:U.S. Route 12 in Michigan

{{short description|US Highway in Michigan}}

{{highway detail hatnote|U.S. Route 12}}

{{good article}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2021}}

{{Use American English|date=March 2023}}

{{Infobox road

| state = MI

| type = US

| route = 12

| alternate_name = Iron Brigade Memorial Highway

| map = {{maplink-road|from=U.S. Route 12 in Michigan.map}}

| map_custom = yes

| map_notes = US 12 highlighted in red

| length_mi = 210.077

| length_ref =

| established = November 11, 1926

| tourist = File:Lake Michigan Circle Tour.svg Lake Michigan Circle Tour
File:Michigan Historic Heritage Route.svg US 12 Heritage Trail

| direction_a = West

| terminus_a = {{jct|state=IN|US|12}} near New Buffalo

| junction = {{plainlist|1=

  • {{jct|state=MI|I|94}} near New Buffalo
  • {{jct|state=MI|US|31}} near Niles
  • {{jct|state=MI|US|131}} in White Pigeon
  • {{jct|state=MI|I|69}} in Coldwater
  • {{jct|state=MI|US|127}} near Somerset
  • {{jct|state=MI|US|23}} near Ann Arbor
  • {{jct|state=MI|I|94}} in Ypsilanti
  • {{jct|state=MI|I|275}} in Canton
  • {{jct|state=MI|US|24}} in Dearborn
  • {{jct|state=MI|I|94}} in Dearborn}}

| direction_b = East

| terminus_b = Michigan Avenue and Cass Avenue in Detroit

| counties = Berrien, Cass, St. Joseph, Branch, Hillsdale, Lenawee, Washtenaw, Wayne

| previous_type = M

| previous_route = 11

| next_type = M 1919

| next_route = 12

| browse = {{mi browse|previous_type=US-Bus|previous_route=23|route=M-23|next_type=US|next_route=24}}

{{mi browse|previous_type=M 1948|previous_route=111|route=US 112|next_type=M 1948|next_route=112}}

{{mi browse|previous_type=M|previous_route=150|route=M-151|next_type=M 1973|next_route=151|next_dab=1935–1977}}

}}

US Highway 12 (US 12) is an east–west United States Numbered Highway that runs from Aberdeen, Washington, to Detroit, Michigan. In Michigan, it runs for {{convert|210|mi|km}} between New Buffalo and Detroit as a state trunkline highway and Pure Michigan Byway. On its western end, the highway is mostly a two-lane road that runs through the southern tier of counties roughly parallel to the Indiana state line. It forms part of the Niles Bypass, a four-lane expressway south of Niles in the southwestern part of the state, and it runs concurrently with the Interstate 94 (I-94) freeway around the south side of Ypsilanti in southeastern Michigan. In between Coldwater and the Ann Arbor area, the highway angles northeasterly and passes Michigan International Speedway. East of Ypsilanti, US 12 follows a divided highway routing on Michigan Avenue into Detroit, where it terminates at an intersection with Cass Avenue.

When US 12 was designated in Michigan on November 11, 1926, along with the other original US Highways, it ran along a more northerly course. It originally replaced sections of the original M-11 and M-17 along Michigan Avenue in the state, the route of the much older St. Joseph Trail, a footpath used by Native Americans before European settlement in the area. It entered from Indiana as it does now, but it followed the Lake Michigan shoreline farther north to Benton HarborSt. Joseph before turning eastward to run through Kalamazoo, Battle Creek, and Jackson. In the Ann Arbor area, it followed a more northerly path into Detroit before terminating downtown. In the 1940s and 1950s, sections of the highway were converted into expressways and freeways. Starting in 1959, these freeway segments were renumbered as part of I-94, and, in January 1962, US 12 was shifted to replace US Highway 112 (US 112). That highway, when it was designated in 1926 replaced the original M-23 along the Chicago Road, which was the route of the older Sauk Trail. Later, US 112 replaced the first M-151 when the former was extended to New Buffalo in the mid-1930s. Since 1962, the highway has remained relatively unchanged aside from minor truncations in the city of Detroit. US 112 previously had two business loops, both of which were renumbered Business US Highway 12 (Bus. US 12) in 1962. In 2010, the Niles business loop was decommissioned, but the one in Ypsilanti remains. One section of the former US 112 was renumbered US Highway 112S (US 112S) for a few years in the 1930s.

