U.S. Route 6
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| Image:US 6.svg | |||||
| U.S. Route 6 | |||||
| Image:US 6 map.png | |||||
| Length: | 3205 mi<ref name="droz">US Highways From US 1 to US 830 Robert V. Droz</ref> (5158 km) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Formed: | 1926<ref name="droz"/> | ||||
| West end: | Image:US 395 (CA).svg US 395 in Bishop, CA | ||||
| Major junctions: | Image:I-15.svg I-15 near Provo, UT Image:I-25.svg I-25 in Denver, CO Image:US 75.svg US 75 in Omaha, NE Image:I-55.svg I-55 in Joliet, IL Image:I-65.svg I-65 in Gary, IN Image:US 42.svg US 42 in Cleveland, OH Image:I-81.svg I-81 in Scranton, PA Image:I-95.svg I-95 in Providence, RI | ||||
| East end: | Image:MA Route 6A.svg Route 6A in Provincetown, MA | ||||
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U.S. Route 6 is a main route of the U.S. Highway system, running east from U.S. Route 395 in Bishop, California to Route 6A in Provincetown, Massachusetts (on Cape Cod) for a total of 3205 miles (5158 km). It serves cities including Denver, Colorado, Omaha, Nebraska, Des Moines, Iowa, Cleveland, Ohio,Mahopac, New York and Hartford, Connecticut.
U.S. 6 was originally proposed in 1925 as a short route from Provincetown west to Brewster, New York. It was extended to Erie, Pennsylvania in 1926 and 1927, and in 1931 it absorbed most of U.S. Route 32 and the entire route of U.S. Route 38 in an extension to Greeley, Colorado. (U.S. 32 had run from Council Bluffs, Iowa east to Chicago, and was fully decommissioned ca. 1934 when U.S. Route 34 was extended east over it from Sheffield, Illinois. US 38 connected Greeley with Omaha, Nebraska, just across the Missouri River from Council Bluffs.) From 1937, when it was extended to Long Beach, California, to 1964, when it was truncated to Bishop (as part of California's 1964 renumbering), US 6 was the longest U.S. Route. Since 1964, U.S. Route 20 has been the longest U.S. Route. However, U.S. 20 is not signed and does not officially exist within Yellowstone National Park (making two separate sections of US 20),<ref>American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, United States Numbered Highways, 1989 edition</ref> and so U.S. Route 6 is still the longest continuous U.S. Route. It is also longer than the longest U.S. Interstate, Interstate 90
U.S. 6 has been called the Roosevelt Highway after Theodore Roosevelt. In 1953 it was formally dedicated as the Grand Army of the Republic Highway.<ref name="FHWA">Richard F. Weingroff, U.S. 6 - The Grand Army of the Republic Highway</ref> (Note that this includes its full former length to Long Beach, California.)
Contents
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[edit] States traversed
U.S. 6 traverses the following states:
| Miles | km | state | |
| 118 | 190 | Massachusetts | |
| 25 | 40 | Rhode Island | |
| 116 | 187 | Connecticut | |
| 78 | 126 | New York | |
| 394 | 634 | Pennsylvania | |
| 259 | 417 | Ohio | |
| 149 | 240 | Indiana | |
| 172 | 277 | Illinois | |
| 320 | 515 | Iowa | |
| 373 | 600 | Nebraska | |
| 467 | 752 | Colorado | |
| 373 | 600 | Utah | |
| 305 | 491 | Nevada | |
| 41 | 66 | California | |
| 3205 | 5158 | Total | |
[edit] Cities
Notable cities along the route include:
- New Bedford, Massachusetts
- Fall River, Massachusetts
- Providence, Rhode Island
- Hartford, Connecticut
- Scranton, Pennsylvania
- Cleveland, Ohio (as Euclid Avenue and as Chardon Road)
- Sandusky, Ohio
- Gary, Indiana
- Hammond, Indiana
- Joliet, Illinois
- Quad Cities (Illinois and Iowa)
- Iowa City, Iowa
- Grinnell, Iowa
- Newton, Iowa
- Des Moines, Iowa
- Adel, Iowa
- Atlantic, Iowa
- Council Bluffs, Iowa
- Omaha, Nebraska
- Lincoln, Nebraska
- Denver, Colorado
- Lakewood, Colorado
- Vail, Colorado
- Gypsum, Colorado
- Glenwood Springs, Colorado
- Grand Junction, Colorado
- Fruita, Colorado
- Price, Utah
- Spanish Fork, Utah
- Santaquin, Utah
- Delta, Utah
- Ely, Nevada
- Lancaster, California (until 1964)
- Los Angeles, California (until 1964)
- Mahopac, New York
- Carmel, New York
Although it does not pass through either New York City or Chicago, U.S. 6 does pass through some of their outer suburbs.
