Illinois Route 1

Illinois Route 1 marker

Illinois Route 1
Route information
Maintained by IDOT
Length: 323.06 mi[1] (519.91 km)
Existed: 1918[2] – present
Major junctions
South end: KY 91 in Cave-in-Rock
 
North end: US 12 / US 20 in Chicago
Location
Counties: Clark, Cook, Crawford, Edgar, Edwards, Gallatin, Hardin, Iroquois, Kankakee, Lawrence, Vermilion, Wabash, White, Will
Highway system
I-490IL 2

Illinois Route 1 (IL 1) is a state highway in the U.S. state of Illinois. Running parallel to the Indiana border, it is also the longest state road, starting on the south side of Chicago as Halsted Street at an intersection with U.S. Route 12 and U.S. Route 20 (95th Street), south to a free ferry crossing to Kentucky at Cave-in-Rock on the Ohio River. This is a distance of 325.59 miles (523.99 km).[1]

Route description

IL 1 south approaching the Cave-in-Rock ferry slip

Illinois 1 starts in the river village of Cave-In-Rock, on the Ohio River. It passes through the hills of Southern Illinois, and junctions at US 45 in Norris City. From there, it continues northeast through Carmi, Grayville, and Mount Carmel, and makes another direction change to the north. After passing through Lawrenceville, Illinois 1 does not pass through many towns for the next 50 miles until it reaches Marshall, although it does come close to Robinson. The road then runs through Paris, where it begins a multiplex with US 150. At Danville, US 150 splits off towards Champaign and US 136 follows Illinois 1 north for about 12 miles. Illinois 1 is more of a major route north of Danville, since it connects Danville with the Chicago area. Illinois 1 runs in a relatively north direction north of Danville, passing through Hoopeston and Watseka before reaching the outskirts of Kankakee. Illinois 1 then zigzags through Momence and Grant Park along with Illinois 17. At Goodenow, a lot of traffic merges onto Illinois 394, while most of the local traffic stays on Illinois 1. Illinois 394 eventually turns into I-94 in the southern suburbs. From Goodenow, Illinois 1 runs through numerous Chicago suburbs such as Chicago Heights and Harvey before ending at US 12 and US 20 on Chicago's south side.[3]

History

Illinois 1 was commissioned in 1918 as SBI Route 1. The original route had extended further along the northern end into Chicago along Vincennes Avenue and Michigan Avenue, and on the southern end from Norris City to Metropolis.

When U.S. Highway 45 was established from Norris City to Metropolis, Illinois 1 shifted east to Cave-In-Rock. Kentucky State Route 91 continues across the Ohio River.

In 1937, Illinois 1 was shifted southeast away from Albion to directly connect Mount Carmel and Grayville. Eventually, Illinois Route 15 and Illinois Route 130 replaced Illinois 1 to Albion.

In the 1950s, a freeway, then known as the Calumet Expressway, was constructed south from Chicago. This was designated Illinois 1, while the old highway along Halsted Street was signed Alternate Illinois Route 1. By 1964, Illinois 1 was restored to its old alignment, and Illinois Route 394 was applied to the expressway south of the portion designated as Interstate 94 (the I-94 portion now being known as the Bishop Ford Freeway). At this time, Illinois 1 was discontinued north of I–57.

Dixie Highway

Most of Route 1 north of Danville was part of the western division of the Dixie Highway, which goes through downstate Illinois and enters the Chicago area as it passes through Beecher. From here it follows the Vincennes Trail north and splits into the Bishop Ford Freeway (formerly the Calumet Expressway) and Chicago Road (which was one of the original roads into Chicago from the south) The Dixie Highway follows Chicago Road through Crete, Steger, South Chicago Heights, (at which point it meets up with the Sauk Trail.

As Route 1 continues north, it has a junction with Lincoln Highway (US 30). This is sometimes known as the "Crossroads of the Nation", because it is the intersection of two major auto trails. This intersection helped cities such as Chicago Heights thrive in its early days. Approximately two blocks after this intersection, Dixie Highway splits from Chicago Road and continues north through Flossmoor and Homewood. At the north end of Homewood's downtown, the road turns and goes under the Illinois Central Railroad tracks, which now carries both the Metra Electric Line and Amtrak trains. The road continues north through East Hazel Crest and past the Markham Rail Yards and under the Tri-State Tollway.