Route description

Between the state line near Michiana and the interchange with I-94 near New Buffalo, US 12 forms a portion of the Lake Michigan Circle Tour (LMCT). The full length of the highway in the state is also a Pure Michigan Byway. Outside of the various cities, most of US 12 is a rural, two-lane state highway. One section runs concurrently with I-94 south of Ypsilanti. From there eastward, US 12 is a divided highway and then a boulevard into the Detroit area. The entire length of the highway east of Coldwater is listed on the National Highway System,{{cite map |author = Michigan Department of Transportation |location = Lansing |title = National Highway System, Michigan |date = April 23, 2006 |publisher = Michigan Department of Transportation |url = http://www.michigan.gov/documents/MDOT_NHS_Statewide_150626_7.pdf |format = PDF |scale = Scale not given |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20141006073353/http://www.michigan.gov/documents/MDOT_NHS_Statewide_150626_7.pdf |archive-date = October 6, 2014 |access-date = October 7, 2008 }} a network of roads important to the US's economy, defense, and mobility.{{cite web |last1 = Natzke |first1 = Stefan |last2 = Neathery |first2 = Mike |last3 = Adderley |first3 = Kevin |name-list-style = amp |url = https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/planning/national_highway_system/ |title = What is the National Highway System? |work = National Highway System |publisher = Federal Highway Administration |date = June 26, 2013 |access-date = July 1, 2013 }}

=Southwest Michigan=

US 12 enters the state of Michigan southwest of New Buffalo near the town of Michiana. The highway runs a bit inland and parallel to the Lake Michigan shore on Red Arrow Highway past the community of Grand Beach before turning eastward away from the lake on the north side of New Buffalo. US 12 intersects I-94 less than {{One2a|{{convert|1|mi|km|spell=in}}}} east of this turn and continues due east along Pulaski Highway through rural farmland. The highway is the main east–west street as it crosses through Three Oaks in southern Berrien County. East of Galien, the highway dips southward around Dayton Lake before passing south of Buchanan. The highway continues eastward, intersecting US 31 (St. Joseph Valley Parkway) near Niles. East of that freeway, US 12 expands into an expressway as the Niles Bypass. This bypass intersects M-139, crosses the St. Joseph River, and intersects M-51 on the south side of Niles. US 12 turns northeasterly along the bypass east of downtown and then departs to the southeast at an interchange with Main Street and M-60 just across the county line with Cass County.

Continuing through southern Cass County, US 12 runs roughly parallel to the state line. It turns northeasterly to run into Edwardsburg, where it intersects M-62. The highway turns southeasterly and runs to the south of Eagle Lake before entering the community of Adamsville. The highway continues on this southeasterly course until it intersects the former M-205 and M-217 (Michiana Parkway) near Union and turns to the northeast. US 12 intersects the southern end of M-40 before crossing into St. Joseph County at the eastern crossing of the St. Joseph River.

On the eastern side of the river, US 12 enters Mottville and intersects M-103. The highway continues as Chicago Road through farmland and intersects US 131 near White Pigeon. It runs along the south side of Klinger Lake and continues to a junction with M-66 in Sturgis; the two highways run concurrently for about eight blocks through town. East of Sturgis, US 12 turns northeasterly into Branch County. Still named Chicago Road, it passes through Bronson and past Batavia. Northeast of Batavia, US 12 intersects the eastern end of M-86 near Branch County Memorial Airport. The airport is on the western edge of Coldwater, and, after crossing the Coldwater River between Cemetery and South lakes, the highway runs through residential neighborhoods and into downtown. East of Division Street, Business Loop I-69 (BL I-69) follows US 12 through downtown and out to an interchange with I-69 on the east side of Coldwater. The highway continues past retail businesses and parallel to the Sauk River. US 12 passes through the town of Quincy before crossing into Hillsdale County.

=Southeast Michigan=

East of the Hillsdale County line, US 12 runs easterly into Allen, where it intersects M-49. The highway continues northeastward through farmland to Jonesville, where it runs concurrently with M-99 through downtown and across a different St. Joseph River. The trunkline continues northeasterly through northern Hillsdale County, crossing the South Branch of the Kalamazoo River in Moscow. US 12 runs along the south side of Lake LeAnn in Somerset Center in the northeastern corner of the county. East of Somerset, the highway crosses into northern Lenawee County.