[edit] Route description
[edit] California
Though US 6 is a two-lane surface road in California, its full length is part of the California Freeway and Expressway System.
[edit] Nevada
Though the Nevada portion of U.S. 6 is over 300 miles long, it only passes through two cities Tonopah, Nevada and Ely, Nevada.
[edit] Utah
In an oddity among U.S. highways, U.S. 6 enters and leaves Utah multiplexed with U.S. Route 50. However the two routes are different through the state. U.S. 50 is the newer and shorter route. U.S. 6 is the old U.S. 50. U.S. 6 forms an arched shape route with Spanish Fork at the apex.
The western half of the arch is the road less traveled, passing through the Great Basin Desert, Sevier Lake, and the Tintic mining district.
The eastern half is a popular transportation corridor, paralleling the Denver and Rio Grande Western Railroad's transcontinental line. This half passes over Soldier Summit and the historic railroad hub of Helper. This half was supposed to be the route of Interstate 70 but the freeway was replanned to its present route.
U.S. 6 in Utah passes through or by several Ghost Towns including Tintic, Thistle, Tucker, Soldier Summit, Colton, Woodside and Cisco. Most of these towns were either mining or railroad based.
[edit] Colorado
- Main Article: U.S. Route 6 in Colorado
U.S. 6 is multiplexed with many different highways throughout Colorado, most of which is unsigned.
| Counties
Cities |
[edit] Nebraska
U.S. 6 starts going southeast. The first town it goes into is Imperial, NE. U.S. 6 conjoins with U.S. Route 34, near Culbertson, NE. U.S. 6 than goes through McCook, NE. U.S. 6 than moves to the northeast, into Hastings. At Hastings, U.S. Route 34 breaks with U.S. 6, and moves north. U.S. 6 moves parallel with Interstate 80, until Lincoln, NE. At Lincoln, U.S. 6 becomes Cornhusker Highway, and moves north of Interstate 80. U.S. 6 moves parallel to Interstate 80 to Gretna, NE. U.S. 6 moves to the due north, and becomes Dodge Street in Omaha, NE. It multiplexes with I-480 in Omaha and is called the "Gerald R. Ford Freeway" after the Omaha-born President. It crosses the Missouri River into Iowa on a girder bridge completed in 1966 that replaced the Ak-Sar-Ben Bridge which was the first road bridge to connect the two cities.
[edit] Iowa
U.S. 6 enters Iowa at Council Bluffs across the Missouri River from Omaha. It heads due east until Lewis, where it turns sharply north-northeast to Atlantic. There, it multiplexes with U.S. Route 71 north until Interstate 80. It multiplexes with 80 both east and west of Des Moines. At Newton, it splits north from 80 to run parallel. U.S. 6 passes through Grinnell and Marengo before arriving in Iowa City where it again crosses 80. At West Liberty, it proceeds due east until Wilton where it turns north to multiplex again with 80. Arriving in Davenport, it becomes Kimberly Road until Interstate 74 with which it runs across the Mississippi River on the Memorial Bridge into Moline, Illinois.
[edit] Illinois
- Main article: U.S. Route 6 in Illinois
In Illinois, U.S. 6 parallels Interstates 74 and 80 mostly along its original routing, multiplexing with Interstate 74 for its first 5 miles (9 km) and Interstate 80 for the final 2 miles (5 km) of its routing in Illinois. U.S. 6 directly serves the downtowns of many cities for its length, including Moline, Geneseo, Ottawa, and Joliet — unlike U.S. Route 20, which in the state of Illinois mainly consists of freeway sections and bypasses around the cities U.S. 20 serves. Much like nearby U.S. Routes 30 and 52, U.S. 6 avoids the Chicago city limits.
[edit] Indiana
U.S. 6 crosses the state line and shares the same Borman Expressway with Interstate 80/94 through Hammond and Gary until State Road 51 Exit 15; it goes south for about 2 miles and turns east until it meets U.S. Route 421 in Westville, then goes south for a mile then east until it meets U.S. Route 35 and U.S. Route 31, and it shares the same road with U.S. Route 33 for about 5 miles until U.S. Route 33 breaks south toward Fort Wayne, IN at Ligonier, IN, and then it is mostly two lanes through Indiana until it meets the Ohio state line just east of Butler, Indiana. Before the Borman Expressway was completed, U.S. 6 was on Ridge Road, portions of which are now signed Business U.S. 6.
