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U.S. Highway 40

United States Highway 40 is an east-west United States highway. As the "0" in its route number suggests, US 40 was once a coast-to-coast route, stretching from the Atlantic to the Pacific. However, the entire segment west of Salt Lake City, Utah has been decommissioned in favor of Interstate 80.

Table of contents
1 Termini
2 Historic termini
3 Alternate routes
4 Historic alternate routes
5 States traversed
6 Related US Routes
7 Sources and external links

Termini

As of 2004, the highway's eastern terminus is in Atlantic City, New Jersey, near the Atlantic Ocean (and close to the end of U.S. Highway 30). Its western/ terminus is north of Park City, Utah at an intersection with Interstate 80.

Historic termini

When the original 1926 routes were commissioned, the western termini of both US 40 and US 50 were in Oakland, California. These highways' endpoints were extended to San Francisco (at US 101 with the construction of the Bay Bridge in 1936. But the rise of the Interstate highway system saw the end of the road creep eastward starting in the 1960s.

Alternate routes

As of 2004 Alternate US 40 in Maryland has an eastern terminus in Frederick. It rejoins US 40 about 20 miles later in Hagerstown. While the main line of US 40 serves as a local access road for Interstate 70, Alternate US 40 veers a to the south to serve Boonsboro.

Some maps show one or two segments labelled Alternate US 40 in the Maryland panhandle, but they appear to be local access alternatives to Interstate 68.

Historic alternate routes

US 40 split into US 40N and US 40S from western Kansas through central Colorado until the mid-1930s.

States traversed

The highway passes through the following states:

Related US Routes

  • U.S. Highway 140
  • U.S. Highway 240
  • U.S. Highway 340

Sources and external links





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