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U.S. Route 9

U.S. Route 9 (US 9) is a north–south United States Numbered Highway in the states of Delaware, New Jersey, and New York in the Northeastern United States. It is one of only two U.S. Highways with a ferry connection (the Cape May–Lewes Ferry, between Lewes, Delaware, and North Cape May, New Jersey); the other is US 10. US 9 is signed east–west in Delaware and north–south on the rest of its route. The southern terminus of the route is in Laurel, Delaware, at an intersection with US 13,[a] while the highway's northern terminus is at a junction with Interstate 87 (I-87) in Champlain, New York, where the old roadway continues north as the unsigned New York State Route 971B (NY 971B) (0.46 m/0.74 km), which ends in a cul-de-sac just short of the Canadian border.

U.S. Route 9

Route information
Length522.73 mi[1][2][3] (841.25 km)
Existed1926[4]–present
Major junctions
South end US 13 at Laurel, DE
Major intersections
North end I-87 in Champlain, NY just south of the US-Canada border
Location
CountryUnited States
StatesDelaware, New Jersey, New York
Highway system
US 8 US 10

Route description edit

Lengths
  mi[1][2][3] km
DE 30.92 49.76
NJ 166.80 268.44
NY 325.01 523.05
Total 522.73 841.25

Much of US 9 is a two-lane road, with some expansions near more populous areas. The major exception to this is central and northern New Jersey, where it is a wide four-lane (or six-lane) divided strip, especially during much of its concurrency with US 1 and in Middlesex and Monmouth counties. New York boasts a few similar sections, as well as two short expressway sections near Albany.

In New Jersey, US 9 mainly runs parallel to the Garden State Parkway, and, in New York, most of US 9 runs parallel to I-87.

Delaware edit

 
Southern (Western) terminus of US 9 at US 13 in Laurel, Delaware

US 9 runs an east–west path through Sussex County, running east from US 13 in Laurel, passing through Georgetown, east to Lewes, where it leads to the Cape May–Lewes Ferry, which carries US 9 across the Delaware Bay to New Jersey.[5] US 9 was extended to Delaware by way of the Cape May–Lewes Ferry in 1974, replacing Delaware Route 28 (DE 28) between Laurel and Georgetown and DE 18 between Georgetown and Lewes. US 9 runs concurrent with DE 404 between Georgetown and the Five Points intersection near Lewes.

New Jersey edit

 
US 9 northbound in Manalapan Township, New Jersey

From Cape May, US 9 runs north parallel to the Garden State Parkway, until briefly joining the Parkway to cross Great Egg Harbor Bay on the reconstructed Great Egg Harbor Bridge following the closure and demolition of the Beesley's Point Bridge. US 9 then exits the Parkway north of the bridge (where the Parkway includes a toll on all US 9 and Parkway traffic in the southbound direction) and runs through the Atlantic City suburbs, until joining the Parkway briefly again to cross the Mullica River estuary in the Pine Barrens region of South Jersey. At New Gretna, US 9 exits the parkway and parallels wooded areas and marshlands along Little Egg Harbor and Manahawkin and Barnegat bays, passing Manahawkin and paralleling Long Beach Island, until South Toms River where the highway rejoins the Parkway for a third and final time through Toms River. In Toms River exists the only Parkway/US 9 concurrency with interim interchanges at Parkway exits 81 and 82, before exiting the parkway at exit 83 and continuing north through Toms River to Lakewood, where the road becomes a divided highway that follows a more inland route through Howell Township, Freehold Township, Manalapan Township, Marlboro Township, Old Bridge Township, Sayreville, and into Perth Amboy. From there, the road resumes its parallel course with the Garden State Parkway. After crossing the Edison Bridge over the Raritan River, it merges with US 1 in Woodbridge Township. The concurrency, an important and busy regional artery, continues past Newark Liberty International Airport and over the Pulaski Skyway, finally leaving the state along with US 1 and I-95 via the George Washington Bridge.

Overlap with US 1 edit

 
A type of sign found on and near the concurrent US 1 and US 9 in New Jersey
 
US 1/9 northbound in Newark, New Jersey approaching the Pulaski Skyway

A large section in northeast New Jersey and a small section in southern New York is concurrent with US 1. Route shields on this section, which includes the Pulaski Skyway, often show both numbers in the same shield, with an endash or ampersand between (1–9 or 1&9). It is known locally as "one and nine" or "one-nine".