[edit] Ohio
US 6 enters Ohio from Indiana in Williams County. It passes through Napoleon, Bowling Green, and Fremont, before turning northeast towards Sandusky Bay and Lake Erie. After passing through Sandusky, the route follows the southern shore of Lake Erie, passing through Huron, Vermilion, Lorain, and the western suburbs of Greater Cleveland as Lake Road and Clifton Boulevard. In Cleveland, U.S. 6 follows Superior Avenue through Public Square and continues onto the east side as Euclid Avenue and Chardon Road. U.S. 6 continues eastward and leaves Ohio in Ashtabula County, slightly north of the Pymatuning Reservoir.
[edit] Alternate U.S. 6
Alternate US 6 parallels U.S. 6, its western terminus being at the U.S. 6/SR 2 concurrency just west of the Rocky River; its eastern terminus is just west of the Cuyahoga River and about a mile west of Public Square (in Downtown Cleveland). Except for its first 0.2 mile concurrency with US 20, where it follows Lake Road, nearly all of its 7-mile span follows Detroit Avenue's alignment from the very eastern portion of Rocky River, through Lakewood, and most its alignment in Cleveland.
[edit] Pennsylvania
See U.S. Route 6 in Pennsylvania.
[edit] New York
U.S. 6 runs for 78.09 miles in New York state. It enters and exits the state close to I-84 but separates in the interior of the state, taking a more southerly route.[edit] Orange County (45.93 miles)
U.S. 6 enters New York state from Pennsylvania multiplexed with US 209. U.S. 209 splits off after 0.9 miles while U.S. 6 closely parallels I-84 for another 16.9 miles. U.S. 6 then overlaps with NY 17M for 5.2 miles until it reaches NY 17. U.S. 6 then travels along the NY 17 freeway for 12.8 miles until just before the junction with I-87. U.S. 6 exits from NY 17 and crosses under I-87 but has no junction with it. It then travels through the Bear Mountain State Park for 10.1 miles with the last 3.0 miles multiplexed with the Palisades Interstate Parkway. The Palisades Interstate Parkway ends at a traffic circle with US 9W and US 202. U.S. 6 is joined by U.S. 202 at this point and heads toward the Hudson River.
- New York State Route 97
- U.S. Route 209 (end concurrency)
- County Route 15; to Route 23 (New Jersey); Interstate 84 interchange 1
- New York State Route 284
- New York State Route 17M (begin concurrency)
- Interstate 84 interchange 3
- New York State Route 17M (begin westbound concurrency)
- New York State Route 17 interchange 123 (begin concurrency)
- New York State Route 17 interchange 124:
- New York State Route 17M (end eastbound concurrency)
- New York State Route 17A
- New York State Route 207
- See future Interstate 86 exit list 125-130
- New York State Route 17 interchange 130A (end concurrency)
- New York State Route 17
- New York State Route 293
- Palisades Interstate Parkway (begin concurrency)
- U.S. Route 9W & U.S. Route 202 (begin concurrency) & Palisades Interstate Parkway (end)
[edit] Rockland County (0.25 miles)
U.S. 6/U.S. 202 cross the Hudson River via the Bear Mountain Bridge (passenger vehicle toll: $1; eastbound only).
[edit] Westchester County (15.01 miles)
After traveling an extremely windy route for 3.8 miles along the east bank of the Hudson River, U.S. 6/U.S. 202 has a short (0.7-mile) three-way overlap with U.S. 9 heading into the city of Peekskill. U.S. 6/U.S. 202 leaves US 9 at an exit ramp along with NY route 35 at 35's western terminus. U.S. 202 & NY 35 separate from U.S. 6 after another 0.8 miles. U.S. 6 then goes through the town of Cortlandt and the rest of Westchester County (9.6 miles). U.S. 6 has a junction with the Taconic State Parkway in this area. U.S. 6 meets once with its spur, NY-6N, at 6N's western terminus.
