U.S. Route 202

U.S. Route 202 (US 202) is a spur route of U.S. Route 2. It follows a northeasterly and southwesterly direction stretching from Delaware to Maine, also traveling through the states of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire. The highway has borne the number 202 since at least 1936.[1] Before this, sections of the highway were designated U.S. Route 122,[2] as it intersected US 22. Its current designation is based on its intersection with US 2 in Maine.

U.S. Route 202
US 202 highlighted in red
Route information
Auxiliary route of US 2
Length629.6 mi (1,013.2 km)
Existed1935–present
Major junctions
South end US 13 / US 40 in New Castle, DE
 
East end
US 1A Bus. / US 2 in Bangor, ME
Location
StatesDelaware, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine
Highway system

This highway is considerably longer than the eastern segment of US 2, making it one of several three-digit U.S. highways to be longer than their parent routes.

Route description

Lengths
 mi[3]km
DE 13.06 21.02
PA 59.002 94.955
NJ 80.31 129.25
NY 55.57 89.43
CT 75.14 120.93
MA 79.6 128.1
NH 95.270 153.322
ME 170.3 274.1
Total 628.252 1,011.074

Delaware

US 202 begins at an interchange with US 13/US 40 south of Wilmington. It runs north along the same road as Delaware Route 141, then joins with Interstate 95 through Wilmington. North of the city, it exits the freeway onto Concord Pike, heading north; Delaware Route 202 also continues south from this point. US 202 continues north towards the state line as a six-lane arterial road and is lined with numerous strip malls and "big-box stores".

Pennsylvania

US 202 parkway northbound in Montgomery Township, PA

US 202 continues north toward West Chester, joining with US 322 after intersecting U.S. Route 1. South of West Chester, US 202/322 exits onto a limited-access bypass of the borough; that is the old West Chester By-Pass, and includes a grade-level intersection at Matlack Street. North of West Chester, US 322 exits, and US 202 continues north as a freeway towards Frazer, where it interchanges with U.S. Route 30 and bends east to head towards Malvern and King of Prussia. The stretch between Mill Lane in Malvern to King of Prussia was recently widened to three lanes in each direction. In King of Prussia, the highway forms a large, complicated interchange with the Schuylkill Expressway, the Pennsylvania Turnpike, and U.S. Route 422.

The freeway then transitions into a divided highway, passing the King of Prussia mall and heading northeast through commercial areas before splitting into a one-way pair through the streets of Bridgeport and Norristown, crossing the Schuylkill River in the process.

North of Norristown, US 202 continues as a two-lane road heading northeast through the Philadelphia suburbs, passing through Blue Bell and Lower Gwynedd, where it becomes a four-lane full-access highway for about two miles (3 km). East of Lansdale, in Montgomeryville, it turns into a parkway with a parallel trail, which opened in December 2012.[4] It continues northeast towards Doylestown, where it joins an older section of bypass at Pennsylvania Route 611 and proceeds north to the old alignment of Route 202 (State Street). It continues as a two-lane road to New Hope, crossing the Delaware River on the New Hope-Lambertville Toll Bridge.

New Jersey

On the toll bridge, US 202 has two lanes in each direction. It continues a northeasterly course for about 5.7 miles (9.2 km) as a freeway. This segment of US 202 was earlier called the US 202 bypass (as it bypassed the New Hope-Lambertville area) from its original route. The old section of US 202 between New Hope and Ringoes, New Jersey is now Route 179 which is also Old York Road, the first roadway to connect New York City and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In 1953, this section of Old York Road was renumbered US 202. A small section of the US 202 bypass was built in 1965 and the old route was renamed Route 179. When the western section of the bypass was built to the Delaware River, the whole former segment was renamed Route 179. The section of the new US 202 freeway section ends once it begins to run concurrently with Route 31 in East Amwell Township. The concurrency runs for five miles (8 km), to Flemington. This stretch, and the 13 miles (21 km) between Flemington and Somerville, is a four-lane divided roadway.

