New Hampshire Route 107

New Hampshire Route 107 is a 69.108-mile-long (111.219 km) north–south state highway in eastern New Hampshire. It connects Laconia in the Lakes Region with Seabrook on the Atlantic coast. The southern terminus of NH 107 is at U.S. Route 1 in Seabrook near the entrance to Seabrook Station Nuclear Power Plant. The northern terminus is at U.S. Route 3 on the Laconia/Gilford town line.

New Hampshire Route 107
Map of eastern New Hampshire with NH 107 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NHDOT
Length69.108 mi[1] (111.219 km)
Major junctions
South end US 1 in Seabrook
 
North end US 3 in Laconia
Location
CountiesRockingham, Merrimack, Belknap
Highway system
NH 106NH 108
Concurrent NH 107 and 108 looking east in East Kingston

The highway is signed north-south, but follows a more southeast-to-northwest alignment. Although the route stretches for almost 70 miles (110 km), NH 107 essentially exists as a series of smaller segments connected by short concurrencies with other routes.

NH 107 between US 3 and Leavitt Road in Laconia is part of the Timberman 70.3 Triathlon bicycle course.[2]

Route description

Seabrook to Kingston

NH 107 begins at US 1 in Seabrook, just 1.5 miles (2.4 km) north of the Massachusetts state line, and initially travels nearly due west (signed north). The highway interchanges with Interstate 95 0.2 miles (0.3 km) to the west then continues west into the town of Kensington. NH 107 crosses NH 150 and traverses the southern part of Kensington before continuing into East Kingston where it meets NH 108. NH 108 turns onto NH 107, sharing pavement briefly before splitting off to the south. Continuing west into Kingston, NH 107 intersects the northern terminus of NH 107A (its only "child" route) before meeting NH 111 and NH 125. NH 107 turns north onto NH 111 / NH 125, and the three routes overlap for just over 1 mile (1.6 km), then NH 111 splits off to the east. NH 107 continues along NH 125 for another 0.5 miles (0.8 km) before it splits off on its own again.

Kingston to Northwood

NH 107 cuts across the southwestern corner of Brentwood, then crosses the Exeter River into Fremont and intersects with NH 111A. The two routes overlap for 1.8 miles (2.9 km) before NH 111A splits off to the south. NH 107 continues along the river until crossing into Raymond. The highway intersects the eastern terminus of NH 102 before turning due north. NH 107 crosses the Lamprey River and interchanges with NH 101 before intersecting with NH 27 east of downtown. NH 107 turns west onto NH 27, and NH 156, a short connector to Nottingham, splits off to the north. NH 27 and NH 107 continue along the Lamprey River for 3.9 miles (6.3 km) before splitting in the western end of town. NH 107 turns north to continue along the Lamprey River into the town of Deerfield, where it intersects with NH 43. NH 43 and NH 107 overlap for 3.5 miles (5.6 km) in Deerfield and split north of the town center. The highway continues northwest into Epsom where it intersects with US 4, US 202 and NH 9 in the eastern end of town. NH 107 turns east to join them, and the four routes run concurrently along the north side of Northwood Lake for 2 miles (3 km), crossing into the town of Northwood along the way. NH 107 splits off and continues northwest into Pittsfield.

Pittsfield to Belmont

NH 107 crosses the town of Pittsfield through windy, hilly terrain before reaching the downtown area. In downtown Pittsfield, the highway turns north and crosses NH 28 before continuing north and crossing into the town of Barnstead. The highway runs briefly through the western corner of the town before continuing northwest into Gilmanton, where it meets the eastern terminus of NH 129, a connector to Loudon to the southwest. NH 107 continues northwest through more hilly terrain for several miles, then crosses NH 140 in the town center. Continuing north, NH 107 traverses the eastern corner of Belmont before entering the city of Laconia.

Laconia

NH 107 has a partial interchange with the Gilford-Laconia Bypass (US 3 / NH 11); full access is available via NH 106 0.6 miles (0.97 km) to the north. NH 107 joins NH 106 northbound into downtown Laconia via South Main Street. NH 106 and NH 107 intersect with NH 11A (unsigned US 3 Business) in the city's center, near the Winnipesaukee River. NH 107 turns onto NH 11A (Union Avenue) for 0.9 miles (1.4 km), then NH 11A splits off east towards the US 3 / NH 11 bypass. NH 107 (and US 3 Business) continue north on Union Avenue, paralleling Opechee and Paugus bays before reaching its northern terminus at US 3 (Lake Street/Lake Shore Road) at the Laconia/Gilford line (US 3 Business also ends here).

