fbpx
Wikipedia

U.S. Route 30 in Pennsylvania

U.S. Route 30 (US 30) is a U.S. Highway that runs east–west across the southern part of Pennsylvania, passing through Pittsburgh and Philadelphia on its way from the West Virginia state line east to the Benjamin Franklin Bridge over the Delaware River into New Jersey.

U.S. Route 30

US 30 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by PennDOT, DRPA
Length333 mi[1] (536 km)
Existed1926 (1924 as PA 1; 1913 as Lincoln Highway)–present
Tourist
routes
Exton Bypass Scenic Byway
Major junctions
West end US 30 at West Virginia border near Chester, WV
Major intersections
East end I-676 / US 30 at New Jersey border in Philadelphia
Location
CountryUnited States
StatePennsylvania
CountiesBeaver, Allegheny, Westmoreland, Somerset, Bedford, Fulton, Franklin, Adams, York, Lancaster, Chester, Delaware, Montgomery, Philadelphia
Highway system
PA 29 PA 31
US 1PA 1 PA 2

In Pennsylvania, US 30 runs along or near the transcontinental Lincoln Highway, an auto trail which ran from San Francisco, California, to New York City before the U.S. Routes were designated. Lincoln Highway turned northeast at Philadelphia, however, using present US 1 and its former alignments to cross the Delaware River into Trenton, New Jersey.

Points of interest along US 30 include the Gettysburg Battlefield, Dutch Wonderland, the Flight 93 National Memorial, Fort Ligonier, Westmoreland Mall, Jennerstown Speedway, Idlewild and Soak Zone, and Independence Mall at the Independence National Historical Park.

Route description edit

West Virginia to Pittsburgh edit

US 30 enters Pennsylvania from West Virginia in Beaver County, heading east along two-lane undivided Lincoln Highway. The road passes through rural areas and comes to an intersection with Pennsylvania Route 168 (PA 168) south of Hookstown, where it briefly becomes a divided highway. US 30 continues as an undivided road, turning northeast and then southeast before it comes to a junction with the western terminus of PA 151. The road heads southeast and crosses PA 18 in Harshaville.

The route passes through Raccoon Creek State Park, where it turns south and crosses Raccoon Creek. The road leaves the state park and curves to the southeast.[2][3]

US 30 enters Allegheny County and continues east along Lincoln Highway, reaching Clinton. Here, the route turns to the southeast and comes to an interchange with the PA 576 toll road to the southwest of Pittsburgh International Airport, where the route briefly becomes a divided highway. The road continues southeast and reaches Imperial, where it passes under the Montour Trail.[2][3]

US 30 heads into developed areas, crossing Steubenville Pike, and comes to a partial cloverleaf interchange with the US 22 freeway, where US 30 heads east for a concurrency with US 22 and PA 978 continues southeast. US 22/US 30 run east as a four-lane freeway through suburban areas, coming to a partial cloverleaf interchange with Oakdale Road that serves Hankey Farms. Farther east, the freeway has a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with McKee Road that provides access to Oakdale to the south.[2][3]

From here, US 22/US 30 turn east-northeast and reach an interchange that connects to Old Steubenville Pike, Bayer Road, and Montour Church Road. The freeway comes to an interchange with I-376, where US 22/US 30 head southeast concurrent with I-376 and PA 60 continues east (south) at-grade along a four-lane divided highway.[2][3]

I-376/US 22/US 30 head southeast as the four-lane Penn-Lincoln Parkway, reaching an interchange with Ridge Road. The freeway comes to a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with Campbells Run Road, where it widens to six lanes. The highway curves to the east and meets I-79 at an interchange. Past this interchange, I-376/US 22/US 30 narrows to two lanes eastbound and head into Rosslyn Farms, turning southeast and coming to a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with Rosslyn Road that serves Rosslyn Farms.[2][3]

The freeway crosses into Carnegie and reaches a bus-only eastbound exit and westbound entrance connecting to the PRT's West Busway before passing over a Pittsburgh and Ohio Central Railroad line. The highway passes over Chartiers Creek and another Pittsburgh and Ohio Central Railroad line as it leaves Carnegie and comes to the PA 50 interchange. I-376/US 22/US 30 narrows to four lanes, passing under a Wheeling and Lake Erie Railway line and curving northeast into Green Tree.[2][3]

The freeway reaches the PA 121 interchange, where it gains a third westbound lane, and heads east, entering Pittsburgh and coming to a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with Parkway Center Drive. The highway turns north and reaches a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with US 19, where US 19 joins I-376/US 22/US 30 on the Penn-Lincoln Parkway. Within this interchange, the road has an eastbound runaway truck ramp and passes under a ramp carrying both directions of US 19 Truck.[2]

The freeway widens to six lanes and passes under a Wheeling and Lake Erie Railway line before reaching an interchange with PA 51, where US 19 Truck joins the Penn-Lincoln Parkway from PA 51 and US 19 splits from the Penn-Lincoln Parkway by heading north along with PA 51. Past this interchange, I-376/US 22/US 30/US 19 Truck narrows to four lanes and passes under Mount Washington in the Fort Pitt Tunnel.[2][3]

 
US 30 westbound concurrent with I-376 and US 22 on the Penn-Lincoln Parkway in Pittsburgh

After emerging from the Fort Pitt Tunnel, the freeway passes over Norfolk Southern's Mon Line and PA 837, coming to a westbound exit and eastbound entrance that connects to northbound PA 837. The Penn-Lincoln Parkway heads onto the Fort Pitt Bridge, a double-decker bridge carrying four lanes in each direction, and passes over CSX's Pittsburgh Subdivision railroad line and the Monongahela River as it heads into Downtown Pittsburgh at Point State Park and comes to an interchange with the southern terminus of I-279, where US 19 Truck heads north along I-279 and I-376/US 22/US 30 continue east along the Penn-Lincoln Parkway. The I-279 interchange also includes eastbound exits and westbound entrances with Boulevard of the Allies/Liberty Avenue and Fort Duquesne Boulevard that serve Downtown Pittsburgh.[2][3]

The four-lane freeway heads east-southeast between Downtown Pittsburgh to the north and the Monongahela River to the south, reaching a partial interchange with Stanwix Street with no eastbound exit. The highway heads under the Smithfield Street Bridge and comes to an interchange with Grant Street, where it widens to six lanes. I-376/US 22/US 30 pass under the Panhandle Bridge carrying PRT's Pittsburgh Light Rail line and then the Liberty Bridge before the lanes split as it reaches a westbound ramp to Second Avenue north of the South Tenth Street Bridge and south of the Duquesne University campus.[2][3]

Past this, the highway continues east between urban areas to the north and the Monongahela River to the south, with the Three Rivers Heritage Trail in the median. The freeway comes to an interchange connecting to PA 885 and Forbes Avenue north of the Birmingham Bridge, at which point the trail leaves the median of the freeway and the river heads further south from the freeway. I-376/US 22/US 30 head southeast, with the Three Rivers Heritage Trail parallel to the south, and reaches a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with PA 885. The highway turns east away from the trail and passes over the Allegheny Valley Railroad's P&W Subdivision line.[2][3]

The freeway comes to an interchange with Beechwood Boulevard before it narrows to four lanes and passes under the southern portion of Squirrel Hill in the Squirrel Hill Tunnel. Past the tunnel, I-376/US 22/US 30 head through wooded areas and pass over Ninemile Run in Frick Park. The highway leaves Pittsburgh as it comes to an interchange with Braddock Avenue that serves Edgewood and Swissvale. The freeway continues east through suburban areas in Edgewood, passing under Norfolk Southern's Pittsburgh Line and the PRT's Martin Luther King Jr. East Busway.[2][3]

I-376/US 22/US 30 turn to the northeast and head through a corner of Braddock Hills before entering Wilkinsburg. In Wilkinsburg, the freeway comes to an interchange with the southern terminus of PA 8, where US 30 splits from I-376/US 22 on the Penn-Lincoln Parkway by heading southeast at-grade on Ardmore Boulevard.[2][3]

Pittsburgh to Breezewood edit

 
US 30 eastbound in North Huntingdon Township

US 30 follows Ardmore Boulevard, a five-lane divided highway with two eastbound lanes and three westbound lanes, and enters Forest Hills, running through suburban development as it curves to the south. The road narrows to two westbound lanes before it curves to the southeast. The route turns to the south-southeast and passes through the center of Forest Hills.

US 30 gains a third eastbound lane before it skirts the border between North Braddock to the west and Chalfant to the east as it comes to an eastbound exit and westbound entrance with Electric Avenue. Past this interchange, the route becomes four-lane undivided Lincoln Highway and heads south, crossing into East Pittsburgh. The road crosses over Bessemer Avenue on a bridge before it curves southeast and heads onto the George Westinghouse Bridge, where it passes over Braddock Avenue, a Union Railroad line, Norfolk Southern's Pittsburgh Line, Turtle Creek, and Norfolk Southern's Port Perry Branch.

After passing over Turtle Creek, US 30 leaves East Pittsburgh, turning into a divided highway and passing over East Pittsburgh McKeesport Boulevard. The route comes to an interchange with Greensburg Pike and becomes undivided before it enters East McKeesport as Greensburg Avenue. Here, the road turns northeast, curving east and intersecting the northern terminus of PA 148. US 30 runs east-southeast as it leaves East McKeesport and continues along Lincoln Highway. Along this stretch, the route briefly becomes a divided highway at intersections with Luehm Avenue and PA 48.[2][3]

US 30 enters Westmoreland County in the Laurel Highlands region and continues south along four-lane undivided Lincoln Highway, curving southeast and passing through Stewartsville. The road briefly becomes a divided highway at intersections with Leger Road/Carpenter Lane and Center Highway/Robbins Station Road. The route turns to the east and comes to an eastbound exit and entrance with Main Street in Fairmont before entering Irwin.[2][3]

US 30 gains a center left-turn lane before it leaves Irwin and becomes a four-lane divided highway as it comes to the Irwin interchange with the Pennsylvania Turnpike (I-76). Past this interchange, the median turns into a center left-turn lane.[2][3]

US 30 runs along the southern border of Adamsburg and becomes a divided highway as it reaches an interchange with Edna Road serving Adamsburg. The road becomes five lanes with a center left-turn lane and passes through Lincoln Heights and running along the southern border of Jeannette.[2][3]

Past Jeannette, US 30 curves southeast and turns into a four-lane divided highway, coming to an interchange with the PA 66 toll road. After this interchange, the route briefly widens to six lanes before curving east and becoming a five-lane road with a center left-turn lane, turning into a four-lane divided highway as it passes south of the Greengate Centre shopping center and comes to a bridge over the Southwest Pennsylvania Railroad's Radebaugh Subdivision line.[2][3]

US 30 becomes a freeway that bypasses Greensburg to the south and curves southeast, reaching an eastbound exit and westbound entrance with West Pittsburgh Street. The road enters Greensburg and comes to a partial cloverleaf interchange with PA 136. The route runs along the southwest border of Southwest Greensburg and reaches a partial cloverleaf interchange with US 119/PA 819/PA 66 Bus.[2][3]

Past this interchange, US 30 passes over the Southwest Pennsylvania Railroad's Greensburg Industrial Track line and the Five Star Trail, at which point it heads through a section of South Greensburg before it comes to a right-in/right-out interchange with Cedar Street. At this point, the freeway curves northeast, reaching a diamond interchange with Mt. Pleasant Road. The road passes through a section of Greensburg and comes to an eastbound exit and westbound entrance with PA 130. A short distance later, the freeway section ends at westbound exit and eastbound entrance with East Pittsburgh Street to the east of Greensburg.[2][3]

US 30 heads east as the six-lane, divided Lincoln Highway and reaches an interchange serving the Westmoreland Mall to the south of the road. The road narrows to four lanes and continues east-southeast. Farther east, the route runs through rural areas with some development, passing to the north of Arnold Palmer Regional Airport as it widens to six lanes and comes to an intersection with PA 981 to the south of Latrobe.

US 30 narrows to four lanes before it reaches a cloverleaf interchange with PA 982 that provides access to Latrobe to the north and Youngstown to the south. The median of the road widens and the westbound lanes cross the Loyalhanna Creek, at which point the Loyalhanna Creek runs in the median of US 30. The route comes to an intersection with the southern terminus of PA 217. Past this intersection, US 30 winds southeast through a gap in Chestnut Ridge, with the eastbound lanes crossing the Loyalhanna Creek.

At this point, the road heads east as a four-lane divided highway with the Loyalhanna Creek parallel to the south, passing to the north of the Idlewild and Soak Zone amusement park. The median widens again and the route intersects the southern terminus of PA 259 in Millbank. US 30 curves south and turns to the east. The road curves southeast and the median narrows, at which point it heads along the southwest border of Ligonier as a four-lane divided highway. The route crosses PA 711 and passes to the south of Fort Ligonier. US 30 leaves Ligonier and narrows to a two-lane undivided road, intersecting the northern terminus of PA 381. The route passes through the Laughlintown and runs along the southern border of Laurel Mountain. Past the Laurel Mountain, the road ascends Laurel Hill and comes to a westbound runaway truck ramp. Further up the hill, the route reaches a westbound truck brake check station and briefly becomes a divided highway through a sharp turn before it comes to another westbound truck brake check station.[2][3]

 
US 30 westbound in West Providence Township in Bedford County

At the summit of Laurel Hill, US 30 enters Somerset County and begins to descend the hill along two-lane undivided Lincoln Highway, passing through a section of Laurel Ridge State Park where it crosses the Laurel Highlands Hiking Trail. After descending the hill, the road runs east-southeast. The route enters Jennerstown and becomes West Pitt Street. US 30 intersects PA 985 and becomes East Pitt Street.[2][3]

The road leaves Jennerstown and becomes the Lincoln Highway again. The route heads through Jenners Crossroads before it has a junction with PA 601 in Ferrellton. US 30 briefly becomes a four-lane divided highway as it comes to an interchange with the US 219 freeway.[2][3]

Past this interchange, the route becomes a two-lane undivided road again and winds southeast. The road runs along the southwest border of Stoystown and passes under Somerset Street before it reaches an interchange with the northern terminus of PA 281.[2][3]

Past Stoystown, US 30 crosses the Stonycreek River and intersects the southern terminus of PA 403 before it comes to a bridge over CSX's S&C Subdivision railroad line. The route comes to the entrance road to the Flight 93 National Memorial to the south. The road runs through Buckstown and passes north of Indian Lake before it reaches an intersection with PA 160 in Reels Corner. US 30 continues east-southeast and passes to the north of the Stony Creek Wind Farm before it begins to ascend Allegheny Mountain, winding to the east. Approaching the summit of the mountain, the road comes to an eastbound truck brake check station.[2][3]

US 30 leaves the Laurel Highlands region as it crosses into Bedford County and reaches the summit of Allegheny Mountain, where it turns north-northeast and begins to descend the mountain. The road makes a hairpin turn to the southeast and winds east, coming to an eastbound truck brake check station as it continues to descend. The route heads east-northeast and enters Schellsburg, where US 30 becomes Pitt Street and crosses PA 96.[2][3]

Upon leaving Schellsburg, the road becomes the Lincoln Highway again and passes north of Shawnee State Park, curving southeast and then east. The route passes under the Pennsylvania Turnpike (I-70/I-76) before intersecting the eastern terminus of PA 31.[2][3]

US 30 heads east-northeast a short distance to the south of the Pennsylvania Turnpike and reaches a junction with the eastern terminus of PA 56 before it curves southeast and crosses the Raystown Branch Juniata River in Wolfsburg. The route runs south and comes to an intersection with the western terminus of US 30 Bus., at which point US 30 becomes a four-lane freeway that bypasses Bedford to the north.[2][3]

US 30 heads southeast and reaches a cloverleaf interchange with the US 220 freeway. The freeway crosses the Raystown Branch Juniata River and runs to the north of the river, passing over US 220 Bus. The route leaves Bedford and crosses the river again before it comes to a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with the eastern terminus of US 30 Bus., where the freeway section ends and US 30 becomes four-lane divided Lincoln Highway.[2][3]

 
View east along the non-freeway portion of I-70 and west along US 30 in Breezewood

US 30, the Raystown Branch Juniata River, and the Pennsylvania Turnpike pass southeast through the Bedford Narrows, a gap in Evitts Mountain. Here, US 30 intersects the northern terminus of PA 326 and curves northeast, crossing over the river and under the turnpike. The route becomes a five-lane road with a center left-turn lane, curving east. The road turns into a four-lane divided highway and has interchanges with Pennknoll Road, where it passes south of UPMC Bedford hospital, and Lutzville Road. US 30 continues east and southeast and passes east through a gap in Tussey Mountain. The route has an eastbound exit and westbound entrance with the western terminus of US 30 Bus., where it becomes a freeway that bypasses Everett to the north. The freeway turns north between the mountain the west and Everett to the east before it turns east and passes over PA 26 prior to an interchange with the Bud Shuster Bypass that connects to PA 26. The freeway section of US 30 ends at an intersection with the eastern terminus of US 30 Bus. east of Everett, where US 30 becomes four-lane divided Lincoln Highway. The road curves southeast as it runs north of the Raystown Branch Juniata River. The route crosses the river and winds east, heading into Breezewood, where it passes several businesses and comes to an at-grade intersection with I-70. At this point, I-70 joins US 30 in a wrong-way concurrency on a non–limited access section of Interstate Highway that has two eastbound lanes, three westbound lanes, and a center left-turn lane before the road comes to an interchange with the Pennsylvania Turnpike, where I-70 splits from US 30 and heads west along with I-76 on the turnpike. From here, US 30 narrows to a two-lane undivided road and crosses the Abandoned Pennsylvania Turnpike before it heads northeast into rural areas and climbs Rays Hill, gaining a second eastbound lane and passing over the Pennsylvania Turnpike (I-76).[2][3]

Breezewood to Lancaster edit

At the summit of Rays Hill, US 30 enters Fulton County and descends the hill as two-lane undivided Lincoln Highway, with the Pennsylvania Turnpike parallel to the north. The route turns east away from the turnpike and comes to an intersection with PA 915, at which point PA 915 heads east for a concurrency with US 30. The road heads into the Buchanan State Forest, with PA 915 splitting to the north. US 30 ascends Sideling Hill and reaches the summit, where it comes to an eastbound truck brake check station. At this point, the road begins to descend Sideling Hill, winding east. Along the descent, the roadway comes to two truck brake check stations and two runaway truck ramps in the eastbound direction. The route leaves the state forest and heads southeast, passing through the Saluvia. US 30 curves east-southeast and comes to an intersection with PA 655 in Harrisonville. The road turns southeast in Breezy Point and ascends Scrub Ridge. The route comes to a westbound truck brake check station before it reaches Summit, where it heads south to descend Scrub Ridge. US 30 continues south and briefly becomes a divided highway as it intersects Lincoln Way, where it turns into a two-lane expressway that bypasses McConnellsburg to the north. The road makes a hairpin turn to the northeast and gains a second westbound lane. The route curves east and comes to a diamond interchange with US 522 that serves McConnellsburg, where it becomes a four-lane divided expressway. Past this interchange, the expressway becomes a three-lane undivided road with two eastbound lanes and one westbound lane, turning to the south-southeast. US 30 becomes a divided highway and intersects Lincoln Way again, where the expressway section ends. The route becomes a three-lane undivided road with two eastbound lanes and one westbound lane as it ascends Tuscarora Mountain. The road narrows to two lanes as it continues to climb the mountain and follow a winding alignment.[2][3]

