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The Black Horse Pike is a designation used for a number of different roadways that had been part of a historic route connecting the Camden area to the area of Atlantic City, New Jersey. Roadways now bearing the Black Horse Pike designation include portions of Route 168, Route 42, U.S. Route 322 (US 322), and US 40.
Route 168 follows the Black Horse Pike for most of its length, running through suburban areas in Gloucester Township, Runnemede, Bellmawr, and Mount Ephraim. It intersects and interchanges many major roads, including the Route 42 freeway in Gloucester Township, Route 41 in Runnemede, the New Jersey Turnpike and I-295 in Bellmawr, Route 76C (an ...
27 lip 2007 · New Jersey Route 168 parallels the North-South Freeway along Black Horse Pike, from Turnersville through Gloucester township to Runnemede, Bellmawr, Mount Ephraim and Haddon Heights to the Camden city line at Woodlynne.
1 lis 2021 · Driving along the original Route 42/Black Horse Pike and providing some historical perspective along the way. 0:10 Turnersville, NJ0:15 NJ 1680:20 Black Hors...
Route 42 begins at an intersection with US 322 and CR 536 Spur in Monroe Township, Gloucester County, where it heads to the north on the Black Horse Pike. [1] For the first portion of the route, Route 42 is a divided four–lane arterial highway that intersects various local roads.
29 lut 2024 · The White Horse Pike’s twin route, the Black Horse Pike, has a very different history. It started in 1795 when surveyors working for Old Gloucester County mapped out a new road, replacing the “meandering old Irish road.”
Black Horse Pike is a local road running parallel to and just south of the Atlantic City Expressway (NJ 446) across the state from Atlantic City to Camden. Over the course of its length, it goes through several different route numbers: US 40, US 322, and NJ 42.