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・ New Jersey Route 14
・ New Jersey Route 140
・ New Jersey Route 143
・ New Jersey Route 147
・ New Jersey Route 15
・ New Jersey Route 151
・ New Jersey Route 152
・ New Jersey Route 154
・ New Jersey Route 155
・ New Jersey Route 156
・ New Jersey Route 157
・ New Jersey Route 158
・ New Jersey Route 159
・ New Jersey Route 160
・ New Jersey Route 161
New Jersey Route 162
・ New Jersey Route 163
・ New Jersey Route 166
・ New Jersey Route 167
・ New Jersey Route 168
・ New Jersey Route 17
・ New Jersey Route 170
・ New Jersey Route 171
・ New Jersey Route 172
・ New Jersey Route 173
・ New Jersey Route 175
・ New Jersey Route 177
・ New Jersey Route 179
・ New Jersey Route 18
・ New Jersey Route 181


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New Jersey Route 162 : ウィキペディア英語版
New Jersey Route 162

Route 162 is an unsigned long state highway in Lower Township, New Jersey, United States. The highway's designation consists entirely of a bridge on Seashore Road (County Route 626), which is known as Relocated Seashore Road. The southern terminus of the highway is an intersection with County Routes 641 and 626 in Lower Township. After crossing the Cape May Canal, Route 162 terminates at an intersection with County Routes 603 and 626 in Lower Township. Route 162 and County Route 626 date back to the 1850s, when local businessmen and county financial Richard Holmes put together the Cape May Turnpike. The turnpike was chartered in 1854, but construction did not begin until 1857, with completion in April of the next year. The turnpike however, caused a lot of controversy, and struggled to live. For many years, railroads were proposed, becoming possible competition for Holmes, who did not appreciate the idea. The railroad was constructed in 1863, just nine years after the charter of the turnpike syndicate.
Route S4C was designated by the New Jersey Legislature in 1929 as a spur of Route 4 (now U.S. Route 9), beginning at Bennett and running south on Seashore Road and Broadway, past Sunset Boulevard to the Delaware Bay. Route S4C was never taken over by the state. However, when the United States Army Corps of Engineers built the Cape May Canal during World War II, Seashore Road was chosen as one of two roads to cross the canal. (The other was Route 4, now Route 109). The Army Corps built a low level bridge close to the pre-canal alignment. The New Jersey Department of Transportation built a higher bridge in 1971 on a new alignment.
== History ==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「New Jersey Route 162」の詳細全文を読む



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