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Ontario Highway 62

King's Highway 62, commonly referred to as Highway 62, is a provincially maintained highway in the Canadian province of Ontario. The highway travels south–north from Highway 33 at Bloomfield in Prince Edward County, through Belleville, Madoc and Bancroft, to Maynooth, where it ends at a junction with Highway 127. Prior to 1997, the route continued north and east of Maynooth through Cobermere, Barry's Bay, Killaloe, Round Lake and Bonnechere to Highway 17 in Pembroke. This section of highway was redesignated Hastings Highlands Municipal Road 62, Renfrew County Road 62, and Renfrew County Road 58.

Highway 62

Madoc–Pembroke Road
A map of Highway 62
  Highway 62   Connecting Links
  Former section
Route information
Maintained by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario
Length165.8 km[2] (103.0 mi)
ExistedAugust 11, 1937[1]–present
Major junctions
South end Highway 33 in Bloomfield
Major intersections Highway 401 in Belleville
 Highway 7 in Madoc
 Highway 28 in Bancroft
North end Highway 127 at Maynooth
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceOntario
Highway system

Highway 62 was designated by the Department of Highways (DHO), predecessor to the modern Ministry of Transportation, in 1937 along the Madoc–Pembroke Road between those two communities. A gap existed along the route between Barry's Bay and Round Lake for several decades pending construction of a new road which never took place. The highway was extended south from Madoc to Highway 14 at Foxboro in 1966. Two years later, Highway 521 was renumbered as part of Highway 62, and a concurrency established with Highway 60 between Barry's Bay and Killaloe, uniting the discontinuous sections. In the 1980s, it assumed the route of Highway  14 from Foxboro to Bloomfield, establishing the peak length of the highway at 294.7 km (183.1 mi). The northernmost portion of the route was renumbered Highway 148 in 1982.

Route description edit

 
Highway 62 at Bridge Street in Belleville

Highway 62 begins in the community of Bloomfield at a junction with Highway 33, the Loyalist Parkway, with which it shares a common terminus at Wellington Street. The first 650 metres (2,130 ft) of the road north of that intersection is maintained under a Connecting Link agreement.[3] Exiting Bloomfield, the highway winds north through several communities in Prince Edward County, including Huffs Corners where the Huff Estates Winery is located, Crofton, Mountain View and Fenwood Gardens before crossing the Norris Whitney Bridge over the Bay of Quinte into Belleville. It skirts the CFD Mountain View military base between Crofton and Mountain View.[4]

Within urbanized Belleville, Highway 62 serves as the primary north–south route. It is maintained under a Connecting Link agreement from the northern end of the Norris Whitney Bridge to the southern end of the Highway 401 interchange. The Connecting Link follows Bay Bridge Road, Dundas Street, Pinnacle Street, and Front Street North.[3][5] Prior to crossing the Moira River in downtown Belleville, Highway 62 encounters what was, until 1997, the southern terminus of Highway 37 at Station Street.[6]

After crossing over Highway 401 at the Exit 543 interchange, Highway 62 exits the urban portion of Belleville. It travels straight north until its path is interrupted by the Moira River approaching Foxboro; the highway bypasses to the west of that community along the boundary between Belleville and Quite West, meeting the southern terminus of former Highway 14 at Doucette Road. The former route through Foxboro is known as Ashley Street. Continuing along the bypass, the highway merges onto the Madoc Road at Halloway. Entering the municipality of Centre Hastings approximately 3 km (1.9 mi) north of Halloway, it follows the route of the historic settlement road north to Highway 7 at Madoc, passing through a mixture of farm fields and grasslands; the occasional forest interrupts the shorter vegetation, as well as the communities of West Huntingdon and Crookston.[4][5]

 
Highway 62 passing through Bannockburn

Within the village of Madoc, Highway 62 is maintained under a Connecting Link agreement as it passes through the centre of town. The Connecting Link begins just north of Charles Street and extends to south of Highway 7.[2][3] Now following the Hastings Colonization Road, an early pioneer settlement road,[7] the highway travels straight north into Madoc Township, passing through Eldorado, site of the first gold rush in Ontario.[8] At Keller Bridge, the highway enters the Canadian Shield, with farmland giving way to thick forests and frequent rock outcroppings for the remainder of its length. The next 50 km (30 mi) of Highway 62 bypasses the Hastings Colonization Road through the particularly barren townships of Tudor and Cashel and Limerick, with a combined population of under 1,000.[9][10] Only the communities of Bannockburn and Millbridge break the endless forests.[5]

 
Highway 62 north of Bancroft

Entering the larger rural Town of Bancroft, Highway  62 travels through the community of L'Amable and around the lake of the same name.[4] It enters the village of Bancroft, where it is maintained as a Connecting Link as it meanders alongside the York River. The Connecting Link begins south of Bay Lake Road and stretches 7.7 km (4.8 mi) through the village to Victoria Drive.[2][3] Within the centre of the village, Highway 62 intersects and is briefly concurrent with Highway 28 along Bridge Street, crossing the York River. South of this concurrency, it is known as Mill Street, while north of the concurrency it is known as Hastings Street.[5]

