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Ontario Provincial Highway 2

Highway 2 shield

Highway 2
Route information
Length: 1.0 km (0.6 mi)
History: Established in 1794 as the Governor's Road and on August 21, 1917, as The Provincial Highway
Major junctions
West end: Gananoque eastern limits
East end:  Highway 401 westbound off ramp
Location
Major cities: Windsor, Chatham-Kent, London, , Toronto, Belleville, Kingston, Cornwall
Highway system
←  Highway 148   Highway 3  →

Highway 2 shield

King's Highway 2, commonly referred to as Highway 2, is the lowest-numbered provincially maintained highway in the Canadian province of Ontario (there is no numbered Ontario Highway 1) and was originally part of a series of identically numbered highways in multiple provinces which together joined Windsor, Ontario to Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Once the primary east–west route across the southern portion of Ontario, most of Highway 2 in Ontario was bypassed by Ontario Highway 401, completed in 1968. The August 1997 completion of Highway 403 bypassed one final section through Brantford. Most of the 837.4 km (520.3 mi) length of Highway 2 was deemed a local route and removed from the provincial highway system on January 1, 1998, with the exception of a 1-kilometre (0.62 mi) section east of Gananoque. The entire route remains driveable, but as County Road 2 or County Highway 2 in most regions. In Toronto, "Highway 2" shields are still found along Lake Shore Boulevard and Kingston Road.

Highway 2 is currently a stub of its former self. At just over 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) in length, it is one of the shortest provincial highways in Ontario. Its nominal purpose is to provide a provincial route between westbound Thousand Islands Parkway and eastbound Highway 401. Highway 2 begins at the eastern town limits of Gananoque, and travels east a short distance before gently curving northward. It interchanges with the Thousand Islands Parkway, once referred to as "Highway 2S" prior to becoming a temporary part of the 401 in 1952, and ends at the westbound 401 offramp (interchange 648). The roadway continues as County Road 2 along the former provincial route to Quebec.


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Wikipedia

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