US 1 highlighted in red | ||||
| Route information | ||||
| Maintained byMDSHA,BCDOT | ||||
| Length | 80.86 mi[1][2] (130.13 km) | |||
| Existed | November 11, 1926[3]–present | |||
| Tourist routes | ||||
| Major junctions | ||||
| South end | ||||
| Major intersections |
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| North end | ||||
| Location | ||||
| Country | United States | |||
| State | Maryland | |||
| Counties | Prince George's,Howard,Baltimore,City of Baltimore,Harford,Cecil | |||
| Highway system | ||||
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U.S. Route 1 (US 1) is the easternmost and longest of the major north–south routes of the older 1920s eraUnited States Numbered Highway System, running fromKey West, Florida, toFort Kent, Maine. In theU.S. state ofMaryland, it runs 81 miles (130 km) from theWashington, D.C. line to thePennsylvania state line near the town ofRising Sun.
US 1 is paralleled by several major highways as it passes through Maryland, includingInterstate 95 (I-95), theBaltimore–Washington Parkway (B–W Parkway),US 29, andUS 301. Thus, US 1 has lost its significance as a long distance route through the state. It is often congested, however, because it remains a major route in the individual towns it traverses.
US 1 leaves theDistrict of Columbia asRhode Island Avenue NE and just simply becomes Rhode Island Avenue, a four-lanedivided street with parking through a downtown-like commercial area, right after crossing the intersection ofEastern Avenue NE (the Maryland–DC line) and entering the city ofMount Rainier inPrince George's County. US 1 then meets the intersections of 34th and Perry streets at aroundabout (which was finished being constructed during August 2001 and replaced the traffic lights originally at this intersection[4]) and then continues northeast through a densely populated residential area. The highway leaves Mount Rainier and entersBrentwood, where the highway meetsMaryland Route 208 (MD 208; 38th Street). US 1 passes throughNorth Brentwood as a four-lane divided highway without parking through a mix of residences and commercial establishments. The median widens as the highway crossesNorthwest Branch Anacostia River and enters the city ofHyattsville. The highway begins to closely parallelCSX Transportation'sCapital Subdivision railroad line andMARC Train'sCamden Line as it reduces to a four-lane undivided highway, passing the District Court of Maryland for Prince George's County building. US 1 curves to the north, and the highway's name changes to Baltimore Avenue at Farragut Street, shortly before intersectingUS 1 Alternate (US 1 Alt.).
US 1 continues north through downtown Hyattsville, gaining acenter turn lane before entering the town ofRiverdale Park, where the highway intersectsMD 410 (East–West Highway). The highway enters a densely populated residential area, passing between Riverdale Park to the east and the town ofUniversity Park to the west. Shortly after the highway enters the city ofCollege Park on the east, US 1 intersects Queens Chapel Road at a five-way intersection with the town of University Park still on the west side. Only busses may enter Queens Chapel Road from US 1. The highway fully enters College Park and enters the commercial area that makes up the downtown of the college town, expanding to a four-lane divided highway. After the intersection with College Avenue and Regents Drive, US 1 passes through the campus of theUniversity of Maryland, College Park, including the historicRossborough Inn and Fraternity Row. The highway leaves the campus after intersecting Campus Drive, which is unsignedMD 431, and crossingPaint Branch.
US 1 continues through the northern part of College Park as a five-lane road with center turn lane, passing through a suburban commercial area. The highway intersects Greenbelt Road, which is unsignedMD 430, before meetingMD 193 (University Boulevard) at a partial interchange. All movements not provided in the interchange require using Greenbelt Road to connect between US 1 and MD 193. After intersecting Cherry Hill Road, US 1 becomes a divided highway and meetsI-95/I-495 (Capital Beltway) at apartial cloverleaf interchange. North of the interchange, the highway expands to a six-lane divided highway, leaving the town of College Park and passing by businesses and through a swath of theHenry A. Wallace Beltsville Agricultural Research Center, including theU.S. National Agricultural Library.