US 202 just inside New Jersey at the New York/New Jersey state line

At Somerville, the road merges with US 206 at a now-reconfigured Somerville Circle. Parts of the old traffic circle, which also carries Route 28, remain below the US 202 flyover. US 202 splits northeastward from US 206 at Bedminster Township and again becomes a two-lane road.

From here to the state line, US 202 parallels, and has largely been supplanted by, I-287, which during its construction dumped traffic onto US 202. US 202 continues through Morristown to Morris Plains with an intersection with Route 53. With a few exceptions, US 202 is maintained by counties rather than the New Jersey Department of Transportation north of Route 53.

The following sections are state-maintained:

US 202 continues past Boonton along the Boonton Turnpike to historic Mountain View in Wayne, where it then picks up Route 23 for about two miles (3 km) and then exits on Black Oak Ridge Road. It then follows the Paterson-Hamburg Turnpike, Terhune Drive on the east side of Pompton Lake (past the former homes of Cecille B. DeMille and Albert Payson Terhune), and Ramapo Valley Road (more or less paralleling the Ramapo River through Oakland) to Mahwah before crossing the New York state line on the Franklin Turnpike.

New York

US 202 is mostly designated east–west in New York, owing to its greater coverage in those directions.

Franklin Turnpike becomes Orange Avenue in Suffern, and US 202 continues to a block-long wrong-way concurrency with NY 59 before tailing off on Wayne Avenue and heading east toward Haverstraw. Most of this stretch is two-lane road.

At Haverstraw, US 202 turns north along US 9W to Bear Mountain and then crosses the Bear Mountain Bridge, running concurrently with US 6, the Grand Army Of The Republic Highway. The two wind around Anthony's Nose, briefly forming New York's only three-way concurrency of U.S. highways with US 9 at Peekskill. Afterwards, the two separate for several miles, with US 202 taking the more southerly route through Somers. The highways reunite at Brewster and become a four-lane road for their last few miles before the state line, taking in NY 121 in the process.[5]

Connecticut

At Danbury, US 6 and 202 climb up onto I-84, which had just been joined by the north–south US 7, making a four-way concurrency. US 7 and 202 split from I-84 and US 6 at Exit 7. It is a two-lane road in southern Brookfield as it follows Federal Road. US 202 diverts from U.S. Route 7 at the next exit to a parallel surface route. The US 7 freeway continues for another 8.5 miles (13.7 km) before it rejoins US 202 at the Brookfield/New Milford town line. The now rejoined US 7 and 202 approach New Milford in bucolic Litchfield County, where they once again split.

US 202 continues through Torrington and on to Cherry Brook, where it then runs concurrently with US 44 for several miles before turning northward at Avon. For the run to the state line, US 202 runs concurrently with Route 10.

Massachusetts

Unlike elsewhere in New England, US 202 is posted as a north–south highway in Massachusetts, as the highway runs mostly in those directions for its length through the state.

US 202 and Route 10 enter the Bay State at the "Congamond Notch" in Southwick, a southward jog in the state line that includes Congamond Lake. North of Westfield, US 202 turns eastward toward Holyoke, crosses the Joseph E. Muller Bridge and South Hadley Falls Interchange, traversing MA 116 and MA 33 toward Belchertown. After crossing MA 9, it then heads north along the west side of the Quabbin Reservoir through New Salem toward Athol. This section of US 202 has been dubbed the Daniel Shays Highway, named for a Revolutionary War veteran who led an insurrection against the state government of Massachusetts. US 202 meets Massachusetts Route 2 at Orange, and runs along the two-lane freeway to Phillipston. There, it diverges to the north again as a two-lane road.

In Massachusetts, US 202 passes through the municipalities of Southwick, Westfield, Holyoke, South Hadley, Granby, Belchertown, Pelham, Shutesbury, New Salem, Orange, Athol, Phillipston, Templeton, and Winchendon.

The stretch of highway through Belchertown, Pelham, Shutesbury, and New Salem opened in 1935 to coincide with the completion and opening of the Quabbin Reservoir. The roadway reaches its closest point to the reservoir itself at the crossing of the Swift River, at the Shutesbury/New Salem town line. Access to the west side of the Quabbin Reservation is made through multiple gates in the three towns. There is no public access, however, to the Prescott Peninsula.