Immediately east of the Lenawee County line, US 12 intersects US 127 in the Irish Hills region. South of Brooklyn in Cambridge Junction, it passes Michigan International Speedway and crosses the River Raisin next to a junction with M-50. East of the racetrack, the highway meanders through an area dotted by several smaller lakes until it intersects M-124 at Hayes State Park. Continuing as Michigan Avenue, US 12 angles northeasterly from the park until it hits the Lenawee–Washtenaw county line. The highway follows the line for several miles before reentering Lenawee County. It continues through an intersection with M-52 and into Clinton before turning northeasterly and fully crossing into Washtenaw County.

In Washtenaw County, US 12 passes through Benton in a rural southern section of the county.{{cite MDOT map |year = 2014 |sections = N6–M14 }} At Saline, the highway enters the suburban edge of the Ann ArborYpsilanti metro area. US 12 follows Michigan Avenue northeasterly through Saline and across an interchange with US 23 before intersecting I-94 in Pittsfield and Ypsilanti townships. US 12 leaves Michigan Avenue to follow I-94 at that freeway's exit 181; Michigan Avenue continues into downtown Ypsilanti as a city street. I-94/US 12 skirts around the south side of the city and intersects the western end of Bus. US 12 at Huron Street south of downtown. The freeway continues around the south side of the city and rounds the north end of Ford Lake. It is bounded by residential neighborhoods, and it crosses the Huron River on the eastern side of Ypsilanti. Near the Willow Run industrial complex and airport, US 12 separates from I-94 and turns northeasterly along an expressway on the north side of the airport. There are three interchanges, including one for the eastern end of M-17 before US 12 crosses into Wayne County and intersects the eastern end of Bus. US 12.

=East into Detroit=

Once US 12 intersects the eastern end of its business loop, it returns to Michigan Avenue for the remainder of its routing in the state. The roadway is a boulevard in this area, a street divided by a central median. It runs through Canton Township and parallel to the Lower River Rouge. US 12 intersects I-275 on the eastern side of the township before crossing into Wayne. The highway is bounded by a mix of industrial and commercial properties in suburban Metro Detroit. In downtown Wayne, the two sides of Michigan Avenue split apart, surrounding the central business district of the city and separated by two to three city blocks. East of this split, Michigan Avenue crosses a section of Westland before entering Inkster.

File:Michigan Central Train Station Exterior 2006.jpg along Michigan Avenue]]

In Dearborn, US 12 intersects US 24 (Telegraph Road) at an interchange on the western side of the city, and M-39 (Southfield Freeway) on the eastern side near the River Rouge crossing and Greenfield Village. On the Dearborn–Detroit city border, US 12 pass through a complex interchange with I-94 (Edsel Ford Freeway) and M-153 (Ford Road/Wyoming Avenue). Michigan Avenue continues northeasterly parallel to I-94 for a short distance before it turns due east. Once it makes the direction change, it forms the 0 Mile of Detroit's Mile Road System.{{cite book |last1 = Gavrilovich |first1 = Peter |last2 = McGraw |first2 = Bill |year = 2000 |title = The Detroit Almanac: 300 Years of Life in the Motor City |location = Detroit |publisher = Detroit Free Press |isbn = 978-0-937247-34-1 |oclc = 45227386 |name-list-style = amp |pages = 20–21 }} US 12 continues through residential areas on Detroit's West Side, passing through the interchange that connects I-75 with I-96's eastern terminus near the Ambassador Bridge. The highway runs through Corktown and beside the site of the former Tiger Stadium at the corner of Michigan and Trumbull. East of the former stadium, US 12 crosses M-10 (Lodge Freeway) near the MGM Grand Detroit casino. East of M-10, Michigan Avenue enters Downtown Detroit. At the corner of Michigan and Cass, US 12 ends while Michigan Avenue continues several blocks further to terminate at Campus Martius Park at Woodward Avenue.{{google maps |url = https://www.google.com/maps/dir/41.7602783,-86.800448/Michigan,+Detroit/@42.0216113,-87.2956136,972879m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m31!4m30!1m20!3m4!1m2!1d-85.486973!2d41.7944657!3s0x8816530a4b89d5a5:0x75e88c99b7a8f541!3m4!1m2!1d-83.6401828!2d42.2241895!3s0x883ca8843c9abec7:0x58de3a13e3edc237!3m4!1m2!1d-83.6031158!2d42.2313151!3s0x883ca819e6747cb1:0xce25e691f7b6d237!3m4!1m2!1d-83.5689522!2d42.2393207!3s0x883b57b8c30f193b:0xaef97aa4375a7966!1m5!1m1!1s0x883b2d374e8efcc7:0x728b4b3a51a01a1b!2m2!1d-83.0526357!2d42.3316739!2m1!1b1!3e0 |title = Overview Map of US Highway 12 in Michigan |access-date = May 4, 2015 }}{{cite MDOT map |year = 2014 |inset = Detroit |sections = G3–F11 }}