Past the tollway, the road enters Hazel Crest, Markham and then Harvey. As the road continues, creating a border between the towns of Dixmoor and Posen, its name changes to Western Avenue.

When the road enters Blue Island, it splits into two streets, (Western and Gregory), and realigns itself into one when it reaches Burr Oak Avenue. The road then enters the city of Chicago. Through Chicago, Western Avenue is a major boulevard, which continues north through the city to the town of Evanston (where it is named Asbury Street), which is where the Dixie Highway ends.

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
HardinCave in Rock0.000.00 Cave-In-Rock Ferry
Loves Corner2.033.27 IL 146 west Elizabethtown
Gallatin21.5534.68 IL 13
GallatinWhite
county line
33.3953.74 IL 141 New Haven, Evansville
White37.8860.96 US 45 Norris City, Eldorado
Carmi50.5281.30 IL 14 west / Lincoln Heritage Trail (Southern Branch) west McLeansboroSouth end of IL 14 / Lincoln Heritage Trail overlap
Crossville58.1693.60 IL 14 east / Lincoln Heritage Trail (Southern Branch) eastNorth end of IL 14 / Lincoln Heritage Trail (Southern Branch) overlap; south end of Lincoln Heritage Trail (Eastern Branch) overlap
Grayville64.26103.42 I-64 St. Louis, EvansvilleI-64 exit 130
Edwards67.13108.04 IL 130 north Albion
WabashMount Carmel83.03133.62 IL 15 east (Walnut Street) PrincetonSouth end of IL 15 overlap
83.60134.54 IL 15 west AlbionNorth end of IL 15 overlap
LawrenceLawrenceville106.78171.85
US 50 Bus.
107.47172.96 US 50 Vincennes, OlneyInterchange
CrawfordGordon126.05202.86 IL 33 Robinson, Palestine, Airport
ClarkMarshall153.06246.33 Lincoln Heritage Trail (Eastern Branch) north (South 6th Street)North end of Lincoln Heritage Trail overlap
153.34246.78 Historic National Road (Archer Avenue)
154.25248.24 US 40 Casey, Terre Haute
155.40250.09 I-70 Effingham, Terre HauteI-70 exit 147
EdgarParis168.27270.80 US 150 east / IL 16 west / IL 133 west (Jasper Street) Charleston, Arcola, Terre HauteSouth end of US 150 overlap
Chrisman181.36291.87 US 36 Decatur, Indianapolis
VermilionDanville203.01326.7114th StreetInterchange
203.23327.07 I-74 Champaign, IndianapolisI-74 exit 215
204.59329.26 US 136 east / US 150 west (Main Street) Urbana, Business DistrictNorth end of US 150 overlap; south end of US 136 overlap
217.17349.50 US 136 west / IL 119 east Henning, AlvinNorth end of US 136 overlap
Hoopeston228.36367.51 IL 9 Rankin, Lafayette
IroquoisWatseka250.47403.09 US 24 east SheldonSouth end of US 24 overlap
253.14407.39 US 24 west GilmanNorth end of US 24 overlap
260.99420.02 US 52 Kankakee, Sheldon
Kankakee277.51446.61 IL 17 west KankakeeSouth end of IL 17 overlap
Momence282.89455.27 IL 114 east
290.27467.14 IL 17 eastNorth end of IL 17 overlap
WillCrete300.38483.41 IL 394 north
CookSouth Chicago Heights306.14492.68 Lincoln Highway east (Sauk Trail)South end of Lincoln Highway overlap
Chicago Heights307.89495.50 US 30 / Lincoln Highway westNorth end of Lincoln Highway overlap
East Hazel Crest313.07503.84 I-80 / I-294 (Tollway) Iowa, Wisconsin, Indiana
Harvey314.61506.32 US 6 (159th Street)
316.13508.76 IL 83 (Sibley Boulevard)
Chicago322.48518.98 I-57 to I-94I-57 exit 357
323.06519.91 US 12 / US 20 (95th Street)roadway continues as Halsted Street
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Route map: Bing / Google

KML is from Wikidata

References

  1. 1 2 3 Illinois Technology Transfer Center (2013). "T2 GIS Data". Retrieved January 29, 2015.
  2. Carlson, Rick. Illinois State Highways Page: Routes 1 thru 20. Last updated March 15, 2006. Retrieved March 24, 2006.
  3. Illinois Highway Map (PDF) (Map). Cartography by IDOT. Illinois Department of Transportation. § C10–D10. Retrieved February 9, 2013.
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