New Hampshire

Section of US 202 in Henniker, NH

US 202 is posted as an east–west highway in New Hampshire. It remains a two-lane highway for most of its length in the Granite State.

It heads north, through Rindge, Jaffrey, and Peterborough, to Hillsborough, where it turns eastward along a concurrency with New Hampshire Route 9. The span of the road between Hillsborough and Hopkinton, which passes through Henniker, is among the most deadly sections of roadway in the state.[6] At Concord, New Hampshire, the state capital, US 202 heads north and picks up a concurrency with US 3 for a short time, and then turns eastward again along Interstate 393, a freeway spur that also carries US 4. The freeway ends short of Chichester, and NH 9 rejoins the two-lane concurrency along with US 4 and 202.

At Northwood, US 202 and NH 9 leave US 4. NH 9 splits off a few miles later, leaving US 202 to continue alone toward Rochester, where the road jumps up onto the Spaulding Turnpike (NH 16) for a short, non-tolled distance. US 202 leaves the turnpike two miles (3 km) before the state line at East Rochester.

Maine

Connected farm in Windham, Maine, typical of older residences adjacent to US 202 through rural New England.

US 202 is posted as an east–west highway in Maine.

The highway enters the state by crossing the Salmon Falls River at South Lebanon and bridges the Mousam River in Sanford. The highway then passes through Alfred, Waterboro and Hollis before crossing the Saco River at Salmon Falls. The highway passes through Gorham and crosses the Presumpscot River into South Windham. There is a rotary with U.S. Route 302 at Foster's Corner and an interchange with I-95 at Gray. The highway parallels I-95 through New Gloucester to Auburn and crosses the Androscoggin River into Lewiston, passing near the campus of Bates College.[7] A very short stretch through the latter two cities is four-lane highway, but most of its length in the Pine Tree State consists of two-lane road. Its final miles west of Hampden, including the short overlay on I-395, and concurrency with US 1A also include four-laned segments.

The highway passes through Greene, Monmouth, and Winthrop concurrently with Maine Route 11 and Maine Route 100, and becomes concurrent with State Route 17 at Manchester. US 202 runs concurrently with U.S. Route 201 as it crosses the Kennebec River at Augusta, and shortly thereafter it picks up State Route 3 and State Route 9. Maine 3 splits off at South China, but Maine 9 stays with US 202 through Albion, Unity, Troy, Dixmont, Newburgh, and Hampden almost all the way to its terminus in Bangor.[7] When Maine 9 turns right onto Summer Street in Bangor with US 1A, US 202 runs four more blocks to its eastern (or northern) terminus at the US 2 intersection at the corner of Hammond, Main, Central and State Streets.

History

U.S. Route 122
LocationWilmington, DEHaverstraw, NY
Existed1926–1934

U.S. Route 122 was created in 1926, connecting US 22 at Whitehouse Station, New Jersey, with Wilmington, Delaware. It was extended to Haverstraw, New York in 1931 and became part of US 202 in 1934.

US 202 was approved by AASHO in June 1934; the route approved was 671 miles (1,080 km), from Bangor, Maine, to State Road, Delaware, south of Wilmington. In 1964, AASHO approved a request by Delaware to eliminate the portion of US 202 between its intersection with I-295 in Farnhurst and State Road; that stretch was carrying US 13/40/301. US 202 was later shortened so that it ended at I-95 just north of Wilmington. Then in 1984, the route numbering committee approved extending US 202 from there to its intersection with US 13/US 40 in Basin Corner, near New Castle. This intersection is US 202's current terminus.[8]

US 202's path passes near the sites of various important Revolutionary War battles in Delaware and Pennsylvania, such as Cooch's Bridge, near Newark, Delaware; Brandywine, near Philadelphia; and Valley Forge.[9] In New Hampshire, US 202 passes by a historical marker in Antrim commemorating the last surviving soldier of the Revolutionary War.[10][11]