 
US 30 eastbound past PA 416 in St. Thomas Township

At the summit of Tuscarora Mountain, US 30 enters Franklin County and curves northeast to descend the mountain. The road comes to an eastbound truck brake check station as it winds northeast and reaches an eastbound runaway truck ramp and gains a westbound truck lane. The route curves to the east-southeast and narrows to two lanes. At the bottom of the mountain, US 30 enters the Cumberland Valley and becomes Lincoln Way West, briefly turning into a divided highway as it reaches an intersection with PA 75. The road becomes undivided again and heads to the south of Fort Loudon. The route continues east-northeast through rural areas in the valley, intersecting the northern terminus of PA 416 and passing through St. Thomas. US 30 gains a center left-turn lane, crossing Back Creek. Farther east, the road has a junction with the northern terminus of PA 995 before it enters Chambersburg. At this point, the route runs through developed areas and splits into the one-way pair of West Loudon Street eastbound and Lincoln Way West westbound, with West Loudon Street a two-way, two-lane road and Lincoln Way West carrying two lanes of one-way traffic. US 30 crosses the Conococheague Creek and the Chambersburg Rail-Trail, with the eastbound direction shifting to West Queen Street, which carries two lanes of one-way traffic. The route heads into downtown Chambersburg and intersects US 11, which is routed on the one-way pair of Main Street southbound and 2nd Street northbound. Westbound US 30 meets southbound US 11 at Memorial Square, which features a fountain in the middle of the intersection. Upon crossing southbound US 11, US 30 becomes East Queen Street eastbound and Lincoln Way East westbound, crossing under Norfolk Southern's Lurgan Branch railroad line before both directions of US 30 rejoin on Lincoln Way East, a three-lane road with a center left-turn lane. The road runs east and passes south of WellSpan Chambersburg Hospital before it widens to five lanes as it comes to an interchange with I-81 on the eastern border of Chambersburg. Past this interchange, the route heads through Stoufferstown as a four-lane divided highway, soon becoming a five-lane road with a center left-turn lane. US 30 narrows to three lanes as it continues through a mix of rural areas and development, passing south of Fayetteville before it forms a short concurrency with PA 997 upon intersecting that route in Greenwood. The road leaves the Cumberland Valley as it heads into the Michaux State Forest, where it crosses South Mountain. The route passes south of Caledonia State Park and becomes a three-lane road with two eastbound lanes and one westbound lane, crossing the Appalachian Trail. US 30 briefly becomes four lanes before it loses the second lane eastbound and intersects PA 233, where it turns into a three-lane road with a center left-turn lane.[2][3]

 
US 30 eastbound past PA 94 in Cross Keys

US 30 enters Adams County and becomes Chambersburg Road, continuing east through Cashtown Gap in South Mountain. The road becomes three lanes with two eastbound lanes and one westbound lane before it turns back to a three-lane road with a center left-turn lane. The route intersects the western terminus of PA 234. US 30 continues east with one eastbound lane and two westbound lanes before narrowing to a two-lane road. The route curves southeast in Hilltown and gains a center left-turn lane. The road passes through McKnightstown, where it narrows to two lanes. US 30 crosses CSX's Hanover Subdivision railroad line at-grade in Seven Stars. The route heads to the north of Gettysburg Regional Airport and passes through Stremmels before it runs through a section of Gettysburg National Military Park. US 30 enters Gettysburg and becomes Buford Avenue, passing north of the United Lutheran Seminary as it heads into developed areas and turns east onto Chambersburg Street. The route continues into downtown Gettysburg and meets US 15 Bus./PA 116 at Lincoln Square, a traffic circle. At this point, US 30 heads east concurrent with PA 116 on York Street, with PA 116 splitting to the east and US 30 continuing northeast along York Street. The route leaves Gettysburg upon crossing Rock Creek and becomes York Road, a three-lane road with a center left-turn lane, with CSX's Hanover Subdivision parallel to the northwest. The road turns into a four-lane divided highway as it comes to an interchange with the US 15 freeway. US 30 continues east-northeast as a three-lane road with a center left-turn lane through a mix of rural areas and development, passing through Guldens. The route curves east and briefly gains a second westbound lane before heading through Brush Run. The road narrows to two lanes and crosses the South Branch Conewago Creek, where the name changes to Lincoln Way West. US 30 enters New Oxford, crossing CSX's Hanover Subdivision at-grade and meeting Carlisle Street/Hanover Street at the New Oxford Town Square, a traffic circle. The route becomes Lincoln Way East before it leaves New Oxford, where it turns into York Road and gains a center left-turn lane. The road crosses PA 94 in Cross Keys and gains a second westbound lane further east before it reaches Abbottstown. Upon entering Abbottstown, US 30 becomes two-lane West King Street, meeting PA 194 at the Abbottstown Square traffic circle, before it continues along East King Street.[2][3]

Upon crossing Beaver Creek, US 30 leaves Abbottstown and heads into York County. The route follows Lincoln Highway, a three-lane road with a center left-turn lane. The road curves to the northeast and passes through Farmers, where it bends to the east-northeast. US 30 heads to the north of York Airport before it reaches Thomasville, where it narrows to two lanes and crosses a York Railway line at-grade. The route gains a center left-turn lane and passes through more developed areas. The road widens to a four-lane divided highway and reaches an intersection with the eastern terminus of PA 116. US 30 heads east-northeast as West Market Street, a five-lane road with a center left-turn lane, and turns into a four-lane divided highway as it comes to a junction with the northern terminus of PA 616. Past this intersection, US 30 splits from West Market Street at a trumpet interchange by heading north onto a four-lane freeway, with PA 462 continuing east along West Market Street towards York. The freeway passes over a York Railway line and curves northeast, passing under PA 234. The route continues northeast and comes to a diamond interchange with PA 74 in a business area north of West York, with the West Manchester Town Center shopping center located northwest of the interchange. US 30 widens to six lanes before the freeway section ends, with US 30 becoming a six-lane divided highway with at-grade intersections called Loucks Road that passes development. The road enters York and curves east. The route leaves the York and crosses Susquehanna Trail/11th Avenue, where the name changes to Arsenal Road, before it reaches an intersection with I-83 Bus. and the southern terminus of PA 181 north of North York. US 30 comes to a partial cloverleaf interchange with I-83, where it narrows to four lanes, before it passes over Codorus Creek and the York County Heritage Rail Trail and then Norfolk Southern's York Secondary railroad line. The route continues east, turning into an unnamed four-lane freeway and reaching an interchange with Memory Lane that serves East York. The freeway reaches a partial cloverleaf interchange with PA 24 south of the York Galleria shopping mall. US 30 continues east-northeast and passes north of the Haines Shoe House as it heads into rural areas, coming to a diamond interchange with Kreutz Creek Road that provides access to PA 462 and Hallam to the south. The freeway reaches a diamond interchange at Cool Springs Road, which heads south to connect to PA 462 and Wrightsville.[2][3]

 
US 30 eastbound at the Harrisburg Pike interchange in Lancaster

US 30 crosses the Susquehanna River on the Wright's Ferry Bridge into Lancaster County, where it heads into Columbia and passes over Norfolk Southern's Port Road Branch railroad line and the Northwest Lancaster County River Trail before coming to an interchange with PA 441 that serves Columbia; the Turkey Hill Experience is located south of this interchange. From here, the freeway heads northeast and curves to the southeast. The route leaves Columbia and turns east, coming to a diamond interchange with Prospect Road. US 30 passes through Mountville before it reaches a diamond interchange with Stony Battery Road that serves Mountville. The freeway runs east-northeast through suburban development, coming to a partial cloverleaf interchange with Centerville Road. The route turns northeast and crosses under PA 23. US 30 curves east as it reaches a diamond interchange with PA 741. The freeway widens to six lanes before it curves northeast and crosses the Little Conestoga Creek. The route comes to an interchange with Harrisburg Pike, at which point it enters Lancaster and narrows to four lanes with an auxiliary lane in each direction, passing southeast of the Park City Center shopping mall that is served by the Harrisburg Pike interchange. US 30 leaves Lancaster as it passes over Amtrak's Keystone Corridor and Norfolk Southern's Lititz Secondary railroad lines, reaching an eastbound exit and westbound entrance with PA 72. The route comes to an interchange with the eastern terminus of the PA 283 freeway. At this point, the US 30 freeway widens to six lanes and turns east as it becomes paralleled by a pair of frontage roads called Chester Road eastbound and York Road westbound. The frontage roads serve the interchanges at Fruitville Pike, PA 501, and US 222/PA 272 to the north of Lancaster. Past the US 222/PA 272 interchange, the frontage roads end and US 222 heads east concurrent with US 30 on the freeway before US 222 splits northeast on a freeway at a trumpet interchange. From here, US 30 continues southeast as a four-lane freeway with an auxiliary lane in each direction, coming to a diamond interchange with PA 23 at New Holland Pike. At this point, PA 23 joins US 30 in a wrong-way concurrency, with the freeway crossing the Conestoga River before PA 23 splits to the southwest at a partial cloverleaf interchange. US 30 runs through a section of Lancaster before it meets Greenfield Road at a partial cloverleaf interchange; Greenfield Road provides access to the Discover Lancaster Visitors Center. The freeway curves to the south-southeast, passing over Norfolk Southern's New Holland Secondary and Amtrak's Keystone Corridor railroad lines before coming to a partial interchange with PA 340 that has no westbound exit. US 30 continues as a four-lane freeway with an eastbound auxiliary lane before the freeway section ends at an interchange with the eastern terminus of PA 462 to the east of Lancaster.[2][3]

Lancaster to New Jersey edit

 
US 30 westbound in East Lampeter Township to the east of Lancaster

Past the interchange with the eastern terminus of PA 462, US 30 heads east-southeast along Lincoln Highway, a five-lane road with a center left-turn lane, passing through Greenland.[2][3] The route heads into the Pennsylvania Dutch Country of eastern Lancaster County and is lined with many Amish tourist attractions.[4][5] The road crosses Mill Creek and heads north of the Tanger Outlets Lancaster outlet mall and south of the Dutch Wonderland amusement park. US 30 passes south of the American Music Theatre and runs between two shopping centers before it reaches an intersection with PA 896. Past this intersection, the route narrows to a three-lane road with a center left-turn lane and heads through agricultural areas with some development, passing through Soudersburg. US 30 crosses the Pequea Creek and runs through Paradise before it comes to a bridge over Amtrak's Keystone Corridor railroad line. From here, the route continues east-southeast a short distance to the north of the Amtrak line. The road closely parallels the railroad tracks as it heads through Kinzers. The Amtrak line diverges to the south east of here. The route splits into a one-way pair, with two lanes in each direction, as it reaches Gap and comes to an intersection with the eastern terminus of PA 772. US 30 continues along the one-way pair, with both directions rejoining at a junction with the northern terminus of PA 41. Past the PA 41 junction, the route is a four-lane divided highway that soon turns into a three-lane road with a center left-turn lane, intersecting the southern terminus of PA 897. The road leaves Gap and turns into a three-lane road two eastbound lanes and one westbound lane as it ascends a hill. Farther east, the route becomes three lanes with a center left-turn lane.[2][3]

 
US 30 freeway westbound on the Exton Bypass past US 202 and US 30 Bus. in Frazer

US 30 enters Chester County and continues east along Lincoln Highway, passing through Black Horse. The route turns into a four-lane undivided road and comes to an intersection with PA 10 north of Parkesburg, where it becomes a divided highway. US 30 splits from Lincoln Highway at an eastbound exit and westbound entrance by heading onto a four-lane freeway called the Coatesville Downingtown Bypass, with US 30 Bus. continuing east along Lincoln Highway. The freeway heads east, crossing Buck Run and coming to a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with Airport Road that provides access to Chester County G. O. Carlson Airport. Following this, the route runs east-northeast through a mix of rural areas and suburban development. US 30 heads into Coatesville and crosses the West Branch Brandywine Creek before it comes to a partial cloverleaf interchange with PA 82 that provides access to Coatesville. Past this interchange, the freeway leaves Coatesville and passes under PA 340 before reaching an interchange with Reeceville Road. The route curves east-southeast and crosses under PA 340 again before running east and coming to a diamond interchange with PA 340 north of Thorndale. US 30 heads east-northeast and reaches a partial cloverleaf interchange with US 322 that serves Downingtown. Farther east, the freeway passes over PA 282 and the East Branch Brandywine Creek before it comes to a bridge over the Struble Trail and enters a section of Downingtown, reaching a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with Norwood Road that provides access to PA 282. The route widens to six lanes and heads near suburban development before it comes to an eastbound exit and westbound entrance with PA 113, at which point it leaves Downingtown and narrows back to four lanes. US 30 curves southeast and reaches an interchange with US 30 Bus. Past this interchange, the name of the freeway changes to Exton Bypass. The route turns northeast and runs parallel to Amtrak's Keystone Corridor railroad line to the south of the road. US 30 comes to a partial cloverleaf interchange with PA 100 that serves Exton to the north. Following this, the freeway continues east-northeast parallel to the Amtrak line. US 30 comes to an interchange with the US 202 freeway and the eastern terminus of US 30 Bus., at which point the freeway section ends.[2][3] The Exton Bypass portion of US 30 is designated the Exton Bypass Scenic Byway, a Pennsylvania Scenic Byway.[6]

 
US 30 westbound past PA 252 in Paoli

Past the interchange with US 202 and US 30 Bus., US 30 heads east-northeast along four-lane divided Lincoln Highway and passes south of a park and ride lot, running through Glenloch. The route soon becomes Lancaster Avenue, a three-lane road with a center left-turn lane. In Frazer, the road comes to an intersection with the northern terminus of PA 352. Farther east, US 30 widens to five lanes with a center turn lane before it reaches a junction with the eastern terminus of PA 401. The route turns into a four-lane divided highway prior to intersecting the southern terminus of PA 29. Past this intersection, the road crosses under Norfolk Southern's Dale Secondary railroad line and continues east as it runs north of Malvern, becoming undivided. US 30 briefly gains a center left-turn lane before it becomes a divided highway again as it passes south of Paoli Hospital prior to crossing under Amtrak's Keystone Corridor railroad line to the north of Green Tree. At this point, the route enters an area of suburbs called the Philadelphia Main Line as it heads into Paoli, becoming a four-lane undivided road. In the center of Paoli, the road has a junction with Paoli Pike before it passes south of the Paoli station serving Amtrak's Keystone Corridor and SEPTA's Paoli/Thorndale Line. US 30 gains a center left-turn lane and reaches an intersection with PA 252. Following this intersection, the route runs south of the parallel Amtrak line, passing south of the Daylesford SEPTA station in Daylesford. The road loses the center turn lane and runs further south but still parallel to the railroad tracks, turning northeast. US 30 reaches Berwyn, where it passes south of the Berwyn SEPTA station and curves east and then southeast, gaining a center left-turn lane. The route turns to the northeast and reaches Devon, where it drops the center turn lane and runs south of the Devon SEPTA station before passing to the north of the Devon Horse Show grounds. Past Devon, the road bends to the east-southeast.[2][3]

Upon intersecting Old Eagle School Road/Sugartown Road, US 30 enters Delaware County and continues east-southeast along four-lane undivided Lancaster Avenue, curving east and running through the downtown area of Wayne. The route passes through St. Davids and turns southeast. East of here, the road becomes a divided highway before turning undivided again. US 30 briefly becomes a divided highway again as it curves east and reaches an interchange with I-476. Past this interchange, the route turns back into an undivided road and crosses under SEPTA's Norristown High Speed Line before coming to an intersection with PA 320 in Villanova. Following this intersection, the road runs through the Villanova University campus, passing south of St. Thomas of Villanova Church, and curves southeast prior to the Ithan Avenue intersection, where it heads to the south of Villanova Stadium and the Finneran Pavilion arena. After passing through the university campus, US 30 runs through Rosemont. Upon intersecting County Line Road, the route enters Montgomery County and heads into Bryn Mawr, passing through the downtown area. The road continues southeast and briefly re-enters Delaware County before heading back into Montgomery County. US 30 passes through Haverford, where it heads north of the Haverford School. The route continues into Ardmore and runs through the downtown area, passing south of the Ardmore station serving Amtrak's Keystone Corridor and SEPTA's Paoli/Thorndale Line. Past Ardmore, the road heads through Wynnewood. The route runs southeast before it crosses the East Branch Indian Creek and passes between the St. Charles Borromeo Seminary to the northeast and Lankenau Medical Center to the southwest as a five-lane road with a center left-turn lane prior to reaching an intersection with US 1 (City Avenue).[2][3]

 
I-676/US 30 (Vine Street Expressway) eastbound crossing the Schuylkill River and entering Center City Philadelphia

Upon crossing US 1, US 30 enters Philadelphia and continues southeast along two-lane undivided Lancaster Avenue through the Overbrook neighborhood. At the intersection with 62nd Street/Malvern Avenue, the route passes north of the 63rd and Malvern Loop that serves as the terminus of SEPTA's Route 10 trolley line and heads into urban areas of West Philadelphia a short distance to the south of Amtrak's Keystone Corridor railroad line, running north of Overbrook High School after the 59th Street intersection. Farther southeast, a SEPTA trolley track follows the westbound lanes past the 54th Street junction. At the intersection with 52nd Street/Lansdowne Avenue, US 30 heads further south from the Amtrak tracks and SEPTA's Route 10 trolley line begins following the road. The route splits from Lancaster Avenue by turning east onto Girard Avenue, which carries two lanes of traffic and SEPTA's Route 15 trolley line. The road runs east and crosses over Amtrak's Keystone Corridor railroad line at the Belmont Avenue intersection before widening to four lanes. Farther east, US 30 passes over CSX's Harrisburg Subdivision railroad line before it comes to an interchange with I-76 (Schuylkill Expressway) and US 13 to the north of the Philadelphia Zoo, crossing under the Pennsylvania Railroad, Connecting Railway Bridge carrying Amtrak's Northeast Corridor railroad line at this interchange. At this interchange, US 13 heads south along 34th Street and continues east (north) along the Girard Avenue Bridge over the Schuylkill River while US 30 becomes concurrent with I-76 on the six-lane Schuylkill Expressway at this point and the road heads south, with the Philadelphia Zoo to the west and Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, the Schuylkill River Trail, and the Schuylkill River parallel to the east. The freeway turns southeast and runs between Amtrak's Northeast Corridor to the southwest and the river drive, trail, and river to the northeast, with Boathouse Row on the opposite bank of the river. The Schuylkill Expressway comes to an eastbound exit and westbound entrance with Spring Garden Street, which heads east across the Schuylkill River toward the Philadelphia Museum of Art. The freeway continues south, heading east of Amtrak's Penn Coach Yard, and comes to an interchange with the western terminus of I-676.[2][3]