At Sunnyside Avenue, the highway reduces to a five-lane road with center turn lane and passes through a suburban commercial area in the unincorporated town ofBeltsville. The highway meets Rhode Island Avenue at an oblique intersection andMD 212A (Powder Mill Road) at a more orthogonal intersection. Past this, the road curves north and parallels CSX Transportation's Capital Subdivision. The highway passes between a commercial strip on the southbound side of the highway and an industrial area on the east side of the railroad tracks. US 1 leaves Beltsville after crossing Indian Creek. The highway temporarily expands to a four-lane divided highway before returning to a five-lane road, passing between an industrial area to the east and office parks to the west. The road comes to an intersection with the official eastern terminus ofMD 212 (Ritz Way). After Muirkirk Meadows Drive, which leads to Muirkirk Road, US 1 reduces to a four-lane undivided highway, passes under the latter highway, and intersects the eastern terminus ofMD 200 (Intercounty Connector) and theICC Trail before it enters a forested area.

US 1 gradually veers away from the railroad tracks as it approachesLaurel, passing Maryland National Memorial Park before entering a suburban commercial area ahead of Contee Road, where the center turn lane returns. At Cypress Street, the southbound direction gains a third lane through the intersection with Cherry Lane, where the northbound direction gains a third lane. After passingTowne Centre at Laurel andLaurel Shopping Center, US 1 splits into aone-way pair. The three to four northbound lanes veer northeast as Second Street, while the three to four southbound lanes take the name Washington Boulevard. The one-way pair intersects Bowie Road, the old alignment ofMD 197, before intersectingMD 198, which takes the form of a one-way pair, eastbound Gorman Avenue and westbound Talbott Avenue. US 1 continues through the city of Laurel, intersecting Main Street just west ofLaurel station before leaving Laurel by crossing thePatuxent River intoHoward County.
Immediately after crossing the Patuxent River, both directions of US 1 pass entrances toLaurel Park. The highway continues throughNorth Laurel, with the one-way pair coming together shortly before the intersection with Whiskey Bottom Road. US 1 continues north as a five-lane road with center turn lane, crossing Hammond Branch. As the highway passes through a commercial area inSavage, the road becomes a divided highway. After Gorman Road, the roadways temporarily diverge to cross theLittle Patuxent River, then come together again at the fullcloverleaf interchange withMD 32 (Patuxent Freeway). US 1 becomes undivided and intersects Guilford Road and crosses over the Columbia Branch from CSX Transportation's Capital Subdivision to the east. The highway passes several industrial parks, crossing Dorsey Run twice before intersectingMD 175 (Waterloo Road) inJessup.
North of Jessup, US 1 crossesDeep Run and passes more industrial parks. The highway intersectsMD 103 (Meadowridge Road) and passes Meadow Ridge Memorial Park before a partial cloverleaf interchange withMD 100 nearDorsey. Continuing northeast past Bealmear Branch, Old Washington Road splits to the northeast to pass through the center ofElkridge shortly before US 1 intersects the old alignment of MD 103, Montgomery Road. The highway passes through a shallow S-curve before receiving the other end of Old Washington Road and passes under the Capital Subdivision. US 1's two directions become divided by aJersey barrier as the highway passes through the commercial strip in Elkridge, passing ramps to and fromI-895 (Harbor Tunnel Thruway) immediately before crossing the upperPatapsco River intoBaltimore County.
After passing under I-895, US 1 intersects South Street, which provides access toSt. Denis andRelay, and passes through its interchange withI-195 (Metropolitan Boulevard). The undivided highway crosses over CSX Transportation'sBaltimore Terminal Subdivision railroad line before reaching the partial interchange withUS 1 Alt. Washington Boulevard continues straight northeast as US 1 Alt. throughHalethorpe, while US 1 exits onto Southwestern Boulevard to head north throughArbutus. The three-lane road with center turn lane and extra-wide shoulders parallelsAmtrak'sNortheast Corridor railroad line and MARC Train'sPenn Line. After crossingHerbert Run, US 1 parallels the long, linear parking lot ofHalethorpe station. The highway leaves the station after passing under Francis Avenue. US 1 expands to a five-lane road with center turn lane as it crosses under I-95. US 1 passes under Sulphur Spring Road andI-695 (Baltimore Beltway) as the highway heads out of Arbutus. The only connection with I-695 is a single ramp, exit 12A, from I-695 east to US 1 south. Inside the beltway, US 1 is paralleled by Leeds Avenue, which intersects the federal highway just before entering the city ofBaltimore.