New York edit

US 9 exits shortly after the George Washington Bridge to go onto New York City's Broadway north of it, passing over the northern tip of Manhattan Island via the toll-free Broadway Bridge, through the Bronx and into Westchester County, where in some towns it follows the old Albany Post Road, which dates from the early days of the nation's existence.

Following the Hudson River closely as a busy surface road through the many suburban river villages and past National Historic Landmarks such as Sunnyside and Kykuit, US 9 becomes the Croton Expressway between Croton-on-Hudson and Peekskill. That section ends at the Annsville Circle junction with US 6 and US 202, where US 9 returns to two-lane status as it follows the old post road inland, away from the river. At Fishkill, the road passes the historic Van Wyck Homestead Museum and it becomes a six-lane divided strip until reaching the Poughkeepsie city limit. It then narrows to a four-lane divided strip which lasts until it intersects St. Andrews Road, just north of the Hyde ParkPoughkeepsie town line where it returns to two-lane status as it goes through Hyde Park and past its historic sites.

At Red Hook, US 9 veers inland again, becoming a two-lane country road through Columbia County save for the outskirts of Hudson. In Rensselaer County, it widens again as it intersects I-90 and then joins US 20 to Albany, where it crosses the Hudson at the Dunn Memorial Bridge. It is a busy surface road through the state capital, becoming a strip in its northern suburbs and taking traffic eventually to Saratoga Springs and Lake George, at the edge of the Adirondack Park.

 
End US 9 sign just short of the Canadian border in Champlain, New York

The Adirondack section of US 9 is the least trafficked of the road, returning to two lanes as it runs through vast tracts of forested wilderness and occasional hamlets. Almost 100 miles (160 km) to the north, it leaves the park and runs along or near Lake Champlain to Plattsburgh. North of there, it is once again a two-lane road all the way to Champlain, ending at an onramp to I-87 just shy of the border.

History edit

Prior to the opening of the Cape May–Lewes Ferry in 1964, US 9 ended on Lafayette Street in Cape May, New Jersey. It was rerouted to the west, via Sandman Boulevard and Lincoln Avenues, to meet the new ferry, and its southern stub into Cape May was renumbered as Route 109.[6]

 
Last northern reference marker on NY 971B (former US 9); Canadian customs are seen to the left

Originally, the road continued north across the border (as Route 9 toward Montreal) through the customs facilities now used by I-87/Autoroute 15. The official northern terminus (the point where the "End US 9" sign is posted) is just south of the interchange with I-87, less than a mile (1.6 km) from customs. The old Route 9 continues north for a very short distance (0.46 m/0.74 km) as the unsigned New York State Route 971B (NY 971B), which ends in a cul-de-sac just short of the Canadian border.

Major intersections edit

Delaware
  US 13 northeast of Laurel
  US 113 in Georgetown
  Cape May–Lewes Ferry in Lewes. US 9 utilizes the ferry across Delaware Bay to North Cape May, New Jersey.
New Jersey
   US 40 / US 322 in Pleasantville
  US 30 in Absecon
  I-195 in Howell Township
  I-95 in Woodbridge Township
  US 1 in Woodbridge Township. The highways travel concurrently to Manhattan, New York City.
  I-278 in Linden
  I-78 in Newark
  US 22 in Newark
  I-78 in Newark
  US 46 in Palisades Park. The highways travel concurrently to the New JerseyNew York state line.
  I-95 in Fort Lee. The highways travel concurrently to Manhattan, New York City.
  US 9W in Fort Lee
New York
   I-87 / I-287 in Tarrytown
   US 6 / US 202 in Peekskill. The highways travel concurrently to northwest of Peekskill.
  I-84 in Fishkill
  US 44 in Poughkeepsie
  I-90 in Schodack
  US 20 in Schodack. The highways travel concurrently to Albany.
  I-90 in Schodack
  US 4 in East Greenbush
  I-787 in Albany
  US 9W in Albany
  I-90 in Albany
  I-87 south of Saratoga Springs
  I-87 in Moreau
  I-87 in Queensbury
  US 11 in the Village of Champlain
  
 
I-87 to A-15 in the Town of Champlain

[7]

In popular culture edit

The highway is mentioned in the Bruce Springsteen songs "Born to Run" and "The Promise". The highway, particularly the section around Freehold Township, New Jersey, is associated with Springsteen more generally. It is also mentioned in the Springsteen song "Last Man Standing".

It is also mentioned in the songs "My Geraldine Lies Over the Delaware" by The Wonder Years and "The Devil On Hwy 9" by Danzig.

