I originally clinched MD 222 in December and had a hard time afterwards proving whether it is concurrent with US 1 or not.
Having said that, I drove this part of US 1 Friday and am wondering if the MD 222 concurrency (cannot remember if the concurrency is posted SB)
Connection to US222 notwithstanding, the
Cecil County HLR has an end at US1, with no concurrency. GMSV supports this.
There's this, but it could be considered a case of a Missing TO, much like
this...
and the MD 222 Truck Route (saw no signs for it) even exist?
There are plenty of signs visible in GMSV -- in areas where imagery hasn't been updated since September 2008.
1 2 3 4 5I have to wonder if this is like the slew of "Stupid Truck Routes!" posted in Pennsylvania to detour around aging weight-restricted bridges. A number of these were added to the HB back in the CHM days, and some of them have been slowly removed as the bridges are replaced and the truck routes cease to be signed.
Indeed, if you zoom in northwest of the
MD276 point, N of Granite Ave and S of where MD222 crosses under the rail line, you'll see a recently replaced bridge if you compare the ESRI WorldImagery and Mapbox Satellite views.
Or not?
https://www.usends.com/222.htmlIn 1995, US 222 was truncated back to its old south terminus at US 1 in Conowingo. The road through Port Deposit (between Conowingo and Perryville) is narrow and not very conducive to truck traffic. So Maryland decided to remove the US route designation from that segment. Instead, they signed it as MD 222, and then they directed truck traffic to use a more suitable route (namely to the east on US 1, and then south via MD 276).
I'll ask Mike Pruett if he knows anything about it...