In Pennsylvania in the early 1960s, a four-lane expressway, the Piedmont Expressway, was proposed that would follow the US 202 corridor. The expressway was to be 59 miles (95 km) long, and would cost approximately $146 million. It was to serve as an outer beltway around the Philadelphia area. The project was ultimately cancelled.[12] In its place, the Route 202 Parkway Trail was built. The trail is 9 miles (14 km) in length.[13] The trail is ultimately expected to connect to the East Coast Greenway via the Neshaminy Creek Trail.[14]

Construction began in November 2008 on a parkway project between Pennsylvania Route 63 in Lower Gwynedd and the existing cloverleaf interchange at the US 202 Bypass and PA 611 near Doylestown. This parkway was planned to consist of a four-lane stretch between Route 63 and Pennsylvania Route 463 and a two-lane parkway the rest of the way that bypasses the boroughs of Chalfont and New Britain. The parkway opened on December 3, 2012.[4]

US 202 originally ended at its junction with US 2/US 1A in Bangor, Maine. In the late 1980s, however, the section of US 202 between I-395 and US 2 was removed from US 202's official routing. Officially, US 202 ends at I-395's exit 3. However, signs designating US 202's termination at US 2 in downtown Bangor, at the corner of Main Street and Hammond Street, still stand today. That intersection is still seen as US 202's end.[15][16]

Major intersections

Delaware
US 13 / US 40 in Wilmington Manor
I-295 in Newport
I-95 with a concurrency from Newport to Wilmington
I-495 in Newport
Pennsylvania
US 1 / US 322 in Chadds Ford Township, with a concurrency with US 322 from Chadds Ford Township to West Goshen Township
US 30 in East Whiteland Township
US 422 in Tredyffrin Township
I-76 / I-276 in Upper Merion Township
New Jersey
US 206 with a concurrency from the RaritanBridgewater Township line to Bedminster Township
US 22 in Bridgewater Township
I-287 in Bridgewater Township
I-287 in Bedminster Township
I-80 in Parsippany-Troy Hills
US 46 in Parsippany-Troy Hills
I-287 in Parsippany-Troy Hills
I-287 in Boonton
I-287 in Montville
I-287 in Oakland
New York
US 9W with a concurrency from the Village of Haverstraw to Highlands
US 6 with a concurrency from Highlands to Peekskill
US 9 with a concurrency from Cortlandt to Peekskill
US 6 with a concurrency from Brewster to the Connecticut state line in Southeast
Connecticut
US 6 with a concurrency from the New York state line in Danbury through the city
I-84 with a concurrency through Danbury
US 7 with a concurrency from Danbury to New Milford
US 44 with a concurrency from Canton to Avon
Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine

