U.S. Route 1 in Massachusetts explained

State:MA
Type:US
Route:1
Map Custom:yes
Length Mi:86.253
Formed:1926
Direction A:South
Direction B:North
Terminus A: in Pawtucket, RI
Junction:
Terminus B: in Seabrook, NH
Counties:Bristol, Norfolk, Suffolk, Middlesex, Essex
Previous Type:I
Previous Route:895
Next Type:Route
Next Route:1A

U.S. Route 1 (US 1) is a major north - south U.S. Route in the state of Massachusetts, traveling through Essex, Middlesex, Suffolk, Norfolk, and Bristol counties. The portion of US 1 south of Boston is also known as the Boston–Providence Turnpike, Washington Street, or the Norfolk and Bristol Turnpike, and portions north of Boston are known as the Northeast Expressway and the Newburyport Turnpike.

Route description

From the south, US 1 enters Massachusetts from Rhode Island, immediately entering the city of Attleboro. It closely parallels Interstate 95 (I-95) as it goes through the towns of North Attleborough, Plainville, Wrentham, Foxborough (where Gillette Stadium is), Walpole, Sharon, Norwood, and Westwood. US 1 then has a wrong-way concurrency with I-95 up to the interchange that is the southern terminus of I-93. US 1 then travels concurrently with I-93 from Canton through Downtown Boston; Route 3 joins the concurrency in Braintree. In Downtown Boston, Route 1A and Route 3 separate from US 1 to head toward Logan International Airport and Cambridge respectively, and I-93 and US 1 separate just after passing through the O'Neill Tunnel and crossing the Leonard P. Zakim Bunker Hill Memorial Bridge. US 1 continues north, crossing the Tobin Bridge as the Northeast Expressway and traveling through Chelsea, Revere, and Malden, then as a four- to six-lane expressway through Saugus, Lynnfield, and Peabody.

The route through Saugus was once known for its abundance of kitschy roadside commercial architecture. Those that still exist as of 2023 include the 68feet neon cactus originally erected for the Hilltop Steak House, the tiki-styled Kowloon Restaurant, the Prince Restaurant's "Leaning Tower of Pizza", and a large orange dinosaur statue that was once part of a miniature golf course. Former structures along Route 1 included restaurants built in the shapes of a ship and a Chinese palace.[1] [2] [3]

From Peabody, US 1 again closely parallels I-95 going through the towns of Danvers, Topsfield, Ipswich, Rowley, Newbury, and Newburyport. In Newburyport, US 1 has a mile-long (1miles) freeway segment that bypasses downtown and the waterfront areas; Route 1A joins the freeway shortly before it crosses the Merrimack River, entering Salisbury and becoming a surface arterial again. 3miles later, it enters the state of New Hampshire.

Route 1A runs alongside US 1 in four parts of the state.

History

US 1 in Massachusetts was constructed in sections throughout the 1930s partly by widening existing roads and also by constructing new right of ways to bypass more congested areas. Originally, most of the highway was two or three lanes in each direction, with numerous widening and improvements made over the years.

Most of US 1 consists of two former turnpike roads—the Norfolk and Bristol Turnpike and the Newburyport Turnpike. The older roads that these turnpikes were meant to bypass are now mostly Route 1A.

The Newburyport Turnpike opened on February 11, 1805, and was constructed by a private company at a cost of $500,000 (equivalent to $ in). The turnpike was used by stagecoaches and mail carriers for decades, but toll collection ceased in 1847 as parallel railroads attracted more use.

Several sections were rebuilt to accommodate automobile traffic in the early 20th century, but it saw decreased use following the completion of I-95.[4]

The section in downtown Newsburyport was bypassed in 1934.[5]

In the 1950s, Route C1 was rerouted to follow portions of these highways. The Route C1 designation was removed in 1971, with US 1 taking over most of the alignment south of the Charles River, and Route 1A taking over most of the alignment north of the river. US 1 was later moved onto the Southeast Expressway leaving most of the former alignment of Route C1 south of the river as having no number.

For a period of time during the 1950s, a segment of US 1 in Massachusetts and New Hampshire was routed onto what later became I-95. The roadway that had been US 1 was designated as Route 17 from Danvers to Salisbury[6] and New Hampshire Route 17 (NH 17) for a short distance in Seabrook.[7]

Once the I-95 designation was adopted, Route 17 and NH 17 were restored to being US 1.

The Northeast Expressway was planned to extend north, as part of I-95, from Saugus, through Lynn, Lynnfield and Peabody. The highway would bisect the Saugus Marsh and Lynn Woods Reservation.

The highway would then connect with the present junction of I-95 and Route 128 in Peabody. The Northeast Expressway was planned to carry the I-95 designation from Charlestown to Peabody. The first section of the expressway built was the Tobin Bridge over the Mystic River, which opened in 1950. In various stages, the Chelsea and Revere portions opened from 1956 to 1958.