US 1 continues north as a four-lane divided street through a densely populated urban residential area. A short distance north of the city line, US 1 curves to the east onto Wilkens Avenue, which continues west asMD 372. The highway crosses Amtrak's Northeast Corridor and reduces to an undivided highway, intersecting US 1 Alt. (Caton Avenue) as it passes through a curve. US 1 crossesGwynns Falls and CSX Transportation'sHanover Subdivision railroad line, expanding to a divided highway before passing the Deck of Cards rowhouses[5] between Brunswick Street and Millington Avenue. A short distance to the east, US 1 turns north onto a one-way pair, Monroe Street southbound and Fulton Avenue northbound, to pass through a densely populated urban residential area on the west side of central Baltimore. US 1 meets the eastern terminus ofMD 144 at another one-way pair,Pratt andLombard streets. The highway passes over theUS 40 freeway, which is accessed by the one-way pair adjacent to the freeway, Mulberry and Franklin streets. At Edmondson Avenue, Fulton Avenue becomes two-way; however, southbound US 1 remains on Monroe Street. Shortly after passing over Amtrak's Northeast Corridor, US 1 reaches North Avenue. The Fulton Avenue/Monroe Street one-way pair continues north asMD 140, while both directions of US 1 turn east onto North Avenue.

North Avenue heads east as a four-lane undivided highway through the junction withMD 129, which follows southbound Druid Hill Avenue and northbound McCulloh Street. US 1 continues east as a four-lane divided highway with parking lanes. The highway meetsI-83 (Jones Falls Expressway) and Mount Royal Avenue next toNorth Avenue station ofMaryland Transit Administration'sBaltimore Light RailLink. US 1 expands to six lanes and crosses over the light rail tracks,Jones Falls,MD 25 (Falls Road), and CSX Transportation's Baltimore Terminal Subdivision. Due north ofDowntown Baltimore, North Avenue intersectsCharles Street (MD 139 to the north),St. Paul and Calvert streets (MD 2 to the south), and Greenmount Avenue (MD 45 to the north), after which North Avenue passes along the north side ofGreen Mount Cemetery. North Avenue reduces to a four-lane undivided street east of MD 45. Shortly after intersectingMD 147 (Harford Road) and Broadway, US 1 turns northeast onto Bel Air Road.
Now a four-lane undivided road, US 1 crosses the Baltimore Terminal Subdivision again and passesClifton Park before reaching Erdman Avenue, which heads southeast asMD 151. The highway crossesHerring Run before intersecting Moravia Road, where Bel Air Road transitions from passing through densely populated residential neighborhoods to being the center of a commercial strip. US 1 intersects Frankford and Hamilton avenues before leaving the city of Baltimore at Fleetwood Avenue, which forms the eastbound component of a one-way pair withNorthern Parkway at the latter street's eastern terminus. US 1 passes through the inner suburb ofOverlea, crossing Stemmers Run before meeting I-695 (Baltimore Beltway) at a cloverleaf interchange.
US 1 continues northeast from the beltway as a six-lane divided highway. The highway intersects Rossville Boulevard and Putty Hill Road, then crossesMD 43 (White Marsh Boulevard). US 1 accesses MD 43 via twoquadrant ramps with aright-in/right-out interchange southbound and an intersection with Dunfield Road northbound. North of MD 43, US 1 reduces to a four-lane undivided highway as it passes throughPerry Hall, intersecting Silver Spring,Joppa, and Ebenezer roads in the midst of a commercial strip. After the intersection with Honeygo Boulevard, US 1 descends into a steep valley to crossGunpowder Falls, passing southeast of apark-and-ride lot before the bridge. The highway continues north through a mix of farmland and residential subdivisions, heading throughKingsville before passing throughGunpowder Falls State Park and leaving Baltimore County by crossingLittle Gunpowder Falls.