- Enters Cortlandt with US 202
- NY 9D
- Enters City of Peekskill
- Merge with US 9
- Bear Mountain State Parkway
- Split from US 9; continue with US 202; beginning of NY 35
- Split from US 202 and NY 35
- Leaves City of Peekskill
- Bear Mountain State Parkway
- Cortlandt/Yorktown town line
- NY 132
- Taconic State Parkway
- NY 6N
- Yorktown/Somers town line
[edit] Putnam County (16.90 miles)
U.S. 6 again meets its spur, NY-6N, at NY 6N's eastern terminus. U.S. 6 heads northeast through Putnam County until reaching the town of Carmel (7.8 miles). It then turns and heads southeast for 5.2 miles and duplexes U.S. 202 again. U.S. 6/U.S. 202 then head east, closely paralleling I-84 to the Connecticut state line (another 4.0 miles further). There is a junction with I-684,I-84, and NY 22 shortly after U.S. 202 joins U.S. 6 in this area.
- NY 118
- NY 6N
- Pass through Mahopac, New York and Carmel, New York
- NY 52
- Carmel/Southeast town line
- NY 312
- Pass thru the Village of Brewster
- Merge with US 202 & NY 22
- I-684 interchange 10; TO I-84 interchange 20 (exit 9); NY 22 splits from 6/202 and replaces 684 to the north.
- NY 121 TO I-84 interchange 21
- Crosses into Connecticut with US 202
[edit] Connecticut
U.S. 6 extends for 116.3 miles in Connecticut. It begins in Danbury after crossing the New York state line, multiplexed with US 202. It runs for 3.8 miles in Danbury as a minor arterial road then multiplexes with Interstate 84 and US 7. The 4-way multiplex of I-84/U.S. 7/U.S. 6/U.S. 202 continues for 3.3 miles after which U.S. 7 and U.S. 202 split off from I-84. U.S. 6 follows I-84 for another 0.8 miles before returning to surface roads. U.S. then goes through the towns of Bethel and Newtown and then overlaps with I-84 again for 6.4 miles between Newtown and Southbury. U.S. 6 is a surface road again as it passes through Southbury, Woodbury, Watertown and Thomaston. There is a 1.0 mile overlap with the Route 8 freeway in Thomaston. U.S. 6 continues through the towns of Plymouth, Bristol and Farmington. In Farmington, U.S. 6 again joins I-84 as it passes through West Hartford, Hartford, East Hartford and Manchester (13.4-mile overlap). U.S. 44 briefly joins I-84/U.S. 6 (for 0.2 miles) as they cross the Connecticut River on the Bulkeley Bridge. After exiting I-84 in Manchester, U.S. 6 is joined again by US 44 for 6.9 miles up to Bolton where I-384 terminates. U.S. 44 then follows a more northerly route while U.S. 6 continues through Bolton, Coventry, Andover and Columbia. It then becomes a freeway in Columbia (at a junction with Route 66), passing through Coventry (again), Windham, Mansfield and Windham (again), ending at the eastern terminus of Route 66. This freeway portion is 5.3 miles long. U.S. 6 then continues as a surface road to the towns of Chaplin, Hampton, Brooklyn and Killingly. The unsigned portion of the Connecticut Turnpike then meets with U.S. 6 shortly before crossing the Rhode Island state line.
- An 11-mile stretch of highway that traverses Bolton, Coventry, Andover, and Columbia is known as Suicide 6. Along with other sections of U.S. 6, including one which runs through western Rhode Island, this stretch has one of the highest rates of fatal injuries of any road in the country and was listed as one of "America's Most Dangerous Highways" by Reader's Digest in November 2000. Because Route 6 connects two major cities, Hartford and Providence, RI the road is used as an expressway despite the fact that most of it is a two-way highway with houses and businesses abutting it. With a lack of stop signs and traffic lights, there is major concern involving drivers pulling out of one of the many small side roads into high speed traffic lanes. Posted signs tell drivers they must keep headlights on at all times.
[edit] Rhode Island
[edit] Massachusetts
U.S. 6 runs approximately 118 miles in Massachusetts. It is a surface expressway or 4-lane road for approximately its first 54 miles from the Rhode Island line to the Cape Cod Canal, except for sections in New Bedford (where it runs along two one-way city streets) and Fall River (where it runs along a two-lane President Avenue). After crossing the canal via the Sagamore Bridge, it becomes a 4-lane freeway from Bourne to Dennis at the Exit 9A/B cloverleaf (Mile 78), then reduces to a two-lane freeway with plastic stanchions posted on a small asphalt median. It remains like this until Orleans, where the freeway ends at a large rotary (Mile 90.6). Through Eastham and North Truro, U.S. 6 is a 4-lane surface street. Through Wellfleet and southern Truro, U.S. 6 is a former 3-lane road converted to 2 lanes with shoulders. In Provincetown, U.S. 6 ends as it started in the state, as a surface expressway once again until it comes to an end at Route 6A at the Cape Cod National Seashore.
