Rhode Island Route 101 Explained

State:RI
Type:RI
Route:101
Alternate Name:Hartford Pike
Map Custom:yes
Length Mi:9.7
Length Round:1
Established:1935
Direction A:West
Direction B:East
Terminus A: in Killingly, CT
Junction: in Scituate
Terminus B: in Scituate
Counties:Providence
Previous Type:Route
Previous Route:100
Next Type:Route
Next Route:102

Route 101 is a numbered state highway running 9.7miles in Rhode Island. It begins at the Connecticut state line in the town of Foster and ends at U.S. Route 6 (US 6) in the town of Scituate.

Route description

Route 101 begins at the Connecticut state line between the towns of Killingly and Foster as a continuation of Connecticut Route 101. The route, known locally as Hartford Pike, runs for about 12miles through several reservoirs before ending at US 6 Bypass in the town of Scituate, near the north edge of the Scituate Reservoir. Route 101 passes near Jerimoth Hill, the highest point in Rhode Island.

History

In the 19th century, modern Route 101 was a toll road that was administered by the Rhode Island and Connecticut Turnpike corporation. The former turnpike route was not assigned a route number in 1923 when the state first designated route numbers. At the time, the Route 101 designation was assigned to what is now US 44. In 1934, US 44 was designated by AASHO along its current alignment. Connecticut and Rhode Island reassigned the Route 101 designation by the following year to the Rhode Island and Connecticut Turnpike route and its continuation in Connecticut.

Until 2003, eastbound signage clearly showed Route 101 beginning concurrent with the US 6 Bypass, from the eastern split of US 6 Business (Danielson Pike) and US 6 Bypass in Scituate. Signage westbound at that intersection has now been changed to say "TO Route 101", leading to the belief that the western terminus is now the split between Hartford Pike and the US 6 Bypass, where the concurrency ended.

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