U.S. Route 41 Business (Marquette, Michigan) Explained

State:MI
Type:US-Bus
Route:41
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:Bus. US 41 highlighted in red
Map Alt:Bus. US 41 runs east–west along an L-shaped route in Marquette, Michigan
Length Mi:2.343
Established:[1]
History:Signage removed November 9, 2005
Direction A:West
Terminus A: and Washington Street in Marquette
Direction B:East
Terminus B: and Front Street in Marquette
Counties:Marquette
Spur Type:US
Spur Of:41
Previous Type:US 1948-Bus
Previous Route:41
Previous Dab:Ishpeming–Negaunee
Next Type:M 1919
Next Route:41

Business US Highway 41 (Bus. US 41) was a state trunkline highway that served as a business loop off US 41 and M-28 in Marquette, Michigan, along Washington and Front streets. The streets serve the downtown area of Marquette and are bordered by several commercial properties and businesses. Those two streets originate with the early founding of the city in the middle of the 19th century. Jurisdiction over them was transferred to the city as part of a highway swap that resulted in the decommissioning of the trunkline in 2005. It was also previously co-designated Bus. M-28, mirroring the Bus. US 41/Bus. M-28 designation previously used along Bus. M-28 in Ishpeming and Negaunee. Washington and Front streets had been a part of the state highway system since the 1910s, and a part of the United States Numbered Highway System since 1926. The business loop designation dates back to the 1960s and was removed in 2005.

Route description

The western terminus of Bus. US 41 was the west end of Washington Street at the intersection with US 41/M-28 near the western Marquette city limits. The intersection features a stoplight to allow traffic from eastbound US 41/M-28 to cross the westbound lanes of the main highway to access Washington Street; the remaining connections are made through stop-sign-controlled access lanes. Running eastward, Washington Street is four lanes, divided by a center median for about 300yd before a center turn lane replaces the median. The street is bordered by several commercial developments. There is a stoplight for the intersection with McClellan Avenue as the business loop runs uphill toward downtown. A few blocks east past other businesses and restaurants, Washington intersects the southern end of Lincoln Avenue at another stoplight. East of this junction, the roadway narrows to one lane in each direction with a center turn lane. Washington Street turns to the southeast and heads downhill in the next block, which is bordered by some houses on the north side. The turn lane drops by Seventh Street as the street passes Harlow Park.

From the park east, the business loop entered the downtown area. Each side of the street is bordered by retail shops, restaurants and other service providers. Washington Street passes the federal building containing the post office and federal courthouse at the intersection with Third Street. At Front Street, Bus. US 41 turned south one block away from Lake Superior; Front Street is also a commercial section of downtown. The street passes Father Marquette Park which is named for the city's namesake, Jacques Marquette. The roadway climbs a hill headed southbound next to the park. Bus. US 41 ended where US 41 turns south along Front Street at the east end of the Marquette Bypass.[2]

At the time the business loop was still under state control, it was maintained by the Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) as a segment of the State Trunkline Highway System. As a part of these maintenance responsibilities, the department tracked the volume of traffic that used Bus. US 41. These volumes were expressed using a metric called annual average daily traffic, which is a statistical calculation of the average daily number of vehicles on a segment of roadway. In the department's last survey, conducted in 2004, there were 10,272 vehicles per day using Washington Street between Lincoln Avenue and Front Street, the lowest traffic count for the trunkline. The highest volume was 19,036 vehicles between McClellan and Lincoln Avenues, while the Front Street section received 16,309 vehicles on an average day.[3] The former business loop has not been listed on the National Highway System,[4] a network of roads important to the country's economy, defense, and mobility.[5]

History

Marquette's founding settlers arrived in the area on May 18, 1849, to establish the community,[6] and the original thoroughfares were platted by 1855, including Washington and Front streets.[7] The widest street in the city at 100feet, Baraga Avenue was intended to be the Marquette's main street when the downtown area was originally laid out, but businesses centered their locations along Washington Street instead.[8] The community was incorporated as a village in 1859, and it was later reincorporated as a city on February 21, 1871.[9] The original city hall was built in 1895 on Washington Street, and in 1910, the city started paving its streets, replacing wooden planks with asphalt.[10]

