Jump to content
Main menu
Main menu
move to sidebar
hide
Navigation
Main page
Recent changes
Random page
Help about MediaWiki
Special pages
Niidae Wiki
Search
Search
Appearance
Create account
Log in
Personal tools
Create account
Log in
Pages for logged out editors
learn more
Contributions
Talk
Editing
New Jersey Route 26
(section)
Page
Discussion
English
Read
Edit
View history
Tools
Tools
move to sidebar
hide
Actions
Read
Edit
View history
General
What links here
Related changes
Page information
Appearance
move to sidebar
hide
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==History== {{wide image|Trenton NBturnpike 1777.jpg|700px|align-cap=center|The layout for the then-proposed Trenton and New Brunswick Turnpike Road}} ===Trenton and New Brunswick Turnpike=== [[File:2021-09-26 14 24 02 View north along New Jersey State Route 26 (Livingston Avenue) from the overpass for U.S. Route 1 in North Brunswick Township, Middlesex County, New Jersey.jpg|thumb|left|View northbound along Route 26 from US 1 in North Brunswick Township]] Route 26 followed a majority of the Trenton and New Brunswick Turnpike, a gravel toll road envisioned in 1795 to connect [[Philadelphia, Pennsylvania]] with New York City. People raised money for the new turnpike, which was to cost $300,000 (1795 dollars) by selling 75,000 shares at $4 apiece. From there, officials would request charters from New Jersey, [[New York (state)|New York]] and [[Pennsylvania]] for creation of the highway. Although officials in cities like New Brunswick were supportive of the plan, insufficient funds were raised and the plans eventually folded. On November 14, 1804, the plans for a turnpike went forward once again, with the [[New Jersey State Legislature]] chartered the Trenton and New Brunswick Turnpike, a new toll road between the two cities. In Trenton, the turnpike was to begin at either Warren or Green Streets, heading along the current US 1 corridor to New Brunswick, where it would end. The new charter set a term of 99 years for the corporation. Two thousand shares of stock in the corporation were to be sold at $100 apiece (1804 dollars). Tolls for the highway would cost from half a cent to two cents a mile, as approved by the State Legislature.<ref name="turnpike">{{cite web|url=http://www.plainsborohistory.org/turnpike.htm|title=Trenton and New Brunswick Turnpike|year=2009|publisher=Plainsboro Historical Society Inc.|access-date=November 20, 2009|location=[[Plainsboro, New Jersey]]|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100619062828/http://www.plainsborohistory.org/turnpike.htm|archive-date=June 19, 2010}}</ref> [[File:2018-05-18 14 19 56 View north along New Jersey State Route 171 and Middlesex County Route 691 (Livingston Avenue) at Suydam Street in New Brunswick, Middlesex County, New Jersey.jpg|right|thumb|1965 shield of Route 26 on its newer alignments of CR 691 and Route 171]] On August 9, 1805, the commissioners of the turnpike met in [[Kingston, New Jersey|the community of Kingston]] to appoint officers and to begin to lay out the new highway. Enough of the 2,000 shares had been subscribed, and the commissioners went ahead and approved a survey map created for the turnpike. By 1806, a portion of the new turnpike was opened and tolls were being collected on the new highway. On November 28, 1806, a second charter was passed in the legislature to grant fines of $20 (1806 dollars) for evading tolls or defacing property along the turnpike. In 1807, the road was completed, and [[Henry Gallatin]], the [[United States Secretary of the Treasury]], reported that the alignment of the {{convert|25|mi|km|adj=on}} long turnpike was nearly straight except for an "obstruction" at Sand Hills, where they had to dig into the hill to create the highway. The new turnpike was {{convert|36|ft|m}} wide and had stone abutments for the new wooden bridges.