List of state routes in Pennsylvania
The Pennsylvania Department of Transportation is responsible for the establishment and classification of a state highway network which includes Interstate Highways, U.S. Highways, and state routes. U.S. and Interstate highways are classified as state routes in Pennsylvania.
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania established the Location Referencing System in 1987, which registers all numbered routes in Pennsylvania as SR-X. A state route would be SR 39, a US Route would be SR 22, and an Interstate route would be SR 80. However, routes which are numbered between 0000 and 0999 are classified as Traffic Routes, which are abbreviated as PA 39, US 22, and I-80, instead.
There are also four-digit numbers for various "state roads" over which PennDOT has jurisdiction, but those numbers are not displayed on the roads, except in rural areas, where they are posted with index-card-sized small signs. In urban areas, these numbers are somewhat less prominently posted, and these streets are known by the names on the street signs.
History
In 1911, when the Sproul Road Bill was passed, a large number of Legislative Routes were assigned. These were the primary internal numbering until the present Location Referencing System was adopted in 1987. See also: List of legislative routes in Pennsylvania.Signed Traffic Route numbers from 1 to 12 were first assigned in 1924 to several of the national auto trails:
Italics denote former routes.
- Pennsylvania Route 1: Lincoln Highway
- Pennsylvania Route 2: Lackawanna Trail
- Pennsylvania Route 3: William Penn Highway
- Pennsylvania Route 4: Susquehanna Trail
- Pennsylvania Route 5: Lakes-to-Sea Highway
- Pennsylvania Route 6: Old Monument Trail
- Pennsylvania Route 7: Roosevelt Highway
- Pennsylvania Route 8: William Flinn Highway
- Pennsylvania Route 9: Yellowstone Trail, Chicago-Buffalo Highway
- Pennsylvania Route 10: Buffalo-Pittsburgh Highway
- Pennsylvania Route 11: National Pike, National Old Trails Road
- Pennsylvania Route 12: Baltimore Pike
- Pennsylvania Route 13: Chambersburg, Pennsylvania - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Pennsylvania Route 14: York Trail
- Pennsylvania Route 17: Benjamin Franklin Highway
- Pennsylvania Route 18: Erie-Lincoln Highway
- Pennsylvania Route 19: Lewistown - Scranton, Anthracite Trail
- Pennsylvania Route 22: Keystone Trail
- Pennsylvania Route 24: Washington-Harrisburg Route
- Pennsylvania Route 33: Lykens Valley Trail
- Pennsylvania Route 41: Reading - Harrisburg
- Pennsylvania Route 44: Highway to the Stars
- Pennsylvania Route 46: Bradford Farmers' Valley Highway
- Pennsylvania Route 55: Bucktail Trail
- Pennsylvania Route 64: Horseshoe Trail, Altoona-Bellefonte-Cumberland Trail
- Pennsylvania Route 66: Anchor Line
- Pennsylvania Route 88: Perry Highway
Since Pennsylvania first introduced numbered traffic routes in 1924, a keystone symbol shape has been used, in reference to Pennsylvania being the "Keystone State". The signs originally said "Penna", followed by the route number in block-style numbering in a keystone cutout. In the mid 1950s, the signs were modified to have "PA" instead of "Penna", with the lone exception being the mainline Pennsylvania Turnpike ; additionally, the numbers were made more round and the signs were made larger in order to be more legible while driving, and the keystone shape itself remained a cutout. By the late 1960s, as U.S. Routes were beginning to be made on rectangular cutouts with the U.S.-style shield painted onto them instead of the shield cutout in most states outside of California, the same was done with the keystone. The state initials were removed altogether and while the numbers remained rounded, were standardized into FHWA Series E typeface, which was becoming the standard for the Interstate Highway System. Most of the 1950s vintage signs were replaced with the newer rectangular cutout with the painted-on keystone by the early 1970s, though a very few remain in scattered places on non-decommissioned roads. Pennsylvania has used the painted-on keystone signs since.
List of state routes
Officially designated SR 0400 due to I-380.State routes with a different route number
- PA 86 - assigned as SR 0886
- PA 97 - assigned as SR 0019 and SR 0197
- PA 99 - assigned as SR 0699
- PA 283 - assigned as SR 0300
- PA 380 - assigned as SR 0400