The Breeders song "Drivin' on 9" refers to the route.

In Wayne Wang's film Smoke, Thomas Cole's father, Cyrus, runs a garage on US 9.

See also edit

Related routes edit

Special and suffixed routes edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Southern terminus located near 38°34′13″N 75°33′44″W / 38.570141°N 75.562209°W / 38.570141; -75.562209

References edit

  1. ^ a b staff (2006), (PDF), Traffic Summary 2006, Delaware Department of Transportation, pp. 2–3, archived from the original (PDF) on March 18, 2009, retrieved January 3, 2012
  2. ^ a b "US 9 straight line diagram" (PDF). New Jersey Department of Transportation. Retrieved December 7, 2009.
  3. ^ a b "Appendix E: Traffic Volume Report – explanation of data items: US1 to NY10" (PDF). New York State Department of Transportation. July 25, 2011. pp. 21–26. Retrieved January 3, 2012.
  4. ^ 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.
  5. ^ "Lewes ferry beats the odds in a tricky transit sea". The Philadelphia Inquirer. August 1, 1976. Retrieved November 22, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ Sanderson, Dale (August 17, 2009), "Endpoints of US highways – US 9", US Ends.com, retrieved January 3, 2012
  7. ^ Rand McNally (2014). The Road Atlas (Walmart ed.). Chicago: Rand McNally. pp. 24, 66–67, 69, 71. ISBN 978-0-528-00771-2.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
Browse numbered routes
  NY 8NY  NY 9A
  Route 7NJ  Route 10
  DE 8DE  DE 9