<ref name="turnpike" /> The turnpike was heavily trafficked, with several forms of transportation using it at a time. There were three tollgates along the turnpike, one at around {{convert|4|mi|km}} from Trenton, one at Ridge Road and one at the current railroad crossing for US 1. Toll collectors on the turnpike would often have a hard time counting the number of horses at a tollgate because of kicked up smoke and dust. During the [[War of 1812]], the turnpike gained record usage, moving goods between Philadelphia and New York. A third supplement was added to the charter in January 1814, where the turnpike corporation would have to upgrade the road in eighteen months or face removal of tolls. If they did not, tollgates would be removed from the turnpike. Although the corporation upgraded the route in 1827, the road was still very tough to travel for passengers and people hauling expensive goods. During the early 19th century, the turnpike was profiting from stagecoach companies, which had about six different lines winding through the turnpike. When the [[Delaware and Raritan Canal]] and [[Camden and Amboy Railroad]] were constructed during the 19th century, the profits began to dwindle and the turnpike could not handle the expenses for stagecoaches.<ref name="turnpike" /> [[File:1904 US Route 1 big.JPG|left|thumb|A view of the turnpike in 1904]] To cause further problems, in 1832, the New Jersey State Legislature approved the Philadelphia and Trenton Railroad, a railroad to connect the two cities. A further note was made that the railroad could acquire the old turnpike for railroad right-of-way to connect Philadelphia and New York. That December, the railroad company attempted to merge the turnpike company into theirs, but faced opposition. In 1834, the turnpike company requested the choice to put another railroad on their turnpike right-of-way, but the monopoly from the Delaware and Raritan Canal and Camden and Amboy Railroad immediately opposed. Later that year, the Philadelphia and Trenton gained a controlling interest in the turnpike company, with hopes to lay the tracks on the right-of-way. The railroad company petitioned the state legislature to let them lay tracks, but the votes turned against their favor. After the Camden and Amboy commandeered control of the Philadelphia and Trenton Railroad, a secret truce was made in 1835, which left the construction of a railroad to become a dead proposal, and the right-of-way remained a road. However, the turnpike was already hurting for funds, as passenger and most stagecoach traffic had moved to the Camden and Amboy Railroad. The last stagecoach line left went out of business soon after becoming the only stagecoach line along the turnpike, which cut turnpike revenues drastically.<ref name="turnpike" /> By 1858, the turnpike had basically begun to fold, with tolls only being charged at one gate for several years as most traffic had moved to rails rather than road. That year however, there were some upgrades made to the road, but not by much. In 1867, the competitor Camden and Amboy Railroad merged with the [[United New Jersey Railroad]] to create a new company. In December 1871, that company then became part of the [[Pennsylvania Railroad]], which was one of the major railroads at that point. The railroad also took over jurisdiction of the turnpike. In 1899, people from Trenton and nearby [[Penns Neck, New Jersey|Penns Neck]] approached the railroad to help reconstruct the old turnpike road, but no full proposal ever came forward. By 1903, the 1804 charter had expired, and the roadway was placed under public control, but was still in a derelict condition.<ref name="turnpike" /> ===Route 26 is designated=== [[File:Route 26 Indentation bridge on Route 1.jpg|right|thumb|Route 26 stamp bridge in the community of West Windsor]] In 1927, about 24 years after the Trenton and New Brunswick Turnpike was revert to the state for future usage, the [[New Jersey State Highway Department]] designated the entire alignment from the [[Trenton-Morrisville Bridge]] in Trenton to the area around the [[Mile Run Brook]] in New Brunswick as a part of State Highway Route 26.<ref name=nj1927>State of New Jersey, Laws of 1927, Chapter 319.</ref> The designation, assigned as part of the [[1927 renumbering (New Jersey)|1927 state highway renumbering]] covered the current alignments of most of [[U.S. Route 1]] from Trenton (including its [[U.S. Route 1 Business (Trenton, New Jersey)|business loop]]) to where Route 26 turned onto Livingston Avenue. From there, Route 26 continued along Livingston Avenue past Nassau Street and into the city of New Brunswick, ending near an intersection with [[New Jersey Route 18|State Highway Route S-28]] (George Street).