Connecticut Route 69

Route 69 marker

Route 69

Map of central Connecticut with Route 69 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by ConnDOT
Length: 35.16 mi[1] (56.58 km)
Existed: 1932 – present
Major junctions
South end: Route 63 in New Haven
  I-84 in Waterbury
North end: Route 4 in Burlington
Location
Counties: New Haven, Hartford
Highway system
  • Routes in Connecticut
Route 68Route 70

Route 69 is a primary northsouth state highway in the U.S. state of Connecticut connecting the city of New Haven to the city of Bristol in the western part of Greater Hartford, passing through Greater Waterbury along the way. The route extends north of Bristol as a secondary route into the town of Burlington. Route 69 is 35.16 miles (56.58 km) in total length.

Route description

Route 69 begins in the Amity neighborhood of New Haven as the continuation of Whalley Avenue, splitting off from Route 63, which continues along Amity Road. It soon crosses under the Wilbur Cross Parkway with an interchange at the Woodbridge town line. Past the Parkway, the road becomes known as Litchfield Turnpike and heads northward along the western side of West Rock. Route 69 then enters the town of Bethany, where the route leaves the Litchfield Turnpike to head along Carrington Road. Several miles later, Route 69 enters the town of Prospect with the road becoming known as New Haven Road. North of Prospect center, the road becomes Prospect Road as it heads towards the city of Waterbury. In Waterbury, the road continues along Hamilton Avenue, meeting with I-84, then turning right onto Silver Street, later becoming Meriden Road. Route 69 leaves Meriden Road following Woodtick Road and Stillson Road, then turns right onto Wolcott Street.

Wolcott Street becomes Wolcott Road as Route 69 crosses from Waterbury into the town of Wolcott. Route 69 intersects with Route 322 in the town center then continues north towards the city of Bristol. In central Bristol, the route turns onto West Street, intersecting with Route 72 and U.S. Route 6. After a brief 0.4-mile (0.64 km) overlap with Route 6, Route 69 continues its northward journey along Burlington Avenue. After the junction with Route 6, the road becomes a secondary, minor arterial road as it heads into the town of Burlington. In Burlington, the road name changes to Milford Street and eventually ends at a junction with Route 4 in the town center of Burlington.[1]

History

Parts of modern Route 69 belonged to two separate state highways in the 1920s. The road from Prospect to Waterbury was designated as State Highway 348, while the road from Waterbury to Bristol was known as State Highway 172. Route 69 was created in the 1932 state highway renumbering as a direct route from New Haven to Waterbury. It used the southernmost portion of the old Litchfield Turnpike (local name for the Straits Turnpike) from the Amity section of New Haven to Bethany, then former town roads from Bethany to Prospect (Carrington Road and New Haven Road), and then former State Highway 348 from Prospect to East Main Street (then Route 14) in Waterbury. The section from Waterbury to Bristol (former State Highway 172) was renumbered to Route 119 in 1932. In 1934, Route 69 was extended to Bristol (at Route 6), taking over former Route 119. In 1962, a further extension north to Burlington (at Route 4) using former unsigned SR 787 was made. At the same time, the route in Waterbury was shifted slightly east (from Wolcott Street to Woodtick Road) for better through traffic flow.[2]

Junction list

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
New HavenNew Haven0.000.00 Route 63 New Haven, Woodbridge
0.320.51 Route 15 (Wilbur Cross Parkway) Hartford, N.Y. CityRoute 15 Exit 59, at the town line
Bethany8.9514.40 Route 42 Beacon Falls, Cheshire
Prospect12.0419.38 Route 68 Cheshire, Naugatuck
Waterbury15.7625.36 I-84 Danbury, HartfordI-84 Exit 23
Wolcott21.3134.30 Route 322 east Marion
HartfordBristol27.1243.65 Route 72 Plymouth, New Britain
28.2145.40 US 6 Plymouth, Farmington
Burlington35.1656.58 Route 4 Harwinton, Farmington
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

External links

Route map: Bing / Google

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, June 07, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.