Ontario Highway 649 Explained

Province:ON
Type:Secondary
Route:649
Maint:city of Kawartha Lakes
Length Km:18.0
Length Ref:[1]
Established:1956 (as Highway 500)
Decommissioned:January 1, 1998
Direction A:North
Direction B:South
Terminus A: in Bobcaygeon
Counties:Kawartha Lakes, Peterborough (road lies on boundary between counties)
Villages:Bobcaygeon
Previous Type:Hwy
Previous Route:647
Next Type:Hwy
Next Route:650

Secondary Highway 649, commonly referred to as Highway 649, was a provincially maintained secondary highway in the Canadian province of Ontario. Now known as Kawartha Lakes Road 49, and locally as East Street North in Bobcaygeon, it is a municipally-maintained class-3 roadway (with the exception of a 0.41NaN1 class-4 section at the southern end)[2] located mostly along the boundary between the city of Kawartha Lakes and Peterborough County. The 18adj=midNaNadj=mid route begins in Bobcaygeon at a junction with former Highway 36, and proceeds north along the boundary between Kawartha Lakes and Peterborough County to a junction with former Highway 121 just south of Kinmount.

The route was designated as Highway 500 in 1956. A major renumbering resulted in it becoming Highway 649 in 1964. The route remained generally unchanged until it was decommissioned and transferred to Victoria County at the beginning of 1998; it then became Victoria County Road 49. In 2001, Victoria County was restructured as the City of Kawartha Lakes, but the road retained the same number.

Route description

Former Highway 649, now known as Kawartha Lakes Road 49, runs in a predominantly north–south direction and covers a distance of 18km (11miles).[3] The road crosses primarily rural geography between its southern terminus, City Road 36 (Main Street), former Highway 36, and northern terminus, City Road 121, former Highway 121. The village of Bobcaygeon at its southern terminus is an exception, and the village of Kinmount lies a short distance north of the route. The road crosses the boundary between the Ordovician limestone to the south and the granite Canadian Shield to the north, resulting in a hilly landscape with many large rock outcroppings.

History

The road that is now Kawartha Lakes Road 49 started in 1853, when an act of parliament set forth the building of colonization roads into what was then the frontier of Upper Canada. One of the first of these roads was named the Bobcaygeon Road, after the village at its southern end.[4] In 1956, the southern portion of the Bobcaygeon Road through Minden was assumed by the Department of Highways (DHO), predecessor to the modern Ministry of Transportation, and numbered as Highway 500. Highway 121 was also opened along the Bobcaygeon Road that year, from south of Kinmount to Minden.[5] [6]

On March 1, 1964, a major renumbering took place in the Kawartha – Haliburton – Peterborough area, which resulted in Highway 500 being renumbered as Highway 649.[7] The road held this designation until January 1, 1998, when the entirety of Highway 649 was decommissioned and transferred to Victoria County,[8] which designated it as Victoria County 49.[9] In 2001, Victoria County was restructured as the city of Kawartha Lakes, and the road was renamed Kawartha Lakes Road 49,[10] which it remains known as today.

See also

List of numbered roads in Kawartha Lakes, Ontario

Notes and References

  1. Provincial Highways Distance Table . Ministry of Transportation and Communications . Provincial Highways Distance Table: King's Secondary Highways and Tertiary Roads . Government of Ontario . April 1, 1989 . 0825-5350 . 100.
  2. Web site: Kawartha Lakes winter maintenance priorities schedule . city of Kawartha Lakes . October 11, 2009 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110726160924/http://www.city.kawarthalakes.on.ca/residents/roads/general-operations/winter-road-maintenance/123-EPW-009-Schedule-A-Roadway-Priority.pdf . July 26, 2011.
  3. Ontario Back Road Atlas . 2010 . 978-1-55198-226-7 . MapArt.
  4. Book: Report of the Commissioner of Crown Lands of Canada . Commission for Crown Lands . 1963 . 61–62 . October 31, 2020.
  5. News: Ontario Secondary Roads Now Designated 500, 600 . The Globe and Mail . February 4, 1956 . 4 . 112 . 33,119 . Two new Ontario road numbers appear on the province's 1956 official road map which will be ready for distribution next week. The new numbers are the 500 and 600 series and designate hundreds of miles of secondary roads which are wholly maintained by the Highways Department. More than 100 secondary roads will have their own numbers and signs this year. All of these secondary roads were taken into the province's main highways system because they form important connecting links with the King's Highways.
  6. Ontario Road Map . C.P. Robins . Ontario Department of Highways . 1956 . Q35.
  7. Ontario Road Map . C.P. Robins . Ontario Department of Highways . 1964 . Q35.
  8. Highway Transfers List - "Who Does What" . Ministry of Transportation of Ontario . June 20, 2001 . 12, 15.
  9. Kawartha / Haliburton Highlands . 1999 . MapArt . 1-55368-335-8.
  10. Municipal Government for Victoria County: A New Beginning—Final Report and Order . Kitchen . Harry . 35 - 36 . April 19, 2000 . Government of Ontario . January 16, 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110721232700/https://ospace.scholarsportal.info/bitstream/1873/6527/1/10286971.pdf . July 21, 2011.