New Jersey Routes 100, 101, and 300

New Jersey Routes 100, 101, and 300

Route 100, Route 101, and Route 300 were three state highways proposed in the 1930s by the New Jersey Department of Transportation as precursors to the New Jersey Turnpike.

The road that is now the New Jersey Turnpike was first planned by the New Jersey Department of Transportation (then known as the State Highway Department) as two untolled freeways in 1938. Route 100 was the route from New Brunswick to the George Washington Bridge, plus a spur to the Holland Tunnel (now the Newark Bay Extension of the Turnpike). Route 300 was the southern part of Turnpike from the Delaware Memorial Bridge to New Brunswick. However, NJDOT did not have the funds to complete the two freeways, and very little of the road was built under its auspices. Instead, in 1948, the New Jersey Turnpike Authority was created to build the road, and the two freeways were built as a single toll road.

Route S100 was a proposed spur of Route 100 in Elizabeth. It was never built, although Route 81 follows a similar alignment.

Route 101, while it would not have connected directly to Route 100, was planned at around the same time. It was planned as freeway from Kearny to Hackensack. It was never built, although the western spur of the New Jersey Turnpike follows roughly the same alignment. Route S101 was a northern extension of Route 101 planned at the same time from Hackensack through Paramus to the New York state line near Montvale. The section from Hackensack to Paramus was never built; the section from Paramus to the state line was built as part of the Garden State Parkway (Route 444) instead.

ee also

*State highways in New Jersey

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