Roads in Prince Edward Island - Secondary Highways

Secondary Highways

These are paved all-weather roads, maximum speed limit 80 km/h (50 mph).

  • Route 4 -- Wood Islands - High Bank - Murray River - Montague (note that this is only a portion of Route 4 - the remainder is designated a primary highway)
  • Route 5 (48 Road) -- Cardigan - Elliotvale - Mount Albion
  • Route 6 -- Bedford - Grand Tracadie - Brackley Beach - Cavendish - Kensington
  • Route 7 -- Milton - Oyster Bed Bridge
  • Route 8 -- Ross Corner - Freetown - New London
  • Route 9 -- Long Creek - New Haven - Brookfield
  • Route 10 -- Bedeque - Cape Traverse - Tryon
  • Route 11 -- Mount Pleasant - Abram Village - Summerside
  • Route 12 -- Miscouche - Tyne Valley - Portage - Alberton - North Cape
  • Route 13 -- Crapaud - Hunter River - Cavendish
  • Route 14 -- Coleman - West Point - Miminegash - Tignish
  • Route 15 -- Sherwood (suburb of Charlottetown) - Brackley Beach
  • Route 16 -- Souris - East Point - Naufrage - St. Peters
  • Route 16A -- South Lake - Elmira - North Lake
  • Route 17 -- Murray River - Gaspereaux - Montague
  • Route 17A -- Cambridge - Sturgeon
  • Route 18 -- High Bank - Beach Point - Murray River
  • Route 18A -- White Sands - Murray Harbour
  • Route 19 -- Desable - Rocky Point - Cornwall
  • Route 19A -- Canoe Cove - New Dominion
  • Route 20 -- Kensington - Malpeque - Park Corner - New London
  • Route 21 -- Fanning Brook - Mount Herbert, Prince Edward Island - Bunbury
  • Route 22 -- Victoria Cross - St. Theresa - Mount Stewart
  • Route 23 -- Wood Islands - Iona - Orwell
  • Route 24 -- Murray River - Caledonia - Vernon River
  • Route 25 -- Marshfield - York - Covehead - Stanhope
  • Route 25A -- Covehead - West Covehead
  • Route 26 (Georgetown Road) -- Crossroads (part of Stratford) - Pownal - Mount Albion (formerly Route 1A)

Read more about this topic:  Roads In Prince Edward Island

Famous quotes containing the words secondary and/or highways:

    Words are always getting conventionalized to some secondary meaning. It is one of the works of poetry to take the truants in custody and bring them back to their right senses.
    William Butler Yeats (1865–1939)

    That is the land of lost content
    I see it shining plain,
    The happy highways where I went
    And cannot come again.
    —A.E. (Alfred Edward)