[edit] Miscellanea
The freeway sections of U.S. 6 on Cape Cod are known as the Mid-Cape Highway. The two-lane freeway section has a secondary, less-formal name of "Suicide Alley", due to the high number of fatalities from head-on collisions before the median improvements were constructed. (When the two-lane freeway stretch was first built, it was marked with passing zones like any other 2-lane highway. The small asphalt/stanchion median was built in stages beginning in 1989 and finishing in 1992.) The Mid-Cape Highway carries a speed limit of 55 on the standard freeway and 50 on the two-lane freeway.
When U.S. 6 was first routed through Provincetown in 1926, the highway was signed along the rather narrow Commercial Street. After the Provincetown U.S. 6 bypass was built, congestion and the increasing size of automobiles forced the town to post most of Commercial Street (all but the easternmost mile which hits the Truro line) as one-way westbound. Route 6A, when signed, was placed along the paralleling Bradford Street instead. There was an alternate plan at the time to make Bradford one-way westbound and Commercial one-way eastbound (which would have made both roads Route 6A), but this was rejected, as the town decided instead to let incoming traffic through the heavy Commercial Street (almost entirely pedestrian) business district.
U.S. 6 was briefly signed on current I-195 between Route 105 and Route 28; however, when I-195 was completed, and the I-195 designation took over that section of freeway, U.S. 6 reverted back to its older route.
[edit] History
U.S. 6 was one of the first national arteries proposed in 1926 and went only as far west as the Hudson River in New York. It has since been extended westward, mostly at the expense of other routes including most of old U.S. Route 32 between Sheffield, Illinois and Council Bluffs, Iowa and old U.S. Route 38 between Omaha, Nebraska and Denver, Colorado before 1937, after which it was extended to Southern California. In California it was a north-south highway, violating the convention that only east-west routes have even numbers.
While the route was intact as early as 1937, paving was not completed on the route until 1952, when the last 160 miles (257 km) of U.S. 6, between Delta, Utah, and Ely, Nevada, received two lanes of fresh asphalt.
In 1964, California truncated U.S. 6 at Bishop in favor of U.S. Route 395, State Route 14, U.S. Route 99 (now Interstate 5), State Route 11 (now Interstate 110 and State Route 110), and State Route 1 from north to south.
All of old and current U.S. 6, at least as far west and south as the intersection with old U.S. 99, is known as the Grand Army of the Republic Highway in honor of Union veterans of the American Civil War. Massachusetts became the first state to so designate the route, in 1937; a formal dedication took place in 1953 at the road's western terminus in Long Beach.
For almost a year starting in the spring of 1983 U.S. 6 was a discontinuous route due to a massive landslide that destroyed the town of Thistle, Utah. During this time traffic was routed on 2 detours. One, via Salina, Utah, was over 200 miles long and took traffic almost 100 aerial miles from the route of U.S. 6. The other, via Duchesne, Utah, was shorter and somewhat less drastic of a route change. However, this detour was for autos only. The Duchesne detour was impassable to trucks, due to steep grades on U.S. Highway 191. The night before the rebuilt U.S. 6 opened, the highway stubs at either side of the landslide were filled with tens of miles of trucks. The drivers tired of the lost revenue from the long detours. The landslide remains the most costly in the history of the United States.
[edit] Related routes and spur routes
Interstate 195 supplants it as a through route between Providence and Cape Cod. Interstate 84 supplants it, in general, between Hartford and Scranton, and was planned to extend east to Providence. Interstate 80 is within 40 miles (64 km) of it between Cleveland and Lincoln. Interstate 76 supplants it between Sterling, Colorado and Denver. Interstate 70 supplants it between Denver and Green River, Utah.
Between Lake Station, Indiana and Lansing, Illinois, U.S. 6 is co-signed with Interstate 80 and Interstate 94.
U.S. Route 106 (decommissioned) was an alternative in eastern Pennsylvania, and may have been proposed to go into New York. U.S. Route 206 is a spur largely in New Jersey. U.S. Route 138 is a spur of U.S. 38, which U.S. 6 incorporated. A U.S. Route 6A was designated on what is now Route 66 in Connecticut. U.S. Route 6N runs through Pennsylvania and Ohio as a shortcut to Lake Erie.