History

=Before 1926=

File:Michigan's Indian trails.png

The first major overland transportation corridors in the future state of Michigan were the Indian trails.{{cite magazine |last = Morrison |first = Roger L. |title = The History and Development of Michigan Highways |magazine = Michigan Alumnus Quarterly Review |date = Autumn 1937 |location = Ann Arbor |publisher = University of Michigan Bureau of Alumni Relations |pages = 59–73 |volume = 39 |issue = 54 |oclc = 698029175 }} Two of these trails are relevant to US 12. The St. Joseph Trail ran between the Benton HarborSt. Joseph area and Detroit by way of what is now Kalamazoo, Battle Creek, Jackson, and Ann Arbor. The second, the Sauk Trail, ran further south through what is now Niles, and Coldwater to the Ann Arbor area.{{cite book |last = Mason |first = Philip P. |title = Michigan Highways From Indian Trails to Expressways |location = Ann Arbor, Michigan |publisher = Braun-Brumfield |year = 1959 |oclc = 23314983 |page = 18 }}

The Town of Detroit{{#tag:ref|Detroit was incorporated as a town in 1802 by the government of the Northwest Territory before incorporation and reincorporation as a city by the Michigan Territory in 1806 and 1815.{{cite book |last = Farmer |first = Silas |year = 1889 |url = http://quod.lib.umich.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=micounty&cc=micounty&idno=bad1459.0001.001;frm=frameset&view=image&seq=191 |title = The History of Detroit and Michigan; or, The Metropolis Illustrated; A Full Record of Territorial Days in Michigan, and the Annals of Wayne County |location = Detroit |publisher = S. Farmer & Co |oclc = 2823136 |edition = 2nd |via = University of Michigan Digital Library Text Collections |pages = 133–135 }}|group=lower-alpha}} created {{convert|120|ft|m|adj=mid|-wide}} rights-of-way for the principal streets of the city in 1805, including Michigan Avenue.{{cite book |title = Michigan Highway History Timeline 1701–2001: 300 Years of Progress |last = Lingeman |first = Stanley D. |date = April 6, 2001 |location = Lansing |publisher = Library of Michigan |oclc = 435640179 |page = 1 }} This street plan was devised by Augustus B. Woodward and others following a devastating fire in Detroit,{{cite news |last = Baulch |first = Vivian M. |date = June 13, 1999 |title = Woodward Avenue, Detroit's Grand Old 'Main Street' |url = http://apps.detnews.com/apps/history/index.php?id=205 |work = The Detroit News |access-date = June 6, 2012 |archive-url = https://archive.today/20090104004403/http://apps.detnews.com/apps/history/index.php?id=205 |archive-date = January 4, 2009 |url-status = live }} with a mandate from the territorial governor to improve on the previous plan.{{cite book |last = Barnett |first = LeRoy |year = 2004 |title = A Drive Down Memory Lane: The Named State and Federal Highways of Michigan |location = Allegan Forest, Michigan |publisher = Priscilla Press |isbn = 1-886167-24-9 |oclc = 57425393 |pages = 243–244 }} The wide width of the avenues was an emulation of the street plan for Washington DC and intended to make Detroit the "Paris of the West".{{cite news |first = Susan |last = Whitall |date = March 12, 2007 |title = Woodward Avenue: Michigan's Main Street |url = http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20070312/METRO/703120330/Woodward-Avenue--Michigan-s-Main-Street |work = The Detroit News |pages = 1A, 8A |issn = 1055-2715 |oclc = 137348716 |access-date = July 16, 2012 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150102140458/http://www.detroitnews.com/article/20070312/METRO/703120330/Woodward-Avenue--Michigan-s-Main-Street |archive-date = January 2, 2015 |url-status = live }}

