Manitoba Highway 22

Provincial Trunk Highway 22 (PTH 22) is a short north-south provincial highway in the Canadian province of Manitoba. It runs from PTH 23 near Elgin to PTH 2 and PR 250 in Souris. This highway is the main access road to the renowned Souris Swinging Bridge.[1]

Provincial Trunk Highway 22 marker

Provincial Trunk Highway 22

Route information
Maintained by Department of Infrastructure
Length22 km (14 mi)
Existed1960–present
Major junctions
South end PTH 23 near Elgin
North end PTH 2 / PR 250 in Souris
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceManitoba
Rural municipalities
Highway system
PTH 21 PTH 23

Route description

PTH 22 begins roughly 1 kilometre (0.62 mi) east of Elgin in the Rural Municipality of Grassland at a junction with PTH 23, with the road continuing south a short distance to Whitewater Recreation Park. The highway heads north through rural farmland for a few kilometers to pass through a switchback, where it has an intersection with PR 347 and crosses into the Rural Municipality of Souris - Glenwood. It winds its way north for a few more kilometers to enter the town of Souris, passing through neighborhoods as it crosses the Souris River just 0.2 kilometres (0.12 mi) south of the Souris Swinging Bridge. Several side streets connect the swinging bridge to the highway. PTH 22 continues up First Street S through the center of downtown, coming to an end at an intersection with PTH 2 (First Avenue / Red Coat Trail) and PR 250 (First Street N).[2][3]

The entire length of Manitoba Highway 22 is a paved, two-lane highway.

History

Originally, Highway 22 was the designation of the route connecting the US border south of Melita to Highway 2 in Pipestone. In 1947, it extended north to Highway 1 in Virden. In 1953, the government re-designated the highway as PTH 83 in order to match U.S. Route 83.[4]

After the original Highway 22 was redesignated as PTH 83, it was moved to a route connecting Highway 1 near Beausejour to Grand Beach, which is now PTH 12 and PTH 59, between 1953 and 1955.[5] The highway was extended to Victoria Beach along what is now PTH 59 in 1956. After the highway was extended, a small stretch of Highway 22 to Grand Beach was redesignated as Highway 22A.[6] The route kept this designation until 1959, when PTH 12 was extended north, replacing Highway 22. As well, the former section of Highway 22A was redesignated as Highway 12G. A small section of the former Highway 22 south of Victoria Beach was redesignated as Highway 12V as Highway 12 turned east to meet Highway 11 at Pine Falls.[7]

PTH 22 was designated to its current route in 1960.[8]

Major intersections

DivisionLocationkmmiDestinationsNotes
Grassland0.00.0 PTH 23 Elgin, MintoSouthern terminus
9.86.1Road 36 NFormer PR 347 south
Souris - Glenwood10.86.7 PR 347 northSouthern terminus of PR 347
Souris20.012.4Bridge over the Souris River
2214 PTH 2 (First Avenue / Red Coat Trail) Pipestone, Brandon
PR 250 north (First Street N) Alexander
Northern terminus; southern terminus of PR 250
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

Template:Attached KML/Manitoba Highway 22
KML is from Wikidata
  1. Manitoba Highways - PTH 2-49 Archived 2008-07-20 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Google (September 24, 2023). "Map of Manitoba Highway 22" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved September 24, 2023.
  3. Government of Manitoba. "Official Highway Map of Manitoba section #1" (PDF). Retrieved September 24, 2023.
  4. "The Province of Manitoba Official Highway Map; 1952". Infrastructure and Transportation, Province of Manitoba.
  5. "The Province of Manitoba Official Highway Map; 1953". Infrastructure and Transportation, Province of Manitoba.
  6. "The Province of Manitoba Official Highway Map; 1956". Infrastructure and Transportation, Province of Manitoba.
  7. "The Province of Manitoba Official Highway Map; 1959". Infrastructure and Transportation, Province of Manitoba.
  8. "The Province of Manitoba Official Highway Map; 1960". Infrastructure and Transportation, Province of Manitoba.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.