A state highway was routed through downtown starting on May 13, 1913, when the system was created.[11] It was first a part of M-15[12] when the highway system was signed in 1919,[13] and then later as US 41/M-28 after the creation of the United States Numbered Highway System in 1926.[14] (Under the original 1925 draft plan for the U.S. Highway System, US 102 was the number assigned to run through Marquette.[15]) The streets have been paved since at least the 1920s.[16]

The Marquette Bypass opened on November 21, 1963,[1] and the business loop was marked for the first time on the 1964 state highway map.[17] A Bus. M-28 designation was added to the route for the 1975 state map,[18] marking it similar to the Bus. US 41/Bus. M-28 designation that was previously assigned along Bus. M-28 in Ishpeming and Negaunee.[19] [20] This second designation was removed by 1981.[21] [22]

In April 2005, the City of Marquette agreed to exchange jurisdiction over a number of roadways with MDOT. These transfers placed Bus. US 41 and the unsigned M-554 under city jurisdiction; at the same time, the state would take over a section of McClellan Avenue to extend M-553 to its current northern terminus at the Marquette Bypass.[23] Negotiations regarding the transfer centered on MDOT deferring to city zoning ordinances along McClellan Avenue regarding driveway and snowmobile access and the city's assumption of expenses and liabilities related to the business loop.[24] The transfers were made official on October 10, 2005, when MDOT and the city finalized the paperwork.[25] As a result, Bus. US 41 was decommissioned when the city took control over Washington and Front streets; signage was removed on November 9, 2005, to complete the process.[26] Some local maps continue to label Bus. US 41 through downtown Marquette, even years after the decommissioning of the designation,[27] [28] and some local businesses and organizations continued to use it in their advertising.

