U.S. Highway 1

United States Highway 1 is a United States highway which parallels the east coast of the United States. It runs 2390 miles from Key West, Florida in the south to Fort Kent, Maine at the Canadian border in the north. It parallels Interstate 95, although for a longer route and usually further to the east. It connects the major cities of the east coast, including: Miami, Florida; Jacksonville, Florida; Augusta, Georgia; Columbia, South Carolina; Raleigh, North Carolina; Richmond, Virginia; Washington, D.C; Baltimore; Philadelphia; Trenton; Newark; New York City and Boston, Massachusetts.

It is labeled "US 1" because it is the U.S. Federal Highway furthest east, and the north-south highways are numbered east to west.

In many of the states through which it passes, the residents call it Route 1 rather than Highway 1 (and route often rhymes with boot).

The section from Savannah, Georgia to Miami, Florida in most places closely follows the old route of the earlier Dixie Highway.

One of Andy Griffith's first successes as an entertainer was a comic monologue called "Number One Street", which told the tale of a rural family experiencing the wonders of the highway: "There was a sign said 'Free Picnic Table', so naturally we stopped and got us one."

Table of contents
1 Termini
2 States traversed
3 Related U.S. routes
4 External links

Termini

As of 2004, the highway's northern terminus is in Fort Kent, Maine at the Canadian border, where it crosses the Saint John River and intersects Provincial Highway 205. Its southern terminus is in Key West, Florida, the southwesternmost island in the Florida Keys, where it is known as the Overseas Highway.

States traversed

The highway passes through the following states:

Related U.S. routes

  • United States Highway 101 (not a "child" of US 1)
  • United States Highway 201
  • United States Highway 301
  • United States Highway 401
  • United States Highway 501
  • United States Highway 601
  • United States Highway 701

External links






Google
Home   Alphabetical Listing   Quote


This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.