At this point, US 30 heads east concurrent with I-676 on the six-lane Vine Street Expressway. It immediately crosses the Schuylkill River and then the Schuylkill River Trail and CSX's Philadelphia Subdivision railroad line on the river's east bank on the Vine Street Expressway Bridge before coming to an interchange with 23rd Street and 22nd Street and the Benjamin Franklin Parkway that has access to the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Franklin Institute science museum. From this point, the Vine Street Expressway enters a depressed road cut and passes under several streets and two freeway lids, running along the northern edge of Center City Philadelphia. Vine Street serves as a street-level frontage road to the freeway. Within this alignment, there is an exit for PA 611 (Broad Street). After passing under 10th Street in Chinatown, the last street the depressed alignment passes under, the highway rises up and reaches a split between the Vine Street Expressway, which continues to I-95, and I-676/US 30. At this split, there is also an eastbound exit and westbound entrance for 8th Street. After exiting the Vine Street Expressway, eastbound I-676/US 30 has a brief at-grade portion along southbound 6th Street east of Franklin Square to the Benjamin Franklin Bridge approach, an example of a non–limited access section of Interstate Highway. Westbound I-676/US 30 has a ramp from the bridge to the Vine Street Expressway that intersects 7th Street and 8th Street at-grade. From this point, I-676/US 30 crosses over I-95, Christopher Columbus Boulevard, and then the Delaware River into New Jersey on the seven-lane Benjamin Franklin Bridge, which also carries pedestrians and the PATCO Speedline.[2][3] This bridge and its approaches are maintained by the Delaware River Port Authority.[7]

History edit

 

Lincoln Highway

LocationGreene TownshipMorrisville
Existed1913–1928

 

Pennsylvania Route 1

LocationGreene TownshipMorrisville
Existed1924–1928

The path of the Lincoln Highway was first laid out in September 1913; it was defined to run through Canton, Ohio; Beaver; Pittsburgh; Greensburg; Ligonier; Bedford; Chambersburg; Gettysburg; York; Lancaster; and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and Camden, New Jersey.[8] This bypassed Harrisburg to the south, and thus did not use the older main route across the state between Chambersburg and Lancaster. From Pittsburgh to Philadelphia, this incorporated a number of old turnpikes, some of which still collected tolls:[9]

 
US 30 westbound in Wynnewood
  • Part of the Harrisburg and Pittsburgh Turnpike, chartered in 1806, broken up in 1814 into separate turnpike companies,[10] of which the following were included:
    • Greensburg and Pittsburgh Turnpike, Pittsburgh to Greensburg
    • Somerset and Greensburg Turnpike (renamed the Stoystown and Greensburg Turnpike 1815), Greensburg to Stoystown
    • Bedford and Somerset Turnpike (renamed the Bedford and Stoystown Turnpike 1815), Stoystown to Bedford
    • Chambersburg and Bedford Turnpike, Bedford to Chambersburg
  • Chambersburg Turnpike, Chambersburg to Cashtown
  • Part of the Gettysburg and Petersburg Turnpike, from Cashtown to Gettysburg
  • York and Gettysburg Turnpike, Gettysburg to York
  • Wrightsville Turnpike, York to Wrightsville
  • Columbia-Wrightsville Bridge, Wrightsville to Columbia
  • Lancaster and Susquehanna Turnpike, Columbia to Lancaster
  • Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike, Lancaster to Philadelphia

This original 1913 path of the Lincoln Highway continued east from Philadelphia, crossing the Delaware River to Camden, New Jersey, on the Market Street Ferry. Philadelphia marked the route from the ferry landing west on Market Street through downtown and onto Lancaster Avenue to the Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike in early 1914.[11] Camden was dropped from the route, allowing the highway to cross the Delaware River on a bridge at Trenton, New Jersey (initially the Calhoun Street Bridge, later the Bridge Street Bridge).[citation needed]

In 1924, the entire Lincoln Highway in Pennsylvania was designated Pennsylvania Route 1 (PA 1).[12] In late 1926 the route from West Virginia to Philadelphia (using the new route west of Pittsburgh) was assigned US 30, while the rest of the Lincoln Highway and PA 1 became part of US 1. The PA 1 designation was gone by 1929,[13] but several branches from east to west – PA 101, PA 201, PA 301, PA 401, PA 501 and PA 601 – had been assigned by then. (PA 701 was assigned later as a branch of PA 101.)[citation needed]

Ohio to Downtown Pittsburgh edit

As defined in 1913, the Lincoln Highway ran east-northeast from Canton, Ohio, to Alliance and east via Salem, crossing into Pennsylvania just east of East Palestine. From there it continued southeasterly to Beaver, crossing the Beaver River there and heading south along its left bank to Rochester and the Ohio River's right bank to Pittsburgh.[9]

By 1915, the highway had been realigned to the route it would follow until the end of 1927. It ran east from Canton, Ohio to Lisbon and then southeast to East Liverpool on the Ohio River. After crossing into Pennsylvania, it turned north away from the river at Smiths Ferry, taking an inland route to Beaver, where it rejoined the Ohio River. It crossed the Beaver River into Rochester, joining the 1913 alignment, and turned south with the Ohio to Pittsburgh.[9]

1915 route edit

This route entered Pennsylvania along PA Route 68. After crossing Little Beaver Creek, it turned south on Main Street, passing under the Cleveland and Pittsburgh Railroad (PRR) into Glasgow. After passing through Glagow on Liberty Street, the highway turned north and passed under the railroad again at Smiths Ferry, merging with Smiths Ferry Road.[9] This alignment through Glasgow carried the Lincoln Highway until ca. 1926, when the present PA 68 was built on the north side of the railroad.[14]

The Lincoln Highway left the banks of the Ohio River on Smiths Ferry Road, which includes an old stone bridge over Upper Dry Run. It turned east on Tuscarawas Road through Ohioville, entering Beaver on Fourth Street and turning south on Buffalo Street to reach Third Street (PA Route 68).[9] By 1929 this inland Glasgow-Beaver route was numbered PA Route 168, while the route along the river, never followed by the Lincoln Highway, was PA 68.[13]

Where PA 68 crosses the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad from Beaver into Bridgewater along Third Street and then the Beaver River on the ca. 1963[14] Rochester-Bridgewater Bridge, the Lincoln Highway instead ran along Bridge Street, just to the north, and crossed the Old Rochester-Bridgewater Bridge into Rochester.[9]

Continuing through Rochester to Pittsburgh, the Lincoln Highway left the Old Rochester-Bridgewater Bridge on Madison Street, turning onto Brighton Avenue, and then crossing the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway (PRR) on New York Avenue. After running alongside the Ohio River on Railroad Avenue, the highway crossed the railroad again in Freedom (about a block north of Third Street[15]), running through Freedom on Third Avenue.[9]

South of downtown Freedom, Third Avenue merges into the Ohio River Boulevard, also known as PA Route 65, which runs along the old Lincoln Highway into Conway. There the old highway went onto First Avenue and State Street, rejoining PA 65 in Baden. Further into Baden, the old highway left PA 65 again, onto State Street, becoming Duss Avenue in Harmony Township. At the Ambridge limits, this becomes PA Route 989, but the old highway turned west at 14th Street and then south on Merchant Street.[9]

Crossing Big Sewickley Creek from Ambridge, Beaver County into Leetsdale, Allegheny County, Merchant Street becomes Beaver Street, a brick road. Beaver Road and Beaver Street continues through Edgeworth, Sewickley, and Osborne, merging back into PA 65 at the border with Haysville. Sewickley officially changed the name of its piece to Lincoln Highway by an ordinance in January 1916, and Osborne, Edgeworth and Leetsdale soon followed suit, but that name is no longer used.[9]

In Glenfield, the highway crossed the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway twice, once near the present overpass and again west of Toms Run Road.[16] The old road next to the Ohio River, Beaver Street, is still a yellow brick road but now used only by local traffic.[9]

The old road left PA 65 again in Emsworth as Beaver Road, becoming Brighton Road in Ben Avon before re-merging with PA 65. It splits yet again, also in Ben Avon, onto Brighton Road, another yellow brick road. In Avalon it is California Avenue, and in Bellevue it is Lincoln Avenue, coincidentally named after Lincoln soon after the U.S. Civil War.[citation needed]

The highway crosses into Pittsburgh on a high concrete arch bridge over Jack's Run, built in 1924 to replace an earlier bridge built for a streetcar line, and returns to the California Avenue name.[citation needed] It crosses Woods Run on a similar 1928 bridge next to a newer bridge built for the Ohio River Boulevard (PA Route 65).[citation needed] Where California Avenue curves away from PA 65, the Lincoln Highway continued next to it on Chateau Street, turning east on Western Avenue and then south on Galveston Avenue onto the 1915 Manchester Bridge to the Point.[9]

During the time that the Lincoln Highway ran through Rochester, the Rochester-Pittsburgh segment was locally maintained. It was often foggy, and a July 1926 Lincoln Highway Association road report states that it was "paved city streets, mostly poor", in stark contrast to the good paving east of Pittsburgh. By 1924, reports recommended following an alternate on the other side of the river between Rochester and Pittsburgh.[9] The route west of Rochester had similar problems; it was a dirt road, despite being a state highway.[17] By 1922 an official detour was recommended via East Palestine, Ohio and Beaver, largely identical to the initial 1913 plan.[citation needed]

1927 route edit

Work began in the mid-1920s on a new route to the south of the existing route, passing through West Virginia and bypassing the problematic sections on both sides of Rochester; the Lincoln Highway was moved to it December 2, 1927.[9] This new route had already been numbered U.S. 30 in late 1926.[18]

The new Lincoln Highway bypassed Imperial on a bypass built for it.[14] Just southeast of Imperial, the highway turned east on Steubenville Pike, joining what was U.S. Route 22 before the present U.S. 22/U.S. 30 freeway was built ca. 1964.[14] Steubenville Pike runs along the north side of the freeway, crossing to the south side and then merging with it just west of the I-376 interchange. From the late 1940s to 1982, the appropriately-named Penn-Lincoln Drive-In Theater operated on a stretch of the original Lincoln Highway in North Fayette, just east of Imperial. It reopened for one season in 1985 as the Super 30 West Drive-In. The site is now occupied by Penn-Lincoln Shopping Center.[citation needed]

US 22 and US 30 now join I-376 and turn southeast, but the Lincoln Highway (and US 22/30 before the nearby part of what is now I-376 opened in 1953) continued east with PA 60 through Robinson Township. In Pittsburgh, the highway ran along Crafton Boulevard, Noblestown Road, and South Main Street, as PA 60 still does. It turned onto Carson Street (now PA Route 837) at the West End Circle, crossing the 1927 Point Bridge into the Point.[9]

Downtown Pittsburgh to North Huntingdon edit

 
Marker for Lincoln Highway along US 30 westbound at PA 655 in Licking Creek Township

From 1915 to late 1927, the Lincoln Highway crossed the Allegheny River on the Manchester Bridge to the Point, touching down at the foot of Penn Avenue after meeting the Point Bridge.[19] It made its way through downtown to Bigelow Boulevard (now PA Route 380), using Water Street, Liberty Avenue and Oliver Avenue.[20] It continued to follow present PA 380 onto Craig Street and Baum Boulevard to East Liberty. The highway left East Liberty and Pittsburgh on Penn Avenue, the old Pittsburgh and Greensburg Turnpike, also now part of PA 380, and further east part of PA Route 8. (PA 380 however bypasses the center of East Liberty.)[9]

The Boulevard of the Allies opened east from downtown Pittsburgh in 1923, and in 1924 it was designated as an alternate route.[21] By 1930, this bypass ran along the Boulevard of the Allies, Forbes Avenue, Beeler Street, Wilkins Avenue and Dallas Avenue, rejoining the Lincoln Highway at Penn Avenue, west of Wilkinsburg.[22]

Leaving the Pittsburgh area, the Lincoln Highway turned onto Ardmore Boulevard (now signed as PA 8 north of I-376, and U.S. 30 south of I-376). It then branched away from Ardmore Boulevard along Electric Avenue, turned northeast on Braddock Avenue, then east on Penn Avenue. The Lincoln Highway originally continued onto Airbrake Avenue and then turned south at 11th Street to cross Turtle Creek and the Pennsylvania Railroad main line over a bridge; a 1925 replacement bridge starts at the intersection of Airbrake Avenue, Penn Avenue, Monroeville Avenue, and Greensburg Pike.[citation needed] The Lincoln Highway then followed Greensburg Pike up to current U.S. 30.[citation needed]

In 1932, a bypass of the grades into and out of Turtle Creek, including the George Westinghouse Bridge, was opened. It runs along current U.S. 30 from the interchange with Electric Avenue in Chalfant to the intersection with Greensburg Pike in North Versailles.[citation needed]

White Oak named their main street Lincoln Way in an attempt to convince the Lincoln Highway Association to use it, but instead the highway continued along Greensburg Pike through North Versailles.[citation needed]

Later history edit

 
US 30 westbound passing through the Villanova University campus in Villanova

The Penn-Lincoln Parkway was built from 1953 to 1962 as a freeway bypass across the Pittsburgh area for both the Lincoln Highway (US 30) and the William Penn Highway (US 22).[citation needed]

In 1953, the portion of present-day US 30 between PA 283 in Lancaster and PA 462 east of Lancaster was built as a freeway alignment of US 230.[23][24][25] In 1967, US 30 was shifted to a freeway bypass between Prospect Road east of Columbia and east of Lancaster; the route replaced the US 230 designation between the present-day PA 283 and PA 462 interchanges. PA 462 was designated onto the former alignment of US 30 between those two points.[26] In 1972, US 30 was shifted to a bypass between west of York and Columbia, with PA 462 extended west along the former alignment of US 30.[27][28]

In 1963, the Coatesville Downingtown Bypass, a freeway bypass route of US 30, was completed. The bypass begins east of the intersection with PA 10, and terminates east of Downingtown in East Caln Township. Upon completion of the bypass, US 30 Bus. was designated onto the former alignment of US 30.[29][26] Shortly after the completion of the bypass, plans were made to extend the new bypass further east to the US 202 interchange with US 30. However, due to significant delays caused by environmental concerns and funding issues, construction did not begin until 1993. The Exton Bypass was completed in December 1995, and was connected to the existing Coatesville Downingtown Bypass, allowing for a continuous freeway alignment of US 30 from PA 10 to US 202. US 30 Bus. was also extended east through Exton along the former alignment of US 30 to its current eastern terminus following the completion of the bypass. The Exton Bypass also provided significant relief to the Exton area, as the intersection of the former US 30 alignment (now US 30 Bus.) and PA 100 was the source of major congestion throughout the area.[30][31][32][33]

From 1997 to 2004, significant construction was completed to the US 30 bypass around Lancaster.[citation needed]

A bypass of the section of US 30 in Gap, in Lancaster County, was first proposed in February 2012. In 2015, a PennDOT project began to build a bypass to the north of Gap for westbound US 30 between the PA 772 and PA 41 intersections to improve traffic flow and safety at the congested intersection of US 30 and PA 41. The bypass, which cost $10 million, was opened on August 4, 2016.[34]

 
US 30 eastbound in Paoli

On April 7, 2018, a section of US 30 in East Pittsburgh sank 40 feet (12 m) down a hill after a landslide. One apartment building was destroyed, another threatened and ultimately demolished.[35] The damaged road section reopened in late June 2018.[36]

There are plans for improvements to be made to the US 30 freeway bypassing Coatesville and Downingtown in Chester County. The project is split into a western section between PA 10 near Parkesburg and PA 82 in Coatesville and an eastern section between Reeceville Road near Coatesville and US 30 Bus. east of Downingtown. The western section will remain four lanes wide, with construction planned to begin in 2026. The eastern section is planned to be widened to six lanes, with construction beginning as early as 2028. In addition to improvements made to the freeway, interchanges will also be improved. Construction of the western section is projected to cost $355 million while the eastern section is projected to cost $460 million.[37]

Major intersections edit

CountyLocation[38]mi[39]kmExitDestinationsNotes
BeaverGreene Township0.0000.000 
 
US 30 west (Lincoln Highway) – East Liverpool
Continuation into West Virginia
2.3283.747  PA 168 – Hookstown, Washington
4.8837.858 
 
PA 151 east (Bocktown Road)
Western terminus of PA 151
Hanover Township7.73312.445  PA 18 (Frankfort Road) – Frankfort Springs, Monaca
AlleghenyFindlay Township17.530–
17.643
28.212–
28.394
 
 
  PA Turnpike 576 (Southern Beltway) – Pittsburgh International Airport
Exit 2 on PA 576; E-ZPass or toll-by-plate
North Fayette Township20.98133.766Western end of freeway
 
 
US 22 west (William Penn Highway) – Weirton
 
 
PA 978 south (Bateman Road) – Imperial
Western end of US 22 concurrency; northern terminus of PA 978
22.48636.188Hankey FarmsAccess via Oakdale Road
23.47537.779  Orange Belt – OakdaleWestbound exit and eastbound entrance; western end of Orange Belt concurrency; access via McKee Road
24.49139.414Old Steubenville Pike / Bayer Road / Montour Church Road
Robinson Township24.93740.132 
 
   I-376 west (Airport Parkway) / Orange Belt – Pittsburgh International Airport
Eastern end of Orange Belt concurrency; western end of I-376 concurrency; exit 60A on I-376
60B 
 
  PA 60 south / Yellow Belt – Crafton
25.83141.57161Ridge Road
RobinsonCollier
township line
26.96643.39862  Yellow Belt (Campbells Run Road)Westbound exit and eastbound entrance
Robinson Township28.235–
29.144
45.440–
46.903
64A  I-79 – Washington, ErieExit 59 on I-79
Rosslyn Farms29.44847.39264BRosslyn FarmsWestbound exit and eastbound entrance; access via Rosslyn Road
Carnegie29.88248.090Buses only (West Busway)Eastbound exit and westbound entrance
30.29048.74765  PA 50 – Carnegie, Heidelberg
Green Tree32.19251.80867   PA 121 / Blue Belt – Green Tree, Mount Lebanon, Crafton
Pittsburgh32.66652.57168Parkway Center DriveWestbound exit and eastbound entrance
33.33953.65469A 
 
US 19 south (Banksville Road) – Mt. Lebanon, Uniontown
Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; western end of US 19 concurrency
33.77554.35669B 
 
 
 
 
US 19 Truck south / PA 51 south – Uniontown
Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; western end of US 19 Truck concurrency
33.85054.47669C 
 
 
 
US 19 north / PA 51 north – West End
Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; eastern end of US 19 concurrency
33.920–
34.611
54.589–
55.701
Fort Pitt Tunnel under Mount Washington
34.67555.80469C 
 