US 1 heads northeast intoHarford County, passing through a forested area and then the residential subdivisions ofPleasant Hills before reachingMD 152 (Mountain Road). The highway continues east through a commercial strip toward the hamlet ofBenson, where US 1 converges with MD 147 (Harford Road) at an acute angle.US 1 Business (US 1 Bus.) heads east from the intersection towardBel Air, while US 1 continues northeast on the Bel Air bypass. The bypass begins as a four-lane divided highway but drops to a two-lane road before crossingWinters Run. US 1 intersects Tollgate Road, gaining a lane northbound, before meetingMD 24 (Vietnam Veterans Memorial Highway) at aT intersection with sweeping right-turn ramps. MD 24 joins US 1 in a concurrency north on a four-lane undivided highway that passes under Vale Road. MD 24 leaves US 1 at a partial cloverleaf interchange with Rock Spring Road, which heads south asMD 924 toward downtown Bel Air. The bypass continues northeast with two lanes, its name changed to the Hickory Bypass before expanding to a four-lane divided highway and intersecting US 1 Bus. (Conowingo Road) south ofHickory. US 1 intersects the eastern end ofMD 23 (East–West Highway) andMD 543 (Ady Road) before reducing to a two-lane road and receiving the northern end of US 1 Bus.
US 1 continues northeast as Conowingo Road through farmland. The old alignment of US 1, Forge Hill Road, splits to the east inKalmia and rejoins the present highway three miles (4.8 km) later after separate crossings ofDeer Creek. The highway passes through a commercial strip around the intersection withMD 136 (Whiteford Road/Priestford Road) as US 1 passes to the south ofDublin. US 1 curves east at the intersection withMD 440 (Dublin Road). Smith Road, another old alignment of US 1, splits to the northeast as US 1 heads towardDarlington, where it meetsMD 161 (Main Street) andMD 623 (Castleton Road). The highway passes aweigh station on the southbound side that serves both directions immediately after the MD 623 intersection and heads straight over a series of hills, gaining climbing lanes in either direction. At Shuresville Road, US 1 curves to the northeast and crosses theSusquehanna River on top ofConowingo Dam, a hydroelectric dam owned byConstellation Energy, intoCecil County.

Immediately on the east side of the river, US 1 intersects the northern terminus ofMD 222 (Susquehanna River Road) and passes overNorfolk Southern Railway'sPort Road Branch. The highway gains a climbing lane northbound as it ascends a hill toConowingo, where the highway meets the southern terminus ofUS 222 (Rock Springs Road). US 1 turns east and meets a pair of old alignments: Connelly Road heading northwest andMD 591 (Colora Road) heading southeast toward a removed bridge overOctoraro Creek. After US 1 crosses the creek, the old alignment reconnects with the mainline as another segment of MD 591, Porters Bridge Road. West ofRising Sun,MD 273 (Rising Sun Road) continues straight toward the town while US 1 curves northeast as the Rising Sun bypass. US 1 intersects the northern terminus ofMD 276 (Jacob Tome Memorial Highway) and crosses Stone Run twice before turning north to thePennsylvania state line. The highway continues across the state line towardOxford, Pennsylvania, becoming a four-lane divided highway just across the state line.
The original predecessors of US 1 were a collection of dirt roads cut through the forests and farmland of central and northern Maryland in the 18th century. Construction of these roads was governed by a 1704 Act of theProvince of Maryland requiring counties to oversee construction and build 20-foot-wide (6.1 m) roads to benefit transport of carts between population centers. The first segment of the road between Baltimore and Washington DC was built in 1741 between Baltimore and Elkridge (then known as Elkridge Landing) as a southward extension of a road between Baltimore andHanover, Pennsylvania. Passage across the then wider and deeper upperPatapsco River at Elkridge Landing was provided by Norwood's Ferry. In 1749, the road was blazed toGeorgetown on thePotomac River viaWaterloo, Laurel, andBladensburg. The highway north of Baltimore was a road constructed in the second half of the 18th century to connect the port of Baltimore with farms in Baltimore and Harford counties in Maryland and inLancaster andChester counties in Pennsylvania. From the docks in Baltimore, the road passed throughHarry Dorsey Gough's plantation at thePerry Hall Mansion (whence it was called "Gough's Road" or "Perry Hall Road" during this stretch) and Kingsville on its way to Bel Air. The highway headed east from Bel Air to Churchville, then north to a crossing of the Susquehanna River at Conowingo. The road continued east to Rising Sun, then turned north toward Oxford, Pennsylvania, where the highway connected with roads toPhiladelphia.