History

From Laconia to Barnstead, Route 107 is part of the Old Province Road, the first "farm to market" road in New Hampshire. Province Road was planned in 1763 to divert crops from being shipped down the Connecticut River from the Haverhill area, then called "Little Co-os", and instead have them brought to the Durham area.[3] Province Road began the great era of roadbuilding in New Hampshire, a dream of Governor John Wentworth, which had to wait until the end of the French and Indian Wars.[4]

Major intersections

CountyLocation[1][5]mi[1][5]kmDestinationsNotes
RockinghamSeabrook0.0000.000 US 1 (Lafayette Road) Hampton, Salisbury MASouthern terminus of NH 107
0.206–
0.616
0.332–
0.991
I-95 (New Hampshire Turnpike) Hampton, Portsmouth, Salisbury, BostonExit 1 on I-95
Kensington3.0754.949 NH 150 (Amesbury Road) South Hampton, Exeter
East Kingston7.33511.805 NH 108 north (North Road) ExeterSouthern end of wrong-way concurrency with NH 108
7.72412.431 NH 108 south (Haverhill Road) NewtonNorthern end of wrong-way concurrency with NH 108
Kingston9.56315.390 NH 107A south (Powwow River Road) South HamptonNorthern terminus of NH 107A
9.62015.482 NH 125 south / NH 111 west PlaistowSouthern end of concurrency with NH 111 / NH 125
10.66317.160 NH 111 east (Exeter Road) ExeterNorthern end of concurrency with NH 111
11.19518.017 NH 125 north EppingNorthern end of concurrency with NH 125
Fremont13.47521.686 NH 111A east (Brentwood Road) Brentwood, ExeterSouthern end of concurrency with NH 111A
15.25224.546 NH 111A west (Danville Road) DanvilleNorthern end of concurrency with NH 111A
Raymond18.90830.429 NH 102 west (Chester Road) Derry, NashuaEastern terminus of NH 102
19.621–
19.997
31.577–
32.182
NH 101 Portsmouth, ManchesterExit 5 on NH 101
20.44732.906 NH 27 east EppingSouthern end of concurrency with NH 27
20.55133.074 NH 156 north (Nottingham Road) NottinghamSouthern terminus of NH 156
24.36739.215 NH 27 west CandiaNorthern end of concurrency with NH 27
Deerfield28.17345.340 NH 43 south (Stage Road) CandiaSouthern end of concurrency with NH 43
31.66350.957 NH 43 north (Mountain View Road) NorthwoodNorthern end of concurrency with NH 43
MerrimackEpsom37.40960.204 US 4 / US 202 / NH 9 west (Dover Road / Franklin Pierce Highway) ConcordSouthern end of concurrency with US 4 / US 202 / NH 9
RockinghamNorthwood39.46263.508 US 4 / US 202 / NH 9 east (First New Hampshire Turnpike / Franklin Pierce Highway) Portsmouth, DoverNorthern end of concurrency with US 4 / US 202 / NH 9
MerrimackPittsfield48.16677.516 NH 28 (Suncook Valley Road) Epsom, Alton
BelknapGilmanton52.74184.878 NH 129 west LoudonEastern terminus of NH 129
58.12793.546 NH 140 (Alton–Belmont Road) Belmont, Gilmanton Ironworks, Alton
Laconia64.932–
65.020
104.498–
104.640
US 3 north / NH 11 east (Daniel Webster Highway / Laconia–Gilford Bypass) Gilford, Meredith, AltonPartial interchange; exit to US 3 north / NH 11 east and entrance from US 3 south / NH 11 west
65.610105.589 NH 106 south (Belmont Road) Belmont, ConcordSouthern end of concurrency with NH 106
66.155106.466 NH 106 north (Main Street) Meredith
NH 11A west
Northern end of concurrency with NH 106; southern end of concurrency with NH 11A
66.729107.390 NH 11A east (Gilford Avenue) Gunstock Rec. AreaNorthern end of concurrency with NH 11A
69.108111.219 US 3 Weirs Beach, Meredith, Gilford, AltonNorthern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Concurrent routes

Suffixed routes

New Hampshire Route 107A
LocationSouth HamptonKingston
Length6.349 mi[1] (10.218 km)
NH 107A in the Smith's Corner part of northwestern South Hampton

New Hampshire Route 107A is a 6.34-mile (10.20 km) long north–south highway in Rockingham County. The southern terminus of the route is at the Massachusetts state line in South Hampton, where South Hampton Road continues unnumbered into Amesbury, Massachusetts. The northern terminus is at NH 107 in Kingston.

NH 107A begins at the Massachusetts border in South Hampton as Main Avenue. The road progresses to the northwest, becoming Burnt Swamp Road at the town line. The name remains the same to an intersection with NH 108, where NH 107A becomes Powwow River Road. In Kingston NH 107A turns to the north a short distance ahead of its northern terminus at NH 107, a few yards east of the junction of NH 107 and NH 111 / NH 125.

gollark: (Note: osmarks.tk™ interthingification™ is not responsible for any loss of information, gain of information, change of information, corruption of information, apification of information, nonexistence of information, consumption of information or anything else ever caused by, for, from, or any other preposition, use of minoteaur™)
gollark: When minoteaur™ exists, store your information there!
gollark: Yes, why?
gollark: I sent helloboi an SQL solution and they seemed okay with it.
gollark: What about XOR bogo bubblesort?

References

  1. Bureau of Planning & Community Assistance (February 20, 2015). "NH Public Roads". Concord, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 7, 2015.
  2. "Timberman 70.3 Triathlon Course Maps".
  3. Workers of the Federal Writers' Project of the Works Progress Administration for the State of New Hampshire. New Hampshire: a guide to the granite state. Boston: Houghton, 1938. 63. Print
  4. Garvin, Donna, and James L. Garvin. On the road north of Boston: New Hampshire taverns and turnpikes, 1700-1900. Concord, N.H.: New Hampshire Historical Society, 1988. 46. Print.
  5. Bureau of Planning & Community Assistance (April 3, 2015). "Nodal Reference 2015, State of New Hampshire". New Hampshire Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 7, 2015.
KML is from Wikidata
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.