U.S. Route 44

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Template:Infobox U.S. Route U.S. Route 44 is an east-west United States highway that runs for 238 miles (383 km) from Plymouth, Massachusetts to the Hudson Valley region of New York.

Contents

Termini

Image:New US 44 east at MA 3.jpg US 44's eastern terminus is in Plymouth, Massachusetts at Route 3A. A freeway realignment to the north opened December 14, 2005, [1] and US 44 now runs concurrent with Route 3 between exits 6 (where it currently crosses Route 3) and 7 (where the new freeway ends). Its western terminus is Kerhonkson, New York at U.S. Highway 209.

States traversed

The highway passes through the following states:

Notable cities on the route

New York

US 44 begins in the hamlet of Kerhonkson in Ulster County and runs for 66.3 miles up to the village of Millerton in Dutchess County. It goes through the hamlets of Gardiner, Clintondale, and Highland, crosses the Hudson River on the Mid-Hudson Bridge and then goes through Poughkeepsie (city), Arlington (hamlet) and Millbrook (village).

  • Ulster County (29.92 miles)
    • US 209 (western terminus)
    • Interstate 87 (no interchange)
    • US 9W (0.56 mile overlap)

Note: US 44 is multiplexed with NY 55 throughout Ulster County and Poughkeepsie.

  • Dutchess County (36.39 miles)
    • US 9
    • Taconic State Parkway

Connecticut

From the New York state line at Salisbury to the Rhode Island state line at Putnam, US 44 runs for a total of 106.03 miles in Connecticut. Most of US 44 is known in the state as the Jonathan Trumbull Highway. It begins as rural arterial road in Litchfield county, going through the towns of North Canaan, Norfolk, Colebrook, Winchester, Barkhamsted, and New Hartford. It is a 2-lane road with 4-lane sections in Winchester.

In Canton, US 44 is joined by US 202 and becomes a mostly 4-lane principal arterial road serving the Hartford metro area. US 44 continues through Simsbury, Avon, and West Hartford. US 202 splits from US 44 in Avon following the route of CT 10 after overlapping for 5.3 miles. US 44 then enters the city of Hartford along Albany Avenue, then goes up onto I-84/US 6 to cross the Connecticut River on the Bulkeley Bridge. In East Hartford, US 44 then returns to surface roads right after crossing the river. It becomes a 2-lane minor arterial road through Manchester, Bolton, Coventry, and Mansfield, then becomes a rural road through Willington, Ashford, Eastford, Pomfret, and Putnam. In Manchester, US 44 overlaps with US 6 for 6.9 miles up to Bolton until just after the eastern terminus of I-384. This segment of US 44 up to Willington is known as the Boston Turnpike while the segment approaching Rhode Island is called Providence Pike.

Major Junctions


Rhode Island

US 44 runs 24.8 miles in the U.S. state of Rhode Island.

Route

Template:RIOneWayPair US 44 takes the following route through the State:

Massachusetts

US 44 runs for 39 miles in Massachusetts. It enters the state in the town of Seekonk along Taunton Avenue. It goes to the city of Taunton passing through the towns of Rehoboth and Dighton along the way. It continues eastward from Taunton through the towns of Raynham, Lakeville, Middleborough, and Carver before reaching its eastern terminus at Plymouth. US 44 has interchanges with MA 24 in Raynham and with Interstate 495 in Middleborough. From MA 3 in Plymouth to Carver, US 44 has a newly-built, 7.5-mile long freeway section, which bypasses the congested business district in Plymouth. The old section of US 44 is now MA 44A. Near its eastern terminus, it overlaps Route 3 for about 1.0 mile, then exits and continues as a surface road for approximately another half mile, ending at Route 3A.

In Middleborough, Route 44 passes by the historically significant Oliver Mill Park, site of Judge Peter Oliver’s 18th-century industrial complex. Ancient stone-walled waterways still remain here on the banks of the Nemasket River.

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Facts

U.S. Highway 44 is a violation to the U.S. Highway numbering system, since it's wholly north of many other U.S. Routes with higher even numbers (such as U.S. 40, U.S. 30 and U.S. 22 and even U.S. 6).

See also

Sources

Template:US HighwaysTemplate:UShighway-stub