In the early 19th century, many of these dirt roads were reconstructed as turnpikes. The Washington Turnpike was chartered in 1796, but no road building ever occurred. It was not until the Washington and Baltimore Turnpike was chartered in 1812 that construction began along a 60-foot (18 m) right-of-way between the corner of Pratt and Eutaw streets, then at the western city limits of Baltimore, southwest along the old dirt road to the District of Columbia boundary southwest of Bladensburg.[6] In 1817, a timber toll bridge replaced Norwood's Ferry in Elkridge Landing. The Washington and Baltimore Turnpike had its chartered revoked in 1865 and the highway was turned over to the supervision of the counties. The toll bridge at Elkridge was sold to the counties in 1869.
By 1825, a turnpike existed from Baltimore northeast toward Bel Air. The Bel Air Turnpike was constructed from the Baltimore city line of 1818 at the corner of North Avenue and North Gay Street through Perry Hall and Kingsville to a junction with the Harford Turnpike at Benson in Harford County. From Benson, the Bel Air Turnpike of Harford County continued east to Main Street in Bel Air. North of Bel Air, what is now US 1 followed county highways to the Conowingo Bridge, which was first constructed around 1820.
By the beginning of the 20th century, county maintenance of the corridor that would become US 1 was becoming inadequate for the increasing amount of traffic using the roads and becoming unacceptable to advocates of better roads. As a result, theMaryland General Assembly passed the first state-aid road construction law in 1904, providing matching funds from the state to the counties to surface their major highways. As the most important corridor in the state, much of the state-aid money in the relevant counties went to the road from Baltimore to Washington DC. Feeling the work done by the counties with state funds was inadequate, in 1906, the general assembly further appropriated a total of $90,000 (equivalent to $23.5 million in 2024[7])—$30,000 each in 1906, 1907, and 1908 (equivalent to $7.83 million, $7.35 million, and $7.37 million in 2024[7])—toward reconstruction of the Baltimore–Washington Boulevard. The 30-mile (48 km) road between the city limits of Washington DC and Baltimore was officially designated State Route No. 1.[8][9] Another $174,000 (equivalent to $4.27 million in 2024[7]) was appropriated by the state legislature in 1908. The 1908 act contained stipulations requiring a realignment of the road between Beltsville and Contee to eliminate two grade crossings of theBaltimore and Ohio Railroad as well as grade separations with the railroad at Elkridge and Mount Winans.
By 1910, the Baltimore–Washington Boulevard was paved from the District of Columbia boundary southwest of Bladensburg north to Beltsville, with small gaps at Northeast Branch south of Hyattsville and at Paint Branch in College Park; from Contee to Elkridge; and from Hammonds Ferry Road in Halethorpe to the Baltimore city line at Gwynns Falls. The general assembly appropriated another $120,000 (equivalent to $2.91 million in 2024[7]) in 1910 for the newly formed two year oldMaryland State Roads Commission (SRC) to complete the Baltimore–Washington Boulevard. By 1915, State Route No. 1 was completely paved with the addition of the highway on a new alignment between Beltsville and Contee, the filling of the gaps in College Park and Hyattsville, and construction between Elkridge and Halethorpe. The road was constructed a minimum of 14 feet (4.3 m) in width with macadam, gravel, and concrete, with curves straightened and grades reduced. Concrete sections in Laurel, College Park, and Bladensburg were among the first concrete roads in Maryland when they were poured in 1912. Concrete girder bridges were built at Northeast Branch and the Anacostia River in Bladensburg. A concrete bridge was built over the Patapsco River at Elkridge to replace an earlier iron bridge. Due to heavy traffic and inadequate initial construction, many of the sections constructed in the first few years of state aid had to be later rebuilt.
The barrage of heavy military vehicles that traveled the Baltimore–Washington Boulevard duringWorld War I, as well as the severe winter of 1917–1918, devastated the highway. As a result, in 1918 and 1919, the highway was reconstructed from end to end. Some sections of the highway were completely rebuilt with concrete, while, along 18 miles (29 km) of the road, concrete shoulders, among the first applied in Maryland, were added to both widen and strengthen the road. By 1919, the entire length of the Baltimore–Washington Boulevard was a minimum width of 20 feet (6.1 m). The only significant realignment during this reconstruction was the straightening out of Dead Man's Curve 0.5 miles (0.80 km) south of Elkridge.

