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Massachusetts Route 9

Route 9 is a 135.310-mile-long (217.760 km) major east–west state highway in Massachusetts, United States. Along with U.S. Route 20 (US 20), Route 2, and Interstate 90, Route 9 is one of the major east–west routes of Massachusetts. The western terminus is near the center of the city of Pittsfield. After winding through the small towns along the passes of the Berkshire Mountains, it crosses the college towns of the Pioneer Valley and then south of the Quabbin Reservoir and the rural areas of western Worcester County. Entering the city of Worcester from the southwestern corner of the city, it passes through the center of the city and forms the major commercial thoroughfare through the MetroWest suburbs of Boston, parallel to the Massachusetts Turnpike. Crossing the Route 128 freeway circling Boston, it passes through the inner suburbs of Newton and Brookline along Boylston Street, and enters Boston on Huntington Avenue, before reaching its eastern terminus at Copley Square.

Route 9

Kneeland Street
Worcester-Boston Turnpike
Ted Williams Highway
United Spanish War Veterans Highway
Route 9 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by MassDOT
Length135.310 mi[1] (217.760 km)
Existedby 1933–present
Major junctions
West end US 20 in Pittsfield
Major intersections
East end Route 28 in Boston
Location
CountryUnited States
StateMassachusetts
CountiesBerkshire, Hampshire, Worcester, Middlesex, Norfolk, Suffolk
Highway system

Route description edit

Route 9 passes through six counties and twenty-eight cities and towns.

Western end (Pittsfield – Worcester) edit

Route 9 begins in the western Massachusetts city of Pittsfield, at U.S. Route 20. After separating from US-20, it has a brief (.2 mile) concurrency with U.S. Route 7 through the center of that city, then continues east, passing through the towns of Dalton and Windsor, wherein the route reaches its highest point at 2033 ft, in Berkshire County. It continues its winding pass through the small towns of The Berkshires in Berkshire and western Hampshire Counties before passing through the center of Northampton, passing Smith College before its first interstate junction, at Interstate 91. It then crosses the Connecticut River at the Calvin Coolidge Bridge, just downstream from Elwell Island. It goes through the retail area of Hadley before passing the University of Massachusetts Amherst and Amherst College. From Amherst, it wends its way into western Worcester County, south of the Quabbin Reservoir, through small towns until it makes its way into the city of Worcester.

Through Worcester edit

Once in Worcester, Route 9 becomes a major thoroughfare through the city, as Park Avenue, Highland Street (which passes Major Taylor Boulevard), before passing over Interstate 290 and Belmont Street, where University of Massachusetts Medical School and the former Worcester State Hospital are located. At its intersection with McRae Ct., it becomes a divided highway with raised median.

In the MetroWest region (Worcester – Wellesley) edit

From Worcester, it crosses Lake Quinsigamond into Shrewsbury. At this point, Route 9 becomes the main retail artery of the MetroWest region. Several plazas and chain stores are located along the route as it makes its way towards Northborough, where it crosses U.S. Route 20; Westborough, where it crosses Interstate 495; and eventually in the Golden Triangle retail area of Framingham and Natick, after crossing the Massachusetts Turnpike. It passes Shopper's World and the Natick Mall, New England's largest mall.

In Greater Boston (Wellesley – Brookline) edit

 
A bridge carrying Route 9 over Winchester St in Newton, Massachusetts

Beginning in the Golden Triangle, Route 9 becomes one of the major routes into Boston, serving as a valuable bypass to the Mass Pike and its tolls. It crosses Interstate 95 (also known as Massachusetts Route 128) in Wellesley before crossing the Charles River into Newton and Brookline as Boylston Street. It enters the city of Boston by crossing over Brookline's former namesake, the Muddy River, part of the Emerald Necklace. At this point it briefly becomes Washington Street, then Huntington Avenue, also known as "Avenue of the Arts".

Eastern end in Boston edit

Route 9 loses its raised median briefly between its intersection with South Huntington Avenue and Brigham Circle. It passes the Longwood Medical and Academic Area, which includes Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School and other hospitals; the Museum of Fine Arts; and several colleges and universities, including Northeastern. This stretch is also a major site of baseball history; the first game of the 1903 World Series, baseball's first true World Series, was played at the Huntington Avenue Grounds, the original home of the Boston Red Sox. (The site is now part of Northeastern's campus.) The E branch of the MBTA Green Line roughly follows Huntington Avenue underground from Copley Square until it rises above ground at the Northeastern portal.