Parting ways with the York River, Highway 62 enters Hastings Highlands and passes through the communities of York River and Birds Creek, which form a continuous stretch of urban development along with the village of Bancroft. The highway then returns to thick forests, although the occasional farm dots the journey north, mostly surrounding the Hickey Settlement. At the Peterson Colonization Road, the highway makes a sharp curve east and enters Maynooth. It ends at the junction with Highway 127, with which it shares a terminus.[2][5] Prior to 1997, Highway 62 continued east and north along what is now known as Hastings Highlands Municipal Road 62, Renfrew County Road 62 and Renfrew County Road 58 via Cobermere, Barry's Bay, Killaloe, Round Lake Centre and Bonnechere to Highway 17 in Pembroke.[11][12]

History edit

 
1937–38 Ontario road map, showing the section of Highway 62 between Barry's Bay and Bonnechere that was never built

Highway 62 was first assumed by the DHO in 1937. On April 1 of that year, the DHO merged with the Department of Northern Development.[13] Following the merger, many new trunk roads through central and northern Ontario were designated as provincial highways. One of these was the Madoc–Pembroke Road, which became Highway 62 on August 11, 1937.[1] Originally, the route followed the Hastings Colonization Road, which was quickly determined to be too rough to upgrade. A new alignment was constructed to the east between Millbridge and L'Amable in the late 1930s. This bypass was opened to traffic on March 22, 1939.[14] Subsequently, the bypassed portion of the highway was decommissioned on April 11.[15]

At the time of its assumption, Highway 62 was split into two segments. The first section travelled from Madoc to Barry's Bay, the second from Pembroke to the community of Bonnechere, on the northwestern shore of Round Lake. It was originally planned to unite these segments by building a new highway mostly following the route of Paugh Lake Road.[note 1][16] This section was never built, and so the two sections of Highway 62 remained separated for a quarter century.[17]

Several changes occurred in the Round Lake area through the 1950s and 1960s. In 1956, Highway 521 was designated by the DHO between Brudenell and the northern segment of Highway 62 at Bonnechere Provincial Park.[18][19][20] Four years later, Highway 62 was extended concurrently along Highway 60 between Barry's Bay and Killaloe and north along Highway 521 to Tramore on the southeast side of Round Lake.[21][22] The remainder of Highway 521, between Tramore and Bonnechere Provincial Park, was renumbered Highway 62 in 1967, reuniting the two sections of the route.[23][24]

 
Animation of highway routes near Pembroke, from 1936 to now

Within Pembroke, Highway 62 initially ended at the intersection of Trafalgar Road and Pembroke Street West.[25] The completion of the Des Allumettes Bridge southeast of Pembroke, in 1957, resulted in the extension of Highway 62 to the Quebec boundary in 1960, almost entirely a concurrency with Highway 17.[26][27][28] In 1966, Highway 62 was extended south of Madoc to Highway 14 at Foxboro when several Hastings County roads were taken over by the DHO on April 1 of that year.[29]

The Norris Whitney Bridge over the Bay of Quinte was opened in December 1982, replacing the original 1891 swing bridge. Portions of the original causeway can still be seen alongside the current structure.[30] Shortly thereafter, by 1984, the section of Highway 14 south of Foxboro to Highway 33 at Bloomfield was renumbered as part of Highway 62.[31] Discussions have been underway since 2017 to build a second bridge, widening the highway from two to four lanes.[32]

As part of a series of budget cuts initiated by premier Mike Harris under his Common Sense Revolution platform in 1995, numerous highways deemed to no longer be of significance to the provincial network were decommissioned and responsibility for the routes transferred to a lower level of government, a process referred to as downloading. Portions of Highway 62 were consequently transferred to local jurisdictions in 1997 and 1998. On April 1, 1997, the section from the Laurentian ValleyKillaloe, Hagarty and Richards boundary east to Highway 17 was transferred to Renfrew County.[11] Renfrew quickly redesignated it as County Road 58.[33] On January 1, 1998, the section northeast of Highway 127 in Maynooth was transferred to Hastings and Renfrew counties. The concurrency with Highway 60 was discontinued as a result of this transfer.[12] Hastings County subsequently transferred its portion of the road to the townships of Monteagle and Bangor, Wicklow and McClure on April 15, 1998.[34][35]

Major intersections edit

The following table lists the major junctions along Highway 62, as noted by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario.[2] 