<ref name="Map">{{cite web|author=Williams, Jimmy and Sharon|url=http://www.jimmyandsharonwilliams.com/njroads/1920s/images/1927_routes.gif|title=1927 New Jersey Road Map|publisher=1920s New Jersey Highways|access-date=October 8, 2008|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071031111034/http://www.jimmyandsharonwilliams.com/njroads/1920s/images/1927_routes.gif|archive-date=October 31, 2007}}</ref> Construction of the new highway continued northward, with a portion of the highway still unconstructed by June 1930, a {{convert|2|mi|km|adj=on}} portion near the [[Adams, New Jersey|Adams]] train station and part of Livingston Avenue still was not constructed to full state standards.<ref name="1930con">{{cite news|title=Reported About Roads|date=June 22, 1930|work=The New York Times|page=XX7}}</ref> [[File:NJ S26 (cutout).svg|thumb|left|100px|Route S26 (1927-1953)]] Route 26 along with [[New Jersey Route 25|State Highway Route 25]] soon became high-use routes to get drivers from Philadelphia to New York via New Brunswick as the large high-speed roadway.<ref name="nyt2">{{cite news|title=Early Autumn In New Jersey|last=Dickinson|first=Leon A.|date=October 5, 1930|work=The New York Times|page=XX7}}</ref> In the 1927 renumbering, a connection from Route 26 to Route 25 was also assigned, bypassing to the south of New Brunswick. This route was designated as State Highway Route S-26, a route completely concurrent with U.S. Route 1.<ref name="s26">ROUTE NO. S-26. Beginning at a point in Route No. 26 near the southerly boundary line of city of New Brunswick and extending easterly by passing the city of New Brunswick to a point in Route No. 25. L. 1927, c. 319.</ref> In 1931, the State Highway Department contracted plans for a new bridge over the Delaware and Raritan Canal near Bakers Basin. Although Route 26 was considered the longest straight section of highway in the state, the new freeway would get rid of a dangerous S-curve along the highway.<ref name="nyt1931">{{cite news|title=On The Highways Of Florida|last=Dickinson|first=Leon A.|date=January 18, 1931|work=The New York Times|page=130}}</ref> On January 30, 1932, the State Highway Department opened the newly constructed [[Calhoun Street Extension]] to traffic. This new freeway, designated as part of Route 26, was constructed as a bypass of the business districts in Trenton and [[Morrisville, Bucks County, Pennsylvania|Morrisville, Pennsylvania]] with a new traffic circle from the Route 26 mainline (now the [[List of traffic circles in New Jersey|Brunswick Circle]]). Calhoun Street was realigned in the process to help make traffic flow.<ref name="nyt1932">{{cite news|title=On Highways-In Traffic|date=January 31, 1932|work=The New York Times|page=XX8}}</ref> In October 1935, the State Highway Department started work on moving an {{convert|8|mi|km|adj=on}} stretch of Route 26 over {{convert|12|ft|m}} from its current alignment. The project, considered unprecedented in history, was tested in September of that year near Penns Neck to certify the feasibility of such an accomplishment. Work started in October, costing the state $400,000 (1935 dollars), including money from the [[Public Works Administration]]. The stretch of highway from Ridge Road to Adams Station Road was to be moved over to reduce the number of accidents occurring along the former alignment. In 1934 alone, accidents along Route 26 caused 90 fatalities, with a similar figure occurring until that point in 1935.<ref name="nyt1935">{{cite news|title=Will Push Road Aside|last=Kane Jr.|first=Frank|date=October 13, 1935|work=The New York Times|page=XX5}}</ref> By November 1936, the project had completed {{convert|7|mi|km}} of the proposed {{convert|8|mi|km|adj=on}} conversion, an engineering feat of the time. The men who were doing this were considered "experts" in the jobs.<ref name="nyt1936">{{cite news|title=Safer State Highways Planned|last=Bernstein|first=Victor H.|date=November 15, 1936|work=The New York Times|page=XX14}}</ref> By February 1939, the project had ballooned in price, reaching $842,000 (1939 dollars) and the project was still incomplete. The missing work included a new island for a median.<ref name="nyt1939">{{cite news|title=New Jersey Dresses Up|date=February 19, 1939|work=The New York Times|page=138}}</ref> [[File:Route 91 heading northbound along Jersey Avenue.jpg|left|thumb|Route 91 through New Brunswick, the former alignment of Route 26-A and the Trenton and New Brunswick Turnpike]] During the 1930s, the outcry for lighting along State Highway Routes 26 and 25 began to rise with the number of traffic accidents. Approximately 7.70% of traffic were in accidents along Route 26 at nighttime contrary to 2.42% during the daytime.