All of present-day US 1 north of Baltimore, with the exception of the road from east of Rising Sun to the Pennsylvania state line, was designated one of the original state roads by the SRC in 1909.[10] By 1910, the highway was paved from Bel Air to Kalmia. In 1910, the SRC purchased the Bel Air Turnpike, the Bel Air Turnpike of Harford County, and Conowingo Bridge from their private operators. The SRC also paved its first section of the road from Oakwood to the crossing of Octoraro Creek that year. The road from Rising Sun to Sylmar Road was completed in 1911, along with Bel Air Road from the Baltimore city limits to Franklin Avenue. The paved section along Bel Air Road was extended northeast to Hamilton Avenue in 1912. That year also saw the first paving in Harford County from Kalmia to Deer Creek. The remainder of the highway in Harford County—from Little Gunpowder Falls to Bel Air and from Deer Creek to the Conowingo Bridge—was completed in 1913. Bel Air Road was finished in Baltimore County in 1914 and was paved from North Avenue to the Baltimore city limits, then just north of Erdman Avenue, in 1915. The highway was paved between the Conowingo Bridge and Oakwood in 1914. The state road was constructed along the alignment of the turnpikes without digression except for a relocation at Gunpowder Falls to reduce the grades on the hills. The final sections of what was to become US 1 were paved in Cecil County between 1917 and 1921, when the gap between Octoraro Creek and Rising Sun was filled and the Sylmar Road link from east of Rising Sun to the Pennsylvania state line was paved.
When US 1 was designated in 1927, its route through Baltimore was the same as it is today except the federal highway entered the city from the southwest along Washington Boulevard. The highway turned north onto Monroe Street, which it followed to its present course north of Wilkens Avenue. This effectively replaced several auto trails that had been signed along the route. North of Baltimore, the road had been signed as theBaltimore PIke; south of there, it was part of a feeder route for the Lincoln Highway.[11] South of Bel Air, the road was part of the Capitol Highway, connecting Washington DC toPhiladelphia andAtlanta.[12]

US 1's first major relocation north of Baltimore occurred at the Susquehanna River. The Conowingo Bridge was removed before it could be inundated by the Conowingo Reservoir set to fill upon the completion of Conowingo Dam in 1928. The old approaches, which consisted of Smith Road from near Darlington to Glen Cove on the west side of the river and Connelly Road, Ragan Road, and Old Conowingo Road to the mouth of Conowingo Creek on the east side of the river, were replaced with the present highway between Smith Road and Connelly Road. Smith Road was redesignated MD 162, while the eastern approach became a western extension of MD 273.
US 1 saw three realignments north of Baltimore in 1934. A three-mile (4.8 km) relocation near Kalmia included a new bridge over Deer Creek. The old highway, which featured 26 curves, was designated MD 590. Another relocation occurred between Conowingo and Rising Sun, featuring a new bridge over Octoraro Creek. The old highway was designated MD 591. East of Rising Sun, a 90-degree turn was bypassed at the intersection of Telegraph Road (now MD 273) and Sylmar Road by the construction of a sweeping curve to the northwest of the intersection. The bypassed portion of Sylmar Road was designated MD 592.
Bel Air Road was expanded started in 1933. US 1 was widened to 40 feet (12 m) from the Baltimore city line northeast to Joppa Road. The highway was widened to 30 feet (9.1 m) from Joppa Road to Bel Air. The 30-foot (9.1 m) road was the first construction in Maryland of a three-lane road with center turn lane.
Massive increases in traffic during the 1920s made the reconstruction of the late 1910s obsolete within the decade. Construction to expand the entire length of the Baltimore–Washington Boulevard with two 10-foot (3.0 m) shoulders to 40 feet (12 m) in width, allowing for four lanes, began in 1928. The final sections of the expanded highway, between the District of Columbia line and Bladensburg and a bypass to the west of Elkridge and over the upper Patapsco River, including the present underpass of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, were completed in 1931. The old colonial era Main Street through Elkridge was designated as MD 477.

Despite the widening of US 1 between Baltimore and Washington DC in the late 1920s, the highway continued to be a major problem for both local and through traffic. The very high traffic levels made the highway a very attractive location for businesses serving travelers, leading to the sobriquet of "hot dog highway". The captive audience also led to the construction of over 1000 billboards between the two cities, spurring another nickname: "billboard boulevard". US 1 was also nicknamed "bloody Mary" due to the very high accident rate on the highway. After 1930, businesses were packed up to the edge of the four-lane, shoulder-less road that was largely built on an alignment poorly suited for the increasing speeds of vehicles. Thus, further expansion of the highway or safety improvements were impossible without expensive condemnation proceedings or relocating the highway. Businesses were adamantly against the latter solution.