DivisionLocationkm[2]miDestinationsNotes
Prince EdwardBloomfield0.00.0  Highway 33 east (Loyalist Parkway) – Picton
  County Road 33 west (Loyalist Parkway) – Wellington
Highway 62 southern terminus
 5.33.3  County Road 1 (Scoharie Road)
8.45.2  County Road 4 east – Gilbert Mills
12.47.7  County Road 14 (Burr Road) – Demorestville
Rossmore24.815.4  County Road 28
25.816.0  County Road 3 west
Bay of Quinte25.9–
26.9
16.1–
16.7
Norris Whitney Bridge
Belleville26.916.7Beginning of Belleville Connecting Link agreement
27.517.1Dundas StreetFormerly Highway 2 west; former southern end of Highway 2 concurrency
28.517.7Pinnacle Street / Dundas StreetFormerly Highway 2 east; former northern end of Highway 2 concurrency; Highway 62 follows Pinnacle Street
29.518.3Station Street / Front StreetFormerly Highway 37 north
32.220.0  Highway 401Toronto, KingstonHighway 401 exit 453; end of Belleville Connecting Link agreement
36.722.8Ashley StreetOriginal route of Highway 14
Belleville – Quinte West boundary38.824.1  Municipal Road 5 (Frankford Road) – Frankford, Foxboro
40.124.9  County Road 14 (Foxboro–Stirling Road) – Stirling, FoxboroFormerly Highway 14
HastingsCentre Hastings50.931.6  County Road 8 (Stirling Road / Moira Road) – MoiraWest Huntingdon Station
61.338.1  County Road 38 (Crookston Road) – Campbellford, TweedCrookston
Centre Hastings
(Madoc)
68.542.6Shoreline RoadBeginning of Madoc Connecting Link agreement
70.2–
70.3
43.6–
43.7
  County Road 23 (St. Lawrence Street)Highway 62 follows St. Lawrence Street for 1 block
71.244.2    Highway 7 / TCHPeterborough, PerthEnd of Madoc Connecting Link agreement
Madoc (township)82.251.1  County Road 11 west (Deloro Road)
87.254.2Bannockburn Road – CooperBannockburn
Tudor and Cashel91.156.6Old Hastings Road – MillbridgeOriginal route of Highway 62; Hastings Colonization Road
Limerick119.374.1  County Road 620 west (Coe Hill Road) – OrmsbyFormerly Highway 620 west
Bancroft139.686.7Beginning of Bancroft Connecting Link agreement
142.588.5  Highway 28 west (Sherbourne Street) – LakefieldSouthern end of Highway 28 concurrency
142.788.7  Highway 28 east (Bridge Street) – DenbighNorthern end of Highway 28 concurrency
147.491.6End of Bancroft Connecting Link agreement
Hastings Highlands165.8103.0  Highway 127 north – Whitney
  Highway 62 ends
  County Road 62 begins
Maynooth; Highway 62 northern terminus; Hastings County Road 62 western terminus
Hastings – Renfrew boundaryHastings Highlands – Madawaska Valley boundary195.0121.2  County Road 62 ends
  County Road 62 begins
Hastings County Road 62 western terminus; Renfrew County Road 62 southern terminus
RenfrewMadawaska Valley197.5122.7  County Road 517 south (Dafoe Road)Formerly Highway 517 south
198.2123.2  County Road 515 south (Palmer Road)Combermere; formerly Highway 515 south
215.0133.6  Highway 60 west – Huntsville
  County Road 62 ends
Barry's Bay; Renfrew County Road 62 northern terminus; former southern end of Highway 60 concurrency
Killaloe, Hagarty and Richards238.1147.9  Highway 60 east – Eganville
  County Road 58 begins
  County Road 512 south (Queen Street)
Killaloe; Renfrew County Road 58 southern terminus; former northern end of Highway 60 concurrency; formerly Highway 512 south
Laurentian Valley284.7176.9    Highway 17 / TCHNorth Bay, OttawaFormer Highway 62 northern terminus (1982-1997); former Highway 148 western terminus (1982-1997)
Pembroke289.9180.1  County Road 19 (Boundary Road)
  County Road 58 ends
Pembroke city limits; Renfrew County Road 58 northern terminus
290.7180.6Pembroke StreetFormerly Highway 17 (pre-1982); former Highway 62 northern terminus (1937-1960); former southern end of Highway 17 concurrency (1960-1982); to County Road 42 west
292.2181.6  Highway 41 south (Mackay Street)
  Highway 148 begins
Present-day Highway 148 western terminus; former Highway 62 follows present-day Highway 148
RenfrewLaurentian Valley297.4184.8  County Road 40 east (Greenwood Road)Former southern end of Highway 17 concurrency (1960-1982)
Ottawa River299.2185.9Allumettes Bridge
  R-148 east – GatineauContinuation into Quebec; former Highway 62 northern terminus (1960-1982); formerly Quebec Route 8 (pre-1972)
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
  •       Closed/former
  •       Concurrency terminus
  •       Route transition