Route 9 then operates in a dedicated median of Huntington Avenue between Northeastern University and the Brigham Circle stop, where trains begin street running in mixed traffic to a terminus at Heath Street. Route 9 continues past Symphony Hall and The First Church of Christ, Scientist, which is the mother church of Christian Science. It then passes Copley Place and the Prudential Center complex, before splitting, the eastbound half onto Stuart Street, the westbound onto Saint James Avenue, past Copley Square; both the eastbound and westbound segments of Route 9 end at Route 28.

History edit

 
1904 postcard of the Boston and Worcester Street Railway

Route 9 was established in 1933. It took over the alignment of what was Route 115 from Kenmore Square in Boston to Route 22 in North Grafton, part of the original route of US 20 between North Grafton and West Brookfield and the original Route 109 between West Brookfield and US 7 in Pittsfield. Route 9's original route in Boston was along Brookline Avenue from Kenmore Square turning west onto its current path along Boylston Street.[2] Between Worcester and Boston, Route 9 follows the path of the 19th-century Worcester Turnpike, opened in 1810. This route originally included a floating bridge over Lake Quinsigamond in Shrewsbury. From Dalton to Goshen in the Berkshires, the road follows the old Berkshire Trail. The massive expansion of the University of Massachusetts Amherst transformed that part of Route 9 in the late 20th century; this otherwise rural part of the route now has several shops, restaurants, and the mid-sized Hampshire Mall. In the 20th century, Route 9 became the focus for urban sprawl in towns like Newton and Wellesley. Further west, in Framingham, Route 9 was home to one of the first modern shopping malls, the aptly named Shoppers' World.[citation needed]

In Natick, Route 9 is officially the "Ted Williams Highway", named after the Red Sox sports legend Ted Williams, who sported that number.[3] In Newton, it is officially the "United Spanish War Veterans Highway".

From 1903 to 1932, the Boston and Worcester Street Railway ran mostly via Route 9. Today the E branch of the MBTA's Green Line follows Route 9 along Huntington Avenue.[citation needed]

Major intersections edit

CountyLocation[1]mi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
BerkshirePittsfield0.0000.000  US 20 – Lenox, Richmond, Albany, NYWestern terminus
0.3880.624 
 
 
 
 
US 7 south to US 20 east – Lenox, Lee
Western terminus of US 7 concurrency
0.5550.893 
 
US 7 north – Lanesborough, Williamstown
Eastern terminus of US 7 concurrency
3.5925.781 
 
Route 8 north – Cheshire, Adams
Western terminus of Route 8 concurrency
Dalton5.9599.590 
 
Route 8 south – Hinsdale, Becket
 
 
Route 8A begins
Eastern terminus of Route 8 concurrency; southern terminus of Route 8A; western terminus of Route 8A concurrency
Windsor12.21619.660 
 
Route 8A north – Savoy
Eastern terminus of Route 8A concurrency
HampshireCummington21.87435.203 
 
Route 112 south – Worthington
Western terminus of Route 112 concurrency
Goshen28.85046.430 
 
Route 112 north – Ashfield, Buckland
Eastern terminus of Route 112 concurrency
Williamsburg34.13854.940 
 
Route 143 west – Chesterfield, Worthington
Eastern terminus of Route 143
Northampton42.34568.148 
 
Route 66 west – Westhampton
Eastern terminus of Route 66
42.38068.204 
 
Route 10 south – Easthampton, Westfield
Western terminus of Route 10 concurrency
42.65968.653  
 
US 5 / Route 10 north – Holyoke, Springfield, Greenfield
Eastern terminus of Route 10 concurrency
43.72770.372 
 
I-91 south – Holyoke, Springfield
Exit 25 on I-91 north
Connecticut River44.04070.876Calvin Coolidge Bridge
Hadley45.59773.381  Route 47 – South Hadley, Sunderland, Montague
48.35577.820 
 
Route 116 north – University of Massachusetts, Sunderland, South Deerfield
Western terminus of Route 116 concurrency
Amherst49.77480.103 
 