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StateCountyLocation[3][17][18]mi[3][17][18]kmExitDestinationsNotes
MassachusettsHampdenSouthwick0.00.0 US 202 / Route 10 southContinuation into Connecticut; southern terminus of Route 10 (MA)
1.93.1 Route 168 east Suffield CT, Thompsonville CTWestern terminus of Route 168
4.36.9 Route 57 west GranvilleWestern terminus of Route 57 concurrency
4.97.9 Route 57 east – Feeding Hills, SpringfieldEastern terminus of Route 57 concurrency
Westfield9.815.8 US 20 east West Springfield, SpringfieldEastern terminus of US 20 concurrency
10.016.1 US 20 west Russell, PittsfieldWestern terminus of US 20 concurrency
11.518.5 I90 / Mass Pike – Boston, Albany NYExit 41 on I-90 / Massachusetts Turnpike (formerly exit 3)
14.523.3 Route 10 north Northampton, SouthamptonNorthern terminus of Route 10 concurrency
Holyoke20.032.2 I91 Springfield, Hartford, CT, Greenfield, Brattleboro VTExit 16 on I-91
20.432.8 US 5 West Springfield, Springfield, NorthamptonSouthern terminus of concurrency with US 5 southbound only
21.033.8Resnic BoulevardTo I-391 south
21.234.1 Route 141 east – Holyoke Center, Chicopee FallsSouthbound only
21.434.4 Route 141 west EasthamptonSouthbound only; to I-91
21.534.6 Route 141 – Chicopee FallsNorthbound only.
21.634.8 US 5 north NorthamptonNorthern terminus of concurrency with US 5 southbound only.
22.035.4US 202 southbound and northbound come back together
Connecticut River22.135.6Joseph E. Muller Bridge
HampshireSouth Hadley23.337.5 Route 116 South Hadley Falls, Holyoke, South Hadley, AmherstInterchange
24.339.1 Route 33 to Route 116 Westover ARB, Chicopee, South Hadley Center
Belchertown33.453.8 Route 21 south Ludlow, SpringfieldSouthern terminus of Route 21 concurrency
34.455.4 Route 21 north / Route 181 south Ware, Worcester, Bondsville, PalmerNorthern terminus of Route 21 concurrency; northern terminus of Route 181
35.356.8 Route 9 Amherst, Northampton, Ware, Worcester
FranklinNew Salem55.188.7 Route 122 south Petersham, Barre, South AtholSouthern terminus of Route 122 concurrency
Orange56.090.1 Route 122 north – Orange Center, GreenfieldNorthern terminus of Route 122 concurrency
57.091.716 Route 2 west Greenfield, North AdamsWestern terminus of Route 2 concurrency
WorcesterAthol61.599.017 Route 32 Athol, Petersham
Phillipston63.1101.518 Route 2A Athol, Phillipston
65.3105.119 Route 2 east / Route 2A west Fitchburg, Boston, PhillipstonEastern terminus of Route 2 concurrency; western terminus of Route 2A concurrency
Templeton66.6107.2 Route 2A east GardnerEastern terminus of Route 2A concurrency
68.3109.9 Route 68 north S. Royalston, RoyalstonWestern terminus of wrong-way concurrency with Route 68
69.7112.2 Route 68 south Gardner, WorcesterEastern terminus of wrong-way concurrency with Route 68
Winchendon75.7121.8 Route 12 north – Fitzwilliam, NH, Keene, NHWestern terminus of wrong-way concurrency with Route 12
75.9122.1 Route 12 south Ashburnham, FitchburgEastern terminus of wrong-way concurrency with Route 12
 79.6
0.000
128.1
0.000
Massachusetts-New Hampshire state line
New HampshireCheshireRindge3.6385.855 NH 119 Fitzwilliam, Rindge
Jaffrey7.49112.056 NH 124 west Marlborough
NH 137 north Dublin
Western terminus of NH 124 concurrency; southern terminus of NH 137
7.56112.168 NH 124 east New IpswichEastern terminus of NH 124 concurrency
HillsboroughPeterborough13.72122.082 NH 101 west KeeneWestern end of NH 101 concurrency
13.91822.399 NH 101 east / NH 123 south ManchesterEastern terminus of NH 101 concurrency; western terminus of NH 123 concurrency
16.21326.092 NH 136 east GreenfieldWestern terminus of NH 136
Hancock19.63731.603 NH 123 north Hancock, StoddardEastern terminus of NH 123 concurrency
23.22137.371 NH 137 south HancockNorthern terminus of NH 137
Bennington24.32539.147 NH 31 south / NH 47 south Bennington, FrancestownWestern terminus of NH 31 concurrency; northern terminus of NH 47
Antrim26.61442.831 NH 31 north Washington, StoddardEastern terminus of NH 31 concurrency
Hillsborough32.67952.592 NH 149 east Hillsborough, DeeringWestern terminus of NH 149
33.40353.757 NH 9 west (Franklin Pierce Highway) KeeneWestern terminus of NH 9 concurrency
35.35656.900Henniker Street to West Main Street HillsboroughInterchange
