New Hampshire Route 125

New Hampshire Route 125 is a 51.994-mile-long (83.676 km) north–south state highway in Rockingham, Strafford and Carroll counties in southeastern New Hampshire. The southern terminus is in Plaistow at the Massachusetts state line, where the road continues south into Haverhill as Massachusetts Route 125. The northern terminus is in Wakefield at New Hampshire Route 16 and New Hampshire Route 153.

New Hampshire Route 125
Map of southeastern New Hampshire with NH 125 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NHDOT
Length51.994 mi[1] (83.676 km)
Major junctions
South end Route 125 in Haverhill, MA
 
North end NH 16 / NH 153 in Wakefield
Location
CountiesRockingham, Strafford, Carroll
Highway system
NH 124NH 126

Although NH 125 is mostly an undivided two-lane highway, it regularly carries heavy truck and tourist traffic, especially in the summer months, when it is used as a toll-free alternative to Interstate 95 and the Spaulding Turnpike.

The EppingLeeBarrington section is known as the Calef Highway, named after state senator Austin L. Calef[2] and family who owned the locally famous Calef's Country Store in Barrington.[3][4] The Milton section is the southernmost part of the White Mountain Highway.

History

The section of NH 125 between Epping and East Barrington (the intersection with NH 9) was built on the grade of the Boston and Maine Railroad's Worcester, Nashua and Portland Division,[2][4] opened by the Nashua and Rochester Railroad in 1876.

Calef's County Store, a locally famous family-owned shop which first opened in 1869, is located near the intersection of NH 9 and NH 125 in Barrington.

The northern section of NH 125 between downtown Rochester and Wakefield occupies part of the original alignment of NH 16 (first designated as New England Interstate Route 16). The historic northern terminus of NH 125 was at the intersection of Columbus Avenue and South Main Street in downtown Rochester. When NH 16 was moved onto the Spaulding Turnpike in the early 1990s, the northern part of its old alignment in Rochester, as well as its entire alignment through Milton and into Wakefield, was redesignated as NH 125, extending NH 125 by over 16 miles (26 km).

Route description

Plaistow, Kingston, Brentwood

New Hampshire historical marker in Brentwood for Crawley Falls Road Bridge, which once carried NH 125

The NH 125 designation begins on Plaistow Road where Massachusetts Route 125 crosses the state line from Haverhill, Massachusetts, into Plaistow, New Hampshire. NH 121A also begins here and splits off as Main Street towards downtown Plaistow. NH 125 stays to the west of town and is initially a four-lane divided highway serving as the local shopping strip. After bypassing the downtown area, NH 125 crosses over NH 121A, then turns northeast and transitions into an undivided two-lane rural highway before crossing into the town of Kingston. In Kingston, NH 125 is first joined by NH 111 which approaches from the west, then 1.6 miles (2.6 km) later by NH 107 which approaches from the east. Bypassing east of downtown Kingston, the three routes are overlapped for just over 1 mile (1.6 km) before NH 111 turns east towards Exeter. NH 107 and NH 125 continue northwest for another 12 mile (0.80 km), then NH 107 turns off towards Fremont while NH 125 continues north and crosses into the town of Brentwood. The highway has one major junction in Brentwood with NH 111A (the main road in town) and continues north towards Epping.

Epping, Lee, Barrington (Calef Highway)

Upon crossing into Epping, NH 125 becomes known as the Calef Highway and expands to four lanes before interchanging with the NH 101 freeway at exit 7. The highway turns northeast to bypass downtown and crosses NH 27 and the Lamprey River, narrowing back to two lanes thereafter. NH 125 meets the western terminus of NH 87 and the southern terminus of NH 155 before turning due north and entering Lee. NH 125 crosses NH 152 and turns slightly east, bypassing downtown Lee (which is directly served by NH 155) to the west. Continuing north, NH 125 then intersects with U.S. Route 4 at the Lee Traffic Circle, a major two-lane roundabout. NH 125 enters Barrington and stays along the town's east side, crossing the Bellamy River and then NH 9 further north. The highway continues north and enters the Rochester city limits.

Rochester

The Calef Highway moniker ends as NH 125 enters Rochester, and the road becomes known as Gonic Road (after the neighborhood of Gonic which NH 125 passes through). The highway crosses the Isinglass River and passes alongside the Rochester County Club as it continues north towards downtown Rochester. After passing through Gonic, NH 125 has a major interchange with the Spaulding Turnpike (NH 16) at exit 12, and the road becomes Columbus Avenue as it transitions into an urban route. The highway crosses the Cocheco River and crosses South Main Street (which carries NH 108 and NH 202A, both of which terminate here) just south of downtown. While NH 202A heads straight into the heart of town, NH 125 follows Columbus Avenue in a partial loop around the east side of downtown. On the north side of downtown, Columbus Avenue ends and NH 125 turns north onto Wakefield Street, which becomes Milton Road. NH 125 has an interchange with US 202 and NH 11, which provide access to the nearby Spaulding Turnpike at exit 16, as well as to points east in Maine. As NH 125 continues north, it begins to parallel the Salmon Falls River (which forms the border between New Hampshire and Maine) to the west, and the Spaulding Turnpike to the east. The highway transitions back into a rural route as it enters the town of Milton.

