Maryland Route 269
List of former Maryland state highways (200–399) |
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Highway names |
Interstates: |
Interstate X (I-X) |
US Highways: |
U.S. Route X (US X) |
State: |
Maryland Route X (MD X) |
List of former Maryland state highways |
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System links |
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Maryland Route 203
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Location: |
College Park |
Existed: |
1928–1957 |
Maryland Route 205
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Location: |
Waldorf |
Existed: |
1989–1997 |
Maryland Route 211
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Location: |
Chillum |
Existed: |
1927–1997 |
The Maryland highway system has several hundred former state highways. These highways were constructed, maintained, or funded by the Maryland State Roads Commission or Maryland State Highway Administration and assigned a unique or temporally unique number. Some time after the highway was assigned, the highway was transferred to county or municipal maintenance and the number designation was removed from the particular stretch of road. In some cases, a highway was renumbered in whole or in part. This list contains all or most of the state-numbered highways between 200 and 399 that have existed since highways were first numbered in 1927 but are no longer part of the state highway system or are state highways of a different number. Most former state highways have not had their numbers reused. However, many state highway numbers were used for a former highway and are currently in use. Some numbers have been used three times. The former highways below whose numbers are used presently, those that were taken over in whole or in part by another highway, or have enough information to warrant a separate article contain links to those separate highway articles. Highway numbers that have two or more former uses are differentiated below by year ranges. This list does not include former Interstate or U.S. Highways, which are linked from their respective lists.
Maryland Route 200 was the designation for Larchmont Avenue from MD 4 (now Marlboro Pike) in Coral Hills north to MD 214 (now MD 332) in Capitol Heights in central Prince George's County. The highway, which was then known as Crystal Spring Avenue, was constructed as a 16-foot-wide (4.9 m) gravel road between 1924 and 1926. MD 200 was widened and resurfaced in 1948. The highway was resurfaced again in 1954, then removed from the state highway system in 1955.
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