route, north, south, united, states, numbered, highway, states, delaware, jersey, york, northeastern, united, states, only, highways, with, ferry, connection, cape, lewes, ferry, between, lewes, delaware, north, cape, jersey, other, signed, east, west, delawar. U S Route 9 US 9 is a north south United States Numbered Highway in the states of Delaware New Jersey and New York in the Northeastern United States It is one of only two U S Highways with a ferry connection the Cape May Lewes Ferry between Lewes Delaware and North Cape May New Jersey the other is US 10 US 9 is signed east west in Delaware and north south on the rest of its route The southern terminus of the route is in Laurel Delaware at an intersection with US 13 a while the highway s northern terminus is at a junction with Interstate 87 I 87 in Champlain New York where the old roadway continues north as the unsigned New York State Route 971B NY 971B 0 46 m 0 74 km which ends in a cul de sac just short of the Canadian border U S Route 9Route informationLength522 73 mi 1 2 3 841 25 km Existed1926 4 presentMajor junctionsSouth endUS 13 at Laurel DEMajor intersectionsUS 40 US 322 in Pleasantville NJ US 30 in Absecon NJ US 1 from Woodbridge Township NJ to New York NY I 78 US 22 in Newark NJ I 95 US 46 from Fort Lee NJ to New York NY US 6 US 202 in Peekskill NY I 84 in Fishkill NY US 44 at Poughkeepsie NY US 20 at Schodack Center NY I 90 in Albany NYNorth endI 87 in Champlain NY just south of the US Canada borderLocationCountryUnited StatesStatesDelaware New Jersey New YorkHighway systemUnited States Numbered Highway SystemList Special Divided US 8 US 10 Contents 1 Route description 1 1 Delaware 1 2 New Jersey 1 2 1 Overlap with US 1 1 3 New York 2 History 3 Major intersections 4 In popular culture 5 See also 5 1 Related routes 5 2 Special and suffixed routes 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksRoute description editLengths mi 1 2 3 kmDE 30 92 49 76NJ 166 80 268 44NY 325 01 523 05Total 522 73 841 25Much of US 9 is a two lane road with some expansions near more populous areas The major exception to this is central and northern New Jersey where it is a wide four lane or six lane divided strip especially during much of its concurrency with US 1 and in Middlesex and Monmouth counties New York boasts a few similar sections as well as two short expressway sections near Albany In New Jersey US 9 mainly runs parallel to the Garden State Parkway and in New York most of US 9 runs parallel to I 87 Delaware edit Main article U S Route 9 in Delaware nbsp Southern Western terminus of US 9 at US 13 in Laurel DelawareUS 9 runs an east west path through Sussex County running east from US 13 in Laurel passing through Georgetown east to Lewes where it leads to the Cape May Lewes Ferry which carries US 9 across the Delaware Bay to New Jersey 5 US 9 was extended to Delaware by way of the Cape May Lewes Ferry in 1974 replacing Delaware Route 28 DE 28 between Laurel and Georgetown and DE 18 between Georgetown and Lewes US 9 runs concurrent with DE 404 between Georgetown and the Five Points intersection near Lewes New Jersey edit Main article U S Route 9 in New Jersey nbsp US 9 northbound in Manalapan Township New JerseyFrom Cape May US 9 runs north parallel to the Garden State Parkway until briefly joining the Parkway to cross Great Egg Harbor Bay on the reconstructed Great Egg Harbor Bridge following the closure and demolition of the Beesley s Point Bridge US 9 then exits the Parkway north of the bridge where the Parkway includes a toll on all US 9 and Parkway traffic in the southbound direction and runs through the Atlantic City suburbs until joining the Parkway briefly again to cross the Mullica River estuary in the Pine Barrens region of South Jersey At New Gretna US 9 exits the parkway and parallels wooded areas and marshlands along Little Egg Harbor and Manahawkin and Barnegat bays passing Manahawkin and paralleling Long Beach Island until South Toms River where the highway rejoins the Parkway for a third and final time through Toms River In Toms River exists the only Parkway US 9 concurrency with interim interchanges at Parkway exits 81 and 82 before exiting the parkway at exit 83 and continuing north through Toms River to Lakewood where the road becomes a divided highway that follows a more inland route through Howell Township Freehold Township Manalapan Township Marlboro Township Old Bridge Township Sayreville and into Perth Amboy From there the road resumes its parallel course with the Garden State Parkway After crossing the Edison Bridge over the Raritan River it merges with US 1 in Woodbridge Township The concurrency an important and busy regional artery continues past Newark Liberty International Airport and over the Pulaski Skyway finally leaving the state along with US 1 and I 95 via the George Washington Bridge Overlap with US 1 edit Main article U S Route 1 9 nbsp A type of sign found on and near the concurrent US 1 and US 9 in New Jersey nbsp US 1 9 northbound in Newark New Jersey approaching the Pulaski SkywayA large section in northeast New Jersey and a small section in southern New York is concurrent with US 1 Route shields on this section which includes the Pulaski Skyway often show both numbers in the same shield with an endash or ampersand between 1 9 or 1 amp 9 It is known locally as one and nine or one nine New York edit Main article U S Route 9 in New York US 9 exits shortly after the George Washington Bridge to go onto New York City s Broadway north of it passing over the northern tip of Manhattan Island via the toll free Broadway Bridge through the Bronx and into Westchester County where in some towns it follows the old Albany Post Road which dates from the early days of the nation s existence Following the Hudson River closely as a busy surface road through the many suburban river villages and past National Historic Landmarks such as Sunnyside and Kykuit US 9 becomes the Croton Expressway between Croton on Hudson and Peekskill That section ends at the Annsville Circle junction with US 6 and US 202 where US 9 returns to two lane status as it follows the old post road