New Hampshire Route 101

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New Hampshire Route 101 marker

New Hampshire Route 101
Map of southern New Hampshire with NH 101 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NHDOT
Length: 95.189 mi[1] (153.192 km)
Major junctions
West end: NH 9 / NH 10 / NH 12 in Keene
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East end: NH 1A in Hampton Beach
Location
Counties: Cheshire, Hillsborough, Rockingham
Highway system
NH 97 NH 101C
NH 49 NH 51 NH 63
NH 101D NH 101E NH 102

New Hampshire Route 101 is a state-maintained highway in southern New Hampshire extending from Keene to Hampton Beach. It is the major east–west highway in the southern portion of the state.

The western terminus of NH 101 is in Keene at the junction with New Hampshire Routes 9, 10 and 12. The eastern terminus is in Hampton Beach at the junction with Ocean Boulevard (NH 1A). The total length of NH 101 is approximately 95 miles (153 km). However, the New Hampshire Department of Transportation has installed mileposts on the freeway section east of Interstate 93 that begin at mile 100.

NH 101 travels through the following municipalities (west to east): Keene, Marlborough, Dublin, Peterborough, Temple, Wilton, Milford, Amherst, Bedford, Manchester, Auburn, Candia, Raymond, Epping, Brentwood, Exeter, Stratham, and Hampton.

Between Exeter and Hampton, NH 101 is known as the Exeter–Hampton Expressway.

Route description

File:Rte101keene.jpg
NH 101 at NH 12 in Keene

NH 101 is a two-lane surface road from its western terminus in Keene to the western terminus of New Hampshire Route 101A in Milford. From there, NH 101 splits off to the south and becomes a two-lane limited-access highway that bypasses Milford and Amherst, becoming a two-lane surface road just north of Amherst. At the eastern terminus of New Hampshire Route 114 in Bedford, NH 101 becomes a four-lane limited-access highway. It expands to six lanes upon merging with Interstate 293 in Manchester, and eight lanes upon merging with Interstate 93. East of I-93, NH 101 narrows to four lanes. The route remains a four-lane expressway until exit 12 (Interstate 95) in Hampton, where NH 101 becomes a two-lane freeway at exit 13. At an interchange with U.S. Route 1, it becomes a two-lane surface road to its terminus in Hampton Beach.

History

Most of the eastern section of NH 101 was originally going to be part of the cancelled New England East–West Highway from Albany, New York, to Portsmouth. Because of the cancellation, NH 101 remained a two-lane freeway until the mid-1990s. This highly traveled road had numerous accidents, prominently advertised on large signs at the start of the two-lane freeway segment between exits 5 and 6 in Raymond, which read, "XX Highway Deaths next XX miles." Locally, this road was known as the Highway of Death for the unusually high number of accidents and the sign advertising.[2] In the mid-1990s, the two-lane freeway segment was dualized over much of the swampland it traversed in Rockingham County, creating a full divided controlled access freeway between Manchester and I-95. The old Highway of Death nickname and the signs have disappeared from use.

In 1991, an overpass was constructed over North Road in Brentwood near the Rockingham County Jail Farm for the future routing of NH 101. However, the NH 101 expressway was not built in this area until 2000, giving the bridge the nickname the Overpass to Nowhere.

NH Route 51.svg

NH 101 between New Hampshire Route 108 in Stratham, just east of the Exeter town line, to New Hampshire Route 1A in Hampton Beach was at its construction named the Exeter-Hampton Expressway, which was marked with seemingly unique round shields featuring the highway's name and was later designated New Hampshire Route 51 during the 1980s until 1994.

File:Rte101peterborough.jpg
NH 101/US 202 in Peterborough

During this time, NH 101 exited the expressway at NH 108 (exit 11) and formed a concurrency with NH 108 north to the community of Stratham. After traversing a traffic circle, NH 101 split from NH 108 and followed the current alignment of New Hampshire Route 33 into downtown Portsmouth, where NH 101 terminated at U.S. Route 1.

On NH 51, there were two traffic lights located on the limited access two-lane highway: the east-end lights at the terminus of New Hampshire Route 88 southeast of exit 11 and the west-end lights west of the Newfields (then-New Hampshire Route 85) exit with what is now New Hampshire Route 27. While NH 88 was rerouted on a new stretch of road to intersect with NH 108 just south of the NH 101/108 SPUI interchange at exit 11, the Newfields exit was upgraded to a full diamond interchange. NH 27 west of Stratham was formerly NH 101 prior to the completion of the four-lane bypass.