References edit

Notes
  1. ^ Some maps mistakenly show the route as complete between Barry's Bay and Pembroke. The official Ontario road map for 1937–1938 lists a distance of 50.2 km (31.2 mi) between Barry's Bay and Alice, while the 1940–1941 map divides the highway into two parts.
Sources
  1. ^ a b "Appendix No. 3 - Schedule of Assumptions and Reversions of Sections of the King's Highway System for the Year Ending March 31, 1938". Annual Report (Report). Department of Highways. March 31, 1938. pp. 80–81. Retrieved February 3, 2021 – via Internet Archive.
  2. ^ a b c d e Ministry of Transportation of Ontario (2008). . Archived from the original on July 6, 2011. Retrieved February 16, 2012.
  3. ^ a b c d Connecting Links Program 2021–22 (PDF) (Report). Ministry of Transportation of Ontario. August 2020. Retrieved May 23, 2021.
  4. ^ a b c Ontario Back Road Atlas (Map). Cartography by MapArt. Peter Heiler. 2010. pp. 34–35, 46, 62. §§ S45–G50. ISBN 978-1-55198-226-7.
  5. ^ a b c d e Google (January 10, 2021). "Highway 62 - Length and Route" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved January 10, 2021.
  6. ^ Ontario Road Map (Map). Cartography by Cartography Section. Ministry of Transportation and Communications. 1974. Belleville inset.
  7. ^ Young, Peter (Autumn 2004). "The Old Hastings Colonization Road". The Country Connection. No. 47. Pinecone Publishing. Retrieved December 30, 2015.
  8. ^ O'Connor, Joe (October 16, 2019). "An Historic Gold Mine in a Tiny Ontario Town Could be the Epicentre of Canada's Next Great Gold Rush". The Financial Post. Retrieved January 12, 2021.
  9. ^ "Census Profile, 2016 Census: Tudor and Cashel, Township". Statistics Canada. 8 February 2017. Retrieved June 15, 2019.
  10. ^ "Census Profile, 2016 Census: Limerick, Township". Statistics Canada. 8 February 2017. Retrieved June 15, 2019.
  11. ^ a b Highway Transfers List (Report). Ministry of Transportation of Ontario. April 1, 1997. p. 7.
  12. ^ a b Highway Transfers List - "Who Does What" (Report). Ministry of Transportation of Ontario. June 20, 2001. pp. 6, 13.
  13. ^ Shragge, John; Bagnato, Sharon (1984). From Footpaths to Freeways. Ontario Ministry of Transportation and Communications, Historical Committee. p. 71. ISBN 0-7743-9388-2.
  14. ^ "Appendix 3 - Schedule of Assumptions and Reversions of Sections". Annual Report (Report). Department of Highways. March 31, 1939. p. 84.
  15. ^ "Appendix 3 - Schedule of Assumptions and Reversions of Sections". Annual Report (Report). Department of Highways. March 31, 1940. p. 93.
  16. ^ Staff Reporter (August 24, 1933). "Program of Road Work in the Ottawa Valley is Announced by Dunlop". Ottawa Citizen. Vol. 48, no. 216. Retrieved January 10, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  17. ^ Ontario Road Map (Map). Cartography by D. Barclay. Ontario Department of Highways. 1938–39. §§ O3–P5. Retrieved November 11, 2021 – via Archives of Ontario.
  18. ^ Ontario Road Map (Map). Cartography by C.P. Robins. Ontario Department of Highways. 1956. §§ O37–P38. Retrieved November 11, 2021 – via Archives of Ontario.
  19. ^ "Ontario Secondary Roads Now Designated 500, 600". Vol. 112, no. 33, 119. The Globe and Mail. February 4, 1956. p. 4. Two new Ontario road numbers appear on the province's 1956 official road map which will be ready for distribution next week. The new numbers are the 500 and 600 series and designate hundreds of miles of secondary roads which are wholly maintained by the Highways Department. More than 100 secondary roads will have their own numbers and signs this year. All of these secondary roads were taken into the province's main highways system because they form important connecting links with the King's Highways
  20. ^ Annual Report (Report). Department of Highways. March 31, 1957. p. 87.
  21. ^ Ontario Road Map (Map). Cartography by C.P. Robins. Ontario Department of Highways. 1960. §§ O37–38. Retrieved November 28, 2021 – via Archives of Ontario.
  22. ^ Ontario Road Map (Map). Cartography by C.P. Robins. Ontario Department of Highways. 1961. §§ O37–38. Retrieved November 28, 2021 – via Archives of Ontario.
  23. ^ Ontario Road Map (Map). Cartography by K.G. Gould. Ontario Department of Highways. 1967. §§ O37–38. Retrieved November 28, 2021 – via Archives of Ontario.
  24. ^ Ontario Road Map (Map). Cartography by Photogrammetry Division. Ontario Department of Highways. 1968. §§ P26–27. Retrieved November 28, 2021 – via Archives of Ontario.
  25. ^ MacGregor Bay, Ontario. Map Sheet 31 F/14b (Map) (1 ed.). 1:25,000. Cartography by Surveys and Mapping Branch. Department of Energy, Mines and Resources. 1974. Retrieved May 23, 2021 – via Scholars GeoPortal.
  26. ^ Adam, Mohammed (January 16, 2012). "Bridge Work for the Capital". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved May 23, 2021.
  27. ^ Ontario Road Map (Map). Cartography by C.P. Robins. Ontario Department of Highways. 1960. Pembroke; Mileage Tables inset. Retrieved November 28, 2021 – via Archives of Ontario.
  28. ^ Ontario Road Map (Map). Cartography by C.P. Robins. Ontario Department of Highways. 1961. Pembroke; Mileage Tables inset. Retrieved November 28, 2021 – via Archives of Ontario.
  29. ^ "Chronology". Annual Report for the Fiscal Year. Department of Highways. March 31, 1967. p. 315. April 1—Hastings County Road between Madoc and Foxboro was assumed as part of King's Highway 62.
  30. ^ "Bay of Quinte Bridges". Community Archives of Belleville and Hastings County. Community Archives of Belleville and Hastings County. Retrieved July 13, 2018.
  31. ^ Ontario Road Map (Map). Cartography by Cartography Section, Surveys and Plans Office. Ministry of Transportation and Communications. 1984–85. §§ G–H27. Retrieved November 28, 2021 – via Archives of Ontario.
  32. ^ Thomas, Mary (December 11, 2017). "Second Norris Whitney Bridge Coming". Quinte News. Quinte Broadcasting Company. Retrieved July 13, 2018.
  33. ^ Boswell, Randy (July 21, 1997). "On A (Back) Road to Ruin?". City. The Ottawa Citizen. p. B3. Retrieved March 13, 2021.
  34. ^ (PDF). The Corporation of the County of Hastings. March 26, 1998. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 14, 2018. Retrieved July 15, 2021.
  35. ^ (PDF). The Corporation of the County of Hastings. March 26, 1998. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 14, 2018. Retrieved July 15, 2021.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
  • Highway 62 - Length and Route
  • Highway 62 Pictures and Information
  • Preliminary Design and Environmental Assessment Study for Highway 62 Norris Whitney Bridge Rehabilitation / Replacement