Route 116 south – South Hadley, Holyoke
Eastern terminus of Route 116 concurrency
Belchertown58.70394.473  US 202 – Pelham, Athol, Belchertown Ctr
59.63195.967 
 
Route 21 south – Ludlow, Springfield, Belchertown, Holyoke
Northern terminus of Route 21; road formerly went north before construction of the Quabbin Reservoir
Ware68.966110.990 
 
Route 32 south – Palmer, Monson
Western terminus of Route 32 concurrency
70.565113.563 
 
Route 32 north – Gilbertville, Barre
Eastern terminus of Route 32 concurrency
WorcesterWest Brookfield74.790120.363 
 
 
 
Route 19 south / Route 67 south – Warren, Palmer
Northern terminus of Route 19; western terminus of Route 67 concurrency
75.888122.130 
 
Route 67 north – North Brookfield
Eastern terminus of Route 67 concurrency
Brookfield78.564–
78.596
126.437–
126.488
  Route 148 – Fiskdale, Sturbridge, North Brookfield, Barre30 yards (27 m) concurrency on Route 9
Spencer83.443134.288 
 
 
 
Route 49 south to US 20 – Sturbridge
Northern terminus of Route 49
85.004136.801 
 
Route 31 north – Paxton, Fitchburg
Western terminus of Route 31 concurrency
85.145137.028 
 
Route 31 south – Charlton, Dudley
Eastern terminus of Route 31 concurrency
Leicester90.004144.847  Route 56 – Oxford, Paxton, Rutland
Worcester94.286151.739 
 
Route 12 south – Auburn, Webster
Western terminus of Route 12 concurrency
95.465153.636  
 
Route 122 / Route 122A south – Millbury, Grafton, Paxton, Barre
Western terminus of Route 122A concurrency
96.114154.680 
 
 
 
Route 12 north / Route 122A north – West Boylston, Holden
Eastern terminus of Routes 12 / 122A concurrency
96.983156.079 
 
 
 
 
Route 70 north to I-290 east – Boylston, Clinton, Shrewsbury, Marlboro
Southern terminus of Route 70
97.229156.475 
 
 
 
 
I-290 west to I-395 south – Auburn, Norwich, CT
Exit 21 on I-290
Lake Quinsigamond99.298159.805Kenneth F. Burns Memorial Bridge
Western terminus of the Boston–Worcester Turnpike
Shrewsbury101.571163.463  Route 140 – Shrewsbury, GraftonInterchange via Grafton Street
Northborough103.702166.892  US 20 – Auburn, NorthboroCloverleaf interchange
Westborough105.585169.923  Route 135 – Westboro, Hopkinton, NorthboroInterchange
107.537173.064  Route 30 – Westboro, Southboro, North GraftonInterchange
108.116173.996Computer Drive / Research DriveInterchange
109.070175.531  
 
I-495 to I-90 / Mass Pike – Cape Cod, Lowell
Exits 59A-B on I-495
Southborough111.121178.832  Route 85 – Hopkinton, Milford, Southboro, MarlboroCloverleaf interchange
MiddlesexFramingham112.949181.774 
 
To Route 30 – Worcester, Southboro
Interchange via Pleasant Street Connector
113.759183.077  I-90 / Mass Pike – Springfield, BostonExit 111 on I-90 / Mass Pike
113.60182.82Eastern terminus of the Boston–Worcester Turnpike; western terminus of Worcester Street
116.096186.838 
 
Route 30 west (Edgell Road) / Main Street – Framingham, Southborough
Interchange; western terminus of Route 30 concurrency
117.122188.490 
 
Route 30 east
Interchange; eastern terminus of Route 30 concurrency (westbound)
117.441189.003 
 
  Route 30 east / Route 126 – Framingham, Milford, Wayland, Weston
Interchange; eastern terminus of Route 30 concurrency (eastbound)
118.097190.059Ring RoadShoppers World entrance; eastbound left exit and westbound entrance
Natick118.307190.397Shoppers World DriveShoppers World entrance; westbound exit and eastbound entrance
118.944191.422 
 
 
 