MerrimackHenniker39.65163.812 NH 114 Henniker, BradfordInterchange
Hopkinton43.80270.492 NH 127 – West Hopkinton, ContoocookSouthern terminus of NH 127
44.25171.215Hatfield Road / Country Club RoadInterchange
47.040–
47.711
75.704–
76.783
I-89 to I-93 / US 4 Concord, Seacoast, Contoocook, Warner, LebanonExit 5 on I-89; no westbound exit to I-89 south; no eastbound entrance from I-89 north
48.62178.248 NH 103 Contoocook, WarnerEastern terminus of NH 103
49.41779.529 I-89 south BowExit 4 on I-89; no exit to I-89 north; no entrance from I-89 south
Concord55.93690.020 NH 13 south (South St.)Northern terminus of NH 13
56.09790.279 US 3 south (Main St.)Western terminus of US 3 concurrency
56.39290.754 NH 9 east (Loudon Rd.)Eastern terminus of NH 9 concurrency
56.84891.488 US 3 north PenacookEastern terminus of US 3 concurrency
57.24692.129 I-393 east
I-93 south to I-89 Manchester, Lebanon
I-93 north / US 4 west Plymouth
Western terminus of I-393; western end of concurrency with I-393 / US 4
57.50392.5421Fort Eddy Road NHTI Community College
57.79893.017Veterans Memorial Bridge over the Merrimack River
58.56394.2482 NH 132 (East Side Drive) – Concord Heights Business District
60.39097.1883 NH 106 Laconia, Pembroke
Pembroke61.84099.522 I-393 west / NH 9 west – Concord Heights Business DistrictEastern terminus of I-393; western terminus of NH 9 concurrency
Epsom66.920107.697 NH 28 Pittsfield, AllenstownTraffic circle
70.580113.587 NH 107 south Deerfield, RaymondWestern terminus of NH 107 concurrency
RockinghamNorthwood72.489116.660 NH 107 north PittsfieldEastern terminus of NH 107 concurrency
78.333126.065 US 4 east Lee, Durham, Portsmouth
NH 43 south Deerfield, Candia
Eastern terminus of US 4 concurrency; northern terminus of NH 43
78.682126.626 NH 202A east Bow Lake, StraffordWestern terminus of NH 202A
StraffordBarrington83.289134.041 NH 9 east Barrington, DoverEastern terminus of NH 9 concurrency
84.001135.187 NH 126 north Center Strafford, BarnsteadWestern terminus of NH 126 concurrency
84.193135.495 NH 126 south Barrington, DoverEastern terminus of NH 126 concurrency
Rochester90.161145.10013 NH 16 south / Spaulding Turnpike south Dover, Portsmouth, Boston MAWestern terminus of NH 16 concurrency
90.809146.14314Ten Rod Road RochesterEastbound exit and westbound entrance
92.020148.09215 NH 11 west Farmington, Alton, Lake WinnipesaukeeWestern terminus of NH 11 concurrency
92.236148.43916 NH 16 north / Spaulding Turnpike north Ossipee, ConwayEastern terminus of NH 16 concurrency
93.094149.820 NH 125 Rochester, MiltonInterchange
 95.270
0.00
153.322
0.00
New Hampshire-Maine state line (eastern terminus of NH 11, southern terminus of SR 11)
MaineYorkSanford9.1414.71 SR 11A north SpringvaleSouthern terminus of SR 11A (southern segment)
12.5020.12 SR 4A south / SR 11 north / SR 109 Wells, SpringvaleEastern end of concurrency with SR 11; western end of concurrency with SR 4A (southern segment)
14.0122.55 SR 224 west (Shaws Ridge Road) Shapleigh, ActonEastern terminus of SR 224
Alfred16.4126.41 SR 4 south / SR 4A south / SR 111 east Biddeford, Lyman, North BerwickEastern end of concurrency with SR 4A; northern terminus of SR 4A (southern segment); western end of concurrency with SR 4; western terminus of SR 111
Waterboro24.3339.16 SR 5 north LimerickWestern end of concurrency with SR 5
Lyman26.1742.12 SR 5 south SacoEastern end of concurrency with SR 5
Hollis29.5947.62 SR 4A east / SR 35 Kennebunk, Bar Mills, StandishWestern terminus of SR 4A (northern segment)
30.0748.39 SR 117 north LimingtonWestern end of concurrency with SR 117
Buxton31.8051.18 SR 117 south SacoEastern end of concurrency with SR 117
32.8752.90 SR 112 Bar Mills, Saco
33.7454.30 SR 4A west Bar MillsEastern terminus of SR 4A (northern segment)
35.4757.08 SR 22 Buxton, South Portland, Scarborough
CumberlandGorham38.9462.67 SR 112 to SR 114 / SR 25 Scarborough, StandishRotary
39.8164.07 SR 25 west StandishWestern end of concurrency with SR 25
40.0164.39 SR 114 Scarborough, Sebago Lake
40.4765.13 SR 25 east to I-95 WestbrookEastern end of concurrency with SR 25
43.7370.38 SR 237Rotary
Windham49.0979.00 US 302 Portland, BridgtonRotary
Gray52.8285.01 SR 115 west North WindhamWestern end of concurrency with SR 115
