire.
MA Route 1A runs alongside Route 1 in four parts of the state.
New Hampshire
Route
US 1 takes the following route through the State (South to North):
Maine
In Maine US Route 1 skirts the Maine coast line, then heads north, hugging the border with
New Brunswick. A total of 529 miles lies in Maine, with spurs in
York,
Portland,
Rockland,
Bangor,
Millbridge,
Machias, and
Aroostook County.
See also
References
External links
U.S. Route 1
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