New England Interstate Route 10

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New England Route 10 marker

New England Route 10
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Route information
Length: 237.22 mi (381.77 km)
Connecticut: 54.28[1] mi (87.36 km)
Massachusetts: 60.69[2] mi (97.68 km)
New Hampshire: 122.25 mi [3] (196.74 km)
Existed: 1922 – 1930s
Major junctions
South end: New England 1.svg Route 1 in Old Saybrook, CT
  New England 2.svg Route 2 in Wethersfield, CT
New England 17.svg Route 17 in Hartford, CT
New England 5.svg Route 5 in Westfield, MA
New England 2.svg Route 2 in Northampton, MA
New England 7.svg Route 7 in Greenfield, MA
New England 2.svg Route 2 in Bernardston, MA
New England 9.svgNew England 12.svg Route 9/Route 12 in Keene, NH
North end: US 302 in Haverhill, NH
Highway system
New England road marking system

New England Route 10 was a multi-state north–south state highway in the New England region of the United States, running through Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire. "Route 10" still exists as a continuous state highway in each of its original states, running from New Haven, Connecticut to Woodsville, New Hampshire. Its number dates from 1922, when it was a New England Interstate Route, also known as the Central New England Route.

Route 10 is often called the College Highway because it links Yale University, Trinity College, Mount Holyoke College, Smith College, Amherst College, the University of Massachusetts and Dartmouth College. Yale and Dartmouth are in the Ivy League and Smith and Mount Holyoke are in the Seven Sisters group of exclusive women's colleges.

History

Map of Connecticut showing the original 1920s route in green and the subsequent route in blue

Route 10 originally followed a different route south of Granby, Connecticut, starting in the town of Old Saybrook[4] instead of at its current New Haven terminus. It moved to its current alignment along the Connecticut section of the College Highway in 1932, with the former alignment becoming the original Route 9. The original routing is now Routes 154, 99, and 189.

New England Route 10 also originally ended in Littleton, New Hampshire (at Route 18) but was subsequently truncated to end at its current northern terminus in Woodsville. The rest of the route has had only very minor changes and basically still follows its successor highways in the three states.

Route description

Connecticut

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New England Route 10 in Connecticut began in the city of New Haven. Route 10 continued north through the towns of Hamden, Cheshire, Southington, Plainville, Farmington, Avon, Simsbury and Granby.

Massachusetts

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New England Route 10 in Massachusetts crossed the border from Granby, Connecticut into Southwick, Massachusetts. It ran north through the Pioneer Valley towns of Southwick, Westfield, Southampton, Easthampton, Northampton, Hatfield, Whately, Deerfield, Greenfield, Bernardston, Gill, and Northfield. It crossed the Connecticut River in Northfield before entering New Hampshire.

New Hampshire

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New England Route 10 in New Hampshire began at the Massachusetts state line in Winchester, New Hampshire. The road continued into Keene. From Keene, NH 10 travels north via Newport until Grantham. NH 10 then traveled along the east bank of the Connecticut River from Lebanon up to Woodsville. Signage for Route 10 continued all the way to Littleton.

References

External links