ontario, highway, king, highway, commonly, referred, highway, provincially, maintained, highway, canadian, province, ontario, highway, travels, south, north, from, highway, bloomfield, prince, edward, county, through, belleville, madoc, bancroft, maynooth, whe. King s Highway 62 commonly referred to as Highway 62 is a provincially maintained highway in the Canadian province of Ontario The highway travels south north from Highway 33 at Bloomfield in Prince Edward County through Belleville Madoc and Bancroft to Maynooth where it ends at a junction with Highway 127 Prior to 1997 the route continued north and east of Maynooth through Cobermere Barry s Bay Killaloe Round Lake and Bonnechere to Highway 17 in Pembroke This section of highway was redesignated Hastings Highlands Municipal Road 62 Renfrew County Road 62 and Renfrew County Road 58 Highway 62Madoc Pembroke RoadA map of Highway 62 Highway 62 Connecting Links Former sectionRoute informationMaintained by the Ministry of Transportation of OntarioLength165 8 km 2 103 0 mi ExistedAugust 11 1937 1 presentMajor junctionsSouth end Highway 33 in BloomfieldMajor intersections Highway 401 in Belleville Highway 7 in Madoc Highway 28 in BancroftNorth end Highway 127 at MaynoothLocationCountryCanadaProvinceOntarioHighway systemOntario provincial highways Current Former 400 series Highway 61 Highway 63 Highway 62 was designated by the Department of Highways DHO predecessor to the modern Ministry of Transportation in 1937 along the Madoc Pembroke Road between those two communities A gap existed along the route between Barry s Bay and Round Lake for several decades pending construction of a new road which never took place The highway was extended south from Madoc to Highway 14 at Foxboro in 1966 Two years later Highway 521 was renumbered as part of Highway 62 and a concurrency established with Highway 60 between Barry s Bay and Killaloe uniting the discontinuous sections In the 1980s it assumed the route of Highway 14 from Foxboro to Bloomfield establishing the peak length of the highway at 294 7 km 183 1 mi The northernmost portion of the route was renumbered Highway 148 in 1982 Contents 1 Route description 2 History 3 Major intersections 4 References 5 External linksRoute description edit nbsp Highway 62 at Bridge Street in Belleville Highway 62 begins in the community of Bloomfield at a junction with Highway 33 the Loyalist Parkway with which it shares a common terminus at Wellington Street The first 650 metres 2 130 ft of the road north of that intersection is maintained under a Connecting Link agreement 3 Exiting Bloomfield the highway winds north through several communities in Prince Edward County including Huffs Corners where the Huff Estates Winery is located Crofton Mountain View and Fenwood Gardens before crossing the Norris Whitney Bridge over the Bay of Quinte into Belleville It skirts the CFD Mountain View military base between Crofton and Mountain View 4 Within urbanized Belleville Highway 62 serves as the primary north south route It is maintained under a Connecting Link agreement from the northern end of the Norris Whitney Bridge to the southern end of the Highway 401 interchange The Connecting Link follows Bay Bridge Road Dundas Street Pinnacle Street and Front Street North 3 5 Prior to crossing the Moira River in downtown Belleville Highway 62 encounters what was until 1997 the southern terminus of Highway 37 at Station Street 6 After crossing over Highway 401 at the Exit 543 interchange Highway 62 exits the urban portion of Belleville It travels straight north until its path is interrupted by the Moira River approaching Foxboro the highway bypasses to the west of that community along the boundary between Belleville and Quite West meeting the southern terminus of former Highway 14 at Doucette Road The former route through Foxboro is known as Ashley Street Continuing along the bypass the highway merges onto the Madoc Road at Halloway Entering the municipality of Centre Hastings approximately 3 km 1 9 mi north of Halloway it follows the route of the historic settlement road north to Highway 7 at Madoc passing through a mixture of farm fields and grasslands the occasional forest interrupts the shorter vegetation as well as the communities of West Huntingdon and Crookston 4 5 nbsp Highway 62 passing through Bannockburn Within the village of Madoc Highway 62 is maintained under a Connecting Link agreement as it passes through the centre of town The Connecting Link begins just north of Charles Street and extends to south of Highway 7 2 3 Now following the Hastings Colonization Road an early pioneer settlement road 7 the highway travels straight north into Madoc Township passing through Eldorado site of the first gold rush in Ontario 8 At Keller Bridge the highway enters the Canadian Shield with farmland giving way to thick forests and frequent rock outcroppings for the remainder of its length The next 50 km 30 mi of Highway 62 bypasses the Hastings Colonization Road through the particularly barren townships of Tudor and Cashel and Limerick with a combined population of under 1 000 9 10 Only the communities of Bannockburn and Millbridge break the endless forests 5 nbsp Highway 62 north of Bancroft Entering the