Highways of Bergen County, New Jersey


This page explains the rule of cardinal direction, as established by national and state authorities in the 1920s.

With the exception of a few states which have signed roads using secondary compass points, such as northeast-to-southwest (and no state does so any longer), highways in the United States, as well as in Canada and Mexico, are usually signed with cardinal directions: north, east, south, and west. The designating authority decides that a road is best represented as north-south or east-west, and signs it accordingly. There are some cases in which a road is designated with both cardinal patterns along its length, but these are rare. Examples include US 62 from El Paso to Niagara Falls, which is generally an east-west road but is signed north-south in Pennsylvania and New York, and I-69 in Michigan, a north-south road that is signed east-west from Lansing to Port Huron.

When state representatives sat down in the mid-1920s to plot out the US highway system and post touring route numbers (like US 66) rather than names (like Lincoln Highway), it was decided that north-south routes would have odd numbers, while east-west routes would have even numbers. States were encouraged to implement this guideline, known as the rule of cardinal direction, on their own highway systems. Some states, such as Indiana, did so; others, such as New Jersey, did not. And even in systems that employ the rule of cardinal direction, spur highways often ignore it. For instance, US 122 (no longer assigned) was a spur from US 22, but it ran north-south and was signed as such. The Interstate highway system, established in 1956, employs the same general rules. Some routes, like I-26 and I-85, seem to ignore it, but even they are generally signed in accordance with their numbers.

Bergen County adopted its route numbering system in the 1920s, and for the most part, its roads follow the rule of cardinal direction. Some roads, especially those numbered over 100, did not follow the rule; recent changes to some route numbers have been made in order to bring those highways in line with the rule.

Most notably, when the primary route system was established in the 1960s, its numbers also followed the rule of cardinal direction.


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This page is not associated with the Bergen Co. Highway Department or the New Jersey Department of Transportation.

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