56.1790.40 SR 26A north to SR 26 north South Paris, Poland Spring, BethelWestern end of concurrency with SR 26A
56.17–
56.44
90.40–
90.83
I-95 / Maine Turnpike Portland, AugustaExit 63 on I-95 / Maine Turnpike
56.6191.10 SR 26 south / SR 100 south Portland
SR 115 east Yarmouth
Eastern end of concurrency with SR 115; western end of concurrency with SR 26 / SR 100
56.6691.19 SR 26 north NorwayWestern end of concurrency with SR 26
New Gloucester64.23103.37 SR 231 south New GloucesterNorthern terminus of SR 231
AndroscogginAuburn66.88107.63 SR 122 west PolandEastern terminus of SR 122
67.89109.26 I-95 / Maine Turnpike Portland, Boston, Lewiston, AugustaExit 75 on I-95 / Maine Turnpike
71.93115.76 SR 11 south / SR 121 south Minot, Mechanic FallsWestern end of concurrency with SR 11; northern terminus of SR 121
72.64116.90 SR 4 north TurnerEastern end of concurrency with SR 4
72.98117.45 SR 136 southNorthern terminus of SR 136
Lewiston73.34118.03 SR 196 east to I-95 / Maine Turnpike Lisbon, BrunswickWestern terminus of SR 196
73.57118.40 SR 126 east SabattusWestern terminus of SR 126
74.45119.82Russell StreetInterchange; to SR 4, SR 126, SR 196
Leeds85.32137.31 SR 106 north North LeedsSouthern terminus of SR 106
KennebecMonmouth89.42143.91 SR 132 south MonmouthNorthern terminus of SR 132
Winthrop92.58148.99 SR 41 north / SR 133 north Winthrop, Readfield, WayneSouthern terminus of SR 41 / SR 133
95.83154.22 SR 135 north Readfield, BelgradeWestern end of concurrency with SR 135
95.95154.42 SR 135 south East MonmouthEastern end of concurrency with SR 135
Manchester99.15159.57 SR 17 north ReadfieldWestern end of concurrency with SR 17
Augusta101.95164.07 I-95 / Maine Turnpike Portland, BangorExit 109 on I-95 / Maine Turnpike
103.46166.50 US 201 south / SR 27 / SR 8 north / SR 11 north / SR 104 north Gardiner, BelgradeRotary; eastern end of concurrency with SR 11; western end of concurrency with US 201; southern terminus of SR 8 / SR 104
104.23167.74 SR 9 west / SR 17 east (Stone Street) / SR 105 east (Cony Street East) Randolph, Rockland, WindsorRotary; eastern end of concurrency with SR 17; western end of concurrency with SR 9; western terminus of SR 105
104.85168.74 US 201 north / SR 100 north WatervilleEastern end of concurrency with US 201 / SR 100
105.85170.35 SR 3 west to I-95 Waterville, PortlandWestern end of concurrency with SR 3
China115.06185.17 SR 32 northWestern end of concurrency with SR 32
116.32187.20 SR 32 south WindsorEastern end of concurrency with SR 32
116.54187.55 SR 3 east BelfastEastern end of concurrency with SR 3
123.66199.01 SR 137 west WinslowWestern end of concurrency with SR 137
Albion131.01210.84 SR 137 east FreedomEastern end of concurrency with SR 137
WaldoUnity137.32221.00 SR 139 westWestern end of concurrency with SR 139
137.49221.27 SR 139 eastEastern end of concurrency with SR 139
138.20222.41 SR 220 southWestern end of concurrency with SR 220
Troy141.15227.16 SR 220 northEastern end of concurrency with SR 220
PenobscotDixmont147.86237.96 SR 7 Brooks, Newport
150.09241.55 SR 143 north EtnaSouthern terminus of SR 143
Newburgh158.50255.08 SR 69 to I-95 Carmel, Winterport
Hampden164.61264.91 SR 9 east HampdenEastern end of concurrency with SR 9
Bangor168.76271.59 I-395 west / SR 15 north to I-95 Orono, NewportWestern end of concurrency with I-395; Exit 2 on I-395
169.05272.06 I-395 east / SR 15 south Ellsworth, Bar Harbor
US 1A west / SR 9 west / Farm Road Hampden
Eastern end of concurrency with I-395; Exit 3 on I-395
169.61272.96 US 1A east / SR 9 east – Downtown Bangor, Brewer, Bar Harbor, Ellsworth, Calais
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
gollark: For "fast stupider web-y Python" Go somewhat works, but I don't think it's generally very good.
gollark: I think languages which do are generally better than ones which don't.
gollark: Yes. However, having a language which actually ALLOWS YOU TO WRITE THAT as a generalized thing would be better without compromising elegance with weird special cases like Go also does.
gollark: Parallel iterators would make that code clearer, actually simpler (not Go-"simpler") and less error-prone.
gollark: I don't think the way Go encourages you to write code is very good.