 
 
PA 837 north to PA 51 – West End
Westbound exit and eastbound left entrance
34.611–
34.840
55.701–
56.070
Fort Pitt Bridge over the Monongahela River
34.840–
34.996
56.070–
56.321
70ABoulevard of the Allies / Liberty Avenue – PPG ArenaEastbound left exit and westbound entrance
70BFort Duquesne Boulevard – Convention Center, Strip DistrictEastbound left exit and westbound entrance
70C 
 
I-279 north / US 19 Truck north – Fort Duquesne Bridge, North Shore
Left exit eastbound; eastern end of concurency with US 19 Truck, southern terminus of I-279
35.07556.44870DStanwix StreetNo eastbound exit; left exit and entrance westbound; left entrance eastbound
35.47557.09171AGrant StreetLeft exit and entrance
36.00357.94171BSecond AvenueWestbound exit only
36.92959.43172AForbes Avenue – OaklandEastbound exit and westbound entrance
37.05559.63472B 
 
To I-579 (Crosstown Blvd) / PA 885 north (Boulevard of the Allies) / Liberty Bridge
Westbound exit and eastbound left entrance
37.70960.68773  PA 885 (Bates Street) – Glenwood, OaklandWestbound exit and eastbound entrance; signed as Exits 73A (south) and 73B (north)
39.33863.30874  Blue Belt – Squirrel Hill, Homestead
39.585–
40.589
63.706–
65.322
Squirrel Hill Tunnel under Squirrel Hill
PittsburghSwissvale
Edgewood tripoint
41.52166.82277Edgewood, SwissvaleAccess via Braddock Avenue
Wilkinsburg42.88769.020 
 
 
 
I-376 east / US 22 east – Monroeville
Eastern end of I-376/US 22 concurrency; exit 78A on I-376
 
 
PA 8 north – Wilkinsburg
Exit 78B on I-376; southern terminus of PA 8
Eastern end of freeway
North BraddockChalfant line45.26572.847East Pittsburgh, Turtle CreekInterchange; eastbound exit and westbound entrance; access via Electric Avenue
North Versailles Township47.71376.787Greensburg PikeInterchange
East McKeesport48.05377.334 
 
  PA 148 south / Yellow Belt (5th Avenue)
Northern terminus of PA 148
North Versailles Township49.98780.446   PA 48 / Orange Belt (Mosside Boulevard / Jacks Run Road) – Monroeville, McKeesport, White Oak
WestmorelandNorth Huntingdon Township54.94788.429Main StreetEastbound exit and entrance
56.85091.491 
 
  I-76 Toll / Penna Turnpike – Pittsburgh, Harrisburg
Exit 67 (Irwin) on Penna Turnpike; E-ZPass or toll-by-plate
Hempfield TownshipAdamsburg line58.15793.595Adamsburg, Penn, AronaInterchange; access via Edna Road
Hempfield Township61.43298.865 
 
PA Turnpike 66 – New Stanton, Delmont
Exit 6 on PA 66; E-ZPass or toll-by-plate
62.975101.348Western end of freeway
63.230101.759Pittsburgh StreetEastbound exit and westbound entrance
GreensburgHempfield Township line63.994102.988 
 
PA 136 west – West Newton
Eastern terminus of PA 136
Southwest Greensburg64.904104.453  
 
  
 
US 119 / PA 66 Bus. / PA 819 to I-70 – Connellsville, Blairsville
Southern terminus of PA 66 Bus.
Hempfield Township65.337105.150Cedar StreetNo access across US 30
65.991106.202Greensburg, Mount PleasantAccess via Mt. Pleasant Road
66.778107.469  PA 130 (Pittsburgh Street) – Pleasant UnityEastbound exit and westbound entrance
67.328108.354Greensburg Business DistrictWestbound exit and eastbound entrance
Eastern end of freeway
Westmoreland MallInterchange
Unity Township74.051119.174  PA 981 (Clearview Drive) – Pleasant Unity, Latrobe
75.319121.214  PA 982 – Youngstown, Baggaley, Bradenville, New DerryInterchange
UnityDerry
township line
76.880123.726 
 
PA 217 north – Derry
Southern terminus of PA 217
Ligonier Township81.623131.359 
 
PA 259 north – Bolivar
Southern terminus of PA 259
Ligonier83.875134.984  PA 711 (Market Street) – Stahlstown, Oak Grove, Johnstown
Ligonier Township85.825138.122 
 
PA 381 south – Rector, Linn Run State Park
Northern terminus of PA 381
SomersetJennerstown95.113153.070  PA 985 (Somerset Pike) – Somerset, Johnstown
Jenner Township96.713155.644  PA 601 (Front Street / Penn Avenue) – Somerset, Boswell
98.360–
98.449
158.295–
158.438
  US 219 – Somerset, JohnstownInterchange
Quemahoning Township103.100165.923 
 
PA 281 south (Pine Avenue) – Friedens
Interchange; northern terminus of PA 281
103.518166.596 
 
PA 403 north (Triple S Road) – Kanter, Hooversville
Southern terminus of PA 403
StonycreekShade
township line
110.444177.742  PA 160 (Huckleberry Highway / Rock Cut Road) – Berlin, Windber
BedfordSchellsburg121.637195.756  PA 96 (Market Street) – Manns Choice, Pleasantville
Napier Township126.386203.399 
 
PA 31 west (Allegheny Road) – Manns Choice, Cumberland, Somerset
Eastern terminus of PA 31
Bedford Township126.972204.342 
 
PA 56 west (Pensyl Hollow Road) – Altoona, Johnstown
Eastern terminus of PA 56
128.890207.428 
 
 
US 30 Bus. east (Pitt Street) – Bedford
Western terminus of US 30 Bus.
Western end of freeway
129.798208.890 
 
US 220 south – Cumberland
 
 
 
 
 
US 220 north to I-99 north – Altoona
131.979212.400 
 
 
US 30 Bus. west – Bedford Business District
Westbound left exit and eastbound left entrance; eastern terminus of US 30 Bus.
Eastern end of freeway
Snake Spring Township132.226212.797 
 
PA 326 south (Egolf Road) – Rainsburg
Northern terminus of PA 326
134.493216.446Pennknoll Road / Upper Snake Spring Road – PennwoodInterchange; no westbound exit
135.173217.540Lutzville Road / Upper Snake Spring Road – PennwoodInterchange; no westbound entrance
Everett137.482221.256Western end of freeway
 
 
 
 
 
 
US 30 Bus. east to PA 26 south – Everett
Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; western terminus of US 30 Bus.
West Providence Township139.338224.243 
 
 
To PA 26 north – Huntingdon, Raystown Lake
Raystown Lake only appears on eastbound signage
Eastern end of freeway
140.319225.822 
 
 
 
 
 
US 30 Bus. west (Main Street) to PA 26 south – Everett
Eastern terminus of US 30 Bus.
East Providence Township147.243236.965 
 
I-70 east – Washington, D.C., Baltimore
Western end of I-70 concurrency
147.537237.438 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
I-70 Toll west to I-76 Toll / Penna Turnpike – Pittsburgh, Harrisburg, New Stanton
Eastern end of I-70 concurrency; exit 161 (Breezewood) on Penna Turnpike; E-ZPass or toll-by-plate
FultonBrush Creek Township150.652242.451 
 
PA 915 west (Crystal Springs Road) – Crystal Springs
Western end of PA 915 concurrency
152.036244.678 
 
PA 915 east (North Valley Road) – Hopewell
Eastern end of PA 915 concurrency
Licking Creek Township158.300254.759  PA 655 (Pleasant Ridge Road) – Saltillo, Hancock
Todd Township164.745265.131  
 
US 522 to PA 16 – McConnellsburg, Mount Union
Interchange
FranklinPeters Township172.541277.678  PA 75 (Fort Loudon Road / Path Valley Road) – Mercersburg, Fannettsburg, Willow Hill
St. Thomas Township177.517285.686 
 
PA 416 south (Mercersburg Road) – Lemasters, Mercersburg
Northern terminus of PA 416
Hamilton Township184.462296.863 
 
PA 995 south (Warm Spring Road) – Williamson
Northern terminus of PA 995
Chambersburg186.273299.777 
 
US 11 south (Main Street)
186.384299.956 
 
US 11 north (2nd Street)
ChambersburgGuilford Township line187.766–
187.786
302.180–
302.212
  I-81 – Carlisle, HagerstownExit 16 on I-81
Greene Township194.100312.374 
 
PA 997 south (Anthony Highway) – Mont Alto, Waynesboro
Western end of PA 997 concurrency
194.215312.559 
 
PA 997 north (Black Gap Road) – Scotland
Eastern end of PA 997 concurrency
196.384316.049  PA 233 (Pine Grove Road / Rocky Mountain Road) – Mont Alto, Newville
AdamsFranklin Township199.247320.657 
 
PA 234 east (Buchanan Valley Road) – Arendtsville, Biglerville
Western terminus of PA 234
Gettysburg211.075339.692 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
US 15 Bus. / PA 116 west (Carlisle Street / Baltimore Street) to PA 97 / PA 34
Traffic circle; western end of PA 116 concurrency
211.314340.077 
 
PA 116 east (Hanover Street) – Hanover
Eastern end of PA 116 concurrency
Straban Township213.288343.254  US 15 – Harrisburg, FrederickInterchange
OxfordHamilton
Berwick township tripoint
222.530358.127  PA 94 (Carlisle Pike) – Harrisburg, Hanover
Abbottstown225.074362.221  PA 194 (Queen Street)Traffic circle
YorkWest Manchester Township234.387377.209 
 
PA 116 west (Hanover Road)
Eastern terminus of PA 116
235.247378.593 
 
PA 616 south (Trinity Road) – New Salem
Northern terminus of PA 616
235.859379.578Western end of freeway
 
 
PA 462 east – York
Western terminus of PA 462
238.494383.819  PA 74 (Carlisle Avenue) – Dover, West York
Eastern end of freeway
Manchester Township241.023387.889  
 
 
 
 
I-83 BL / PA 181 north (North George Street) to I-83 north – Harrisburg, Emigsville, York
Southern terminus of PA 181
241.277388.298  I-83 – Baltimore, HarrisburgNo eastbound exit to I-83 north; no westbound entrance from I-83 south; exit 21 on I-83
Springettsbury Township243.169391.343Western end of freeway
243.749392.276Memory Lane – East YorkNo westbound exit; no westbound entrance from southbound Memory Lane
244.663393.747  PA 24 (Mt. Zion Road)
Hellam Township247.700398.635 
 
To PA 462 – Hallam
251.473404.707 
 
To PA 462 – Wrightsville
Susquehanna River252.677406.644Wright's Ferry Bridge
LancasterColumbia253.903408.617  PA 441 – Columbia, Marietta
West Hempfield Township256.997413.597Prospect Road
258.812416.518MountvilleAccess via Stony Battery Road
East Hempfield Township260.276418.874Centerville Road
262.393422.281  PA 741 – Millersville, RohrerstownAccess to Millersville University
Manheim TownshipLancaster line263.486424.040Harrisburg PikeAccess to Franklin & Marshall College
Manheim Township264.100425.028  PA 72 (Manheim Pike)Eastbound exit and westbound entrance
264.423425.548 
 
PA 283 west – Harrisburg, Downtown Lancaster
Eastbound access to Downtown Lancaster and Fruitville Pike; eastern terminus of PA 283
265.034–
265.757
426.531–
427.694
   
 
PA 501 (Lititz Pike) / PA 272 (Oregon Pike) / US 222 south
Eastbound signage
  
 
PA 501 / US 222 south (Lititz Pike) / Fruitville Pike
Westbound signage; western end of US 222 concurrency
 
 
PA 272 north (Oregon Pike)
Westbound signage
266.416428.755 
 
 
 
US 222 north to I-76 – Ephrata, Reading
I-76 only appears on eastbound signage; Ephrata only appears on westbound signage; eastern end of US 222 concurrency
267.161429.954 
 
PA 23 east (New Holland Avenue/Pike)
Western end of PA 23 concurrency
LancasterEast Lampeter Township line267.771430.936 
 
PA 23 west (Walnut Street)
Eastern end of PA 23 concurrency
268.497432.104Greenfield Road
East Lampeter Township269.387433.536  PA 340 (Old Philadelphia Pike)No westbound exit
270.150434.764 
 
PA 462 west (Lincoln Highway) – Downtown Lancaster
Eastern terminus of PA 462
Eastern end of freeway
272.705438.876  PA 896 (Eastbrook Road / Hartman Bridge Road) – Strasburg
Salisbury Township281.639453.254 
 
PA 772 west (Newport Road)
Eastern terminus of PA 772
282.034453.890 
 
PA 41 south (Gap Newport Pike) – Wilmington, DE
Northern terminus of PA 41
282.313454.339 
 
PA 897 north (White Horse Road)
Southern terminus of PA 897
ChesterWest SadsburySadsbury
township line
286.823461.597  PA 10 (Octorara Trail) – Honey Brook, Parkesburg
Sadsbury Township287.555462.775Western end of freeway
 
 
 
US 30 Bus. east (Lincoln Highway)
Eastbound exit and westbound entrance; western terminus of US 30 Bus.
Valley Township290.087466.850Chester County AirportWestbound exit and eastbound entrance; access via Airport Road
CoatesvilleValley Township line292.916471.403  PA 82 – Coatesville
Caln Township294.673474.230Reeceville RoadAccess to Coatesville Veterans Hospital
297.056478.065  PA 340 – Thorndale
298.173479.863  US 322 (Manor Avenue)
Downingtown299.393481.826  PA 282 (Wallace Avenue)Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; access via Norwood Road
East Caln Township299.933482.695  
 
PA 113 (West Uwchlan Avenue) to PA 100 – Downingtown, Lionville
Eastbound exit and westbound entrance
300.913484.273 
 
US 30 Bus. (Lancaster Avenue)
West Whiteland Township303.841488.985  
 
 
PA 100 to US 202 south – Exton, West Chester
US 202 signed eastbound
West WhitelandEast Whiteland
township line
306.055492.548  US 202 – King of Prussia, West Chester
 
 
 
US 30 Bus. west (Lancaster Avenue) – Exton
Eastern terminus of US 30 Bus.
Eastern end of freeway
East Whiteland Township307.519494.904 
 
PA 352 south (Sproul Road) – Chester, Immaculata University
Northern terminus of PA 352
309.186497.587 
 
PA 401 west (Conestoga Road) – Elverson
Eastern terminus of PA 401
309.486498.069 
 
 
 
PA 29 north (Morehall Road) to US 202 – Phoenixville
Southern terminus of PA 29
Tredyffrin Township312.020502.148  PA 252 (Bear Hill Road / Leopard Road) – Valley Forge, Newtown Square
DelawareRadnor Township318.773–
318.902
513.015–
513.223
  I-476 (Mid-County Expressway) – Chester, Plymouth MeetingExit 13 on I-476
319.158513.635  PA 320 (North Spring Mill Road / Sproul Road)
Montgomery
No major junctions
Delaware
No major junctions
MontgomeryPhiladelphia
county line
Lower Merion TownshipPhiladelphia line325.258523.452  US 1 (City Avenue) – Bala Cynwyd, Upper Darby
PhiladelphiaPhiladelphia328.691528.977Western end of freeway
342 
 
I-76 west (Schuylkill Expressway) – Valley Forge
  US 13 (34th Street / Girard Avenue)
Western end of I-76 concurrency
343Spring Garden Street / Haverford AvenueEastbound exit and westbound entrance
329.8530.8344 
 
  I-76 east (Schuylkill Expressway) – International Airport
 
 
I-676 begins
Eastern end of I-76 concurrency; western terminus of I-676
Vine Street Expressway Bridge over the Schuylkill River
330.2531.4Ben Franklin Parkway / 23rd Street
330.8532.4  PA 611 (Broad Street) – Central Philadelphia
331.2533.08th Street south – Chinatown, Market EastAt-grade intersection westbound
331.3533.2   I-95 – Chester, Philadelphia International Airport, New YorkExit 22 on I-95; to Penn's Landing
 
 
To PA 611 / Vine Street – Pennsylvania Convention Center
Westbound exit and eastbound entrance
331.7533.86th Street south – Independence Hall, Penn's LandingAt-grade intersection eastbound
5th StreetWestbound exit and eastbound entrance
Delaware River332.0534.3Benjamin Franklin Bridge
(Westbound toll, cash or E-ZPass)
334.6538.5 
 
 
 