Speen Street to I-90 / Route 30 / Mass Pike – Natick
Interchange
119.957193.052  Route 27 – Natick Center, Sherborn, Cochituate, Wayland, ConcordCloverleaf interchange
NorfolkWellesley122.360196.919Weston Road – Needham, WestonInterchange
124.551200.445  Route 16 – Wellesley Hills, NatickPartial interchange
125.896202.610Cedar Street – Newton Lower Falls, West Newton, Needham, DoverInterchange
126.545203.654   I-95 / Route 128 – Canton, Providence RI, Peabody, Portsmouth NHExits 36A-B on I-95 / Route 128
Charles River126.867204.173Bridge; eastern terminus of Worcester Street; western terminus of Boylston Street
MiddlesexNewton126.984204.361Chestnut Street – Upper Falls, WabanInterchange
127.956205.925Centre Street – Needham, Dedham, Newton CentreInterchange
128.609206.976Parker Street – Newton Centre, West RoxburyInterchange
129.748208.809Hammond Pond Parkway – West Roxbury, Hyde ParkInterchange
SuffolkBoston132.936213.940Jamaicaway south / Riverway north – Dedham, Providence RIInterchange
134.599216.616  Route 2A (Massachusetts Avenue) – Cambridge, RoxburyInterchange
135.028217.307Exeter StreetSplit of eastbound and westbound lanes into Stuart Avenue and Avenue of the Arts
135.055217.350  I-90 / Mass Pike west – New YorkEastbound exit and westbound entrance; Exit 133 on I-90 / Mass Pike
135.310217.760 
 
Route 28 south (Clarendon Street)
Eastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c MassDOT Planning Division. . Massachusetts Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on August 26, 2014. Retrieved September 20, 2014.
  2. ^ Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Department of Public Works, 1932 Road Map and Detour Bulletin.
  3. ^ "Route 9 through the years". Retrieved 2012-08-12.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
  •   Media related to Massachusetts Route 9 at Wikimedia Commons