larger rural Town of Bancroft Highway 62 travels through the community of L Amable and around the lake of the same name 4 It enters the village of Bancroft where it is maintained as a Connecting Link as it meanders alongside the York River The Connecting Link begins south of Bay Lake Road and stretches 7 7 km 4 8 mi through the village to Victoria Drive 2 3 Within the centre of the village Highway 62 intersects and is briefly concurrent with Highway 28 along Bridge Street crossing the York River South of this concurrency it is known as Mill Street while north of the concurrency it is known as Hastings Street 5 Parting ways with the York River Highway 62 enters Hastings Highlands and passes through the communities of York River and Birds Creek which form a continuous stretch of urban development along with the village of Bancroft The highway then returns to thick forests although the occasional farm dots the journey north mostly surrounding the Hickey Settlement At the Peterson Colonization Road the highway makes a sharp curve east and enters Maynooth It ends at the junction with Highway 127 with which it shares a terminus 2 5 Prior to 1997 Highway 62 continued east and north along what is now known as Hastings Highlands Municipal Road 62 Renfrew County Road 62 and Renfrew County Road 58 via Cobermere Barry s Bay Killaloe Round Lake Centre and Bonnechere to Highway 17 in Pembroke 11 12 History edit nbsp 1937 38 Ontario road map showing the section of Highway 62 between Barry s Bay and Bonnechere that was never built Highway 62 was first assumed by the DHO in 1937 On April 1 of that year the DHO merged with the Department of Northern Development 13 Following the merger many new trunk roads through central and northern Ontario were designated as provincial highways One of these was the Madoc Pembroke Road which became Highway 62 on August 11 1937 1 Originally the route followed the Hastings Colonization Road which was quickly determined to be too rough to upgrade A new alignment was constructed to the east between Millbridge and L Amable in the late 1930s This bypass was opened to traffic on March 22 1939 14 Subsequently the bypassed portion of the highway was decommissioned on April 11 15 At the time of its assumption Highway 62 was split into two segments The first section travelled from Madoc to Barry s Bay the second from Pembroke to the community of Bonnechere on the northwestern shore of Round Lake It was originally planned to unite these segments by building a new highway mostly following the route of Paugh Lake Road note 1 16 This section was never built and so the two sections of Highway 62 remained separated for a quarter century 17 Several changes occurred in the Round Lake area through the 1950s and 1960s In 1956 Highway 521 was designated by the DHO between Brudenell and the northern segment of Highway 62 at Bonnechere Provincial Park 18 19 20 Four years later Highway 62 was extended concurrently along Highway 60 between Barry s Bay and Killaloe and north along Highway 521 to Tramore on the southeast side of Round Lake 21 22 The remainder of Highway 521 between Tramore and Bonnechere Provincial Park was renumbered Highway 62 in 1967 reuniting the two sections of the route 23 24 nbsp Animation of highway routes near Pembroke from 1936 to now Within Pembroke Highway 62 initially ended at the intersection of Trafalgar Road and Pembroke Street West 25 The completion of the Des Allumettes Bridge southeast of Pembroke in 1957 resulted in the extension of Highway 62 to the Quebec boundary in 1960 almost entirely a concurrency with Highway 17 26 27 28 In 1966 Highway 62 was extended south of Madoc to Highway 14 at Foxboro when several Hastings County roads were taken over by the DHO on April 1 of that year 29 The Norris Whitney Bridge over the Bay of Quinte was opened in December 1982 replacing the original 1891 swing bridge Portions of the original causeway can still be seen alongside the current structure 30 Shortly thereafter by 1984 the section of Highway 14 south of Foxboro to Highway 33 at Bloomfield was renumbered as part of Highway 62 31 Discussions have been underway since 2017 to build a second bridge widening the highway from two to four lanes 32 As part of a series of budget cuts initiated by premier Mike Harris under his Common Sense Revolution platform in 1995 numerous highways deemed to no longer be of significance to the provincial network were decommissioned and responsibility for the routes transferred to a lower level of government a process referred to as downloading Portions of Highway 62 were consequently transferred to local jurisdictions in 1997 and 1998 On April 1 1997 the section from the Laurentian Valley Killaloe Hagarty and Richards boundary east to Highway 17 was transferred to Renfrew County 11 Renfrew quickly redesignated it as County Road 58 33 On January 1 1998 the section northeast of Highway 127 in Maynooth was transferred to Hastings and Renfrew counties The concurrency with Highway 60 was discontinued as a result of this transfer 12 Hastings County subsequently transferred its portion of the road to the townships of Monteagle and Bangor Wicklow and McClure on April 15 1998 34 35 Major intersections editThe following table