I-676 south / US 30 east – Camden, Cherry Hill
Continuation into New Jersey
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Google (June 21, 2014). "U.S. Route 30 in Pennsylvania" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved June 21, 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap Google (August 18, 2020). "U.S. Route 30 in Pennsylvania" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved August 18, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ADC Map (2003). Pennsylvania State Road Atlas. Alexandria, VA: ADC Map. pp. 54–55, 67–71, 74–77, 84–90. ISBN 0875303714.
  4. ^ Interactive Map of Lancaster County (Map). Discover Lancaster. Retrieved October 9, 2017.
  5. ^ "Amish & PA Dutch Countryside". Discover Lancaster. Retrieved October 9, 2017.
  6. ^ "Exton Bypass". VisitPA.com. Retrieved March 27, 2012.
  7. ^ "I-676 Straight Line Diagram" (PDF). New Jersey Department of Transportation. Retrieved March 17, 2020.
  8. ^ Lincoln Highway Association (September 14, 1913). Proclamation of the Route of the Lincoln Highway. Lincoln Highway Association – via Wikisource.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Butko, Brian (2002). The Lincoln Highway: Pennsylvania Traveler's Guide. Stackpole Books. ISBN 978-0-8117-2497-5.[full citation needed]
  10. ^ Pennsylvania (1822). Laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania: Dec. 21, 1812-Mar. 25, 1817. J. Bioren.
  11. ^ "How 'Lincoln Way' Project Now Stands". The New York Times. April 5, 1914.[page needed]
  12. ^ "U.S. 22 – The William Penn Highway". Federal Highway Administration. Retrieved October 9, 2014.
  13. ^ a b (Map). Pennsylvania Department of Highways. Archived from the original on February 4, 2012.
  14. ^ a b c d National Bridge Inventory[full citation needed]
  15. ^ . Archived from the original on April 18, 2006. Retrieved July 18, 2006.
  16. ^ United States Geological Survey (1908). (Map). Reston, Virginia: United States Geological Survey. Archived from the original on June 14, 2006. Retrieved July 19, 2006.
  17. ^ 1911 state map[permanent dead link][full citation needed][permanent dead link]
  18. ^ Bureau of Public Roads & American Association of State Highway Officials (November 11, 1926). United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials (Map). 1:7,000,000. Washington, DC: United States Geological Survey. OCLC 32889555. Retrieved November 7, 2013 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  19. ^ Plat Map, Central Pittsburgh (Map). 1923.[full citation needed]
  20. ^ Butko, Brian (2005). Greetings from the Lincoln Highway. Stackpole Books. p. 74.[full citation needed]
  21. ^ (PDF). Lincoln Highway Resource Guide. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 10, 2007.[full citation needed]
  22. ^ 1930 Pennsylvania Transportation Map, back side[permanent dead link]
  23. ^ Federal Highway Administration (2012). "NBI Structure Number: 000000000021030". National Bridge Inventory. Federal Highway Administration.
  24. ^ U.S. Route Numbering Committee (1953). [Report of the U.S. Route Numbering Committee to the Executive Committee] (PDF) (Report). Washington, DC: American Association of State Highway Officials. p. 123. Retrieved October 28, 2020 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  25. ^ Official Map of Pennsylvania (PDF) (Map). Pennsylvania Department of Highways. 1960. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 5, 2011. Retrieved December 17, 2014.
  26. ^ a b Official Map of Pennsylvania (PDF) (Map). Pennsylvania Department of Highways. 1970. Retrieved September 26, 2020.
  27. ^ Smith, Stephen H. (March 27, 2013).
route, pennsylvania, details, section, lincoln, highway, northeast, philadelphia, route, pennsylvania, this, article, contain, excessive, amount, intricate, detail, that, interest, only, particular, audience, please, help, spinning, relocating, relevant, infor. For details on the section of Lincoln Highway northeast of Philadelphia see U S Route 1 in Pennsylvania This article may contain an excessive amount of intricate detail that may interest only a particular audience Please help by spinning off or relocating any relevant information and removing excessive detail that may be against Wikipedia s inclusion policy April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message This article is about the section of U S Route 30 in Pennsylvania For the entire route see U S Route 30 U S Route 30 US 30 is a U S Highway that runs east west across the southern part of Pennsylvania passing through Pittsburgh and Philadelphia on its way from the West Virginia state line east to the Benjamin Franklin Bridge over the Delaware River into New Jersey U S Route 30US 30 highlighted in redRoute informationMaintained by PennDOT DRPALength333 mi 1 536 km Existed1926 1924 as PA 1 1913 as Lincoln Highway presentTouristroutesExton Bypass Scenic BywayMajor junctionsWest endUS 30 at West Virginia border near Chester WVMajor intersectionsI 376 US 22 from Robinson Township to Wilkinsburg I 79 near Pittsburgh I 76 Toll Penna Turnpike in North Huntingdon Township US 220 in Bedford I 70 Toll in Breezewood I 81 in Chambersburg I 83 in York I 476 in Villanova I 76 in Philadelphia I 95 in PhiladelphiaEast endI 676 US 30 at New Jersey border in PhiladelphiaLocationCountryUnited StatesStatePennsylvaniaCountiesBeaver Allegheny Westmoreland Somerset Bedford Fulton Franklin Adams York Lancaster Chester Delaware Montgomery PhiladelphiaHighway systemUnited States Numbered Highway System List Special Divided Pennsylvania State Route System Interstate US State Scenic Legislative PA 29 PA 31 US 1PA 1 PA 2 In Pennsylvania US 30 runs along or near the transcontinental Lincoln Highway an auto trail which ran from San Francisco California to New York City before the U S Routes were designated Lincoln Highway turned northeast at Philadelphia however using present US 1 and its former alignments to cross the Delaware River into Trenton New Jersey Points of interest along US 30 include the Gettysburg Battlefield Dutch Wonderland the Flight 93 National Memorial Fort Ligonier Westmoreland Mall Jennerstown Speedway Idlewild and Soak Zone and Independence Mall at the Independence National Historical Park Contents 1 Route description 1 1 West Virginia to Pittsburgh 1 2 Pittsburgh to Breezewood 1 3 Breezewood to Lancaster 1 4 Lancaster to New Jersey 2 History 2 1 Ohio to Downtown Pittsburgh 2 1 1 1915 route 2 1 2 1927 route 2 2 Downtown Pittsburgh to North Huntingdon 2 3 Later history 3 Major intersections 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksRoute description editWest Virginia to Pittsburgh edit US 30 enters Pennsylvania from West Virginia in Beaver County heading east along two lane undivided Lincoln Highway The road passes through rural areas and comes to an intersection with Pennsylvania Route 168 PA 168 south of Hookstown where it briefly becomes a divided highway US 30 continues as an undivided road turning northeast and then southeast before it comes to a junction with the western terminus of PA 151 The road heads southeast and crosses PA 18 in Harshaville The route passes through Raccoon Creek State Park where it turns south and crosses Raccoon Creek The road leaves the state park and curves to the southeast 2 3 US 30 enters Allegheny County and continues east along Lincoln Highway reaching Clinton Here the route turns to the southeast and comes to an interchange with the PA 576 toll road to the southwest of Pittsburgh International Airport where the route briefly becomes a divided highway The road continues southeast and reaches Imperial where it passes under the Montour Trail 2 3 US 30 heads into developed areas crossing Steubenville Pike and comes to a partial cloverleaf interchange with the US 22 freeway where US 30 heads east for a concurrency with US 22 and PA 978 continues southeast US 22 US 30 run east as a four lane freeway through suburban areas coming to a partial cloverleaf interchange with Oakdale Road that serves Hankey Farms Farther east the freeway has a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with McKee Road that provides access to Oakdale to the south 2 3 From here US 22 US 30 turn east northeast and reach an interchange that connects to Old Steubenville Pike Bayer Road and Montour Church Road The freeway comes to an interchange with I 376 where US 22 US 30 head southeast concurrent with I 376 and PA 60 continues east south at grade along a four lane divided highway 2 3 I 376 US 22 US 30 head southeast as the four lane Penn Lincoln Parkway reaching an interchange with Ridge Road The freeway comes to a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with Campbells Run Road where it widens to six lanes The highway curves to the east and meets I 79 at an interchange Past this interchange I 376 US 22 US 30 narrows to two lanes eastbound and head into Rosslyn Farms turning southeast and coming to a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with Rosslyn Road that serves Rosslyn Farms 2 3 The freeway crosses into Carnegie and reaches a bus only eastbound exit and westbound entrance connecting to the PRT s West Busway before passing over a Pittsburgh and Ohio Central Railroad line The highway passes over Chartiers Creek and another Pittsburgh and Ohio Central Railroad line as it leaves Carnegie and comes to the PA 50 interchange I 376 US 22 US 30 narrows to four lanes passing under a Wheeling and Lake Erie Railway line and curving northeast into Green Tree 2 3 The freeway reaches the PA 121 interchange where it gains a third westbound lane and heads east entering Pittsburgh and coming to a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with Parkway Center Drive The highway turns north and reaches a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with US 19 where US 19 joins I 376 US 22 US 30 on the Penn Lincoln Parkway Within this interchange the road has an eastbound runaway truck ramp and passes under a ramp carrying both directions of US 19 Truck 2 The freeway widens to six lanes and passes under a Wheeling and Lake Erie Railway line before reaching an interchange with PA 51 where US 19 Truck joins the Penn Lincoln Parkway from PA 51 and US 19 splits from the Penn Lincoln Parkway by heading north along with PA 51 Past this interchange I 376 US 22 US 30 US 19 Truck narrows to four lanes and passes under Mount Washington in the Fort Pitt Tunnel 2 3 nbsp US 30 westbound concurrent with I 376 and US 22 on the Penn Lincoln Parkway in Pittsburgh After emerging from the Fort Pitt Tunnel the freeway passes over Norfolk Southern s Mon Line and PA 837 coming to a westbound exit and eastbound entrance that connects to northbound PA 837 The Penn Lincoln Parkway heads onto the Fort Pitt Bridge a double decker bridge carrying four lanes in each direction and passes over CSX s Pittsburgh Subdivision railroad line and the Monongahela River as it heads into Downtown Pittsburgh at Point State Park and comes to an interchange with the southern terminus of I 279 where US 19 Truck heads north along I 279 and I 376 US 22 US 30 continue east along the Penn Lincoln Parkway The I 279 interchange also includes eastbound exits and westbound entrances with Boulevard of the Allies Liberty Avenue and Fort Duquesne Boulevard that serve Downtown Pittsburgh 2 3 The four lane freeway heads east southeast between Downtown Pittsburgh to the north and the Monongahela River to the south reaching a partial interchange with Stanwix Street with no eastbound exit The highway heads under the Smithfield Street Bridge and comes to an interchange with Grant Street where it widens to six lanes I 376 US 22 US 30 pass under the Panhandle Bridge carrying PRT s Pittsburgh Light Rail line and then the Liberty Bridge before the lanes split as it reaches a westbound ramp to Second Avenue north of the South Tenth Street Bridge and south of the Duquesne University campus 2 3 Past this the highway continues east between urban areas to the north and the Monongahela River to the south with the Three Rivers Heritage Trail in the median The freeway comes to an interchange connecting to PA 885 and Forbes Avenue north of the Birmingham Bridge at which point the trail leaves the median of the freeway and the river heads further south from the freeway I 376 US 22 US 30 head southeast with the Three Rivers Heritage Trail parallel to the south and reaches a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with PA 885 The highway turns east away from the trail and passes over the Allegheny Valley Railroad s P amp W Subdivision line 2 3 The freeway comes to an interchange with Beechwood Boulevard before it narrows to four lanes and passes under the southern portion of Squirrel Hill in the Squirrel Hill Tunnel Past the tunnel I 376 US 22 US 30 head through wooded areas and pass over Ninemile Run in Frick Park The highway leaves Pittsburgh as it comes to an interchange with Braddock Avenue that serves Edgewood and Swissvale The freeway continues east through suburban areas in Edgewood passing under Norfolk Southern s Pittsburgh Line and the PRT s Martin Luther King Jr East Busway 2 3 I 376 US 22 US 30 turn to the northeast and head through a corner of Braddock Hills before entering Wilkinsburg In Wilkinsburg the freeway comes to an interchange with the southern terminus of PA 8 where US 30 splits from I 376 US 22 on the Penn Lincoln Parkway by heading southeast at grade on Ardmore Boulevard 2 3 Pittsburgh to Breezewood edit nbsp US 30 eastbound in North Huntingdon Township US 30 follows Ardmore Boulevard a five lane divided highway with two eastbound lanes and three westbound lanes and enters Forest Hills running through suburban development as it curves to the south The road narrows to two westbound lanes before it curves to the southeast The route turns to the south southeast and passes through the center of Forest Hills US 30 gains a third eastbound lane before it skirts the border between North Braddock to the west and Chalfant to the east as it comes to an eastbound exit and westbound entrance with Electric Avenue Past this interchange the route becomes four lane undivided Lincoln Highway and heads south crossing into East Pittsburgh The road crosses over Bessemer Avenue on a bridge before it curves southeast and heads onto the George Westinghouse Bridge where it passes over Braddock Avenue a Union Railroad line Norfolk Southern s Pittsburgh Line Turtle Creek and Norfolk Southern s Port Perry Branch After passing over Turtle Creek US 30 leaves East Pittsburgh turning into a divided highway and passing over East Pittsburgh McKeesport Boulevard The route comes to an interchange with Greensburg Pike and becomes undivided before it enters East McKeesport as Greensburg Avenue Here the road turns northeast curving east and intersecting the northern terminus of PA 148 US 30 runs east southeast as it leaves East McKeesport and continues along Lincoln Highway Along this stretch the route briefly becomes a divided highway at intersections with Luehm Avenue and PA 48 2 3 US 30 enters Westmoreland County in the Laurel Highlands region and continues south along four lane undivided Lincoln Highway curving southeast and passing through Stewartsville The road briefly becomes a divided highway at intersections with Leger Road Carpenter Lane and Center Highway Robbins Station Road The route turns to the east and comes to an eastbound exit and entrance with Main Street in Fairmont before entering Irwin 2 3 US 30 gains a center left turn lane before it leaves Irwin and becomes a four lane divided highway as it comes to the Irwin interchange with the Pennsylvania Turnpike I 76 Past this interchange the median turns into a center left turn lane 2 3 US 30 runs along the southern border of Adamsburg and becomes a divided highway as it reaches an interchange with Edna Road serving Adamsburg The road becomes five lanes with a center left turn lane and passes through Lincoln Heights and running along the southern border of Jeannette 2 3 Past Jeannette US 30 curves southeast and turns into a four lane divided highway coming to an interchange with the PA 66 toll road After this interchange the route briefly widens to six lanes before curving east and becoming a five lane road with a center left turn lane turning into a four lane divided highway as it passes south of the Greengate Centre shopping center and comes to a bridge over the Southwest Pennsylvania Railroad s Radebaugh Subdivision line 2 3 US 30 becomes a freeway that bypasses Greensburg to the south and curves southeast reaching an eastbound exit and westbound entrance with West Pittsburgh Street The road enters Greensburg and comes to a partial cloverleaf interchange with PA 136 The route runs along the southwest border of Southwest Greensburg and reaches a partial cloverleaf interchange with US 119 PA 819 PA 66 Bus 2 3 Past this interchange US 30 passes over the Southwest Pennsylvania Railroad s Greensburg Industrial Track line and the Five Star Trail at which point it heads through a section of South Greensburg before it comes to a right in right out interchange with Cedar Street At this point the freeway curves northeast reaching a diamond interchange with Mt Pleasant Road The road passes through a section of Greensburg and comes to an eastbound exit and westbound entrance with PA 130 A short distance later the freeway section ends at westbound exit and eastbound entrance with East Pittsburgh Street to the east of Greensburg 2 3 US 30 heads east as the six lane divided Lincoln Highway and reaches an interchange serving the Westmoreland Mall to the south of the road The road narrows to four lanes and continues east southeast Farther east the route runs through rural areas with some development passing to the north of Arnold Palmer Regional Airport as it widens to six lanes and comes to an intersection with PA 981 to the south of Latrobe US 30 narrows to four lanes before it reaches a cloverleaf interchange with PA 982 that provides access to Latrobe to the north and Youngstown to the south The median of the road widens and the westbound lanes cross the Loyalhanna Creek at which point the Loyalhanna Creek runs in the median of US 30 The route comes to an intersection with the southern terminus of PA 217 Past this intersection US 30 winds southeast through a gap in Chestnut Ridge with the eastbound lanes crossing the Loyalhanna Creek At this point the road heads east as a four lane divided highway with the Loyalhanna Creek parallel to the south passing to the north of the Idlewild and Soak Zone amusement park The median widens again and the route intersects the southern terminus of PA 259 in Millbank US 30 curves south and turns to the east The road curves southeast and the median narrows at which point it heads along the southwest border of Ligonier as a four lane divided highway The route crosses PA 711 and passes to the south of Fort Ligonier US 30 leaves Ligonier and narrows to a two lane undivided road intersecting the northern terminus of PA 381 The route passes through the Laughlintown and runs along the southern border of Laurel Mountain Past the Laurel Mountain the road ascends Laurel Hill and comes to a westbound runaway truck ramp Further up the hill the route reaches a westbound truck brake check station and briefly becomes a divided highway through a sharp turn before it comes to another westbound truck brake check station 2 3 nbsp US 30 westbound in West Providence Township in Bedford CountyAt the summit of Laurel Hill US 30 enters Somerset County and begins to descend the hill along two lane undivided Lincoln Highway passing through a section of Laurel Ridge State Park where it crosses the Laurel Highlands Hiking Trail After descending the hill the road runs east southeast The route enters Jennerstown and becomes West Pitt Street US 30 intersects PA 985 and becomes East Pitt Street 2 3 The road leaves Jennerstown and becomes the Lincoln Highway again The route heads through Jenners Crossroads before it has a junction with PA 601 in Ferrellton US 30 briefly becomes a four lane divided highway as it comes to an interchange with the US 219 freeway 2 3 Past this interchange the route becomes a two lane undivided road again and winds southeast The road runs along the southwest border of Stoystown and passes under Somerset Street before it reaches an interchange with the northern terminus of PA 281 2 3 Past Stoystown US 30 crosses the Stonycreek River and intersects the southern terminus of PA 403 before it comes to a bridge over CSX s S amp C Subdivision railroad line The route comes to the entrance road to the Flight 93 National Memorial to the south The road runs through Buckstown and passes north of Indian Lake before it reaches an intersection with PA 160 in Reels Corner US 30 continues east southeast and passes to the north of the Stony Creek Wind Farm before it begins to ascend Allegheny Mountain winding to the east Approaching the summit of the mountain the road comes to an eastbound truck brake check station 2 3 US 30 leaves the Laurel Highlands region as it crosses into Bedford County and reaches the summit of Allegheny Mountain where it turns north northeast and begins to descend the mountain The road makes a hairpin turn to the southeast and winds east coming to an eastbound