Maine State Route 219

State Route 219 (abbreviated SR 219) is part of Maine's system of numbered state highways, located in the western central part of the state. It runs for 35.1 miles (56.5 km) from the town center of Greenwood to an intersection with State Route 133 in Wayne.

State Route 219
Route information
Maintained by MaineDOT
Length35.1 mi[1] (56.5 km)
Existed1933–present
Major junctions
West endGreenwood Road in Greenwood
  SR 26 in West Paris
SR 4 in Turner
East end SR 133 in Wayne
Location
CountiesOxford, Androscoggin, Kennebec
Highway system
SR 218SR 220

SR 219 runs through parts of Oxford, Androscoggin and Kennebec counties.

Route description

SR 219 begins in the west at Greenwood Road in the town center of Greenwood. From this intersection, SR 219 proceeds eastward and crosses into West Paris where it intersects with SR 26. The two routes share a brief overlap before SR 219 continues northeast into Sumner. The highway continues through the center of town and intersects with SR 140 just feet shy of the Nezinscot River.

SR 140 turns east along SR 219 and the two routes cross the river into Hartford. After a 1.8-mile (2.9 km) concurrency, SR 140 splits off to the north while SR 219 turns southeast and crosses into the northern part of Turner in Androscoggin County. SR 219 crosses SR 4 and intersects both the northern terminus of SR 117 and eastern terminus of SR 108 before crossing the Androscoggin River into Leeds. Continuing east, SR 219 intersects, and briefly overlaps with, SR 106 before crossing into Wayne and Kennebec County. SR 219 meets its eastern terminus at SR 133 shortly thereafter, located near the northern tip of Androscoggin Lake.

History

Modern SR 219, as first designated in 1933, was approximately 16 miles (26 km) in length and ran between SR 140 in Hartford and its current eastern terminus at SR 133 in Wayne. A minor routing shift was made near Bear Pond in 1937-8; the highway, which once ran along the north side of the pond, now runs along the south side. The old routing is still present as unnumbered local roadways. By 1941, SR 219 had been extended westward along a concurrency with SR 140, then through entirely new routing through Sumner and West Paris to the current western terminus in Greenwood.

The first highway in Maine designated SR 219 ran between Rumford and South Arm north of Andover in 1928. This is now the northernmost stretch of SR 5, although the route to South Arm was later truncated to what is now the intersection of SR 5 and SR 120 in Andover.[1]

Major intersections

CountyLocationmikmDestinationsNotes
OxfordGreenwood0.00.0Greenwood Road – Norway, BethelWestern terminus of SR 219
West Paris5.69.0 SR 26 south (Bethel Road) Paris, NorwaySouthern terminus of SR 26 / SR 219 concurrency
5.79.2 SR 26 north (South Main Street) Woodstock, BethelSouthern terminus of SR 26 / SR 219 concurrency
Sumner17.327.8 SR 140 south (Butterfield Road) BuckfieldWestern terminus of SR 140 / SR 219 concurrency
Hartford19.130.7 SR 140 north (Main Street) Canton, JayEastern terminus of SR 140 / SR 219 concurrency
AndroscogginTurner25.641.2 SR 4 (Auburn Road) Auburn, Livermore Falls
27.744.6 SR 117 south (North Parish Road) Turner, BuckfieldNorthern terminus of SR 117
29.447.3 SR 108 west (Boothby Road) Livermore, CantonEastern terminus of SR 108
Leeds31.650.9 SR 106 north Livermore FallsWestern terminus of SR 106 / SR 219 concurrency
32.352.0 SR 106 south LeedsEastern terminus of SR 106 / SR 219 concurrency
KennebecWayne35.156.5 SR 133 Livermore Falls, WayneEastern terminus of SR 219
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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gollark: <@341618941317349376> Yes, probably (even if we assume you mean multiple people).
gollark: GCC does lots of magic optimiser stuff, I'm not a compiler writer, and also not capable of heavily optimizing Python.
gollark: No.
gollark: Maybe that's your fault.

See also

  •  U.S. Roads portal

References

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