lists the major junctions along Highway 62 as noted by the Ministry of Transportation of Ontario 2 DivisionLocationkm 2 miDestinationsNotes Prince EdwardBloomfield0 00 0 nbsp Highway 33 east Loyalist Parkway Picton nbsp County Road 33 west Loyalist Parkway WellingtonHighway 62 southern terminus 5 33 3 nbsp County Road 1 Scoharie Road 8 45 2 nbsp County Road 4 east Gilbert Mills 12 47 7 nbsp County Road 14 Burr Road Demorestville Rossmore24 815 4 nbsp County Road 28 25 816 0 nbsp County Road 3 west Bay of Quinte25 9 26 916 1 16 7Norris Whitney Bridge Belleville26 916 7Beginning of Belleville Connecting Link agreement 27 517 1Dundas StreetFormerly Highway 2 west former southern end of Highway 2 concurrency 28 517 7Pinnacle Street Dundas StreetFormerly Highway 2 east former northern end of Highway 2 concurrency Highway 62 follows Pinnacle Street 29 518 3Station Street Front StreetFormerly Highway 37 north 32 220 0 nbsp Highway 401 Toronto KingstonHighway 401 exit 453 end of Belleville Connecting Link agreement 36 722 8Ashley StreetOriginal route of Highway 14 Belleville Quinte West boundary38 824 1 nbsp Municipal Road 5 Frankford Road Frankford Foxboro 40 124 9 nbsp County Road 14 Foxboro Stirling Road Stirling FoxboroFormerly Highway 14 HastingsCentre Hastings50 931 6 nbsp County Road 8 Stirling Road Moira Road MoiraWest Huntingdon Station 61 338 1 nbsp County Road 38 Crookston Road Campbellford TweedCrookston Centre Hastings Madoc 68 542 6Shoreline RoadBeginning of Madoc Connecting Link agreement 70 2 70 343 6 43 7 nbsp County Road 23 St Lawrence Street Highway 62 follows St Lawrence Street for 1 block 71 244 2 nbsp nbsp Highway 7 TCH Peterborough PerthEnd of Madoc Connecting Link agreement Madoc township 82 251 1 nbsp County Road 11 west Deloro Road 87 254 2Bannockburn Road CooperBannockburn Tudor and Cashel91 156 6Old Hastings Road MillbridgeOriginal route of Highway 62 Hastings Colonization Road Limerick119 374 1 nbsp County Road 620 west Coe Hill Road OrmsbyFormerly Highway 620 west Bancroft139 686 7Beginning of Bancroft Connecting Link agreement 142 588 5 nbsp Highway 28 west Sherbourne Street LakefieldSouthern end of Highway 28 concurrency 142 788 7 nbsp Highway 28 east Bridge Street DenbighNorthern end of Highway 28 concurrency 147 491 6End of Bancroft Connecting Link agreement Hastings Highlands165 8103 0 nbsp Highway 127 north Whitney nbsp Highway 62 ends nbsp County Road 62 beginsMaynooth Highway 62 northern terminus Hastings County Road 62 western terminus Hastings Renfrew boundaryHastings Highlands Madawaska Valley boundary195 0121 2 nbsp County Road 62 ends nbsp County Road 62 beginsHastings County Road 62 western terminus Renfrew County Road 62 southern terminus RenfrewMadawaska Valley197 5122 7 nbsp County Road 517 south Dafoe Road Formerly Highway 517 south 198 2123 2 nbsp County Road 515 south Palmer Road Combermere formerly Highway 515 south 215 0133 6 nbsp Highway 60 west Huntsville nbsp County Road 62 endsBarry s Bay Renfrew County Road 62 northern terminus former southern end of Highway 60 concurrency Killaloe Hagarty and Richards238 1147 9 nbsp Highway 60 east Eganville nbsp County Road 58 begins nbsp County Road 512 south Queen Street Killaloe Renfrew County Road 58 southern terminus former northern end of Highway 60 concurrency formerly Highway 512 south Laurentian Valley284 7176 9 nbsp nbsp Highway 17 TCH North Bay OttawaFormer Highway 62 northern terminus 1982 1997 former Highway 148 western terminus 1982 1997 Pembroke289 9180 1 nbsp County Road 19 Boundary Road nbsp County Road 58 endsPembroke city limits Renfrew County Road 58 northern terminus 290 7180 6Pembroke StreetFormerly Highway 17 pre 1982 former Highway 62 northern terminus 1937 1960 former southern end of Highway 17 concurrency 1960 1982 to County Road 42 west 292 2181 6 nbsp Highway 41 south Mackay Street nbsp Highway 148 beginsPresent day Highway 148 western terminus former Highway 62 follows present day Highway 148 RenfrewLaurentian Valley297 4184 8 nbsp County Road 40 east Greenwood Road Former southern end of Highway 17 concurrency 1960 1982 Ottawa River299 2185 9Allumettes Bridge nbsp R 148 east GatineauContinuation into Quebec former Highway 62 northern terminus 1960 1982 formerly Quebec Route 8 pre 1972 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Closed former Concurrency terminus Route transitionReferences editNotes Some maps mistakenly show the route as complete between Barry s Bay and Pembroke The official Ontario road map for 1937 1938 lists a distance of 50 2 km 31 2 mi between Barry s Bay and Alice while the 1940 1941 map divides the highway into two parts Sources a b Appendix No 3 Schedule of Assumptions and Reversions of Sections of the King s Highway System for the Year Ending March 31 1938 Annual Report Report Department of Highways March 31 1938 pp 80 81 Retrieved February 3 2021 via Internet Archive a b c d e Ministry of Transportation of Ontario 2008 Annual Average Daily Traffic AADT counts Archived from the original on July 6 2011 Retrieved February 16 2012 a b c d Connecting Links Program 2021 22 PDF Report Ministry of Transportation of Ontario August 2020 Retrieved May 23 2021 a b c Ontario Back Road Atlas Map Cartography by MapArt Peter