Ontario Highway 39

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Template:Good article Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Infobox".Template:Template otherScript error: No such module "Infobox road/errors".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".[[Category:Infobox road instances Template:Infobox road/meta/mask/category]] King's Highway 39, commonly referred to as Highway 39, was a provincially maintained highway in the Canadian province of Ontario. The Script error: No such module "convert".-long route connected Highway 3 in downtown Windsor with Highway 2 south of Belle River, travelling along the southern shoreline of Lake St. Clair. Highway 39 was established in 1934. By 1961, the Pike Creek Bypass was opened and Highway 39 was rerouted along it, with the former route briefly becoming HighwayScript error: No such module "String".39B. The route was renumbered as Highway 2 in 1970, retiring the designation from the provincial highway system. Highway 2 was itself decommissioned along the former route of Highway 39 on January 1, 1998, and transferred to Essex County and the City of Windsor. It was subsequently redesignated as Essex County Road 22.

Route description

File:Ouellette Avenue 1951, Windsor, Ontario.png
Facing west towards downtown Windsor along Ouellette Avenue in 1951. The sign assembly at right features reassurance markers for Highway 2, Highway 3B, HighwayScript error: No such module "String".39, and Highway 98

HighwayScript error: No such module "String".39 began in downtown Windsor at the intersection of Ouellette Avenue and Riverside Drive. That intersection also served as the terminus for Highway 3B and Highway 98; HighwayScript error: No such module "String".2 continued through the intersection to the Detroit–Windsor tunnel. All four routes travelled concurrently southeast along Ouellette Avenue to Tecumseh Road, at which point HighwayScript error: No such module "String".3B branched west along that road while the others turned east. At Howard Avenue, HighwayScript error: No such module "String".39 continued east while HighwayScript error: No such module "String".2 and HighwayScript error: No such module "String".98 turned south.[1][2]

HighwayScript error: No such module "String".39 jogged south from Tecumseh Road to the Pike Creek Bypass at Banwell Road, gradually curving east onto it along what is now Mulberry Drive;[3] the Pike Creek Bypass was connected to the E.Script error: No such module "String".C. Row Expressway when it was extended east to Shawnee Road in May 1981.[4] It followed the bypass south of the community of Pike Creek, crossing over the creek of the same name and passing south of the J.P. Wiser's Whisky storage facility.[3][5] After paralleling along the south side of a Canadian National rail line, HighwayScript error: No such module "String".39 returned onto Tecumseh Road. Following the southern shoreline of Lake St. Clair, it crossed over the Puce River and through the communities of Puce and Emeryville. Becoming Notre Dame Street, the highway travelled through the town of Belle River and crossed the river of the same name. Exiting the town, the route crossed Duck Creek then curved south alongside it. After passing over a Canadian Pacific rail line, it ended at an intersection with HighwayScript error: No such module "String".2, which continued east to Tilbury.[1][6]

History

Assumption

HighwayScript error: No such module "String".39 was one of several provincial highways intended to funnel traffic from the border crossings in Windsor through Essex County.[7] The concept for a "Blue Water Highway" along the shores of the Detroit River, Lake St. Clair and thenceforth to Chatham alongside the Thames River was first made by the town of Belle River in 1927.[8][9] Noting that the route was already paved,[10] this premise was presented to the Department of Highways (DHO), predecessor to the modern Ministry of Transportation, multiple times over the next several years,[11] with the province opting instead to build and improve the Provincial Road (now Essex County RoadScript error: No such module "String".46),[12] and later the Base Line Road (now Essex County RoadScript error: No such module "String".42).[13] Despite this, the highway along Tecumseh Road and the lakefront continued to be lobbied for by local merchants and governments into the 1930s.[14][15][16]

The DHO finally agreed to take over the route, assuming control over Script error: No such module "convert". of roads through Maidstone, Rochester and Sandwich East townships on JulyScript error: No such module "String".11, 1934. The new highway began at the Windsor–Ford City boundary at Drouillard Road, and proceeded east along Tecumseh Road; the sections through the towns of Tecumseh and Belle River were designated as Connecting Links.[17] Within Windsor, the highway was signed along local roads (Tecumseh Road and Ouellette Avenue) to the Detroit–Windsor tunnel.[18]

In 1939, several renumberings took place in Essex County. Following pressure by the Essex County Automobile Club to number all three highways between Windsor and Tilbury with the number 2,[19] HighwayScript error: No such module "String".39 was redesignated as HighwayScript error: No such module "String".2B in January.[20] Two months later, the province instituted a change to its "numbering" policy in which lettered suffixes would only be used for short feeder routes and not for long distance routes. Consequently, HighwayScript error: No such module "String".2B became HighwayScript error: No such module "String".39 again, effective MarchScript error: No such module "String".18.[21]

Tecumseh Bypass

Traffic levels increased over the following decades, with two at-grade crossings of the Michigan Central Railroad becoming the site of frequent deadly accidents. In August 1951, the towns of Tecumseh and Belle River petitioned the DHO to construct a bypass along the south side of the tracks, avoiding both crossings.[22] The DHO opted to install automated signals and gates instead. The towns made a second request in March 1955,[23] to which the DHO agreed to conduct a survey into the need for a bypass that summer.[24] Plans were developed for the highway over the following years, including a proposal to connect the bypass with the proposed E. C. Row Avenue extension in 1957.[25]

The western end of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".39 was expanded from two to four lanes from Jefferson Avenue to Tecumseh in 1957 and 1958.[26] In April 1958, the DHO announced that it would proceed with constructing the bypass, as it was not possible to widen the existing highway through Tecumseh.[27][28] Concurrent with construction of the new bypass, which began in the fall of 1959, the highway was widened through Belle River.[29][30] The existing route through Tecumseh and Pike Creek was rehabilitated as part of the work.[30] The HighwayScript error: No such module "String".39 Bypass was opened the week of NovemberScript error: No such module "String".20, 1961.[31] The provincial portion of the former route through Tecumseh, east of Manning Road, became HighwayScript error: No such module "String".39B briefly before being decommissioned on AugustScript error: No such module "String".10, 1962.[32][33]

As part of a larger reorganisation of highways in Essex County following the completion of Highway 401, HighwayScript error: No such module "String".2 west of the HighwayScript error: No such module "String".39 intersections near Belle River was transferred to Essex County on JuneScript error: No such module "String".1, 1970.[34] Consequently, HighwayScript error: No such module "String".39 was renumbered as a continuation of HighwayScript error: No such module "String".2 into Windsor.[35]

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Major intersections

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See also

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References

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