In 1939, US 1's departure north from Washington Boulevard in Baltimore was moved south from Monroe Street to Caton Avenue just north of the city line. From Caton Avenue, US 1 followed Wilkens Avenue to Monroe Street. Caton and Wilkens avenues were expanded between 1936 and 1938, including removal of streetcar tracks and expansion to a divided boulevard on Wilkens Avenue, to handle the increased traffic as a "through-street". By 1946, a US 1 bypass was signed following Caton Avenue north from Wilkens Avenue, continuing on Hilton Street to North Avenue, then taking North Avenue east to rejoin US 1 at Monroe Street. Southwestern Boulevard was completed in 1950 as a dual highway through Arbutus, with grade separations with Sulphur Spring Road and Francis Avenue. US 1 was moved to its present alignment along that boulevard and Wilkens Avenue and old US 1 through Halethorpe was designated US 1 Alt.
DuringWorld War II, US 1 was relocated from Baltimore Avenue and Bladensburg Road between Washington DC and Hyattsville to Rhode Island Avenue, which was widened to 36 feet (11 m) in 1940. Rhode Island Avenue between Mount Rainier and Hyattsville had originally been MD 411. The old US 1 south of Hyattsville became US 1 Alt. Despite these relocations and upgrades, true relief did not come until the first limited-access highway between Baltimore and Washington DC, the B–W Parkway, was completed in 1954 to remove long-distance traffic from US 1. With the completion of that highway and later the Baltimore Harbor Tunnel Thruway (I-895) in 1957 and, later, I-95, US 1 between the two cities became a highway mainly for local traffic.

Dead Man's Curve was bypassed south of Elkridge in 1946. A bypass of Laurel was constructed around 1950. In 1952, northbound US 1 was placed on Fulton Avenue in West Baltimore opposite southbound US 1 on Monroe Street. North Avenue was widened to a divided highway for much of its US 1-designated length by 1957. By 1960, this bypass had become the northbound lanes of the present one-way pair. US 1 north of Baltimore was reconstructed to modify curves and widen the road in the 1950s. The highway was reconstructed in Cecil County from Conowingo Dam to Rising Sun in 1952 and 1953 and from Rising Sun to Sylmar in 1954. US 1 in Harford County was reconstructed from Little Gunpowder Falls to north of Deer Creek in 1952 and 1953 and to Conowingo Dam between 1954 and 1956. In Howard County, the highway was resurfaced from Elkridge to Waterloo in 1954 and from Waterloo to the Patuxent River in 1956. By 1958, US 1 was being widened from Laurel to Beltsville. The highway's bypass of Rising Sun was completed in 1957. MD 273 was extended west from Sylmar through Rising Sun along the old alignment to the southern end of the bypass. The Bel Air bypass was placed under construction in 1964 and completed in 1965, resulting in the designation of US 1 Bus. along the old road through Bel Air. The Bel Air bypass was extended north around Hickory in 2000, with US 1 Bus. extended to meet the northern end of the bypass.