Heiler 2010 pp 34 35 46 62 S45 G50 ISBN 978 1 55198 226 7 a b c d e Google January 10 2021 Highway 62 Length and Route Map Google Maps Google Retrieved January 10 2021 Ontario Road Map Map Cartography by Cartography Section Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1974 Belleville inset Young Peter Autumn 2004 The Old Hastings Colonization Road The Country Connection No 47 Pinecone Publishing Retrieved December 30 2015 O Connor Joe October 16 2019 An Historic Gold Mine in a Tiny Ontario Town Could be the Epicentre of Canada s Next Great Gold Rush The Financial Post Retrieved January 12 2021 Census Profile 2016 Census Tudor and Cashel Township Statistics Canada 8 February 2017 Retrieved June 15 2019 Census Profile 2016 Census Limerick Township Statistics Canada 8 February 2017 Retrieved June 15 2019 a b Highway Transfers List Report Ministry of Transportation of Ontario April 1 1997 p 7 a b Highway Transfers List Who Does What Report Ministry of Transportation of Ontario June 20 2001 pp 6 13 Shragge John Bagnato Sharon 1984 From Footpaths to Freeways Ontario Ministry of Transportation and Communications Historical Committee p 71 ISBN 0 7743 9388 2 Appendix 3 Schedule of Assumptions and Reversions of Sections Annual Report Report Department of Highways March 31 1939 p 84 Appendix 3 Schedule of Assumptions and Reversions of Sections Annual Report Report Department of Highways March 31 1940 p 93 Staff Reporter August 24 1933 Program of Road Work in the Ottawa Valley is Announced by Dunlop Ottawa Citizen Vol 48 no 216 Retrieved January 10 2021 via Newspapers com Ontario Road Map Map Cartography by D Barclay Ontario Department of Highways 1938 39 O3 P5 Retrieved November 11 2021 via Archives of Ontario Ontario Road Map Map Cartography by C P Robins Ontario Department of Highways 1956 O37 P38 Retrieved November 11 2021 via Archives of Ontario Ontario Secondary Roads Now Designated 500 600 Vol 112 no 33 119 The Globe and Mail February 4 1956 p 4 Two new Ontario road numbers appear on the province s 1956 official road map which will be ready for distribution next week The new numbers are the 500 and 600 series and designate hundreds of miles of secondary roads which are wholly maintained by the Highways Department More than 100 secondary roads will have their own numbers and signs this year All of these secondary roads were taken into the province s main highways system because they form important connecting links with the King s Highways Annual Report Report Department of Highways March 31 1957 p 87 Ontario Road Map Map Cartography by C P Robins Ontario Department of Highways 1960 O37 38 Retrieved November 28 2021 via Archives of Ontario Ontario Road Map Map Cartography by C P Robins Ontario Department of Highways 1961 O37 38 Retrieved November 28 2021 via Archives of Ontario Ontario Road Map Map Cartography by K G Gould Ontario Department of Highways 1967 O37 38 Retrieved November 28 2021 via Archives of Ontario Ontario Road Map Map Cartography by Photogrammetry Division Ontario Department of Highways 1968 P26 27 Retrieved November 28 2021 via Archives of Ontario MacGregor Bay Ontario Map Sheet 31 F 14b Map 1 ed 1 25 000 Cartography by Surveys and Mapping Branch Department of Energy Mines and Resources 1974 Retrieved May 23 2021 via Scholars GeoPortal Adam Mohammed January 16 2012 Bridge Work for the Capital Ottawa Citizen Retrieved May 23 2021 Ontario Road Map Map Cartography by C P Robins Ontario Department of Highways 1960 Pembroke Mileage Tables inset Retrieved November 28 2021 via Archives of Ontario Ontario Road Map Map Cartography by C P Robins Ontario Department of Highways 1961 Pembroke Mileage Tables inset Retrieved November 28 2021 via Archives of Ontario Chronology Annual Report for the Fiscal Year Department of Highways March 31 1967 p 315 April 1 Hastings County Road between Madoc and Foxboro was assumed as part of King s Highway 62 Bay of Quinte Bridges Community Archives of Belleville and Hastings County Community Archives of Belleville and Hastings County Retrieved July 13 2018 Ontario Road Map Map Cartography by Cartography Section Surveys and Plans Office Ministry of Transportation and Communications 1984 85 G H27 Retrieved November 28 2021 via Archives of Ontario Thomas Mary December 11 2017 Second Norris Whitney Bridge Coming Quinte News Quinte Broadcasting Company Retrieved July 13 2018 Boswell Randy July 21 1997 On A Back Road to Ruin City The Ottawa Citizen p B3 Retrieved March 13 2021 By law 98 21 PDF The Corporation of the County of Hastings March 26 1998 Archived from the original PDF on July 14 2018 Retrieved July 15 2021 By law 98 24 PDF The Corporation of the County of Hastings March 26 1998 Archived from the original PDF on July 14 2018 Retrieved July 15 2021 External links editKML file edit help Template Attached KML Ontario Highway 62KML is from Wikidata Highway 62 Length and Route Highway 62 Pictures and Information Preliminary Design and Environmental Assessment Study for Highway 62 Norris Whitney Bridge Rehabilitation Replacement Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ontario Highway 62 amp oldid 1222749309, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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