inland away from the river At Fishkill the road passes the historic Van Wyck Homestead Museum and it becomes a six lane divided strip until reaching the Poughkeepsie city limit It then narrows to a four lane divided strip which lasts until it intersects St Andrews Road just north of the Hyde Park Poughkeepsie town line where it returns to two lane status as it goes through Hyde Park and past its historic sites At Red Hook US 9 veers inland again becoming a two lane country road through Columbia County save for the outskirts of Hudson In Rensselaer County it widens again as it intersects I 90 and then joins US 20 to Albany where it crosses the Hudson at the Dunn Memorial Bridge It is a busy surface road through the state capital becoming a strip in its northern suburbs and taking traffic eventually to Saratoga Springs and Lake George at the edge of the Adirondack Park nbsp End US 9 sign just short of the Canadian border in Champlain New YorkThe Adirondack section of US 9 is the least trafficked of the road returning to two lanes as it runs through vast tracts of forested wilderness and occasional hamlets Almost 100 miles 160 km to the north it leaves the park and runs along or near Lake Champlain to Plattsburgh North of there it is once again a two lane road all the way to Champlain ending at an onramp to I 87 just shy of the border nbsp First northern reassurance marker on New York I 87 US 9 nbsp US 9 north as it approaches AlbanyHistory editPrior to the opening of the Cape May Lewes Ferry in 1964 US 9 ended on Lafayette Street in Cape May New Jersey It was rerouted to the west via Sandman Boulevard and Lincoln Avenues to meet the new ferry and its southern stub into Cape May was renumbered as Route 109 6 nbsp Last northern reference marker on NY 971B former US 9 Canadian customs are seen to the leftOriginally the road continued north across the border as Route 9 toward Montreal through the customs facilities now used by I 87 Autoroute 15 The official northern terminus the point where the End US 9 sign is posted is just south of the interchange with I 87 less than a mile 1 6 km from customs The old Route 9 continues north for a very short distance 0 46 m 0 74 km as the unsigned New York State Route 971B NY 971B which ends in a cul de sac just short of the Canadian border Major intersections editDelaware nbsp US 13 northeast of Laurel nbsp US 113 in Georgetown nbsp Cape May Lewes Ferry in Lewes US 9 utilizes the ferry across Delaware Bay to North Cape May New Jersey New Jersey nbsp nbsp US 40 US 322 in Pleasantville nbsp US 30 in Absecon nbsp I 195 in Howell Township nbsp I 95 in Woodbridge Township nbsp US 1 in Woodbridge Township The highways travel concurrently to Manhattan New York City nbsp I 278 in Linden nbsp I 78 in Newark nbsp US 22 in Newark nbsp I 78 in Newark nbsp US 46 in Palisades Park The highways travel concurrently to the New Jersey New York state line nbsp I 95 in Fort Lee The highways travel concurrently to Manhattan New York City nbsp US 9W in Fort Lee New York nbsp nbsp I 87 I 287 in Tarrytown nbsp nbsp US 6 US 202 in Peekskill The highways travel concurrently to northwest of Peekskill nbsp I 84 in Fishkill nbsp US 44 in Poughkeepsie nbsp I 90 in Schodack nbsp US 20 in Schodack The highways travel concurrently to Albany nbsp I 90 in Schodack nbsp US 4 in East Greenbush nbsp I 787 in Albany nbsp US 9W in Albany nbsp I 90 in Albany nbsp I 87 south of Saratoga Springs nbsp I 87 in Moreau nbsp I 87 in Queensbury nbsp US 11 in the Village of Champlain nbsp nbsp nbsp I 87 to A 15 in the Town of Champlain 7 In popular culture editThe highway is mentioned in the Bruce Springsteen songs Born to Run and The Promise The highway particularly the section around Freehold Township New Jersey is associated with Springsteen more generally It is also mentioned in the Springsteen song Last Man Standing It is also mentioned in the songs My Geraldine Lies Over the Delaware by The Wonder Years and The Devil On Hwy 9 by Danzig The Breeders song Drivin on 9 refers to the route In Wayne Wang s film Smoke Thomas Cole s father Cyrus runs a garage on US 9 See also editRelated routes edit U S Route 109 U S Route 209 U S Route 309Special and suffixed routes edit U S Route 9E U S Route 9W U S Route 9 Alternate in Toms River New Jersey U S Route 1 9 Truck in Jersey City New Jersey U S Route 1 9 Business in Jersey City New Jersey U S Route 9 Truck in Georgetown Delaware U S Route 9 Business in Lewes DelawareNotes edit Southern terminus located near 38 34 13 N 75 33 44 W 38 570141 N 75 562209 W 38 570141 75 562209References edit a b staff 2006 AADT and TPG Tables Interstate Delaware and US Routes PDF Traffic Summary 2006 Delaware Department of Transportation pp 2 3 archived from the original PDF on March 18 2009 retrieved January 3 2012 a b US 9 straight line diagram PDF New Jersey Department of Transportation Retrieved December 7 2009 a b Appendix E Traffic Volume Report explanation of data items US1 to NY10 PDF New York State Department of Transportation July 25 2011 pp 21 26 Retrieved January 3 2012 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 Lewes ferry beats the odds in a tricky transit sea The Philadelphia Inquirer August 1 1976 Retrieved November 22 2022 via Newspapers com Sanderson Dale August 17 2009 Endpoints of US highways US 9 US Ends com retrieved January 3 2012 Rand McNally 2014 The Road Atlas Walmart ed Chicago Rand McNally pp 24 66 67 69 71 ISBN 978 0 528 00771 2 External links editKML file edit help Template Attached KML U S Route 9KML is from Wikidata nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to U S Route 9 Delaware Highways US 9 NJDOT US 9 Straight Line Diagram for the New Jersey portion of US9 from the New Jersey Department of Transportation New Jersey Highways US 9 Capital Highways Mid Crosstown Arterial Endpoints of U S Highway 9Browse numbered routes nbsp NY 8NY nbsp NY 9A nbsp Route 7NJ nbsp Route 10 nbsp DE 8DE nbsp DE 9 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title U S Route 9 amp oldid 1182237421, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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