massachusetts, route, williams, highway, redirects, here, tunnel, boston, williams, tunnel, route, mile, long, major, east, west, state, highway, massachusetts, united, states, along, with, route, route, interstate, route, major, east, west, routes, massachuse. Ted Williams Highway redirects here For the tunnel in Boston see Ted Williams Tunnel Route 9 is a 135 310 mile long 217 760 km major east west state highway in Massachusetts United States Along with U S Route 20 US 20 Route 2 and Interstate 90 Route 9 is one of the major east west routes of Massachusetts The western terminus is near the center of the city of Pittsfield After winding through the small towns along the passes of the Berkshire Mountains it crosses the college towns of the Pioneer Valley and then south of the Quabbin Reservoir and the rural areas of western Worcester County Entering the city of Worcester from the southwestern corner of the city it passes through the center of the city and forms the major commercial thoroughfare through the MetroWest suburbs of Boston parallel to the Massachusetts Turnpike Crossing the Route 128 freeway circling Boston it passes through the inner suburbs of Newton and Brookline along Boylston Street and enters Boston on Huntington Avenue before reaching its eastern terminus at Copley Square Route 9Kneeland StreetWorcester Boston TurnpikeTed Williams HighwayUnited Spanish War Veterans HighwayRoute 9 highlighted in redRoute informationMaintained by MassDOTLength135 310 mi 1 217 760 km Existedby 1933 presentMajor junctionsWest endUS 20 in PittsfieldMajor intersectionsUS 7 in Pittsfield I 91 US 5 in Northampton US 202 in Belchertown I 290 in Worcester US 20 in Northborough I 495 in Westborough I 90 Mass Pike in Framingham I 95 Route 128 in WellesleyEast endRoute 28 in BostonLocationCountryUnited StatesStateMassachusettsCountiesBerkshire Hampshire Worcester Middlesex Norfolk SuffolkHighway systemMassachusetts State Highway System Interstate US State Route 8A Route C9 Contents 1 Route description 1 1 Western end Pittsfield Worcester 1 2 Through Worcester 1 3 In the MetroWest region Worcester Wellesley 1 4 In Greater Boston Wellesley Brookline 1 5 Eastern end in Boston 2 History 3 Major intersections 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksRoute description editRoute 9 passes through six counties and twenty eight cities and towns Western end Pittsfield Worcester edit Route 9 begins in the western Massachusetts city of Pittsfield at U S Route 20 After separating from US 20 it has a brief 2 mile concurrency with U S Route 7 through the center of that city then continues east passing through the towns of Dalton and Windsor wherein the route reaches its highest point at 2033 ft in Berkshire County It continues its winding pass through the small towns of The Berkshires in Berkshire and western Hampshire Counties before passing through the center of Northampton passing Smith College before its first interstate junction at Interstate 91 It then crosses the Connecticut River at the Calvin Coolidge Bridge just downstream from Elwell Island It goes through the retail area of Hadley before passing the University of Massachusetts Amherst and Amherst College From Amherst it wends its way into western Worcester County south of the Quabbin Reservoir through small towns until it makes its way into the city of Worcester Through Worcester edit Once in Worcester Route 9 becomes a major thoroughfare through the city as Park Avenue Highland Street which passes Major Taylor Boulevard before passing over Interstate 290 and Belmont Street where University of Massachusetts Medical School and the former Worcester State Hospital are located At its intersection with McRae Ct it becomes a divided highway with raised median In the MetroWest region Worcester Wellesley edit From Worcester it crosses Lake Quinsigamond into Shrewsbury At this point Route 9 becomes the main retail artery of the MetroWest region Several plazas and chain stores are located along the route as it makes its way towards Northborough where it crosses U S Route 20 Westborough where it crosses Interstate 495 and eventually in the Golden Triangle retail area of Framingham and Natick after crossing the Massachusetts Turnpike It passes Shopper s World and the Natick Mall New England s largest mall In Greater Boston Wellesley Brookline edit nbsp A bridge carrying Route 9 over Winchester St in Newton Massachusetts Beginning in the Golden Triangle Route 9 becomes one of the major routes into Boston serving as a valuable bypass to the Mass Pike and its tolls It crosses Interstate 95 also known as Massachusetts Route 128 in Wellesley before crossing the Charles River into Newton and Brookline as Boylston Street It enters the city of Boston by crossing over Brookline s former namesake the Muddy River part of the Emerald Necklace At this point it briefly becomes Washington Street then Huntington Avenue also known as Avenue of the Arts Eastern end in Boston edit Route 9 loses its raised median briefly between its intersection with South Huntington Avenue and Brigham Circle It passes the Longwood Medical and Academic Area which includes Brigham and Women s Hospital Harvard