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Pennsylvania Route 414

PA Route 414 marker

PA Route 414
Route information
Maintained by PennDOT
Length: 79.4 mi (127.8 km)
Major junctions
West end: PA 44 in Waterville
  PA 287 in Morris Township
US 15 in Liberty
PA 14 in Canton
PA 154 in Canton
PA 514 in West Franklin
East end: US 220 in Monroe
Location
Counties: Lycoming, Tioga, Bradford
Highway system
PA 413 PA 415
PA 892 PA-893.svg PA 894
PA 940 PA-941 (1926).svg PA 942

PA Route 414 marker

Pennsylvania Route 414 (PA 414) is a 79.4-mile-long (127.8 km) state highway located in Lycoming, Tioga, and Bradford Counties in Pennsylvania. The western terminus is at PA 44 in Waterville. The eastern terminus is at US 220 in Monroe. The first leg of the highway, between its intersection with PA 44 in Waterville and Blackwell (crossing Pine Creek and Pine Creek Rail Trail the final time) is very narrow and rugged.

PA 414 begins at an intersection with PA 44 in Cummings Township, Lycoming County, heading north-northwest on a two-lane undivided road. The route heads through dense forests and mountains of the Tiadaghton State Forest along the west bank of Pine Creek, crossing into McHenry Township. The road crosses to the east bank of the creek and the Pine Creek Rail Trail, turning northwest and passing through Jersey Mills and Blue Stone. PA 414 heads through the residential community of Cammal and continues through more forests alongside the rail trail, passing through Ross. The road curves to the north and enters Brown Township, turning to the northeast and leaving the Tiadaghton State Forest as it passes through more dense forests. The route curves north and passes through Slate Run before heading through Hilborn and crossing the Pine Creek Rail Trail and Pine Creek again, this time on the historic Bridge in Brown Township. PA 414 turns northeast and runs along the northwest bank of the creek through more dense forests on the eastern edge of the Tioga State Forest. The road continues to wind northeast through forested areas along the creek, with the rail trail crossing the creek to run next to the road.


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Wikipedia

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