The highway carried the I-95 designation from 1955 (in its planning stages) to 1973. It was among the canceled highways affected by Governor Francis Sargent's February 1970 moratorium on expressway construction within Route 128. US 1 replaced I-95 on the Northeast Expressway, in the 1970s after I-95 joined Route 128 from Westwood to Peabody around Boston.[8]

In the late 1980s, at the request of the Metropolitan District Commission (now the Department of Conservation and Recreation) in an attempt to reduce the incidence of overheight vehicles finding their way onto Storrow Drive,[9] US 1 was moved onto I-93 south of and through Boston, leaving the old route—Veterans of Foreign Wars Parkway (VFW Parkway), Jamaicaway, Riverway, and Storrow Drive through Dedham, Chestnut Hill, West Roxbury, Jamaica Plain, and central Boston—without a number. There are still some street signs incorrectly indicating the former alignment as US 1, and many local residents still refer to parts of VFW Parkway and Jamaicaway as "Route 1", as if it still runs along its old trajectory.

Future

In the early 2010s, the Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT) proposed a $137-million (equivalent to $ in) project to widen the existing 2.4miles four-lane highway section to six lanes, from north of Route 99 in Saugus to south of Route 60 in Revere. The proposal consisted of adding a 12feet travel lane and 10feet shoulder in each direction. Work would also include reconstruction of the Copeland Circle interchange by eliminating the existing rotary, and demolition of the existing 1957 bridges from the never-built highway extension. The Lynn Street/Salem Street interchange in Malden, and the Route 99 interchange in Saugus, were slated to be reconstructed. Major rock blasting would be required for the project due to a massive ledge next to the highway, and seven bridges would be replaced and three others upgraded to handle the new lanes. In 2012, $10 million (equivalent to $ in) was added to the state budget with the intent to be used for design costs and pulling permits for US 1.[10] The project was expected to begin in 2012, but no further movement by the state has been implemented. Since then, town officials have made the push to ask MassDOT to revisit the project and begin development.[11]

Major intersections

See main article: t, old, US and 1.

See main article: t, old, I and 95.

See main article: t, old, MA and 123.

See main article: t, old, MA and 1A.

See main article: t, old, I, 295, I and 95.

See main article: t, old, MA and 120.

See main article: t, old, MA and 1A.

See main article: t, old, MA and 106.

See main article: t, old, MA and 152.

See main article: t, old, I and 495.

See main article: t, old, MA and 140.

See main article: t, old, I and 95.

See main article: t, old, MA and 27.

See main article: t and old.

See main article: t and old.

See main article: t, old, I, 95, MA, 128, MA and 1A.

See main article: t and old.

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See main article: t, old, I and 95.

See main article: t, old, MA, 128, I and 93.

See main article: t, old, MA and 138.

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See main article: t, old, MA and 24.

See main article: t, old, MA and 28.

See main article: t, old, MA and 37.

See main article: t, old, MA and 3.

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See main article: t, old, road, MA and 203.

See main article: t, old, MA and 3A.

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See main article: t, old, I, 90 and MATP.

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See main article: t, old, MA and 1A.

See main article: t, old, MA, 3, MA and 28.

See main article: t, old, I and 93.

See main article: t, old, MA, 99, I and 93.

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See main article: t, old, MA, 16, MA and 1A.

See main article: t, old, MA and 16.

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See main article: t, old, MA and 60.

See main article: t and old.

See main article: t and old.

See main article: t, old, MA and 99.

See main article: t and old.

See main article: t and old.

See main article: t and old.

See main article: t, old, MA, 129 and road.

See main article: t, old, MA, 129 and road.

See main article: t, old, I, 95, MA and 128.

See main article: t, old, I and 95.

See main article: t and old.

See main article: t, old, MA and 114.

See main article: t and old.

See main article: t, old, MA and 62.

See main article: t, old, I and 95.

See main article: t, old, MA and 97.

See main article: t, old, MA and 133.

See main article: t, old, MA, 1A, MA and 113.

See main article: t, old, MA, 110 and road.

See main article: t, old, MA and 1A.

See main article: t, old, MA and 286.

See main article: t, old, US and 1.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Extinction-Level Events: Vanishing American Kitsch on Boston's Route 1 . Wearethemutants.com . 2017-09-12 . 2019-07-08.
  2. Web site: Saugus, MA - Frightening Saugus, Part 2 . www.roadsideamerica.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080502164023/http://www.roadsideamerica.com/tip/576 . 2008-05-02.
  3. Web site: Boston Magazine. When Route 1 Ruled the Earth. Scott. Kearnan. March 29, 2022. July 19, 2023.
  4. News: Sessler . Amy . November 18, 1990 . One for all . North 1, North 9, North 10 . The Boston Globe . . January 22, 2022.
  5. News: Sessler . Amy . December 16, 1990 . Old Route 1 remains true to its rural roots . North 1, North 18 . The Boston Globe . Newspapers.com . January 22, 2022.
  6. News: Mt. Ann Park Reservation in West Gloucester . . 92 . June 3, 1956 . April 11, 2020 . newspapers.com.
  7. News: (advertisement) . . . 5 . January 10, 1956 . April 11, 2020 . newspapers.com.
  8. Web site: Northeast Expressway (US 1) . Bostonroads.com . 2012-08-15.
  9. Personal Conservation 3-2016 with Steve Timmins, MassDOT Highway Signing Engineer
  10. Web site: Revere, Malden, Saugus call for relief to Route 1 gridlock . Boston Globe . limited . 2014-01-09. 2015-01-05.
  11. Web site: Joint Letter 12-10-13 Route 1 - Improvement MPO . Gary Christenson, Daniel Rizzo, Scott Crabtree . 2013-12-10. 2015-01-05.