truck brake check station as it continues to descend The route heads east northeast and enters Schellsburg where US 30 becomes Pitt Street and crosses PA 96 2 3 Upon leaving Schellsburg the road becomes the Lincoln Highway again and passes north of Shawnee State Park curving southeast and then east The route passes under the Pennsylvania Turnpike I 70 I 76 before intersecting the eastern terminus of PA 31 2 3 US 30 heads east northeast a short distance to the south of the Pennsylvania Turnpike and reaches a junction with the eastern terminus of PA 56 before it curves southeast and crosses the Raystown Branch Juniata River in Wolfsburg The route runs south and comes to an intersection with the western terminus of US 30 Bus at which point US 30 becomes a four lane freeway that bypasses Bedford to the north 2 3 US 30 heads southeast and reaches a cloverleaf interchange with the US 220 freeway The freeway crosses the Raystown Branch Juniata River and runs to the north of the river passing over US 220 Bus The route leaves Bedford and crosses the river again before it comes to a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with the eastern terminus of US 30 Bus where the freeway section ends and US 30 becomes four lane divided Lincoln Highway 2 3 nbsp View east along the non freeway portion of I 70 and west along US 30 in Breezewood US 30 the Raystown Branch Juniata River and the Pennsylvania Turnpike pass southeast through the Bedford Narrows a gap in Evitts Mountain Here US 30 intersects the northern terminus of PA 326 and curves northeast crossing over the river and under the turnpike The route becomes a five lane road with a center left turn lane curving east The road turns into a four lane divided highway and has interchanges with Pennknoll Road where it passes south of UPMC Bedford hospital and Lutzville Road US 30 continues east and southeast and passes east through a gap in Tussey Mountain The route has an eastbound exit and westbound entrance with the western terminus of US 30 Bus where it becomes a freeway that bypasses Everett to the north The freeway turns north between the mountain the west and Everett to the east before it turns east and passes over PA 26 prior to an interchange with the Bud Shuster Bypass that connects to PA 26 The freeway section of US 30 ends at an intersection with the eastern terminus of US 30 Bus east of Everett where US 30 becomes four lane divided Lincoln Highway The road curves southeast as it runs north of the Raystown Branch Juniata River The route crosses the river and winds east heading into Breezewood where it passes several businesses and comes to an at grade intersection with I 70 At this point I 70 joins US 30 in a wrong way concurrency on a non limited access section of Interstate Highway that has two eastbound lanes three westbound lanes and a center left turn lane before the road comes to an interchange with the Pennsylvania Turnpike where I 70 splits from US 30 and heads west along with I 76 on the turnpike From here US 30 narrows to a two lane undivided road and crosses the Abandoned Pennsylvania Turnpike before it heads northeast into rural areas and climbs Rays Hill gaining a second eastbound lane and passing over the Pennsylvania Turnpike I 76 2 3 Breezewood to Lancaster edit At the summit of Rays Hill US 30 enters Fulton County and descends the hill as two lane undivided Lincoln Highway with the Pennsylvania Turnpike parallel to the north The route turns east away from the turnpike and comes to an intersection with PA 915 at which point PA 915 heads east for a concurrency with US 30 The road heads into the Buchanan State Forest with PA 915 splitting to the north US 30 ascends Sideling Hill and reaches the summit where it comes to an eastbound truck brake check station At this point the road begins to descend Sideling Hill winding east Along the descent the roadway comes to two truck brake check stations and two runaway truck ramps in the eastbound direction The route leaves the state forest and heads southeast passing through the Saluvia US 30 curves east southeast and comes to an intersection with PA 655 in Harrisonville The road turns southeast in Breezy Point and ascends Scrub Ridge The route comes to a westbound truck brake check station before it reaches Summit where it heads south to descend Scrub Ridge US 30 continues south and briefly becomes a divided highway as it intersects Lincoln Way where it turns into a two lane expressway that bypasses McConnellsburg to the north The road makes a hairpin turn to the northeast and gains a second westbound lane The route curves east and comes to a diamond interchange with US 522 that serves McConnellsburg where it becomes a four lane divided expressway Past this interchange the expressway becomes a three lane undivided road with two eastbound lanes and one westbound lane turning to the south southeast US 30 becomes a divided highway and intersects Lincoln Way again where the expressway section ends The route becomes a three lane undivided road with two eastbound lanes and one westbound lane as it ascends Tuscarora Mountain The road narrows to two lanes as it continues to climb the mountain and follow a winding alignment 2 3 nbsp US 30 eastbound past PA 416 in St Thomas Township At the summit of Tuscarora Mountain US 30 enters Franklin County and curves northeast to descend the mountain The road comes to an eastbound truck brake check station as it winds northeast and reaches an eastbound runaway truck ramp and gains a westbound truck lane The route curves to the east southeast and narrows to two lanes At the bottom of the mountain US 30 enters the Cumberland Valley and becomes Lincoln Way West briefly turning into a divided highway as it reaches an intersection with PA 75 The road becomes undivided again and heads to the south of Fort Loudon The route continues east northeast through rural areas in the valley intersecting the northern terminus of PA 416 and passing through St Thomas US 30 gains a center left turn lane crossing Back Creek Farther east the road has a junction with the northern terminus of PA 995 before it enters Chambersburg At this point the route runs through developed areas and splits into the one way pair of West Loudon Street eastbound and Lincoln Way West westbound with West Loudon Street a two way two lane road and Lincoln Way West carrying two lanes of one way traffic US 30 crosses the Conococheague Creek and the Chambersburg Rail Trail with the eastbound direction shifting to West Queen Street which carries two lanes of one way traffic The route heads into downtown Chambersburg and intersects US 11 which is routed on the one way pair of Main Street southbound and 2nd Street northbound Westbound US 30 meets southbound US 11 at Memorial Square which features a fountain in the middle of the intersection Upon crossing southbound US 11 US 30 becomes East Queen Street eastbound and Lincoln Way East westbound crossing under Norfolk Southern s Lurgan Branch railroad line before both directions of US 30 rejoin on Lincoln Way East a three lane road with a center left turn lane The road runs east and passes south of WellSpan Chambersburg Hospital before it widens to five lanes as it comes to an interchange with I 81 on the eastern border of Chambersburg Past this interchange the route heads through Stoufferstown as a four lane divided highway soon becoming a five lane road with a center left turn lane US 30 narrows to three lanes as it continues through a mix of rural areas and development passing south of Fayetteville before it forms a short concurrency with PA 997 upon intersecting that route in Greenwood The road leaves the Cumberland Valley as it heads into the Michaux State Forest where it crosses South Mountain The route passes south of Caledonia State Park and becomes a three lane road with two eastbound lanes and one westbound lane crossing the Appalachian Trail US 30 briefly becomes four lanes before it loses the second lane eastbound and intersects PA 233 where it turns into a three lane road with a center left turn lane 2 3 nbsp US 30 eastbound past PA 94 in Cross Keys US 30 enters Adams County and becomes Chambersburg Road continuing east through Cashtown Gap in South Mountain The road becomes three lanes with two eastbound lanes and one westbound lane before it turns back to a three lane road with a center left turn lane The route intersects the western terminus of PA 234 US 30 continues east with one eastbound lane and two westbound lanes before narrowing to a two lane road The route curves southeast in Hilltown and gains a center left turn lane The road passes through McKnightstown where it narrows to two lanes US 30 crosses CSX s Hanover Subdivision railroad line at grade in Seven Stars The route heads to the north of Gettysburg Regional Airport and passes through Stremmels before it runs through a section of Gettysburg National Military Park US 30 enters Gettysburg and becomes Buford Avenue passing north of the United Lutheran Seminary as it heads into developed areas and turns east onto Chambersburg Street The route continues into downtown Gettysburg and meets US 15 Bus PA 116 at Lincoln Square a traffic circle At this point US 30 heads east concurrent with PA 116 on York Street with PA 116 splitting to the east and US 30 continuing northeast along York Street The route leaves Gettysburg upon crossing Rock Creek and becomes York Road a three lane road with a center left turn lane with CSX s Hanover Subdivision parallel to the northwest The road turns into a four lane divided highway as it comes to an interchange with the US 15 freeway US 30 continues east northeast as a three lane road with a center left turn lane through a mix of rural areas and development passing through Guldens The route curves east and briefly gains a second westbound lane before heading through Brush Run The road narrows to two lanes and crosses the South Branch Conewago Creek where the name changes to Lincoln Way West US 30 enters New Oxford crossing CSX s Hanover Subdivision at grade and meeting Carlisle Street Hanover Street at the New Oxford Town Square a traffic circle The route becomes Lincoln Way East before it leaves New Oxford where it turns into York Road and gains a center left turn lane The road crosses PA 94 in Cross Keys and gains a second westbound lane further east before it reaches Abbottstown Upon entering Abbottstown US 30 becomes two lane West King Street meeting PA 194 at the Abbottstown Square traffic circle before it continues along East King Street 2 3 Upon crossing Beaver Creek US 30 leaves Abbottstown and heads into York County The route follows Lincoln Highway a three lane road with a center left turn lane The road curves to the northeast and passes through Farmers where it bends to the east northeast US 30 heads to the north of York Airport before it reaches Thomasville where it narrows to two lanes and crosses a York Railway line at grade The route gains a center left turn lane and passes through more developed areas The road widens to a four lane divided highway and reaches an intersection with the eastern terminus of PA 116 US 30 heads east northeast as West Market Street a five lane road with a center left turn lane and turns into a four lane divided highway as it comes to a junction with the northern terminus of PA 616 Past this intersection US 30 splits from West Market Street at a trumpet interchange by heading north onto a four lane freeway with PA 462 continuing east along West Market Street towards York The freeway passes over a York Railway line and curves northeast passing under PA 234 The route continues northeast and comes to a diamond interchange with PA 74 in a business area north of West York with the West Manchester Town Center shopping center located northwest of the interchange US 30 widens to six lanes before the freeway section ends with US 30 becoming a six lane divided highway with at grade intersections called Loucks Road that passes development The road enters York and curves east The route leaves the York and crosses Susquehanna Trail 11th Avenue where the name changes to Arsenal Road before it reaches an intersection with I 83 Bus and the southern terminus of PA 181 north of North York US 30 comes to a partial cloverleaf interchange with I 83 where it narrows to four lanes before it passes over Codorus Creek and the York County Heritage Rail Trail and then Norfolk Southern s York Secondary railroad line The route continues east turning into an unnamed four lane freeway and reaching an interchange with Memory Lane that serves East York The freeway reaches a partial cloverleaf interchange with PA 24 south of the York Galleria shopping mall US 30 continues east northeast and passes north of the Haines Shoe House as it heads into rural areas coming to a diamond interchange with Kreutz Creek Road that provides access to PA 462 and Hallam to the south The freeway reaches a diamond interchange at Cool Springs Road which heads south to connect to PA 462 and Wrightsville 2 3 nbsp US 30 eastbound at the Harrisburg Pike interchange in Lancaster US 30 crosses the Susquehanna River on the Wright s Ferry Bridge into Lancaster County where it heads into Columbia and passes over Norfolk Southern s Port Road Branch railroad line and the Northwest Lancaster County River Trail before coming to an interchange with PA 441 that serves Columbia the Turkey Hill Experience is located south of this interchange From here the freeway heads northeast and curves to the southeast The route leaves Columbia and turns east coming to a diamond interchange with Prospect Road US 30 passes through Mountville before it reaches a diamond interchange with Stony Battery Road that serves Mountville The freeway runs east northeast through suburban development coming to a partial cloverleaf interchange with Centerville Road The route turns northeast and crosses under PA 23 US 30 curves east as it reaches a diamond interchange with PA 741 The freeway widens to six lanes before it curves northeast and crosses the Little Conestoga Creek The route comes to an interchange with Harrisburg Pike at which point it enters Lancaster and narrows to four lanes with an auxiliary lane in each direction passing southeast of the Park City Center shopping mall that is served by the Harrisburg Pike interchange US 30 leaves Lancaster as it passes over Amtrak s Keystone Corridor and Norfolk Southern s Lititz Secondary railroad lines reaching an eastbound exit and westbound entrance with PA 72 The route comes to an interchange with the eastern terminus of the PA 283 freeway At this point the US 30 freeway widens to six lanes and turns east as it becomes paralleled by a pair of frontage roads called Chester Road eastbound and York Road westbound The frontage roads serve the interchanges at Fruitville Pike PA 501 and US 222 PA 272 to the north of Lancaster Past the US 222 PA 272 interchange the frontage roads end and US 222 heads east concurrent with US 30 on the freeway before US 222 splits northeast on a freeway at a trumpet interchange From here US 30 continues southeast as a four lane freeway with an auxiliary lane in each direction coming to a diamond interchange with PA 23 at New Holland Pike At this point PA 23 joins US 30 in a wrong way concurrency with the freeway crossing the Conestoga River before PA 23 splits to the southwest at a partial cloverleaf interchange US 30 runs through a section of Lancaster before it meets Greenfield Road at a partial cloverleaf interchange Greenfield Road provides access to the Discover Lancaster Visitors Center The freeway curves to the south southeast passing over Norfolk Southern s New Holland Secondary and Amtrak s Keystone Corridor railroad lines before coming to a partial interchange with PA 340 that has no westbound exit US 30 continues as a four lane freeway with an eastbound auxiliary lane before the freeway section ends at an interchange with the eastern terminus of PA 462 to the east of Lancaster 2 3 Lancaster to New Jersey edit See also Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike nbsp US 30 westbound in East Lampeter Township to the east of Lancaster Past the interchange with the eastern terminus of PA 462 US 30 heads east southeast along Lincoln Highway a five lane road with a center left turn lane passing through Greenland 2 3 The route heads into the Pennsylvania Dutch Country of eastern Lancaster County and is lined with many Amish tourist attractions 4 5 The road crosses Mill Creek and heads north of the Tanger Outlets Lancaster outlet mall and south of the Dutch Wonderland amusement park US 30 passes south of the American Music Theatre and runs between two shopping centers before it reaches an intersection with PA 896 Past this intersection the route narrows to a three lane road with a center left turn lane and heads through agricultural areas with some development passing through Soudersburg US 30 crosses the Pequea Creek and runs through Paradise before it comes to a bridge over Amtrak s Keystone Corridor railroad line From here the route continues east southeast a short distance to the north of the Amtrak line The road closely parallels the railroad tracks as it heads through Kinzers The Amtrak line diverges to the south east of here The route splits into a one way pair with two lanes in each direction as it reaches Gap and comes to an intersection with the eastern terminus of PA 772 US 30 continues along the one way pair with both directions rejoining at a junction with the northern terminus of PA 41 Past the PA 41 junction the route is a four lane divided highway that soon turns into a three lane road with a center left turn lane intersecting the southern terminus of PA 897 The road leaves Gap and turns into a three lane road two eastbound lanes and one westbound lane as it ascends a hill Farther east the route becomes three lanes with a center left turn lane 2 3 nbsp US 30 freeway westbound on the Exton Bypass past US 202 and US 30 Bus in Frazer US 30 enters Chester County and continues east along Lincoln Highway passing through Black Horse The route turns into a four lane undivided road and comes to an intersection with PA 10 north of Parkesburg where it becomes a divided highway US 30 splits from Lincoln Highway at an eastbound exit and westbound entrance by heading onto a four lane freeway called the Coatesville Downingtown Bypass with US 30 Bus continuing east along Lincoln Highway The freeway heads east crossing Buck Run and coming to a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with Airport Road that provides access to Chester County G O Carlson Airport Following this the route runs east northeast through a mix of rural areas and suburban development US 30 heads into Coatesville and crosses the West Branch Brandywine Creek before it comes to a partial cloverleaf interchange with PA 82 that provides access to Coatesville Past this interchange the freeway leaves Coatesville and passes under PA 340 before reaching an interchange with Reeceville Road The route curves east southeast and crosses under PA 340 again before running east and coming to a diamond interchange with PA 340 north of Thorndale US 30 heads east northeast and reaches a partial cloverleaf interchange with US 322 that serves Downingtown Farther east the freeway passes over PA 282 and the East Branch Brandywine Creek before it comes to a bridge over the Struble Trail and enters a section of Downingtown reaching a westbound exit and eastbound entrance with Norwood Road that provides access to PA 282 The route widens to six lanes and heads near suburban development before it comes to an eastbound exit and westbound entrance with PA 113 at which point it leaves Downingtown and narrows back to four lanes US 30 curves southeast and reaches an interchange with US 30 Bus Past this interchange the name of the freeway changes to Exton Bypass The route turns northeast and runs parallel to Amtrak s Keystone Corridor railroad line to the south of the road US 30 comes to a partial cloverleaf interchange with PA 100 that serves Exton to the north Following this the freeway continues east northeast parallel to the Amtrak line US 30 comes to an interchange with the US 202 freeway and the eastern terminus of US 30 Bus at which point the freeway section ends 2 3 The Exton Bypass portion of US 30 is designated the Exton Bypass Scenic Byway a Pennsylvania Scenic Byway 6 nbsp US 30 westbound past PA 252 in Paoli Past the interchange with US 202 and US 30 Bus US 30 heads east northeast along four lane divided Lincoln Highway and passes south of a park and ride lot running through Glenloch The route soon becomes Lancaster Avenue a three lane road with a center left turn lane In Frazer the road comes to an intersection with the northern terminus of PA 352 Farther east US 30 widens to five lanes with a center turn lane before it reaches a junction with the eastern terminus of PA 401 The route turns into a four lane divided highway prior to intersecting the southern terminus of PA 29 Past this intersection the road crosses under Norfolk Southern s Dale Secondary railroad line and continues east as it runs north of Malvern becoming undivided US 30 briefly gains a center left turn lane before it becomes a divided highway again as it passes south