The southern of these two Indian trails later became the Chicago Road. Father Gabriel Richard, the first priest to serve in the U.S. House of Representatives, petitioned Congress to fund a highway between Detroit and Chicago in March 1824. A year later, the road was established in federal law, and it was surveyed by the end of 1825. Construction started in 1829, and the road was finished across Michigan in 1833.{{harvp|Barnett|2004|pp=50–1}}. The northern Indian trail was established as an unnamed territorial road (later called Territorial Road) in 1829.{{harvp|Barnett|2004|pp=154–5}}.

The State Trunkline Highway System was created on May 13, 1913, by an act of the Michigan Legislature; at the time, two of the system's divisions corresponded to the original US 12. Division 5 had a segment from New Buffalo to Benton Harbor and Watervliet while Division 6 connected Watervliet through Kalamazoo, Jackson, and Ann Arbor to Detroit. No divisions corresponded to the future US 112.{{cite book |author = Michigan Legislature |author-link = Michigan Legislature |chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=7kXiAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA1868 |title = The Compiled Laws of the State of Michigan |volume = 1 |year = 1915 |orig-year = enacted May 13, 1913 |chapter = Chapter 91: State Reward Trunk Line Highways |pages = 1868–1869 |location = Lansing, Michigan |publisher = Wynkoop, Hallenbeck, Crawford |editor1-last = Shields |editor1-first = Edmund C. |editor2-last = Black |editor2-first = Cyrenius P. |editor3-last = Broomfield |editor3-first = Archibald |name-list-style = amp |via = Google Books |oclc = 44724558 }} In 1919, the Michigan State Highway Department (MSHD){{#tag:ref|The Michigan State Highway Department was reorganized into the Michigan Department of State Highways and Transportation on August 23, 1973.{{cite book |last1 = Kulsea |first1 = Bill |last2 = Shawver |first2 = Tom |title = Making Michigan Move: A History of Michigan Highways and the Michigan Department of Transportation |url = https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Making_Michigan_Move#27 |year = 1980 |publisher = Michigan Department of Transportation |location = Lansing |oclc = 8169232 |name-list-style = amp |page = 27 |access-date = January 18, 2021 |via = Wikisource }} The name was shortened to its current form in 1978.{{harvp|Kulsea|Shawver|1980|pp=[https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Making_Michigan_Move#30 30–31]}}.|name=MDOT|group=lower-alpha}} signposted the highway system for the first time,{{cite news |title = Michigan May Do Well Following Wisconsin's Road Marking System |work = The Grand Rapids Press |date = September 20, 1919 |page = 10 |oclc = 9975013 }} and the future US 12 corridor was assigned two numbers. From the state line north through Benton Harbor to Watervliet, it carried the original M-11 designation, and, from Watervliet eastward, it was the original M-17. From Dearborn into Detroit, the original M-10 ran concurrently along M-17.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1919-07-01L |link = yes }}

{{Infobox road small

|state=MI

|type=M 1919

|route=23

|length_mi=130.223

|length_ref=

|formed={{circa|July 1, 1919}}

|deleted=November 11, 1926{{cite map |author1 = Bureau of Public Roads |author2 = American Association of State Highway Officials |date = November 11, 1926 |title = United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials |url = https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:United_States_System_of_Highways_Adopted_for_Uniform_Marking_by_the_American_Association_of_State_Highway_Officials.jpg |scale = 1:7,000,000 |location = Washington, DC |publisher = United States Geological Survey |oclc = 32889555 |access-date = November 7, 2013 |via = Wikimedia Commons |name-list-style = amp }}

|location=UnionYpsilanti

}}

The future US 112 along the Chicago Road had two different numbers in the original highway plan. Between New Buffalo and Niles, the highway was numbered M-60, and, from Union to Ypsilanti, it was M-23. East of Ypsilanti, the corridor was part of M-17 and M-10. In November 1926, these two highway corridors were renumbered as part of the United States Numbered Highway System.