Medical School and other hospitals the Museum of Fine Arts and several colleges and universities including Northeastern This stretch is also a major site of baseball history the first game of the 1903 World Series baseball s first true World Series was played at the Huntington Avenue Grounds the original home of the Boston Red Sox The site is now part of Northeastern s campus The E branch of the MBTA Green Line roughly follows Huntington Avenue underground from Copley Square until it rises above ground at the Northeastern portal Route 9 then operates in a dedicated median of Huntington Avenue between Northeastern University and the Brigham Circle stop where trains begin street running in mixed traffic to a terminus at Heath Street Route 9 continues past Symphony Hall and The First Church of Christ Scientist which is the mother church of Christian Science It then passes Copley Place and the Prudential Center complex before splitting the eastbound half onto Stuart Street the westbound onto Saint James Avenue past Copley Square both the eastbound and westbound segments of Route 9 end at Route 28 History edit nbsp 1904 postcard of the Boston and Worcester Street Railway Route 9 was established in 1933 It took over the alignment of what was Route 115 from Kenmore Square in Boston to Route 22 in North Grafton part of the original route of US 20 between North Grafton and West Brookfield and the original Route 109 between West Brookfield and US 7 in Pittsfield Route 9 s original route in Boston was along Brookline Avenue from Kenmore Square turning west onto its current path along Boylston Street 2 Between Worcester and Boston Route 9 follows the path of the 19th century Worcester Turnpike opened in 1810 This route originally included a floating bridge over Lake Quinsigamond in Shrewsbury From Dalton to Goshen in the Berkshires the road follows the old Berkshire Trail The massive expansion of the University of Massachusetts Amherst transformed that part of Route 9 in the late 20th century this otherwise rural part of the route now has several shops restaurants and the mid sized Hampshire Mall In the 20th century Route 9 became the focus for urban sprawl in towns like Newton and Wellesley Further west in Framingham Route 9 was home to one of the first modern shopping malls the aptly named Shoppers World citation needed In Natick Route 9 is officially the Ted Williams Highway named after the Red Sox sports legend Ted Williams who sported that number 3 In Newton it is officially the United Spanish War Veterans Highway From 1903 to 1932 the Boston and Worcester Street Railway ran mostly via Route 9 Today the E branch of the MBTA s Green Line follows Route 9 along Huntington Avenue citation needed Major intersections editCountyLocation 1 mi 1 kmDestinationsNotes BerkshirePittsfield0 0000 000 nbsp US 20 Lenox Richmond Albany NYWestern terminus 0 3880 624 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 7 south to US 20 east Lenox LeeWestern terminus of US 7 concurrency 0 5550 893 nbsp nbsp US 7 north Lanesborough WilliamstownEastern terminus of US 7 concurrency 3 5925 781 nbsp nbsp Route 8 north Cheshire AdamsWestern terminus of Route 8 concurrency Dalton5 9599 590 nbsp nbsp Route 8 south Hinsdale Becket nbsp nbsp Route 8A beginsEastern terminus of Route 8 concurrency southern terminus of Route 8A western terminus of Route 8A concurrency Windsor12 21619 660 nbsp nbsp Route 8A north SavoyEastern terminus of Route 8A concurrency HampshireCummington21 87435 203 nbsp nbsp Route 112 south WorthingtonWestern terminus of Route 112 concurrency Goshen28 85046 430 nbsp nbsp Route 112 north Ashfield BucklandEastern terminus of Route 112 concurrency Williamsburg34 13854 940 nbsp nbsp Route 143 west Chesterfield WorthingtonEastern terminus of Route 143 Northampton42 34568 148 nbsp nbsp Route 66 west WesthamptonEastern terminus of Route 66 42 38068 204 nbsp nbsp Route 10 south Easthampton WestfieldWestern terminus of Route 10 concurrency 42 65968 653 nbsp nbsp nbsp US 5 Route 10 north Holyoke Springfield GreenfieldEastern terminus of Route 10 concurrency 43 72770 372 nbsp nbsp I 91 south Holyoke SpringfieldExit 25 on I 91 north Connecticut River44 04070 876Calvin Coolidge Bridge Hadley45 59773 381 nbsp Route 47 South Hadley Sunderland Montague 48 35577 820 nbsp nbsp Route 116 north University of Massachusetts Sunderland South DeerfieldWestern terminus of Route 116 concurrency Amherst49 77480 103 nbsp nbsp Route 116 south South Hadley HolyokeEastern terminus of Route 116 concurrency Belchertown58 70394 473 nbsp US 202 Pelham Athol Belchertown Ctr 59 63195 967 nbsp nbsp Route 21 south Ludlow Springfield Belchertown HolyokeNorthern terminus of Route 21 road formerly went north before construction of the Quabbin Reservoir Ware68 966110 990 nbsp nbsp Route 32 south Palmer MonsonWestern terminus of Route 32 concurrency 70 565113 563 nbsp nbsp Route 32 north Gilbertville BarreEastern terminus of Route 32 concurrency WorcesterWest Brookfield74 790120 363 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Route 19 south Route 67 south Warren PalmerNorthern terminus of Route 19 western terminus of Route 67 concurrency 75 888122 130 nbsp