of Paoli Hospital prior to crossing under Amtrak s Keystone Corridor railroad line to the north of Green Tree At this point the route enters an area of suburbs called the Philadelphia Main Line as it heads into Paoli becoming a four lane undivided road In the center of Paoli the road has a junction with Paoli Pike before it passes south of the Paoli station serving Amtrak s Keystone Corridor and SEPTA s Paoli Thorndale Line US 30 gains a center left turn lane and reaches an intersection with PA 252 Following this intersection the route runs south of the parallel Amtrak line passing south of the Daylesford SEPTA station in Daylesford The road loses the center turn lane and runs further south but still parallel to the railroad tracks turning northeast US 30 reaches Berwyn where it passes south of the Berwyn SEPTA station and curves east and then southeast gaining a center left turn lane The route turns to the northeast and reaches Devon where it drops the center turn lane and runs south of the Devon SEPTA station before passing to the north of the Devon Horse Show grounds Past Devon the road bends to the east southeast 2 3 Upon intersecting Old Eagle School Road Sugartown Road US 30 enters Delaware County and continues east southeast along four lane undivided Lancaster Avenue curving east and running through the downtown area of Wayne The route passes through St Davids and turns southeast East of here the road becomes a divided highway before turning undivided again US 30 briefly becomes a divided highway again as it curves east and reaches an interchange with I 476 Past this interchange the route turns back into an undivided road and crosses under SEPTA s Norristown High Speed Line before coming to an intersection with PA 320 in Villanova Following this intersection the road runs through the Villanova University campus passing south of St Thomas of Villanova Church and curves southeast prior to the Ithan Avenue intersection where it heads to the south of Villanova Stadium and the Finneran Pavilion arena After passing through the university campus US 30 runs through Rosemont Upon intersecting County Line Road the route enters Montgomery County and heads into Bryn Mawr passing through the downtown area The road continues southeast and briefly re enters Delaware County before heading back into Montgomery County US 30 passes through Haverford where it heads north of the Haverford School The route continues into Ardmore and runs through the downtown area passing south of the Ardmore station serving Amtrak s Keystone Corridor and SEPTA s Paoli Thorndale Line Past Ardmore the road heads through Wynnewood The route runs southeast before it crosses the East Branch Indian Creek and passes between the St Charles Borromeo Seminary to the northeast and Lankenau Medical Center to the southwest as a five lane road with a center left turn lane prior to reaching an intersection with US 1 City Avenue 2 3 nbsp I 676 US 30 Vine Street Expressway eastbound crossing the Schuylkill River and entering Center City Philadelphia Upon crossing US 1 US 30 enters Philadelphia and continues southeast along two lane undivided Lancaster Avenue through the Overbrook neighborhood At the intersection with 62nd Street Malvern Avenue the route passes north of the 63rd and Malvern Loop that serves as the terminus of SEPTA s Route 10 trolley line and heads into urban areas of West Philadelphia a short distance to the south of Amtrak s Keystone Corridor railroad line running north of Overbrook High School after the 59th Street intersection Farther southeast a SEPTA trolley track follows the westbound lanes past the 54th Street junction At the intersection with 52nd Street Lansdowne Avenue US 30 heads further south from the Amtrak tracks and SEPTA s Route 10 trolley line begins following the road The route splits from Lancaster Avenue by turning east onto Girard Avenue which carries two lanes of traffic and SEPTA s Route 15 trolley line The road runs east and crosses over Amtrak s Keystone Corridor railroad line at the Belmont Avenue intersection before widening to four lanes Farther east US 30 passes over CSX s Harrisburg Subdivision railroad line before it comes to an interchange with I 76 Schuylkill Expressway and US 13 to the north of the Philadelphia Zoo crossing under the Pennsylvania Railroad Connecting Railway Bridge carrying Amtrak s Northeast Corridor railroad line at this interchange At this interchange US 13 heads south along 34th Street and continues east north along the Girard Avenue Bridge over the Schuylkill River while US 30 becomes concurrent with I 76 on the six lane Schuylkill Expressway at this point and the road heads south with the Philadelphia Zoo to the west and Martin Luther King Jr Drive the Schuylkill River Trail and the Schuylkill River parallel to the east The freeway turns southeast and runs between Amtrak s Northeast Corridor to the southwest and the river drive trail and river to the northeast with Boathouse Row on the opposite bank of the river The Schuylkill Expressway comes to an eastbound exit and westbound entrance with Spring Garden Street which heads east across the Schuylkill River toward the Philadelphia Museum of Art The freeway continues south heading east of Amtrak s Penn Coach Yard and comes to an interchange with the western terminus of I 676 2 3 At this point US 30 heads east concurrent with I 676 on the six lane Vine Street Expressway It immediately crosses the Schuylkill River and then the Schuylkill River Trail and CSX s Philadelphia Subdivision railroad line on the river s east bank on the Vine Street Expressway Bridge before coming to an interchange with 23rd Street and 22nd Street and the Benjamin Franklin Parkway that has access to the Philadelphia Museum of Art and the Franklin Institute science museum From this point the Vine Street Expressway enters a depressed road cut and passes under several streets and two freeway lids running along the northern edge of Center City Philadelphia Vine Street serves as a street level frontage road to the freeway Within this alignment there is an exit for PA 611 Broad Street After passing under 10th Street in Chinatown the last street the depressed alignment passes under the highway rises up and reaches a split between the Vine Street Expressway which continues to I 95 and I 676 US 30 At this split there is also an eastbound exit and westbound entrance for 8th Street After exiting the Vine Street Expressway eastbound I 676 US 30 has a brief at grade portion along southbound 6th Street east of Franklin Square to the Benjamin Franklin Bridge approach an example of a non limited access section of Interstate Highway Westbound I 676 US 30 has a ramp from the bridge to the Vine Street Expressway that intersects 7th Street and 8th Street at grade From this point I 676 US 30 crosses over I 95 Christopher Columbus Boulevard and then the Delaware River into New Jersey on the seven lane Benjamin Franklin Bridge which also carries pedestrians and the PATCO Speedline 2 3 This bridge and its approaches are maintained by the Delaware River Port Authority 7 History edit nbsp Lincoln HighwayLocationGreene Township MorrisvilleExisted1913 1928 nbsp Pennsylvania Route 1LocationGreene Township MorrisvilleExisted1924 1928 The path of the Lincoln Highway was first laid out in September 1913 it was defined to run through Canton Ohio Beaver Pittsburgh Greensburg Ligonier Bedford Chambersburg Gettysburg York Lancaster and Philadelphia Pennsylvania and Camden New Jersey 8 This bypassed Harrisburg to the south and thus did not use the older main route across the state between Chambersburg and Lancaster From Pittsburgh to Philadelphia this incorporated a number of old turnpikes some of which still collected tolls 9 nbsp US 30 westbound in Wynnewood Part of the Harrisburg and Pittsburgh Turnpike chartered in 1806 broken up in 1814 into separate turnpike companies 10 of which the following were included Greensburg and Pittsburgh Turnpike Pittsburgh to Greensburg Somerset and Greensburg Turnpike renamed the Stoystown and Greensburg Turnpike 1815 Greensburg to Stoystown Bedford and Somerset Turnpike renamed the Bedford and Stoystown Turnpike 1815 Stoystown to Bedford Chambersburg and Bedford Turnpike Bedford to Chambersburg Chambersburg Turnpike Chambersburg to Cashtown Part of the Gettysburg and Petersburg Turnpike from Cashtown to Gettysburg York and Gettysburg Turnpike Gettysburg to York Wrightsville Turnpike York to Wrightsville Columbia Wrightsville Bridge Wrightsville to Columbia Lancaster and Susquehanna Turnpike Columbia to Lancaster Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike Lancaster to Philadelphia This original 1913 path of the Lincoln Highway continued east from Philadelphia crossing the Delaware River to Camden New Jersey on the Market Street Ferry Philadelphia marked the route from the ferry landing west on Market Street through downtown and onto Lancaster Avenue to the Philadelphia and Lancaster Turnpike in early 1914 11 Camden was dropped from the route allowing the highway to cross the Delaware River on a bridge at Trenton New Jersey initially the Calhoun Street Bridge later the Bridge Street Bridge citation needed In 1924 the entire Lincoln Highway in Pennsylvania was designated Pennsylvania Route 1 PA 1 12 In late 1926 the route from West Virginia to Philadelphia using the new route west of Pittsburgh was assigned US 30 while the rest of the Lincoln Highway and PA 1 became part of US 1 The PA 1 designation was gone by 1929 13 but several branches from east to west PA 101 PA 201 PA 301 PA 401 PA 501 and PA 601 had been assigned by then PA 701 was assigned later as a branch of PA 101 citation needed Ohio to Downtown Pittsburgh edit As defined in 1913 the Lincoln Highway ran east northeast from Canton Ohio to Alliance and east via Salem crossing into Pennsylvania just east of East Palestine From there it continued southeasterly to Beaver crossing the Beaver River there and heading south along its left bank to Rochester and the Ohio River s right bank to Pittsburgh 9 By 1915 the highway had been realigned to the route it would follow until the end of 1927 It ran east from Canton Ohio to Lisbon and then southeast to East Liverpool on the Ohio River After crossing into Pennsylvania it turned north away from the river at Smiths Ferry taking an inland route to Beaver where it rejoined the Ohio River It crossed the Beaver River into Rochester joining the 1913 alignment and turned south with the Ohio to Pittsburgh 9 1915 route edit This route entered Pennsylvania along PA Route 68 After crossing Little Beaver Creek it turned south on Main Street passing under the Cleveland and Pittsburgh Railroad PRR into Glasgow After passing through Glagow on Liberty Street the highway turned north and passed under the railroad again at Smiths Ferry merging with Smiths Ferry Road 9 This alignment through Glasgow carried the Lincoln Highway until ca 1926 when the present PA 68 was built on the north side of the railroad 14 The Lincoln Highway left the banks of the Ohio River on Smiths Ferry Road which includes an old stone bridge over Upper Dry Run It turned east on Tuscarawas Road through Ohioville entering Beaver on Fourth Street and turning south on Buffalo Street to reach Third Street PA Route 68 9 By 1929 this inland Glasgow Beaver route was numbered PA Route 168 while the route along the river never followed by the Lincoln Highway was PA 68 13 Where PA 68 crosses the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad from Beaver into Bridgewater along Third Street and then the Beaver River on the ca 1963 14 Rochester Bridgewater Bridge the Lincoln Highway instead ran along Bridge Street just to the north and crossed the Old Rochester Bridgewater Bridge into Rochester 9 Continuing through Rochester to Pittsburgh the Lincoln Highway left the Old Rochester Bridgewater Bridge on Madison Street turning onto Brighton Avenue and then crossing the Pittsburgh Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway PRR on New York Avenue After running alongside the Ohio River on Railroad Avenue the highway crossed the railroad again in Freedom about a block north of Third Street 15 running through Freedom on Third Avenue 9 South of downtown Freedom Third Avenue merges into the Ohio River Boulevard also known as PA Route 65 which runs along the old Lincoln Highway into Conway There the old highway went onto First Avenue and State Street rejoining PA 65 in Baden Further into Baden the old highway left PA 65 again onto State Street becoming Duss Avenue in Harmony Township At the Ambridge limits this becomes PA Route 989 but the old highway turned west at 14th Street and then south on Merchant Street 9 Crossing Big Sewickley Creek from Ambridge Beaver County into Leetsdale Allegheny County Merchant Street becomes Beaver Street a brick road Beaver Road and Beaver Street continues through Edgeworth Sewickley and Osborne merging back into PA 65 at the border with Haysville Sewickley officially changed the name of its piece to Lincoln Highway by an ordinance in January 1916 and Osborne Edgeworth and Leetsdale soon followed suit but that name is no longer used 9 In Glenfield the highway crossed the Pittsburgh Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway twice once near the present overpass and again west of Toms Run Road 16 The old road next to the Ohio River Beaver Street is still a yellow brick road but now used only by local traffic 9 The old road left PA 65 again in Emsworth as Beaver Road becoming Brighton Road in Ben Avon before re merging with PA 65 It splits yet again also in Ben Avon onto Brighton Road another yellow brick road In Avalon it is California Avenue and in Bellevue it is Lincoln Avenue coincidentally named after Lincoln soon after the U S Civil War citation needed The highway crosses into Pittsburgh on a high concrete arch bridge over Jack s Run built in 1924 to replace an earlier bridge built for a streetcar line and returns to the California Avenue name citation needed It crosses Woods Run on a similar 1928 bridge next to a newer bridge built for the Ohio River Boulevard PA Route 65 citation needed Where California Avenue curves away from PA 65 the Lincoln Highway continued next to it on Chateau Street turning east on Western Avenue and then south on Galveston Avenue onto the 1915 Manchester Bridge to the Point 9 During the time that the Lincoln Highway ran through Rochester the Rochester Pittsburgh segment was locally maintained It was often foggy and a July 1926 Lincoln Highway Association road report states that it was paved city streets mostly poor in stark contrast to the good paving east of Pittsburgh By 1924 reports recommended following an alternate on the other side of the river between Rochester and Pittsburgh 9 The route west of Rochester had similar problems it was a dirt road despite being a state highway 17 By 1922 an official detour was recommended via East Palestine Ohio and Beaver largely identical to the initial 1913 plan citation needed 1927 route edit Work began in the mid 1920s on a new route to the south of the existing route passing through West Virginia and bypassing the problematic sections on both sides of Rochester the Lincoln Highway was moved to it December 2 1927 9 This new route had already been numbered U S 30 in late 1926 18 The new Lincoln Highway bypassed Imperial on a bypass built for it 14 Just southeast of Imperial the highway turned east on Steubenville Pike joining what was U S Route 22 before the present U S 22 U S 30 freeway was built ca 1964 14 Steubenville Pike runs along the north side of the freeway crossing to the south side and then merging with it just west of the I 376 interchange From the late 1940s to 1982 the appropriately named Penn Lincoln Drive In Theater operated on a stretch of the original Lincoln Highway in North Fayette just east of Imperial It reopened for one season in 1985 as the Super 30 West Drive In The site is now occupied by Penn Lincoln Shopping Center citation needed US 22 and US 30 now join I 376 and turn southeast but the Lincoln Highway and US 22 30 before the nearby part of what is now I 376 opened in 1953 continued east with PA 60 through Robinson Township In Pittsburgh the highway ran along Crafton Boulevard Noblestown Road and South Main Street as PA 60 still does It turned onto Carson Street now PA Route 837 at the West End Circle crossing the 1927 Point Bridge into the Point 9 Downtown Pittsburgh to North Huntingdon edit nbsp Marker for Lincoln Highway along US 30 westbound at PA 655 in Licking Creek Township From 1915 to late 1927 the Lincoln Highway crossed the Allegheny River on the Manchester Bridge to the Point touching down at the foot of Penn Avenue after meeting the Point Bridge 19 It made its way through downtown to Bigelow Boulevard now PA Route 380 using Water Street Liberty Avenue and Oliver Avenue 20 It continued to follow present PA 380 onto Craig Street and Baum Boulevard to East Liberty The highway left East Liberty and Pittsburgh on Penn Avenue the old Pittsburgh and Greensburg Turnpike also now part of PA 380 and further east part of PA Route 8 PA 380 however bypasses the center of East Liberty 9 The Boulevard of the Allies opened east from downtown Pittsburgh in 1923 and in 1924 it was designated as an alternate route 21 By 1930 this bypass ran along the Boulevard of the Allies Forbes Avenue Beeler Street Wilkins Avenue and Dallas Avenue rejoining the Lincoln Highway at Penn Avenue west of Wilkinsburg 22 Leaving the Pittsburgh area the Lincoln Highway turned onto Ardmore Boulevard now signed as PA 8 north of I 376 and U S 30 south of I 376 It then branched away from Ardmore Boulevard along Electric Avenue turned northeast on Braddock Avenue then east on Penn Avenue The Lincoln Highway originally continued onto Airbrake Avenue and then turned south at 11th Street to cross Turtle Creek and the Pennsylvania Railroad main line over a bridge a 1925 replacement bridge starts at the intersection of Airbrake Avenue Penn Avenue Monroeville Avenue and Greensburg Pike citation needed The Lincoln Highway then followed Greensburg Pike up to current U S 30 citation needed In 1932 a bypass of the grades into and out of Turtle Creek including the George Westinghouse Bridge was opened It runs along current U S 30 from the interchange with Electric Avenue in Chalfant to the intersection with Greensburg Pike in North Versailles citation needed White Oak named their main street Lincoln Way in an attempt to convince the Lincoln Highway Association to use it but instead the highway continued along Greensburg Pike through North Versailles citation needed Later history edit nbsp US 30 westbound passing through the Villanova University campus in Villanova The Penn Lincoln Parkway was built from 1953 to 1962 as a freeway bypass across the Pittsburgh area for both the Lincoln Highway US 30 and the William Penn Highway US 22 citation needed In 1953 the portion of present day US 30 between PA 283 in Lancaster and PA 462 east of Lancaster was built as a freeway alignment of US 230 23 24 25 In 1967 US 30 was shifted to a freeway bypass between Prospect Road east of Columbia and east of Lancaster the route replaced the US 230 designation between the present day PA 283 and PA 462 interchanges PA 462 was designated onto the former alignment of US 30 between those two points 26 In 1972 US 30 was shifted to a bypass between west of York and Columbia with PA 462 extended west along the former alignment of US 30 27 28 In 1963 the Coatesville Downingtown Bypass a freeway bypass route of US 30 was completed The bypass begins east of the intersection with PA 10 and terminates east of Downingtown in East Caln Township Upon completion of the bypass US 30 Bus was designated onto the former alignment of US 30 29 26 Shortly after the completion of the bypass plans were made to extend the new bypass further east to the US 202 interchange with US 30 However due to significant delays caused by environmental concerns and funding issues construction did not begin until 1993 The Exton Bypass was completed in December 1995 and was connected to the existing Coatesville Downingtown Bypass allowing for a continuous freeway alignment of US 30 from PA 10 to US 202 US 30 Bus was also extended east through Exton along the former alignment of US 30 to its current eastern terminus following the completion of the bypass The Exton Bypass also provided significant relief to the Exton area as the intersection of the former US 30 alignment now US 30 Bus and PA 100 was the source of major congestion throughout the area 30 31 32 33 From 1997 to 2004 significant construction was completed to the US 30 bypass around Lancaster citation needed A bypass of the section of US 30 in Gap in Lancaster County was first proposed in February 2012 In 2015 a PennDOT project began to build a bypass to the north of Gap for westbound US 30 between the PA 772 and PA 41 intersections to improve traffic flow and safety at the congested intersection of US 30 and PA 41 The bypass which cost 10 million was opened on August 4 2016 34 nbsp US 30 eastbound in Paoli On April 7 2018 a section of US 30 in East Pittsburgh sank 40 feet 12 m down a hill after a landslide One apartment building was destroyed another