Milton, Wakefield

Upon crossing into Milton, NH 125 becomes known as the White Mountain Highway, in recognition of its former status as the major route north to the White Mountains Region (it carries the original alignment of NH 16 before the Spaulding Turnpike was built). The highway meets the eastern terminus of NH 75, which connects to the nearby turnpike at exit 17, before passing through downtown Milton, continuing to run along the western side of the Salmon Falls River. After leaving the downtown area, NH 125 turns slightly westward away from the river and continues winding north, running nearly adjacent to the turnpike. As it approaches the Branch River, a tributary of the Salmon Falls, NH 125 turns west and interchanges with the Spaulding Turnpike again at exit 18. This interchange marks the northern terminus of the Spaulding Turnpike, and the White Mountain Highway designation continues northward on NH 16. NH 125 crosses into Wakefield and passes through the village of Union as Main Street, then intersects with NH 153. NH 125 is overlapped with NH 153 on Main Street for 0.29 miles (0.47 km) (although this is only signed in the southbound direction) as the road bends around to the east to meet NH 16, where the NH 125 designation officially ends. The roadway continues north as NH 153 (Wakefield Road).

Major intersections

CountyLocation[1][5]mi[1][5]kmDestinationsNotes
RockinghamPlaistow0.0000.000 Route 125 south (Plaistow Road)Continuation from Massachusetts
0.0350.056 NH 121A (Main Street)Southern terminus of NH 121A
2.3243.740 NH 121A (Main Street) Plaistow, East Hampstead
Kingston7.40611.919 NH 111 west (Danville Road) Salem, NashuaSouthern end of concurrency with NH 111
9.12714.688 NH 107 south (Depot Road) to NH 107A East KingstonSouthern end of concurrency with NH 107
10.17016.367 NH 111 east (Exeter Road) ExeterNorthern end of concurrency with NH 111
10.70117.222 NH 107 north (Marshall Road) Fremont, RaymondNorthern end of concurrency with NH 107
Brentwood12.96020.857 NH 111A (Middle Road) Fremont, Exeter
Epping16.389–
16.524
26.376–
26.593
NH 101 Exeter, Hampton, Raymond, ManchesterExit 7 on NH 101
17.18827.661 NH 27 (Water Street / Exeter Road) Epping
18.89930.415 NH 87 (Hedding Road) – Hedding, NewfieldsWestern terminus of NH 87
20.72433.352 NH 155 (Lee Hill Road) Lee, DurhamSouthern terminus of NH 155
StraffordLee22.00135.407 NH 152 (Harvey Mill Road / Wadleigh Falls Road) Nottingham, Newmarket
26.08641.981 US 4 (Concord Road) Durham, Dover, Portsmouth, Northwood, ConcordLee traffic circle
Barrington30.57149.199 NH 9 (Franklin Pierce Highway / Littleworth Road) Concord, Dover
Rochester35.510–
35.747
57.148–
57.529
Spaulding Turnpike / NH 16 Dover, Portsmouth, Boston, Alton, Ossipee, Sanford MEExit 12 on Spaulding Turnpike
36.97159.499 NH 108 / NH 202A (South Main Street)Northern terminus of NH 108; eastern terminus of NH 202A
39.142–
39.446
62.993–
63.482
US 202 / NH 11 (Highland Street) to Spaulding Turnpike / NH 16 Concord, Alton, East Rochester, Sanford ME, Conway, PortsmouthInterchange
Milton43.78570.465 NH 75 (Farmington Road) to Spaulding Turnpike / NH 16 Farmington, Portsmouth, ConwayEastern terminus of NH 75
50.044–
50.279
80.538–
80.916
Spaulding Turnpike / NH 16 Rochester, Portsmouth, Ossipee, ConwayExit 18 on Spaulding Turnpike; northern terminus of Spaulding Turnpike
CarrollWakefield51.70883.216 NH 153 south (Middleton Hill Road) Middleton, FarmingtonSouthern end of concurrency with NH 153
51.99483.676 NH 16 (White Mountain Highway) Ossipee, Rochester
NH 153 north (Wakefield Road) Sanbornville
Northern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
gollark: It may be good to avoid this because events are !!GLOBAL!! mutable state.
gollark: Bytecode *can* be decompiled though.
gollark: What you can do is compile to bytecode or minify it.
gollark: The fundamental issue is that the computer has to have/generate some runnable form of the code at some point in order to, well, run it.
gollark: <@!209142270195138560> SKyCrafter0 is wrong and you cannot just encrypt it to protect it, since the computer must obviously store the encryption key.

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. "Gov Murphy's Pen Presented Calef". The Boston Globe. April 8, 1937. p. 11. Retrieved February 7, 2019 via newspapers.com.
  3. Milbouer, Stacy (July 6, 1997). "Signs of the Times". The Boston Globe. p. 1–NH. Retrieved February 7, 2019 via newspapers.com.
  4. Milbouer, Stacy (July 6, 1997). "Signs of (past) times on state's roads". The Boston Globe. p. 14–NH. Retrieved February 7, 2019 via newspapers.com.
  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.