| County | Location | mi [1][2] | km | Destinations | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prince George's | Mount Rainier | 0.00 | 0.00 | Continuation into theDistrict of Columbia | |
| Brentwood | 0.48 | 0.77 | |||
| Hyattsville | 1.82 | 2.93 | Northern terminus of US 1 Alt. | ||
| Riverdale Park | 2.61 | 4.20 | Access toRiverdale station | ||
| College Park | 4.33 | 6.97 | Campus Drive (MD 431 south) | Northern terminus of unsigned MD 431 | |
| 5.03 | 8.10 | Western terminus of unsigned MD 430 | |||
| 5.24 | 8.43 | Partial cloverleaf interchange | |||
| 6.43 | 10.35 | Exit 25 on I-95 / I-495 | |||
| Beltsville | 8.00 | 12.87 | Access via MD 212A; southern terminus of MD 212 concurrency | ||
| 9.87 | 15.88 | Northern terminus of MD 212 concurrency. also serves Muirkirk Road andMuirkirk station | |||
| 10.38 | 16.70 | E-ZPass orVideo Tolling | |||
| Laurel | 13.49 | 21.71 | |||
| 13.58 | 21.85 | ||||
| 13.99 | 22.51 | Main Street | Unsigned Main StreetMD 979 between the one-way pair; toLaurel station | ||
| Howard | Savage | 16.97 | 27.31 | Exit 12 on MD 32 | |
| Jessup | 19.72 | 31.74 | ToJessup station | ||
| Elkridge | 21.17 | 34.07 | ToDorsey station | ||
| 21.68 | 34.89 | Exit 6 on MD 100 | |||
| 25.01 | 40.25 | Exit 1 on I-895; northbound exit to I-895 north and southbound entrance from I-895 south | |||
| Baltimore | Arbutus | 25.44 | 40.94 | Exit 3 on I-195 | |
| 26.02 | 41.88 | Southern terminus of US 1 Alt.; northbound exit and southbound entrance; toHalethorpe station | |||
| 28.06 | 45.16 | Access via Leeds Avenue; direct ramp planned from US 1 to westbound I-695 | |||
| Baltimore City | 29.18 | 46.96 | Eastern terminus of MD 372; US 1 turns east onto Wilkens Avenue | ||
| 29.77 | 47.91 | Northern terminus of US 1 Alt. | |||
| 31.24 | 50.28 | Monroe Street | South end of one-way pair; Monroe Street north of the intersection is southbound US 1 | ||
| 31.59 | 50.84 | Eastern terminus of MD 144 | |||
| 32.06 | 51.60 | One-way eastbound | |||
| 32.13 | 51.71 | One-way westbound; toWest Baltimore station | |||
| 33.24 | 53.49 | Southern terminus of US 40 Truck concurrency; southern terminus of MD 140; north end of one-way pair; US 1 turns east onto North Avenue | |||
| 33.67 | 54.19 | ||||
| 33.74 | 54.30 | ||||
| 34.39 | 55.35 | Exit 6 on I-83 | |||
| 34.85 | 56.09 | One-way northbound; southern terminus of MD 139; | |||
| 34.94 | 56.23 | One-way southbound; northern terminus of MD 2; toPenn Station | |||
| 35.23 | 56.70 | Southern terminus of MD 45 | |||
| 35.79 | 57.60 | Southern terminus of MD 147 | |||
| 37.46 | 60.29 | North end of concurrency with US 40 Truck; northern terminus of MD 151 | |||
| Baltimore | Overlea | 42.13 | 67.80 | Exit 32 on I-695 | |
| 43.11 | 69.38 | SouthboundRight-in/right-out interchange | |||
| 43.37 | 69.80 | Northbound access only | |||
| Harford | Pleasant Hills | 53.00 | 85.30 | ||
| 54.32 | 87.42 | Southern terminus of US 1 Bus.; northern terminus of MD 147 | |||
| Bel Air | 56.26 | 90.54 | Southern terminus of MD 24 concurrency | ||
| 57.80 | 93.02 | Partial cloverleaf interchange; northern terminus of MD 24 concurrency; northern terminus of MD 924 | |||
| 58.90 | 94.79 | ||||
| Hickory | 59.17 | 95.22 | Eastern terminus of MD 23 | ||
| 59.75 | 96.16 | ||||
| 60.26 | 96.98 | Northern terminus of US 1 Bus. | |||
| Dublin | 65.79 | 105.88 | |||
| 67.85 | 109.19 | Eastern terminus of MD 440 | |||
| Darlington | 69.49 | 111.83 | Northern terminus of MD 161 | ||
| 69.67 | 112.12 | ||||
| Susquehanna River | 71.27– 72.08 | 114.70– 116.00 | Conowingo Dam | ||
| Cecil | Conowingo | 72.08 | 116.00 | Northern terminus of MD 222 | |
| 73.06 | 117.58 | Southern terminus of US 222 | |||
| | 74.67 | 120.17 | Access via MD 591A; southern terminus of MD 591 | ||
| | 75.73 | 121.88 | Access via MD 591B; northern terminus of MD 591 | ||
| Harrisville | 76.83– 77.04 | 123.65– 123.98 | Western terminus of MD 273; northbound ramp is unsigned MD 273A | ||
| 77.73 | 125.09 | Northern terminus of MD 276 | |||
| | 80.86 | 130.13 | Continuation intoPennsylvania | ||
| 1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi | |||||
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