threatened and ultimately demolished 35 The damaged road section reopened in late June 2018 36 There are plans for improvements to be made to the US 30 freeway bypassing Coatesville and Downingtown in Chester County The project is split into a western section between PA 10 near Parkesburg and PA 82 in Coatesville and an eastern section between Reeceville Road near Coatesville and US 30 Bus east of Downingtown The western section will remain four lanes wide with construction planned to begin in 2026 The eastern section is planned to be widened to six lanes with construction beginning as early as 2028 In addition to improvements made to the freeway interchanges will also be improved Construction of the western section is projected to cost 355 million while the eastern section is projected to cost 460 million 37 Major intersections editThis section is missing mileposts for junctions Please help by adding them CountyLocation 38 mi 39 kmExitDestinationsNotes BeaverGreene Township0 0000 000 nbsp nbsp US 30 west Lincoln Highway East LiverpoolContinuation into West Virginia 2 3283 747 nbsp PA 168 Hookstown Washington 4 8837 858 nbsp nbsp PA 151 east Bocktown Road Western terminus of PA 151 Hanover Township7 73312 445 nbsp PA 18 Frankfort Road Frankfort Springs Monaca AlleghenyFindlay Township17 530 17 64328 212 28 394 nbsp nbsp nbsp PA Turnpike 576 Southern Beltway Pittsburgh International AirportExit 2 on PA 576 E ZPass or toll by plate North Fayette Township20 98133 766Western end of freeway nbsp nbsp US 22 west William Penn Highway Weirton nbsp nbsp PA 978 south Bateman Road ImperialWestern end of US 22 concurrency northern terminus of PA 978 22 48636 188Hankey FarmsAccess via Oakdale Road 23 47537 779 nbsp Orange Belt OakdaleWestbound exit and eastbound entrance western end of Orange Belt concurrency access via McKee Road 24 49139 414Old Steubenville Pike Bayer Road Montour Church Road Robinson Township24 93740 132 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 376 west Airport Parkway Orange Belt Pittsburgh International AirportEastern end of Orange Belt concurrency western end of I 376 concurrency exit 60A on I 376 60B nbsp nbsp nbsp PA 60 south Yellow Belt Crafton 25 83141 57161Ridge Road Robinson Colliertownship line26 96643 39862 nbsp Yellow Belt Campbells Run Road Westbound exit and eastbound entrance Robinson Township28 235 29 14445 440 46 90364A nbsp I 79 Washington ErieExit 59 on I 79 Rosslyn Farms29 44847 39264BRosslyn FarmsWestbound exit and eastbound entrance access via Rosslyn Road Carnegie29 88248 090Buses only West Busway Eastbound exit and westbound entrance 30 29048 74765 nbsp PA 50 Carnegie Heidelberg Green Tree32 19251 80867 nbsp nbsp PA 121 Blue Belt Green Tree Mount Lebanon Crafton Pittsburgh32 66652 57168Parkway Center DriveWestbound exit and eastbound entrance 33 33953 65469A nbsp nbsp US 19 south Banksville Road Mt Lebanon UniontownWestbound exit and eastbound entrance western end of US 19 concurrency 33 77554 35669B nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 19 Truck south PA 51 south UniontownEastbound exit and westbound entrance western end of US 19 Truck concurrency 33 85054 47669C nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 19 north PA 51 north West EndEastbound exit and westbound entrance eastern end of US 19 concurrency 33 920 34 61154 589 55 701Fort Pitt Tunnel under Mount Washington 34 67555 80469C nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp PA 837 north to PA 51 West EndWestbound exit and eastbound left entrance 34 611 34 84055 701 56 070Fort Pitt Bridge over the Monongahela River 34 840 34 99656 070 56 32170ABoulevard of the Allies Liberty Avenue PPG ArenaEastbound left exit and westbound entrance 70BFort Duquesne Boulevard Convention Center Strip DistrictEastbound left exit and westbound entrance 70C nbsp nbsp I 279 north US 19 Truck north Fort Duquesne Bridge North ShoreLeft exit eastbound eastern end of concurency with US 19 Truck southern terminus of I 279 35 07556 44870DStanwix StreetNo eastbound exit left exit and entrance westbound left entrance eastbound 35 47557 09171AGrant StreetLeft exit and entrance 36 00357 94171BSecond AvenueWestbound exit only 36 92959 43172AForbes Avenue OaklandEastbound exit and westbound entrance 37 05559 63472B nbsp nbsp To I 579 Crosstown Blvd PA 885 north Boulevard of the Allies Liberty BridgeWestbound exit and eastbound left entrance 37 70960 68773 nbsp PA 885 Bates Street Glenwood OaklandWestbound exit and eastbound entrance signed as Exits 73A south and 73B north 39 33863 30874 nbsp Blue Belt Squirrel Hill Homestead 39 585 40 58963 706 65 322Squirrel Hill Tunnel under Squirrel Hill Pittsburgh Swissvale Edgewood tripoint41 52166 82277Edgewood SwissvaleAccess via Braddock Avenue Wilkinsburg42 88769 020 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 376 east US 22 east MonroevilleEastern end of I 376 US 22 concurrency exit 78A on I 376 nbsp nbsp PA 8 north WilkinsburgExit 78B on I 376 southern terminus of PA 8 Eastern end of freeway North Braddock Chalfant line45 26572 847East Pittsburgh Turtle CreekInterchange eastbound exit and westbound entrance access via Electric Avenue North Versailles Township47 71376 787Greensburg PikeInterchange East McKeesport48 05377 334 nbsp nbsp nbsp PA 148 south Yellow Belt 5th Avenue Northern terminus of PA 148 North Versailles Township49 98780 446 nbsp nbsp PA 48 Orange Belt Mosside Boulevard Jacks Run Road Monroeville McKeesport White Oak WestmorelandNorth Huntingdon Township54 94788 429Main StreetEastbound exit and entrance 56 85091 491 nbsp nbsp nbsp I 76 Toll Penna Turnpike Pittsburgh HarrisburgExit 67 Irwin on Penna Turnpike E ZPass or toll by plate Hempfield Township Adamsburg line58 15793 595Adamsburg Penn AronaInterchange access via Edna Road Hempfield Township61 43298 865 nbsp nbsp PA Turnpike 66 New Stanton DelmontExit 6 on PA 66 E ZPass or toll by plate 62 975101 348Western end of freeway 63 230101 759Pittsburgh StreetEastbound exit and westbound entrance Greensburg Hempfield Township line63 994102 988 nbsp nbsp PA 136 west West NewtonEastern terminus of PA 136 Southwest Greensburg64 904104 453 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 119 PA 66 Bus PA 819 to I 70 Connellsville BlairsvilleSouthern terminus of PA 66 Bus Hempfield Township65 337105 150Cedar StreetNo access across US 30 65 991106 202Greensburg Mount PleasantAccess via Mt Pleasant Road 66 778107 469 nbsp PA 130 Pittsburgh Street Pleasant UnityEastbound exit and westbound entrance 67 328108 354Greensburg Business DistrictWestbound exit and eastbound entrance Eastern end of freeway Westmoreland MallInterchange Unity Township74 051119 174 nbsp PA 981 Clearview Drive Pleasant Unity Latrobe 75 319121 214 nbsp PA 982 Youngstown Baggaley Bradenville New DerryInterchange Unity Derrytownship line76 880123 726 nbsp nbsp PA 217 north DerrySouthern terminus of PA 217 Ligonier Township81 623131 359 nbsp nbsp PA 259 north BolivarSouthern terminus of PA 259 Ligonier83 875134 984 nbsp PA 711 Market Street Stahlstown Oak Grove Johnstown Ligonier Township85 825138 122 nbsp nbsp PA 381 south Rector Linn Run State ParkNorthern terminus of PA 381 SomersetJennerstown95 113153 070 nbsp PA 985 Somerset Pike Somerset Johnstown Jenner Township96 713155 644 nbsp PA 601 Front Street Penn Avenue Somerset Boswell 98 360 98 449158 295 158 438 nbsp US 219 Somerset JohnstownInterchange Quemahoning Township103 100165 923 nbsp nbsp PA 281 south Pine Avenue FriedensInterchange northern terminus of PA 281 103 518166 596 nbsp nbsp PA 403 north Triple S Road Kanter HooversvilleSouthern terminus of PA 403 Stonycreek Shadetownship line110 444177 742 nbsp PA 160 Huckleberry Highway Rock Cut Road Berlin Windber BedfordSchellsburg121 637195 756 nbsp PA 96 Market Street Manns Choice Pleasantville Napier Township126 386203 399 nbsp nbsp PA 31 west Allegheny Road Manns Choice Cumberland SomersetEastern terminus of PA 31 Bedford Township126 972204 342 nbsp nbsp PA 56 west Pensyl Hollow Road Altoona JohnstownEastern terminus of PA 56 128 890207 428 nbsp nbsp nbsp US 30 Bus east Pitt Street BedfordWestern terminus of US 30 Bus Western end of freeway 129 798208 890 nbsp nbsp US 220 south Cumberland nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 220 north to I 99 north Altoona 131 979212 400 nbsp nbsp nbsp US 30 Bus west Bedford Business DistrictWestbound left exit and eastbound left entrance eastern terminus of US 30 Bus Eastern end of freeway Snake Spring Township132 226212 797 nbsp nbsp PA 326 south Egolf Road RainsburgNorthern terminus of PA 326 134 493216 446Pennknoll Road Upper Snake Spring Road PennwoodInterchange no westbound exit 135 173217 540Lutzville Road Upper Snake Spring Road PennwoodInterchange no westbound entrance Everett137 482221 256Western end of freeway nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 30 Bus east to PA 26 south EverettEastbound exit and westbound entrance western terminus of US 30 Bus West Providence Township139 338224 243 nbsp nbsp nbsp To PA 26 north Huntingdon Raystown LakeRaystown Lake only appears on eastbound signage Eastern end of freeway 140 319225 822 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 30 Bus west Main Street to PA 26 south EverettEastern terminus of US 30 Bus East Providence Township147 243236 965 nbsp nbsp I 70 east Washington D C BaltimoreWestern end of I 70 concurrency 147 537237 438 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 70 Toll west to I 76 Toll Penna Turnpike Pittsburgh Harrisburg New StantonEastern end of I 70 concurrency exit 161 Breezewood on Penna Turnpike E ZPass or toll by plate FultonBrush Creek Township150 652242 451 nbsp nbsp PA 915 west Crystal Springs Road Crystal SpringsWestern end of PA 915 concurrency 152 036244 678 nbsp nbsp PA 915 east North Valley Road HopewellEastern end of PA 915 concurrency Licking Creek Township158 300254 759 nbsp PA 655 Pleasant Ridge Road Saltillo Hancock Todd Township164 745265 131 nbsp nbsp nbsp US 522 to PA 16 McConnellsburg Mount UnionInterchange FranklinPeters Township172 541277 678 nbsp PA 75 Fort Loudon Road Path Valley Road Mercersburg Fannettsburg Willow Hill St Thomas Township177 517285 686 nbsp nbsp PA 416 south Mercersburg Road Lemasters MercersburgNorthern terminus of PA 416 Hamilton Township184 462296 863 nbsp nbsp PA 995 south Warm Spring Road WilliamsonNorthern terminus of PA 995 Chambersburg186 273299 777 nbsp nbsp US 11 south Main Street 186 384299 956 nbsp nbsp US 11 north 2nd Street Chambersburg Guilford Township line187 766 187 786302 180 302 212 nbsp I 81 Carlisle HagerstownExit 16 on I 81 Greene Township194 100312 374 nbsp nbsp PA 997 south Anthony Highway Mont Alto WaynesboroWestern end of PA 997 concurrency 194 215312 559 nbsp nbsp PA 997 north Black Gap Road ScotlandEastern end of PA 997 concurrency 196 384316 049 nbsp PA 233 Pine Grove Road Rocky Mountain Road Mont Alto Newville AdamsFranklin Township199 247320 657 nbsp nbsp PA 234 east Buchanan Valley Road Arendtsville BiglervilleWestern terminus of PA 234 Gettysburg211 075339 692 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 15 Bus PA 116 west Carlisle Street Baltimore Street to PA 97 PA 34Traffic circle western end of PA 116 concurrency 211 314340 077 nbsp nbsp PA 116 east Hanover Street HanoverEastern end of PA 116 concurrency Straban Township213 288343 254 nbsp US 15 Harrisburg FrederickInterchange Oxford Hamilton Berwick township tripoint222 530358 127 nbsp PA 94 Carlisle Pike Harrisburg Hanover Abbottstown225 074362 221 nbsp PA 194 Queen Street Traffic circle YorkWest Manchester Township234 387377 209 nbsp nbsp PA 116 west Hanover Road Eastern terminus of PA 116 235 247378 593 nbsp nbsp PA 616 south Trinity Road New SalemNorthern terminus of PA 616 235 859379 578Western end of freeway nbsp nbsp PA 462 east YorkWestern terminus of PA 462 238 494383 819 nbsp PA 74 Carlisle Avenue Dover West York Eastern end of freeway Manchester Township241 023387 889 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 83 BL PA 181 north North George Street to I 83 north Harrisburg Emigsville YorkSouthern terminus of PA 181 241 277388 298 nbsp I 83 Baltimore HarrisburgNo eastbound exit to I 83 north no westbound entrance from I 83 south exit 21 on I 83 Springettsbury Township243 169391 343Western end of freeway 243 749392 276Memory Lane East YorkNo westbound exit no westbound entrance from southbound Memory Lane 244 663393 747 nbsp PA 24 Mt Zion Road Hellam Township247 700398 635 nbsp nbsp To PA 462 Hallam 251 473404 707 nbsp nbsp To PA 462 Wrightsville Susquehanna River252 677406 644Wright s Ferry Bridge LancasterColumbia253 903408 617 nbsp PA 441 Columbia Marietta West Hempfield Township256 997413 597Prospect Road 258 812416 518MountvilleAccess via Stony Battery Road East Hempfield Township260 276418 874Centerville Road 262 393422 281 nbsp PA 741 Millersville RohrerstownAccess to Millersville University Manheim Township Lancaster line263 486424 040Harrisburg PikeAccess to Franklin amp Marshall College Manheim Township264 100425 028 nbsp PA 72 Manheim Pike Eastbound exit and westbound entrance 264 423425 548 nbsp nbsp PA 283 west Harrisburg Downtown LancasterEastbound access to Downtown Lancaster and Fruitville Pike eastern terminus of PA 283 265 034 265 757426 531 427 694 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp PA 501 Lititz Pike PA 272 Oregon Pike US 222 southEastbound signage nbsp nbsp nbsp PA 501 US 222 south Lititz Pike Fruitville PikeWestbound signage western end of US 222 concurrency nbsp nbsp PA 272 north Oregon Pike Westbound signage 266 416428 755 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 222 north to I 76 Ephrata ReadingI 76 only appears on eastbound signage Ephrata only appears on westbound signage eastern end of US 222 concurrency 267 161429 954 nbsp nbsp PA 23 east New Holland Avenue Pike Western end of PA 23 concurrency Lancaster East Lampeter Township line267 771430 936 nbsp nbsp PA 23 west Walnut Street Eastern end of PA 23 concurrency 268 497432 104Greenfield Road East Lampeter Township269 387433 536 nbsp PA 340 Old Philadelphia Pike No westbound exit 270 150434 764 nbsp nbsp PA 462 west Lincoln Highway Downtown LancasterEastern terminus of PA 462 Eastern end of freeway 272 705438 876 nbsp PA 896 Eastbrook Road Hartman Bridge Road Strasburg Salisbury Township281 639453 254 nbsp nbsp PA 772 west Newport Road Eastern terminus of PA 772 282 034453 890 nbsp nbsp PA 41 south Gap Newport Pike Wilmington DENorthern terminus of PA 41 282 313454 339 nbsp nbsp PA 897 north White Horse Road Southern terminus of PA 897 ChesterWest Sadsbury Sadsburytownship line286 823461 597 nbsp PA 10 Octorara Trail Honey Brook Parkesburg Sadsbury Township287 555462 775Western end of freeway nbsp nbsp nbsp US 30 Bus east Lincoln Highway Eastbound exit and westbound entrance western terminus of US 30 Bus Valley Township290 087466 850Chester County AirportWestbound exit and eastbound entrance access via Airport Road Coatesville Valley Township line292 916471 403 nbsp PA 82 Coatesville Caln Township294 673474 230Reeceville RoadAccess to Coatesville Veterans Hospital 297 056478 065 nbsp PA 340 Thorndale 298 173479 863 nbsp US 322 Manor Avenue Downingtown299 393481 826 nbsp PA 282 Wallace Avenue Westbound exit and eastbound entrance access via Norwood Road East Caln Township299 933482 695 nbsp nbsp nbsp PA 113 West Uwchlan Avenue to PA 100 Downingtown LionvilleEastbound exit and westbound entrance 300 913484 273 nbsp nbsp US 30 Bus Lancaster Avenue West Whiteland Township303 841488 985 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp PA 100 to US 202 south Exton West ChesterUS 202 signed eastbound West Whiteland East Whitelandtownship line306 055492 548 nbsp US 202 King of Prussia West Chester nbsp nbsp nbsp US 30 Bus west Lancaster Avenue ExtonEastern terminus of US 30 Bus Eastern end of freeway East Whiteland Township307 519494 904 nbsp nbsp PA 352 south Sproul Road Chester Immaculata UniversityNorthern terminus of PA 352 309 186497 587 nbsp nbsp PA 401 west Conestoga Road ElversonEastern terminus of PA 401 309 486498 069 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp PA 29 north Morehall Road to US 202 PhoenixvilleSouthern terminus of PA 29 Tredyffrin Township312 020502 148 nbsp PA 252 Bear Hill Road Leopard Road Valley Forge Newtown Square DelawareRadnor Township318 773 318 902513 015 513 223 nbsp I 476 Mid County Expressway Chester Plymouth MeetingExit 13 on I 476 319 158513 635 nbsp PA 320 North Spring Mill Road Sproul Road Montgomery No major junctions Delaware No major junctions Montgomery Philadelphiacounty lineLower Merion Township Philadelphia line325 258523 452 nbsp US 1 City Avenue Bala Cynwyd Upper Darby PhiladelphiaPhiladelphia328 691528 977Western end of freeway 342 nbsp nbsp I 76 west Schuylkill Expressway Valley Forge nbsp US 13 34th Street Girard Avenue Western end of I 76 concurrency 343Spring Garden Street Haverford AvenueEastbound exit and westbound entrance 329 8530 8344 nbsp nbsp nbsp I 76 east Schuylkill Expressway International Airport nbsp nbsp I 676 beginsEastern end of I 76 concurrency western terminus of I 676 Vine Street Expressway Bridge over the Schuylkill River 330 2531 4 Ben Franklin Parkway 23rd Street 330 8532 4 nbsp PA 611 Broad Street Central Philadelphia 331 2533 0 8th Street south Chinatown Market EastAt grade intersection westbound 331 3533 2 nbsp nbsp I 95 Chester Philadelphia International Airport New YorkExit 22 on I 95 to Penn s Landing nbsp nbsp To PA 611 Vine Street Pennsylvania Convention CenterWestbound exit and eastbound entrance 331 7533 8 6th Street south Independence Hall Penn s LandingAt grade intersection eastbound 5th StreetWestbound exit and eastbound entrance Delaware River332 0534 3Benjamin Franklin Bridge Westbound toll cash or E ZPass 334 6538 5 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp I 676 south US 30 east Camden Cherry HillContinuation into New Jersey 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminus Electronic toll collection Incomplete access TolledSee also edit nbsp U S Roads portal nbsp Pennsylvania portal nbsp Philadelphia portalReferences edit Google June 21 2014 U S Route 30 in Pennsylvania Map Google Maps Google Retrieved June 21 2014 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap Google August 18 2020 U S Route 30 in Pennsylvania Map Google Maps Google Retrieved August 18 2020 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ADC Map 2003 Pennsylvania State Road Atlas Alexandria VA ADC Map pp 54 55 67 71 74 77 84 90 ISBN 0875303714 Interactive Map of Lancaster County Map Discover Lancaster Retrieved October 9 2017 Amish amp PA Dutch Countryside Discover Lancaster Retrieved October 9 2017 Exton Bypass VisitPA com Retrieved March 27 2012 I 676 Straight Line Diagram PDF New Jersey Department of Transportation Retrieved March 17 2020 Lincoln Highway Association September 14 1913 Proclamation of the Route of the Lincoln Highway Lincoln Highway Association via Wikisource a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Butko Brian 2002 The Lincoln Highway Pennsylvania Traveler s Guide Stackpole Books ISBN 978 0 8117 2497 5 full citation needed Pennsylvania 1822 Laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Dec 21 1812 Mar 25 1817 J Bioren How Lincoln Way Project Now Stands The New York Times April 5 1914 page needed U S 22 The William Penn Highway Federal Highway Administration Retrieved October 9 2014 a b 1929 Map of Pennsylvania Map Pennsylvania Department of Highways Archived from the original on February 4 2012 a b c d National Bridge Inventory full citation needed 1904 USGS Beaver quadrangle Archived from the original on April 18 2006 Retrieved July 18 2006 United States Geological Survey 1908 Sewickley Quadrangle Map Reston Virginia United States Geological Survey Archived from the original on June 14 2006 Retrieved July 19 2006 1911 state map permanent dead link full citation needed permanent dead link Bureau of Public Roads amp American Association of State Highway Officials November 11 1926 United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials Map 1 7 000 000 Washington DC United States Geological Survey OCLC 32889555 Retrieved November 7 2013 via Wikimedia Commons Plat Map Central Pittsburgh Map 1923 full citation needed Butko Brian 2005 Greetings from the Lincoln Highway Stackpole Books p 74 full citation needed Appendix A Lincoln Highway Chronology PDF Lincoln Highway Resource Guide Archived from the original PDF on August 10 2007 full citation needed 1930 Pennsylvania Transportation Map back side permanent dead link Federal Highway Administration 2012 NBI Structure Number 000000000021030 National Bridge Inventory Federal Highway Administration U S Route Numbering Committee 1953 Report of the U S Route Numbering Committee to the Executive Committee PDF Report Washington DC American Association of State Highway Officials p 123 Retrieved October 28 2020 via Wikimedia Commons Official Map of Pennsylvania PDF Map Pennsylvania Department of Highways 1960 Archived from the original PDF on July 5 2011 Retrieved December 17 2014 a b Official Map of Pennsylvania PDF Map Pennsylvania Department of Highways 1970 Retrieved September 26 2020 Smith Stephen H March 27 2013 a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.