=Original US Highway: 1926–1962=

On November 11, 1926, the United States Numbered Highway System was approved by the American Association of State Highway Officials (AASHO),{{cite book |last = McNichol |first = Dan |year = 2006 |title = The Roads that Built America: The Incredible Story of the US Interstate System |location = New York |publisher = Sterling |isbn = 1-4027-3468-9 |oclc = 63377558 |page = 74 }}{{#tag:ref|AASHO was renamed the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) on November 13, 1973.{{cite web |author = Federal Highway Administration |date = December 4, 2012 |url = https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/byday/fhbd1113.htm |title = November 13 |work = Highway History |publisher = Federal Highway Administration |access-date = August 18, 2013 }}|name=AASHTO|group=lower-alpha}} and US 12 was the designation assigned to a highway running northeasterly from Indiana near Lake Michigan to Benton Harbor–St. Joseph and turning east to Detroit through Kalamazoo, Jackson, and Ann Arbor. This designation replaced sections of the original M-11 and M-17 through the southern part of the state.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1926-11-01 }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1926-12-01 }} By the end of the next year, the MSHD rerouted the highway between Sawyer and Stevensville,{{cite MDOT map |date = 1927-12-01 }} and downtown Stevensville was bypassed in 1928.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1928-05-01 }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1928-10-01 }} Additional work to fully bypass Stevensville was finished in 1929.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1929-05-01 }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1930-01-01 |c-link = yes }}

In 1931, the original routing of US 12 along a section of Michigan Avenue between Kalamazoo and Comstock was renumbered US 12A, and a new routing along King Highway south of the original opened. By 1936, another US 12A debuted in Battle Creek, and, by the end of the year, the main highway was rerouted between Augusta and Battle Creek. Another new segment of highway opened that same year east of Jackson, bypassing Leoni and Grass Lake to the north.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1936-06-01 |sections = M9, M11, M13 }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1936-12-15 |sections = M9, M11, M13 }} This new bypass was extended eastward from Sylvan Township to bypass Chelsea to the south the following year, filling a gap in "super highway"Michigan State Highway Department maps of the time defined a "super highway" as one with "three lanes and over" on the map key. segments between Jackson and Ann Arbor.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1937-05-15 |section = M11 }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1937-12-01 |section = M11 }} The last routing change in the 1930s was the opening of Stadium Drive in Kalamazoo, after which US 12 was rerouted to follow it west of downtown.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1939-04-15 |inset = Kalamazoo }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1939-12-01 |inset = Kalamazoo }}

In 1940, a southern bypass of Battle Creek opened along Columbia Avenue, and the former routing through downtown on Michigan Avenue became a Bus. US 12.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1940-07-15 |inset = Battle Creek }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1941-12-01 |inset = Battle Creek }} In late 1951 or early 1952, a northerly bypass of Jackson opened, and the former route through downtown on Michigan Avenue became another Bus. US 12.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1951-07-01 |section = M11 }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1952-04-15 |section = M11 }} By the next year, the western half of the Jackson bypass opened, including a bypass of Parma.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1953-04-15 |section = M11 }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1953-10-01 |section = M11 }} In 1954, a new bypass of Kalamazoo and Galesburg opened; US 12 was rerouted to follow the new highway while M-96 replaced part of the old route and the US 12A in the area.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1954-04-15 |section = M9 }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1954-10-01 |section = M9 }}

File:Tiger Stadium, Detroit.jpg, former home of the Detroit Tigers at the corner of Michigan and Trumbull in Detroit (now demolished)|left]]

In 1956, several changes were made to US 12's routing. A southern bypass of Ann Arbor and Ypsilanti was converted to a freeway. US 12 was rerouted to follow the bypass, supplanting the M-17 and Bypass US 112 (Byp. US 112) designations used previously on the bypass. US 112 was also rerouted, and it ran concurrently with US 12 along the bypass. The former route of US 12 along Plymouth Road from Ann Arbor east to Detroit was renumbered M-14, and the M-112 designation on the Willow Run and Detroit Industrial expressways was replaced by US 12. At the same time as these changes were made, the Jackson bypass was upgraded to a full freeway.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1956-04-15 |sections = M11, M12–M14 }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1956-10-01 |sections = M11, M12–M14 }} By the middle of 1958, the Kalamazoo bypass was converted to a full freeway.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1957-10-01 |section = M9 }}{{cite MDOT map |year = 1958 |section = M9, N9 }}