nbsp Route 67 north North BrookfieldEastern terminus of Route 67 concurrency Brookfield78 564 78 596126 437 126 488 nbsp Route 148 Fiskdale Sturbridge North Brookfield Barre30 yards 27 m concurrency on Route 9 Spencer83 443134 288 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Route 49 south to US 20 SturbridgeNorthern terminus of Route 49 85 004136 801 nbsp nbsp Route 31 north Paxton FitchburgWestern terminus of Route 31 concurrency 85 145137 028 nbsp nbsp Route 31 south Charlton DudleyEastern terminus of Route 31 concurrency Leicester90 004144 847 nbsp Route 56 Oxford Paxton Rutland Worcester94 286151 739 nbsp nbsp Route 12 south Auburn WebsterWestern terminus of Route 12 concurrency 95 465153 636 nbsp nbsp nbsp Route 122 Route 122A south Millbury Grafton Paxton BarreWestern terminus of Route 122A concurrency 96 114154 680 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Route 12 north Route 122A north West Boylston HoldenEastern terminus of Routes 12 122A concurrency 96 983156 079 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Route 70 north to I 290 east Boylston Clinton Shrewsbury MarlboroSouthern terminus of Route 70 97 229156 475 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 290 west to I 395 south Auburn Norwich CTExit 21 on I 290 Lake Quinsigamond99 298159 805Kenneth F Burns Memorial BridgeWestern terminus of the Boston Worcester Turnpike Shrewsbury101 571163 463 nbsp Route 140 Shrewsbury GraftonInterchange via Grafton Street Northborough103 702166 892 nbsp US 20 Auburn NorthboroCloverleaf interchange Westborough105 585169 923 nbsp Route 135 Westboro Hopkinton NorthboroInterchange 107 537173 064 nbsp Route 30 Westboro Southboro North GraftonInterchange 108 116173 996Computer Drive Research DriveInterchange 109 070175 531 nbsp nbsp nbsp I 495 to I 90 Mass Pike Cape Cod LowellExits 59A B on I 495 Southborough111 121178 832 nbsp Route 85 Hopkinton Milford Southboro MarlboroCloverleaf interchange MiddlesexFramingham112 949181 774 nbsp nbsp To Route 30 Worcester SouthboroInterchange via Pleasant Street Connector 113 759183 077 nbsp I 90 Mass Pike Springfield BostonExit 111 on I 90 Mass Pike 113 60182 82Eastern terminus of the Boston Worcester Turnpike western terminus of Worcester Street 116 096186 838 nbsp nbsp Route 30 west Edgell Road Main Street Framingham SouthboroughInterchange western terminus of Route 30 concurrency 117 122188 490 nbsp nbsp Route 30 eastInterchange eastern terminus of Route 30 concurrency westbound 117 441189 003 nbsp nbsp nbsp Route 30 east Route 126 Framingham Milford Wayland WestonInterchange eastern terminus of Route 30 concurrency eastbound 118 097190 059Ring RoadShoppers World entrance eastbound left exit and westbound entrance Natick118 307190 397Shoppers World DriveShoppers World entrance westbound exit and eastbound entrance 118 944191 422 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Speen Street to I 90 Route 30 Mass Pike NatickInterchange 119 957193 052 nbsp Route 27 Natick Center Sherborn Cochituate Wayland ConcordCloverleaf interchange NorfolkWellesley122 360196 919Weston Road Needham WestonInterchange 124 551200 445 nbsp Route 16 Wellesley Hills NatickPartial interchange 125 896202 610Cedar Street Newton Lower Falls West Newton Needham DoverInterchange 126 545203 654 nbsp nbsp I 95 Route 128 Canton Providence RI Peabody Portsmouth NHExits 36A B on I 95 Route 128 Charles River126 867204 173Bridge eastern terminus of Worcester Street western terminus of Boylston Street MiddlesexNewton126 984204 361Chestnut Street Upper Falls WabanInterchange 127 956205 925Centre Street Needham Dedham Newton CentreInterchange 128 609206 976Parker Street Newton Centre West RoxburyInterchange 129 748208 809Hammond Pond Parkway West Roxbury Hyde ParkInterchange SuffolkBoston132 936213 940Jamaicaway south Riverway north Dedham Providence RIInterchange 134 599216 616 nbsp Route 2A Massachusetts Avenue Cambridge RoxburyInterchange 135 028217 307Exeter StreetSplit of eastbound and westbound lanes into Stuart Avenue and Avenue of the Arts 135 055217 350 nbsp I 90 Mass Pike west New YorkEastbound exit and westbound entrance Exit 133 on I 90 Mass Pike 135 310217 760 nbsp nbsp Route 28 south Clarendon Street Eastern terminus 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminus Electronic toll collection Incomplete accessGallery edit nbsp Eastbound entering Leicester nbsp Downtown Spencer nbsp Downtown Ware nbsp Eastbound in WindsorSee also edit19th century turnpikes in MassachusettsReferences edit a b c MassDOT Planning Division Massachusetts Route Log Application Massachusetts Department of Transportation Archived from the original on August 26 2014 Retrieved September 20 2014 Commonwealth of Massachusetts Department of Public Works 1932 Road Map and Detour Bulletin Route 9 through the years Retrieved 2012 08 12 External links editKML file edit help Template Attached KML Massachusetts Route 9KML is from Wikidata nbsp Media related to Massachusetts Route 9 at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Massachusetts Route 9 amp oldid 1221764481, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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