Plimoth Plantation Highway

Plimoth Plantation Highway
Route information
Length: 2.04 mi[1] (3.28 km)
Existed: 1951 – present
Major junctions
West end: Route 3 in Plymouth
East end: Route 3A in Plymouth
Location
Counties: Plymouth
Highway system

Plimoth Plantation Highway is a short unnumbered two-lane freeway with plastic stanchions posted on a rumbled asphalt median in Plymouth, Massachusetts.

Route description

The highway begins at Exit 4 off Route 3, a partial interchange which is accessible only from the southbound side from which there is a left exit. Motorists on Plimoth Plantation Highway headed toward Route 3 can enter that highway northbound only. However, motorists may use Exit 5 in order to reverse direction and ultimately travel southbound on Route 3. The highway proceeds east, serving Plimoth Plantation, Plymouth Beach and the village of Chiltonville. The highway ends at a special intersection in White Horse Beach and Manomet at Route 3A.

History

The first segment of Route 3 opened up in 1951 from what is now Exit 9 to Exit 4 and used Plimoth Plantation Highway temporarily to detour around the old Route 3 in Kingston and Plymouth, now renamed Route 3A, until 1957 when Route 3 south of Exit 4 opened and assumed its current alignment. An Act naming the two-mile (3 km) spur Plimoth Plantation Highway was approved on April 3, 1969, 18 years after the highway had opened.[2] The Act references the highway as being Exit 40, the old exit number before the Massachusetts Highway Department renumbered the exit in 1978.

Exit list

The entire route is in Plymouth, Plymouth County. All exits are unnumbered.

mikmDestinationsNotes
0.000.00 Route 3 north Brockton, BostonSouthbound exit and northbound entrance from Route 3; Exit 4 on Route 3
Sandwich Road Chiltonville, Plymouth Beach
Plimoth PlantationWestbound exit and entrance; opened seasonally
Plimoth Plantation via River StreetEastbound exit and entrance
2.043.28 Route 3A Manomet, White Horse BeachHigh-speed merge onto Route 3A south toward Manomet with two left-hand modified jughandles
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Gallery

References

External links

KML is from Wikidata
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/28/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.