Previously delayed so that the designations could be finalized,{{cite news |title = Michigan Delays Road Number System |url = https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=mb1OAAAAIBAJ&pg=7401,5582043&dq=interstate+opening+michigan&hl=en |work = Toledo Blade |date = June 4, 1959 |page = 11 |access-date = November 21, 2010 |oclc = 12962635 |via = Google News }} the MSHD started numbering its Interstate Highways in 1959, adding I-94 to the sections of US 12 freeway.{{cite news |title = Temporary Double Signs for Highway |url = https://www.newspapers.com/clip/21842751/temporary_double_signs_for_highway/ |date = January 15, 1959 |work = The News-Palladium |location = Benton Harbor, Michigan |at = § 2, p. 1 |access-date = July 13, 2018 |via = Newspapers.com }} Later that year, additional segments of I-94/US 12 were opened, starting with a {{convert|10|mi|km|adj=on}} section from Hartford to Coloma, then another from Paw Paw to Kalamazoo which connected with a segment between Galesburg to Battle Creek. The overall {{convert|45|mi|km|adj=on}} section from Paw Paw to Battle Creek was dedicated on December 7, 1959.{{cite news |title = Marshall and Area Chronology for 1959 |url = https://newspaperarchive.com/michael-g-other-articles-clipping-dec-31-1959-784439/ |work = Marshall Evening Chronicle |date = December 31, 1959 |pages = 4–[https://newspaperarchive.com/michael-g-other-articles-clipping-dec-31-1959-784440/ 5] |access-date = August 11, 2018 |via = NewspaperArchive.com }} By the middle of 1960, US 12 followed the I-94 freeway from Coloma to Watervliet and from Paw Paw to the east side of Jackson. It was also routed along the freeway from the west side of Ann Arbor into Detroit, where it followed the southern end of the Lodge Freeway.{{cite MDOT map |year = 1960 |sections = M7–M14, N9 }} By the middle of 1961, the Watervliet–Paw Paw and Jackson–Ann Arbor freeway gaps were completed, and the freeway was extended westward to Stevensville.{{cite MDOT map |year = 1961 |sections = M7–M8, M11–M12 }} By the end of the year, I-94/US 12 extended all the way to New Buffalo.{{cite MDOT map |year = 1962 |sections = M7, N7–M14 }} In January 1962, the state made the biggest rerouting change of all to US 12: the designation was removed from the I-94 freeway from New Buffalo to Detroit and shifted to completely replace US 112.{{cite news |title = Area Road Signs To Be Changed |url = https://www.newspapers.com/clip/21841466/area_road_signs_to_be_changed/ |date = January 9, 1962 |work = The News-Palladium |location = Benton Harbor, Michigan |agency = Associated Press |at = § 2, p. 5 |access-date = July 13, 2018 |via = Newspapers.com }}{{cite news |title = Route Numbers Changed by State |url = https://www.newspapers.com/clip/13834539/us_12112_changes_january_14_1962/ |work = Detroit Free Press |date = January 14, 1962 |page = 12 |access-date = September 17, 2017 |via = Newspapers.com }}