Marquette received $2.5 million (equivalent to $ in) in state funding for improvements to Washington Street near downtown as a part of the transfer agreement. The city also assumed responsibility for maintaining the stoplights installed along the former highway.[23] These improvements rebuilt Washington Street from 5th Street westward during 2007. The roadway was narrowed from four lanes to two with a center turn lane between Lincoln Avenue and 7th Street. The speed limit was reduced from 35to along the street to deal with the traffic that turns into and out of businesses.[29] In 2010, the intersection between Front Street and the eastern end of the Marquette Bypass was converted into a roundabout configuration, opening to traffic on August 19.[30]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Bypass to Cut Travel Time by 20 Minutes . . Marquette, Michigan . 13 . November 20, 1963 . 0898-4964 . 9729223 .
  2. 2004 . Marquette .
  3. Web site: Bureau of Transportation Planning . Traffic Monitoring Information System . Michigan Department of Transportation . 2008 . April 24, 2011 .
  4. Michigan Department of Transportation . National Highway System, Michigan . April 23, 2006 . Scale not given . Lansing . Michigan Department of Transportation . PDF . October 7, 2008 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121004040152/http://www.michigan.gov/documents/MDOT_NHS_Statewide_150626_7.pdf . October 4, 2012 .
  5. Web site: Stefan . Natzke . Mike . Neathery . Kevin . Adderly . What is the National Highway System? . National Highway System . . June 20, 2012 . July 31, 2012 . amp .
  6. News: Christopher . Diem . May 18, 2009 . A Glimpse of the Past: Sunrise Re-Enactment Honors Marquette's Founders . The Mining Journal . Marquette, Michigan . A1 . 0898-4964 . 9729223 . July 25, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150402101047/http://www.miningjournal.net/page/content.detail/id/527444.html . April 2, 2015 . dead .
  7. A. . Brooks . J.G. . Chamberlain . amp . Marquette, Michigan . Cleveland and Sharon Iron Companies . 1855 . Map of Iron Bay and the Village of Marquette . 1:1,440 . 28982382 .
  8. Book: Longtine . Sonny . Chappell . Laverne . 1999 . Marquette: Then and Now . Marquette, Michigan . North Shore Publications . 67 . 0-9670793-0-6 . 42775596 . amp .
  9. Book: Rydholm, C. Fred . Superior Heartland: A Backwoods History . 1 . 1989 . Braun-Brumfield . Ann Arbor, Michigan . 208 . 0-9639948-2-4 . 20652946 . 89-90710 .
  10. Web site: Central Upper Peninsula and NMU Archives . n.d. . Marquette Historical Timeline . . July 25, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120820233811/http://www.nmu.edu/archives/node/210 . August 20, 2012 .
  11. Book: Michigan Legislature . https://books.google.com/books?id=7kXiAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA1868 . The Compiled Laws of the State of Michigan . 1 . 1915 . enacted May 13, 1913 . Chapter 91: State Reward Trunk Line Highways . 1868–72 . Lansing, Michigan . Wynkoop, Hallenbeck, Crawford . Shields . Edmund C. . Black . Cyrenius P. . Broomfield . Archibald . January 24, 2012 . 44724558 . amp . Michigan Legislature .
  12. 1919-07-01U . yes . 15607244 .
  13. News: Michigan May Do Well Following Wisconsin's Road Marking System . . September 20, 1919 . 10 . 9975013 .
  14. . . amp . November 11, 1926 . United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials . 1:7,000,000 . Washington, DC . . 32889555 . November 7, 2013 . .
  15. Book: Report . Joint Board on Interstate Highways . 1925 . Appendix VI: Descriptions of the Interstate Routes Selected, with Numbers Assigned . https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Report_of_Joint_Board_on_Interstate_Highways_October_30,_1925#52 . Report of Joint Board on Interstate Highways, October 30, 1925, Approved by the Secretary of Agriculture, November 18, 1925 . Washington, DC . . 52 . . . November 14, 2017 .
  16. 1926-12-01 .
  17. 1964 . C6 . 81213707.
  18. 1975 . yes . Marquette .
  19. Marquette County Road Commission . Scale not given . Ishpeming, Michigan . Marquette County Road Commission . Marquette County . 1939 .
  20. Marquette County Road Commission . Scale not given . Ishpeming, Michigan . Marquette County Road Commission . Marquette County . 1950 .
  21. 1980 . Marquette .
  22. 1981 . Marquette .
  23. News: Road Shift with State Well-Planned . The Mining Journal . Editorial . Marquette, Michigan . April 27, 2005 . A6 . 0898-4964 . 9729223 .
  24. News: Swanson . Scott . April 26, 2005 . Washington Reconstruction: City To Get $2.5 Million . The Mining Journal . Marquette, Michigan . A1 . 0898-4964 . 9729223 .
  25. News: Michigan Department of Transportation . City of Marquette . amp . October 10, 2005 . Memorandum of Understanding . Michigan Department of Transportation . Marquette, Michigan .
  26. Dawn . Garner . MDOT and City of Marquette Complete Jurisdictional Transfer . Michigan Department of Transportation . November 9, 2005 . July 31, 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20070314203544/http://www.michigan.gov/mdot/0%2C1607%2C7-151-9620_11057-129975--%2C00.html . March 14, 2007 . dead .
  27. Iron Ore Heritage Recreation Area . 2010 . Iron Ore Heritage Trail Official Map and Trail Guide . Scale not given . Marquette, Michigan . Iron Ore Heritage Recreation Area . Marquette–Chocolay .
  28. Marquette County Convention and Visitors Bureau . 2015 . Tourist Map of Marquette . Scale not given . Marquette, Michigan . Marquette County Convention and Visitors Bureau .
  29. News: Diem . Christopher . January 3, 2008 . Washington Street Reactions . The Mining Journal . Marquette, Michigan . A1 . April 29, 2012 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140419014935/http://www.miningjournal.net/page/content.detail/id/503831/Washington-Street-reactions.html . April 19, 2014 . 0898-4964 . 9729223 . dead .
  30. News: Diem . Christopher . New Roundabout Celebrated with Ceremony . The Mining Journal . Marquette, Michigan . August 19, 2010 . A1 . September 11, 2010 . https://web.archive.org/web/20110723211137/http://beta249.miningjournal.net/page/content.detail/id/547668.html . July 23, 2011 . 0898-4964 . 9729223 . dead .