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Fun facts about US Route 1
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US Route 1
This is where it all begins
Northern Door Inn
356 West Main St.
Fort Kent, ME 04743
A brief History of US Route 1, America's first interstate highway.
U.S. Route 1 is a major north–south U.S. Highway that serves the
East Coast of the United
States. It runs 2,390 miles (3,846 km) from Key West, Florida,
north to Fort Kent, Maine, at the Canadian border. U.S. 1 generally parallels
Interstate 95, though it is significantly farther west (inland) between Jacksonville, Florida and
Petersburg, Virginia. The highway connects most of 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,
Maryland; Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania; Newark,
New Jersey; New York City;
New Haven, Connecticut;
Providence, Rhode Island;
Boston, Massachusetts;
and Portland, Maine.
The direct predecessor to US 1 was the Atlantic Highway, an auto trail established in 1911 as
the Quebec-Miami
International Highway. In 1915 it was renamed the Atlantic Highway, and the northern
terminus was changed to Calais, Maine Due
to the overlapping of auto trail designations, portions of the route had other
names that remain in common use, such as the Boston Post Road between Boston and New York, the Lincoln Highway between
New York and Philadelphia, Baltimore Pike between
Philadelphia and Baltimore, and
the Dixie Highway in and
south of eastern Georgia. North of Augusta, Georgia, the
highway generally followed the Fall Line, rather than a more easterly route through
the swamps of the Atlantic
Coastal Plain. Brickell Avenue is the
name given to the stretch of U.S. Route 1 in Miami, Florida just south
of the Miami
River.
When the New England road marking system
was established in 1922, the Atlantic Highway within New England was signed as Route 1, with a
Route 24 continuing north to Madawaska; New York extended the number to New York City in 1924 with
its own Route 1.
Other states adopted their own systems of numbering, and by 1926 all states but
Maryland had signed the Atlantic
Highway as various routes, usually changing numbers at the state line. In 1925,
the Joint Board on Interstate
Highways created a preliminary list of interstate routes to be marked by the
states,
including Route 1 along the Atlantic. This highway began at Fort Kent, Maine and
followed the existing Route 24 to Houlton and Route 15
to Bangor,
beyond which it generally followed the Atlantic Highway to Miami. In all
states but Georgia that had numbered their state highways, Route 1
followed only one or two numbers across the state.
The only significant deviation from the Atlantic Highway was between Augusta, Georgia and
Jacksonville, Florida, where Route 1 was
assigned to a more inland route, rather than following the Atlantic Highway via
Savannah.
One of the many changes made to the system before the final numbering was
adopted in 1926 involved US 1 in Maine. The 1925 plan had assigned Route 1 to
the shorter inland route (Route 15) between Houlton and Bangor, while Route 2 followed the longer
coastal route via Calais. In the system as adopted in 1926, US 2 instead took
the inland route, while US 1 followed the coast, absorbing all of the former
Routes 24 and 1 in New England. Many
local and regional relocations, often onto parallel superhighways, were made in the
early days of US 1; this included the four-lane divided Route 25 in
New Jersey, completed in 1932
with the opening of the Pulaski Skyway,
and a bypass of Bangor involving the Waldo-Hancock
Bridge, opened in 1931. The Overseas Highway from
Miami to Key
West was completed in 1938, and soon became a southern extension of US
1.
PIX from the 50's

Fort Kent residents Alphosine and Roland Page in Key West circa 1952.

1950's vintage Route 1 sign which was located about one mile east of the current hospital location.
Note that in the 1950's Fort Kent and Key West both claim to be the "beginning".

Here is where it all ends :
in front of the Monroe County Courthouse
500 Whitehead St.
Key West, FL
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