New Jersey Route 24 Explained

State:NJ
Type:NJ
Route:24
Length Mi:10.4
Length Ref:[1]
Map Custom:yes
Direction A:West
Terminus A: in Hanover
Junction: in Millburn
Direction B:East
Terminus B: in Springfield
Established:1927 (1976 on present alignment)
Counties:Morris, Essex, Union
Previous Type:NJ
Previous Route:23
Next Type:NJ-old
Next Route:25

Route 24 is a 10.42NaN2 freeway in New Jersey, United States, that begins at a junction with I-287 in Hanover in Morris County, passes southeast through Essex County, and ends at a interchange with I-78 in Springfield in Union County.

The route was created in 1927 to run from Phillipsburg to Newark, replacing pre-1927 Route 12 from Phillipsburg to Penwell and Pre-1927 Route 5 from Morristown to Newark. The route was extended west to the new Easton–Phillipsburg Toll Bridge in 1938 but was cut back to U.S. Route 22 (US 22) in the eastern part of Phillipsburg in 1953. The western terminus was cut back further around 1970 to Hackettstown with the route west of there becoming part of Route 57. The freeway alignment of Route 24 between JFK Parkway and I-78 was completed in 1976.

With the completion of this freeway, Route 24 east of JFK Parkway became Route 124. The freeway was completed between the abandoned Triborough Road interchange and the JFK Parkway interchange in the 1970s but was not opened until 1992, when the rest of the freeway to I-287 was completed after years of legal, environmental and budgetary problems. At this time, the alignment of Route 24 between US 202 in Morristown and JFK Parkway became a western extension of Route 124 while the route was officially eliminated between Hackettstown and Morristown as it followed county-maintained routes. The former route between Hackettstown and Morristown is still referred to as Route 24 by many and is still signed as such due to local outcry.

Route description

Route 24 begins at an interchange with I-287 in Hanover, Morris County, heading southeast on a six-lane freeway. The route interchanges with Whippany Road (CR 511) with a westbound exit and eastbound entrance and crosses into Morris Township.[1] Route 24 crosses back into Hanover Township, where it passes over Park Avenue (CR 623) and narrows to four lanes, and interchanges with Columbia Turnpike (CR 510) at a cloverleaf interchange near the Morristown Municipal Airport.[1] Just past this interchange, the freeway crosses into Florham Park, heading southeast and passing through Madison before crossing back into Florham Park. Route 24 passes under Triborough Road and enters Chatham. An abandoned cloverleaf interchange exists at this location, as Triborough Road was to be an extension of Eisenhower Parkway.[1]

Route 24 crosses into Millburn, Essex County, widens to six lanes, and passes over the Passaic River. In Millburn Township, the route interchanges with Route 124, JFK Parkway (CR 649), and River Road.[1] This interchange provides access to The Mall at Short Hills. Past this interchange, Route 124 becomes a frontage road for Route 24 and the freeway forms the border between Summit in Union County and Millburn. After bisecting the Canoe Brook Country Club, the highway interchanges with Summit Avenue (CR 657). Route 24 continues along the Summit-Millburn border until it fully enters Millburn and interchanges with Hobart Avenue (CR 608) with a westbound exit and eastbound entrance.[1] Past this interchange, the Route 124 frontage road ends, with Route 124 following the freeway closely to the north as a two-way road, and Route 24 crosses into Summit before passing under NJ Transit's Morris & Essex Lines. The freeway then interchanges with Broad Street (CR 512) with a westbound exit and entrance and eastbound exit and Morris Avenue (CR 527) with an eastbound exit and entrance, entering Springfield.[1] Route 24 continues southeast toward its terminus at an interchange with Interstate 78.[1]

History

State:NJ
Type:NJ 1926
Route:S24
Location:Penwell - Hackettstown; Springfield - Elizabeth
Formed:1927
Deleted:1953

Route 24 follows the course of the Great Minisink Trail, and old Lenape trail running from Minisink Village in what is now Montague Township to Navesink.[2] In 1801, the Morris Turnpike was legislated to run along this trail from Newton through Morristown to Elizabeth. In 1806, the Washington Turnpike was legislated to run from Morristown to Philipsburg. In 1916, both of these routes were incorporated into the William Penn Highway, which diverged from the Morris Turnpike at Springfield to service Newark by the old Springfield and Newark Turnpike, and diverged north to Hackettstown via Schooley's Mountain Road and modern-day Route 57. That same year, the state put a part of Pre-1927 Route 12 (from Phillipsburg to Penwell) and part of Pre-1927 Route 5 (from Morristown to Newark) on this route.

In the 1927 highway renumbering, Route 24 was created to run from Downtown Phillipsburg at the Northampton Street Bridge over the Delaware River east to Route 25 (now US 1/9) in Newark, almost completely superseding the William Penn Highway. The only diversion from that route was a proposed highway from Penwell to Long Valley, closely paralleling the Washington Turnpike.[3] [4] Two spurs of Route 24 numbered Route S24 were created in 1927, both of which were renumbered in the 1953 renumbering. The western Route S24 replaced the William Penn Highway and ran northeast from Penwell to Hackettstown, and is now mostly Route 57. The eastern Route S24 ran from Springfield to Elizabeth, and is now mostly Route 82.[5] In addition, Route 24N was a planning number for the approach to the new Delaware River crossing (the Easton–Phillipsburg Toll Bridge) in Phillipsburg that opened in 1938.[6] However, before the bridge opened, Route 24N was instead built simply as an extension of Route 24. Between 1938 and 1941, this segment was also designated as part of a rerouted US 22. In the 1953 renumbering, Route 24’s western terminus was cut back to US 22 in eastern Phillipsburg (removing the concurrency in that town) and the incomplete section of Route 24 between Penwell and Long Valley was bridged by signing the route along the former Route S24 and CR 517. Around 1970, Route 24 west of Hackettstown became part of Route 57.[7] [8]