<ref name="nyt1937">{{cite news|title=Lighted Highways Urged|date=February 26, 1937|work=The New York Times|page=3}}</ref> Although lighting was still in testing by 1938 (with [[New Jersey Route 24|State Highway Route 24]] as a test highway), Route 26 still had a high night accident rate, urging further actions for lighting the new roadway.<ref name="nyt1938">{{cite news|title=At The Wheel|date=January 16, 1938|work=The New York Times|page=170}}</ref> During the 1940s, the [[Middlesex County, New Jersey|Middlesex County]] officials designated Route 26 (Livingston Avenue) through New Brunswick as County Highway 3-R-16, but was signed as part of Route 26 to its end at State Highway Route S-28 ([[George Street (New Brunswick)|George Street]]).<ref name="1947map">{{cite map|title=Middlesex County|publisher=[[Middlesex County, New Jersey]]|year=1947|cartography=Middlesex County, New Jersey}}</ref> In 1941, the State Highway Department designated a spur along Jersey Avenue in North Brunswick and New Brunswick, which was taken over as [[New Jersey Route 91|State Highway Route 26-A]], that provided direct access to [[New Jersey Route 27|State Highway Route 27]] in New Brunswick.<ref name=nj1941>State of New Jersey, Laws of 1941.</ref> In 1947, the New Jersey State Highway Department expanded a {{convert|10|mi|km|adj=on}} stretch of three-lane roadway to four lanes for $500,000. This addition of new lanes was started to help safety of drivers down Route 26.<ref name="route26expansion">{{cite news|title=A Safety Boom! 3 Lane Highway Increased to 4!|date=May 18, 1947|work=The [[Chicago Daily Tribune]]|page=30}}</ref> ===Trenton Freeway and truncation=== [[File:2017-10-06 15 02 48 View north along U.S. Route 1 (Trenton Freeway) at the exit for Mulberry Street in Trenton City, Mercer County, New Jersey.jpg|right|thumb|Route 1 in the city of Trenton, along the Trenton Freeway]] {{main|U.S. Route 1 in New Jersey}} During the 1950s, plans arose in Trenton to construct a new bypass of the city to the west. The bypass, to be a four-lane freeway, was designated as another portion of Route 26 when the highway was constructed in 1952. The new route also included the construction of the [[Trenton-Morrisville Toll Bridge]], a $6.25 million (1952 dollars) span across the [[Delaware River]].<ref name="trenton">{{cite news|title=Delaware Bridge at Trenton Opens|date=December 2, 1952|work=The New York Times|page=33}}</ref> Just 30 days after the new Trenton Freeway was opened to automobile traffic, the [[1953 New Jersey state highway renumbering|highways were renumbered]] around the state. Route 26 was truncated back from the state line in Trenton to an interchange with U.S. Route 1 in North Brunswick Township, while its alignment became [[New Jersey Route 174|State Route 174]] (a portion of the Trenton Freeway), U.S. Route 1 and U.S. Route 1 Alternate. The two suffixed spurs of Route 26 were also truncated, with State Highway Route 26-A becoming Route 91, and State Highway Route S-26 becoming only a portion of U.S. Route 1. The route, however, continued into downtown New Brunswick, where it terminated at Route 18.<ref name="nj1953">[[Wikisource:1953 New Jersey state highway renumbering]]</ref> By the 1980s, Route 26 had been truncated back to Nassau Street.<ref name="1980sld">{{cite book|title=Route 26 Straight Line Diagram|publisher=New Jersey Department of Transportation|year=1980|edition=1980}}</ref> The county-maintained portion became Middlesex County Route 691<ref name="691sld">{{cite web|url=http://www.state.nj.us/transportation/refdata/sldiag/12000691__-.pdf|title=County Route 691 Straight Line Diagram|year=2009|publisher=New Jersey Department of Transportation|page=2|access-date=November 20, 2009}}</ref> while the northernmost portion of Livingston Avenue became part of [[New Jersey Route 171|Route 171]].<ref name="1980sld2">{{cite book|title=Route 171 Straight Line Diagram|publisher=New Jersey Department of Transportation|year=1980|edition=1980}}</ref>
Summary:
Please note that all contributions to Niidae Wiki may be edited, altered, or removed by other contributors. If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource (see
Encyclopedia:Copyrights
for details).
Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)
Search
Search
Editing
New Jersey Route 26
(section)
Add topic