In the fall of 1994, the eastern terminus of NH 101 was shifted eight miles (13 km) south from Portsmouth to its current terminus in Hampton Beach, replacing NH 51 along the Super-2 between Exeter and Hampton Beach. Old NH 101 between Stratham and downtown Portsmouth became NH 33 and the NH 51 designation was eliminated.

Major intersections

County Location[1][3] mi[1][3] km Exit Destinations Notes
Cheshire Keene 0.000 0.000 NH 9 / NH 10 north / NH 12 north – Brattleboro VT, Concord, Walpole Western end of concurrency with NH 10 / NH 12
0.459 0.739 NH 10 south – Winchester Eastern end of concurrency with NH 10
1.240 1.996 NH 12 south – Troy Eastern end of concurrency with NH 12
Marlborough 5.362 8.629 NH 124 – Jaffrey Western terminus of NH 124
Dublin 15.626 25.148 NH 137 – Hancock, Jaffrey
Hillsborough Peterborough 20.094 32.338 US 202 south – Jaffrey Western end of concurrency with US 202
20.290 32.654 US 202 north / NH 123 north – Hancock, Concord Eastern end of concurrency with US 202; western end of concurrency with NH 123
21.154 34.044 NH 123 south – Sharon, New Ipswich Eastern end of concurrency with NH 123
Temple 25.812 41.540 NH 45 – Temple, Greenville Northern terminus of NH 45
Wilton 30.743 49.476 NH 31 south – Greenville, Mason, New Ipswich Western end of concurrency with NH 31
32.737 52.685 NH 31 north – Wilton, Greenfield Eastern end of concurrency with NH 31
Milford 34.794 55.996 NH 101A – Milford Western terminus of NH 101A
38.349 61.717 NH 13 – Milford, Brookline Interchange
39.997 64.369 NH 101A – Milford, Nashua Interchange
Amherst 41.110 66.160 NH 122 (Ponemah Road) Interchange; eastbound exit and westbound entrance
42.974 69.160 NH 122 – Amherst Interchange
Bedford 52.419 84.360 NH 114 north / Boynton Street – Goffstown At-grade intersection; western end of limited-access segment
53.847 86.658 US 3 (Daniel Webster Highway)
54.119 87.096 Everett Turnpike / I‑293 north – Merrimack, Nashua, Manchester, Concord Western end of concurrency with I-293
Manchester 55.160 88.771 2 NH 3A (Brown Avenue) – Litchfield Serves Manchester–Boston Regional Airport
55.787 89.780 1 NH 28 (South Willow Street) – Mall of New Hampshire
57.972 93.297 I‑93 south / I‑293 – Boston Southern terminus of I-293; eastern end of concurrency with I-293; western end of concurrency with I-93
58.900 94.790 6 To NH 28A (Hanover Street / Candia Road)
59.275 95.394 I‑93 north – Concord Western end of concurrency with I-93; Exit 7 on I-93
60.994 98.160 1 NH 28 Bypass (Londonderry Turnpike) – Auburn, Hooksett
Rockingham Auburn 62.521 100.618 2 To NH 121 / Hooksett Road – Auburn, Candia
Candia 65.980 106.185 3 NH 43 – Candia, Deerfield Trumpet interchange
Raymond 71.979 115.839 4 Old Manchester Road Local traffic only
73.875 118.890 5 NH 102 / NH 107 to NH 156 – Raymond, Fremont Though NH 102 is marked on the guide signs, it officially ends a short distance south of NH 101.
Epping 76.021 122.344 6 Depot Road / Beede Hill Road
78.288 125.992 7 NH 125 – Epping, Kingston
Brentwood 80.479 129.518 8 To NH 27 / North Road
Exeter 83.586 134.519 9 NH 27 (Epping Road) – Exeter
85.101 136.957 10 NH 85 (Newfields Road) – Exeter, Newfields
Stratham 86.236 138.783 11 NH 108 (Portsmouth Avenue) – Stratham, Exeter
Exeter 88.942 143.138 12 NH 111 (Exeter Road) – Exeter, North Hampton
Hampton 90.566 145.752 I‑95 – Portsmouth, Boston Trumpet interchange; Exit 2 on I-95
91.276 146.894 13 NH 27 (Exeter Road) – Hampton
92.884 149.482 US 1 (Lafayette Road) – Hampton, Seabrook
93.731 150.845 Eastern end of limited-access segment
95.189 153.192 NH 1A (Ocean Boulevard)
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Suffixed routes