See also

References

  1. "U.S. 202 - Maine to Delaware - General Highway History". www.fhwa.dot.gov. Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved June 2, 2018.
  2. "Route 122 North Has Been Changed to 202". The News Journal. Wilmington, Delaware. March 15, 1935. p. 16. Retrieved March 20, 2018 via newspapers.com.
  3. Bureau of Planning & Community Assistance (February 20, 2015). "NH Public Roads". Concord, New Hampshire: New Hampshire Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 7, 2015.
  4. Savana, Freda R. (December 3, 2012). "It's official: The 202 parkway is open". The Intelligencer. Archived from the original on January 31, 2013. Retrieved December 3, 2012.
  5. DeLorme Mapping Company (1993). New York State Atlas and Gazetteer. DeLorme Mapping Company. ISBN 0-89933-230-7.
  6. "Crash takes two lives" Archived September 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine. Concord Monitor. June 2005. Accessed July 10, 2008.
  7. DeLorme Mapping Company (1988). The Maine Atlas and Gazetteer. DeLorme Mapping Company. ISBN 0-89933-035-5.
  8. "U.S. 202 - Maine to Delaware - General Highway History - Highway History - Federal Highway Administration". www.fhwa.dot.gov. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  9. "Introduction, US Route 202, Revolutionary War, History-based Travel, Road Trip Driving Tour of the American Revolution". www.revolutionaryday.com. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  10. https://www.nh.gov/nhdhr/markers/documents/markers_bynumber.pdf
  11. "Roadside History: Joel McGregor, Last Surviving Soldier of the Revolution". UnionLeader.com. March 31, 2017. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  12. "Pennsylvania Highways: US 202". www.pahighways.com. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  13. https://circuittrails.org/sites/default/files/08_Route202.pdf
  14. "Neshaminy Creek Greenway Extension". Circuit. June 8, 2016. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  15. "End of US highway 202". US Ends.com. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  16. "US Highway 202 (Maine)". RoadsAroundME. 2010. Retrieved August 26, 2019.
  17. Bureau of Planning & Community Assistance (April 3, 2015). "Nodal Reference 2015, State of New Hampshire". New Hampshire Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 7, 2015.
  18. "MaineDOT Public Map Viewer". Maine Department of Transportation. Retrieved April 9, 2017.

Further reading

KML is not from Wikidata
Browse numbered routes
Route 198MARoute 203
I-193NHNH 202A
US 201MESR 203
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