Vermont Route 7A
Vermont Route 7A | ||||
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Korean Veterans Memorial Highway [1] | ||||
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Map of Bennington County in southwestern Vermont with VT 7A highlighted in red
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Route information | ||||
Maintained by VTrans | ||||
Length: | 27.820 mi[2] (44.772 km) | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end: | ![]() |
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North end: | ![]() |
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Location | ||||
Counties: | Bennington | |||
Highway system | ||||
State highways in Vermont
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Vermont Route 7A (VT 7A) is a north–south state highway in Bennington County, Vermont, in the United States. It is an alternate route of U.S. Route 7 (US 7) between Bennington and Dorset. The route is signed as "Historic VT 7A" to distinguish it, the original routing of US 7, from the modern US 7 limited-access highway.
Route description
VT 7A begins at the southern end of the US 7 limited-access highway in Bennington. It heads northwest on Northside Drive for roughly six blocks, then turns north to follow the Ethan Allen Highway at the southern terminus of VT 67A. Upon passing under VT 279, VT 7A begins to parallel US 7. The two routes eventually reconnect by way of the Bennington North State Highway before US 7 veers off to the northeast. VT 7A, meanwhile, continues north into Shaftsbury.
Just inside Shaftsbury, VT 7A passes by the Robert Frost Stone House Museum. The route continues north to the village of South Shaftsbury, where it meets VT 67. North of the village, VT 7A curves slightly to the northeast as it enters Arlington. Here, the route travels past the Norman Rockwell Gallery and Exhibition and overlaps with VT 313. Outside of the village of Arlington, VT 7A takes on a more pronounced northeasterly routing into Manchester. The route passes near Hildene and serves the historic site by way of Hildene Road, then continues on to Manchester Center. Here, VT 7A intersects VT 11 and briefly overlaps VT 30 before exiting the village and entering the town of Dorset, where the route ends at another junction with US 7.
History
The route is called "Historic" in order to avert confusion with the four-lane limited-access highway routing of US 7, known locally as the "Super 7". Before the limited-access highway opened, VT 7A was the original routing of US 7.[3]
Major intersections
The entire route is in Bennington County. [2]
Location[2] | mi[2] | km | Destinations | Notes | |
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Bennington | 0.000 | 0.000 | ![]() |
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0.768 | 1.236 | ![]() |
Southern terminus of VT 67A | ||
2.356 | 3.792 | Bennington North State Highway (VT 9025) | To ![]() |
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Shaftsbury | 4.219 | 6.790 | ![]() |
Eastern terminus of VT 67 | |
Arlington | 12.405 | 19.964 | ![]() ![]() |
Southern end of concurrency with VT 313 | |
13.830 | 22.257 | ![]() |
Northern end of concurrency with VT 313 | ||
Manchester | 22.999 | 37.013 | ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Western terminus of VT 11; southern end of concurrency with VT 30 | |
23.037 | 37.074 | ![]() |
Northern end of concurrency with VT 30 | ||
Dorset | 27.820 | 44.772 | ![]() |
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1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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References
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External links
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- ↑ "Vermont Named State Highways and Bridges". Vermont Department of Libraries. Retrieved May 21, 2012.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ "Why is Route 7A Historic?", ThisisVermont.com; accessed August 23, 2006.