Illinois Route 9
Illinois Route 9 is a cross-state, east–west rural state highway in the central part of the U.S. state of Illinois. It travels from Niota at the Fort Madison Toll Bridge, that crosses the Mississippi River into Iowa, eastward across central Illinois to State Road 26 at the Indiana state line.
Route description
IL 9 is a major arterial route in rural central Illinois. It is a parallel highway to IL 116 to the north and U.S. Route 136 to its south. It is a two-lane highway for most of its length.Illinois Route 9 runs eastward from the Mississippi River at the Fort Madison Toll Bridge to the Indiana state line near Cheneyville at SR 26 and SR 352. It crosses the Illinois River on the John T. McNaughton Bridge at Pekin, where it becomes known as Court Street in the city. It has an interchange with I-155 at Tremont; I-55/I-74 at Bloomington; and Interstate 57 at Paxton.
History
IL 9 was established in 1918 as one of the original 46 State Bond Issue Route routes.The routing of IL 9 has had two major changes since its establishment.
The original western terminus was in Hamilton, at the old Keokuk Rail Bridge completed in 1916 and then proceeded east through Carthage and Macomb, east of Macomb, southwest of New Philadelphia, the highway turned north to Bushnell and then proceeded east along the current IL 9 alignment to Canton, Peoria County, and Pekin.
- US 136, Hamilton to New Philadelphia,
- IL 41, New Philadelphia to Bushnell
- IL 9, Bushnell to Indiana state line.
From 1935 to 1937, IL 9 traveled a different route from Pekin to Bloomington, that original route is now posted as:
- IL 29, Pekin to North Pekin,
- IL 98, North Pekin to Morton,
- US 150, Morton to Bloomington.