[edit] Oddities
- U.S. 6 takes a semi-circular route through the Cape Cod Peninsula (dictated by topography). Someone leaving Provincetown, Mass. on 6 west will actually head east, then south, before finally turning west.
- Formerly, it took both sides along the Cape Cod canal (and was signed as "BYPASS 6"), but is now routed only on the north side (The south side is now signed "TO 6" from the Sagamore to the Bourne Bridge). However, a single "BYPASS 6" sign still exists just north of the Bourne Bridge rotary.
- At the eastern terminus of U.S. 6 (in Provincetown), there is currently no "end" marker.
- It is often reported to be a violation of the numbering system because it is wholly south of numerous other U.S. routes with higher even numbers (8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, and 26). In fact, in north-central Ohio, part of it (from Cleveland, Ohio to Fremont, Ohio) lies to the north of U.S. Route 20, the lowest-numbered even U.S. Highway that intersects U.S. 6. At this longitude, U.S. 6 is the northernmost U.S. Highway, though US 2 was once signed through Canada ("TO US 2").
- Until 1964, U.S. 6 crossed U.S. Route 66 twice (in Joliet and Los Angeles), and even crossed Interstate 10 (also in Los Angeles). The highway originally began in Long Beach, then diverged west into San Pedro then north along Figueroa Street through downtown Los Angeles, then shared several highways through southern California, including the present-day Antelope Valley Freeway.
- U.S. 6 enters and leaves Utah multiplexed with U.S. Route 50. However, the routes are different through the state. Before Interstate 70 was completed in Utah, the two routes were multiplexed throughout the state. U.S. 6 takes the older route; US 50's route was changed to follow the interstate.
- U.S. 6's route through greater Los Angeles once had its southern terminus farther east than its entrance into California on the California-Nevada state line. Even today, its current 'western' terminus (Bishop, California) lies farther east than its entrance into California from the Nevada state line. U.S. 6 is currently recognized and signed as a north-south route in California, but it was apparently east-west until it was truncated to U.S. Route 395.[1]
- Taking U.S. 6 all the way from New York to the West Coast is one of the early, unrealized goals of the narrator character (Sal Paradise) in the famous "beat" novel On the Road by Jack Kerouac.
[edit] Major Intersections on U.S. Highway 6
- U.S. Highway 395 in Bishop, CA
- U.S. Highway 95 northeast of Bishop, CA
- U.S. Highway 50 and U.S. Highway 93 in Ely, NV
- Interstate 15 in Santaquin, Utah
- U.S. Highway 89 southeast of Santaquin, Utah
- U.S. Highway 191 near Price, Utah
- U.S. Highway 50 and Interstate 70 near Green River, Utah
- U.S. Highway 24 in Rifle, Colorado
- U.S. Highway 24 east of Avon, Colorado
- U.S. Highway 40 east of Gerogetown, Colorado
- Interstate 25 and U.S. Highway 85 and U.S. Highway 87 in Denver, Colorado
[edit] See also
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Federal Highway Administration: US 6
- U.S. Route 6 Tour Association
- US 6 in Connecticut (Scott Oglesby)
- Pennsylvania Route 6 Tourist Association
- Linesville, Pa., National U.S. Route 6 Museum Site
- Utah Department of Transportation - US 6
[edit] California
- WestCoastRoads - US 6
- California Highways: US 6
- The Big Highways Page: California Route 6
- Caltrans: Route 6 highway conditions
- Virtual Tour of US 6 in California and western Nevada
| Image:US blank.svg | Main U.S. Routes | ||||||||||||||||||
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | |
| 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | 38 | |
| 40 | 41 | 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | 48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57 | 58 | 59 | |
| 60 | 61 | 62 | 63 | 64 | 65 | 66 | 67 | 68 | 69 | 70 | 71 | 72 | 73 | 74 | 75 | 76 | 77 | 78 | 79 |
| 80 | 81 | 82 | 83 | 84 | 85 | 87 | 89 | 90 | 91 | 92 | 93 | 94 | 95 | 96 | 97 | 98 | 99 | ||
| 101 | 163 | 400 | 412 | 425 | |||||||||||||||
| Lists | U.S. Routes - Bannered - Divided - Replaced | ||||||||||||||||||