New Hampshire Route 101A

New Hampshire Route 101A
Location: MilfordNashua
Length: 13.819 mi[1] (22.240 km)

New Hampshire Route 101A (abbreviated NH 101A) is a 13.819-mile-long (22.240 km) east–west highway in Hillsborough County, New Hampshire, connecting Milford and Nashua. It also runs through Merrimack and Amherst, and very briefly touches Hollis.

The western terminus of NH 101A is in western Milford at the intersection with NH 101. The eastern terminus is in the center of Nashua, when it meets New Hampshire Route 111 at the Merrimack River. Most of it is two lanes in each direction, sometimes with a central turning lane.

Route 101A is quite busy by southern New Hampshire standards, with traffic ranging from 26,000 vehicles per weekday in Nashua to 9,000 in western Milford. [2]

The road carries a number of names. In Milford it is Elm Street and then Nashua Street; in Amherst and Merrimack it is the Milford Road or, more commonly, just 101A; in Nashua it is Amherst Street, then Canal Street and finally Bridge Street.

New Hampshire Route 101B

New Hampshire Route 101B was a designation once held by two separate state highways in New Hampshire. Although the two segments did not directly connect, they were linked at the time by their parent route, New Hampshire Route 101.

Western segment

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New Hampshire Route 101B
Location: HooksettCandia

The western segment of NH 101B was a roughly 8.5-mile-long (13.7 km) east–west road in the Manchester area. The western terminus of the route was at U.S. Route 3 and New Hampshire Route 28 in Hooksett, the current western terminus of New Hampshire Route 27. The eastern terminus was at NH 101 near Candia.

All of the western segment of NH 101B was renumbered NH 27 at an unknown time.[4]

Eastern segment

New Hampshire Route 101B
Location: Portsmouth

The eastern segment of NH 101B was a short east–west road in downtown Portsmouth. The western terminus was at the intersection of Islington Street and Middle Road, where NH 101, which followed the present alignment of New Hampshire Route 33 into Portsmouth, departed the routing of NH 33 and followed Islington Street to U.S. Route 1. NH 101B continued east on Middle Road and South Street, following the modern alignment of NH 33 to the present eastern terminus of NH 33 at US 1. At US 1, NH 101B continued east on South Street, running along the local street to its eastern terminus at New Hampshire Route 1B.

Prior to 1971, NH 101B from Islington Street east to US 1 became NH 101 while Islington Street and the portion of NH101B east of US 1 reverted to city maintenance. This section of NH 101 was renumbered to NH 33 in 1994.[4]

New Hampshire Route 101C

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New Hampshire Route 101C
Location: Hampton Beach

New Hampshire Route 101C ran from NH 108 east along what is now NH 27 to NH 1A in Hampton Beach.

New Hampshire Route 101D

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New Hampshire Route 101D
Location: HamptonHampton Beach

The portion of NH 111 between New Hampshire Route 27 in Hampton and NH 1A in Hampton Beach was once designated New Hampshire Route 101D.[4]

New Hampshire Route 101E

New Hampshire Route 101E
Location: Hampton
Length: 2.357 mi[1] (3.793 km)

New Hampshire Route 101E is a short stretch of urban road 2.357 miles (3.793 km) in length in Hampton, Rockingham County, New Hampshire. This road connects Lafayette Road (U.S. Route 1) with Ocean Boulevard (New Hampshire Route 1A). NH 101E is locally named Winnacunnet Road. Oddly, this highway has never connected with NH 101, its "parent", or any of its spurs. The entire route is maintained by the town of Hampton.

NH 101E is very poorly signed. There exists one sign on southbound U.S. Route 1 using an old state-highway logo (without the Old Man of the Mountain), and green guide signs at the eastern terminus at NH 1A, but along the road itself, there is no signage to indicate the route's number. It is not known as "Route 101E" to local residents; they refer to it as "Winnacunnet Road."

References

External links

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