Plans for the Route 24 freeway originate in 1950 when a bypass of the many congested towns along the route was planned; this bypass was designated as a freeway in 1952. In 1959, the freeway was planned on its current alignment, running from I-287 near Morristown to I-78 in Springfield, with approval in 1960. In 1962, plans were made to extend the Route 24 freeway west to US 22 in Phillipsburg.[9] In the 1970s, this western extension was cut back to US 206 in Chester. It was put on hold in 1982, largely because its route was planned through protected wetlands and forests.[10] In 1970, the Route 24 freeway was planned to become part of a western extension of I-278, which would have run northwest from its current terminus at US 1/9 in Linden to I-78, which it would have followed west for a mile to the Route 24 freeway. However, this proposal was rejected by the Federal Highway Administration.[11]

Construction on the section of the Route 24 freeway between the John F. Kennedy Parkway on the Essex/Morris County border and I-78 began in 1967 and was finished in 1976. With the completion of this section, the former alignment of Route 24 between JFK Parkway and the boundary between Maplewood and Irvington, including frontage roads built alongside a portion of the freeway in the Short Hills area, was designated as Route 124. The section across Chatham Borough from JFK Parkway to shortly past the still-existing unused cloverleaf interchange at the Florham Park borough line, once signed as the Triborough Road, a never-built southern extension of the Eisenhower Parkway, was built in 1973-74 but not opened as it did not provide any connections to existing roads.[12] Plans were made to finish the rest of the freeway to I-287; however construction was halted for many years due to legal, environmental and budgetary problems. Construction finally began on this portion of freeway in 1988.[13] Route 24 was finally completed through to the interchange with I-287 in Hanover on November 17, 1992, and at that time the Route 24 designation was limited to strictly that freeway.[14]

Following the completion of the freeway, the former signed route of Route 24 between the intersection with US 202 in Morristown and the JFK Parkway became a western extension of Route 124.[15] The western portion between Route 57 and Route 182 in Hackettstown and US 202 officially had the Route 24 designation removed as the road has always been county-maintained rather than state-maintained. The New Jersey Department of Transportation has tried to remove signs from this section, but locals protested because of their familiarity with the Route 24 designation.[16] Along this route, the road is known as CR 517 from the Morris-Warren county line to the Long Valley section of Washington Township, CR 513 from Long Valley to Chester, and CR 510 from Chester to Morristown.[15] [17] [18] [19] This route is also known as Old Route 24 along with its names and county route numbers.[16] [20] [21]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: New Jersey Department of Transportation. Route 24 straight line diagram. March 17, 2020.
  2. Snyder, John (1969). "The Story of New Jersey's Civil Boundaries 1606-1968"
  3. State of New Jersey, Laws of 1927, Chapter 319.
  4. 1927 New Jersey Road Map. State of New Jersey. 2008-10-08. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20071031111034/http://www.jimmyandsharonwilliams.com/njroads/1920s/images/1927_routes.gif. 2007-10-31.
  5. Book: 1953 renumbering. New Jersey Department of Highways. July 31, 2009. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110628183145/http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/1953_New_Jersey_state_highway_renumbering. June 28, 2011.
  6. State of New Jersey, Laws of 1938, Chapter 85.
  7. Chevron Corporation. Map of New Jersey . 1969. H.M. Gousha.
  8. Esso. Map of New Jersey . 1970. General Drafting.
  9. Book: Regional Highways: Status Report. Tri-State Transportation Commission. 1962.
  10. Book: Route 24 Freeway, Administrative Action Final Environmental Impact Statement and Section 4(f) Statement. Federal Highway Administration and New Jersey Department of Transportation. 1982.
  11. Book: Report on the Status of the Federal-Aid Highway Program. Committee on Public Works, U.S. Senate. 1970.
  12. Book: Master Plan for Transportation. New Jersey Department of Transportation. 1972.
  13. News: Cantor. Carla. After 30 Years, a Jammed 2-Lane Country Road Awaits Relief. The New York Times. August 21, 1988.
  14. Web site: Route 24 Straight Line Diagram. Internet Archives WayBack Machine. New Jersey Department of Transportation. 2006. April 4, 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20060320023319/http://www.state.nj.us/transportation/refdata/sldiag/00000024__-.pdf . March 20, 2006.
  15. State Farm Insurance. State Farm Road Atlas . 1983. Rand McNally.
  16. News: Ragonese. Lawrence. Route 24: Even the Name's an Adventure. The Star-Ledger. March 25, 2001.
  17. Web site: New Jersey Department of Transportation. County Route 510 straight line diagram. https://web.archive.org/web/20070930190043/http://www.state.nj.us/transportation/refdata/sldiag/00000510__-.pdf . 2007-09-30 . live. 2012-04-03.
  18. Web site: New Jersey Department of Transportation. County Route 513 straight line diagram. https://web.archive.org/web/20070930165454/http://www.state.nj.us/transportation/refdata/sldiag/00000513__-.pdf . 2007-09-30 . live. 2012-04-03.
  19. Web site: New Jersey Department of Transportation. County Route 517 straight line diagram. https://web.archive.org/web/20110622115144/http://www.state.nj.us/transportation/refdata/sldiag/00000517__-.pdf . 2011-06-22 . live. 2012-04-03.
  20. Web site: Directions to Alstede Farms. Alstede Farms. 2008-11-24.
  21. Web site: Directions – Chester Township NJ. Chester Township, New Jersey. 2008-11-24.