=US Highway 112: 1926–1962=

{{Infobox road small

|state=MI

|type=US 1948

|route=112

|length_mi=205.507

|length_ref=

|formed=November 11, 1926

|deleted=January 1962

|location=New BuffaloDetroit

}}

{{Infobox road small

|state=MI

|type=M 1926

|route=151

|length_mi=17.376

|length_ref=

|formed=1931

|deleted=1935

|location=NilesUnion

}}

In 1925, US 112 was originally proposed to run from Oshkosh to Fremont, Wisconsin, on what later became US 110.{{cite book |author = Report of Joint Board on Interstate Highways |date = November 18, 1925 |chapter = Appendix VI: Descriptions of the Interstate Routes Selected, with Numbers Assigned |title = Report of Joint Board on Interstate Highways October 30, 1925, Approved by the Secretary of Agriculture, November 18, 1925 |chapter-url = https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Report_of_Joint_Board_on_Interstate_Highways_October_30,_1925#57 |location = Washington, DC |publisher = United States Department of Agriculture |page = 57 |id = {{OCLC|733875457|55123355|71026428}} |access-date = March 24, 2019 |via = Wikisource }} When it was initially designated in November 1926, US 112 made a sharp turn to the southwest to connect to US 20 in Elkhart, Indiana. In 1931, a new trunkline highway was designated between M-60 at Niles and US 112 at Union. This highway was numbered M-151.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1931-05-15 |c-link = yes |sections = M9, N7–N8 }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1931-10-01 |sections = M9, N7–N8 }} In 1933, the section of US 112 from Union to Elkhart was renumbered US 112S.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1933-05-01 |sections = N7–N8 }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1933-09-01 |sections = N7–N8 }} M-151 and US 112S each lasted until 1935 when US 112 was extended to replace M-151. US 112 was also extended to run concurrently with M-60 to New Buffalo, and US 112S was renumbered M-205.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1935-05-15 |sections = N7–N8 }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1935-12-01 |sections = N7–N8 }}

In 1936, the section of US 112 along Michigan Avenue east of Ypsilanti was expanded into a "super highway". In 1955, a realignment of US 127 in southern Jackson County removed a short concurrency with US 112 from Somerset Center in Hillsdale County and the current intersection in northwestern Lenawee County.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1955-04-15 |section = N11 }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1955-10-01 |section = N11 }}

On December 1, 1956, the highway department opened the first {{convert|6.6|mi|km}} of a new four-lane divided highway around the south side of Niles; the final {{convert|1.6|mi|km}} of the bypass opened early the next year.{{cite news |work = Niles Daily Star |date = December 3, 1956 |title = 7,260 Cars Travel New Bypass Daily |oclc = 36065307 }}{{page needed|date=August 2012}} Consequently, they converted the former route through town back to US 112/M-60 into a business loop numbered Bus. US 112.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1956-10-01 |inset = Niles }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1957-04-15 |inset = Niles }} At the end of the decade, another highway concurrency was removed when US 131 was realigned to run directly south of US 112 to the state line instead of running concurrently along US 112 between Mottville and White Pigeon. In January 1962, the US 112 designation was eliminated when US 12 was shifted off the I-94 freeway to replace US 112. The state's rationale for the removal of the US 112 designation was the long-standing AASHO recommendation against US Highway designations extant in only one state.{{cite news |title = New Name Set For Old Road |url = https://www.newspapers.com/clip/32320891/new_name_set_for_old_road/ |date = July 28, 1961 |work = The News-Palladium |location = Benton Harbor, Michigan |at = § 2, p. 1 |access-date = June 6, 2019 |via = Newspapers.com }}

=After 1962=

After US 12 replaced US 112, the Bus. US 12 routes were renumbered as BL I-94, and the two Bus. US 112s were renumbered to Bus. US 12. In 1966, the state truncated M-60 and removed it as a concurrent designation along US 12 between New Buffalo and Niles.{{cite MDOT map |year = 1966 |link = yes |section = N7 }}{{cite MDOT map |year = 1967 |section = N7 }}

In October 2000, the state proposed changing jurisdiction of several highways near Campus Martius Park in Detroit,{{cite map |author = Michigan Department of Transportation |date = October 9, 2000 |title = Proposed Jurisdiction: Woodward Avenue/Campus Martius Area |location = Lansing |publisher = Michigan Department of Transportation |scale = Scale not given |url = http://www.michiganhighways.org/etc/campusmartiusexhibit2.pdf |format = PDF |access-date = May 4, 2015 }} and US 12 was shortened by four city blocks the next year to end along Michigan Avenue at Griswold Street.{{cite MDOT map |year = 2001 |inset = Downtown Detroit }}{{cite MDOT map |year = 2002 |inset = Downtown Detroit }} This would be shortened again in 2005 to Michigan and Cass avenues.{{cite MDOT map |year = 2005 |inset = Downtown Detroit }}{{cite MDOT map |year= 2006 |inset= Downtown Detroit}}

In April 2017, MDOT announced the reconstruction of US 12 east of Ypsilanti, which would reduce the route from a boulevard to a singular road along the existing eastbound lanes. This project would also eliminate an interchange with Wiard Road and allow the adjacent American Center for Mobility to use the westbound lanes as part of a facility to test automated vehicles. The project was projected to be completed that November.{{cite press release |first = Rob |last = Morosi |url = http://www.michigan.gov/mdot/0,4616,7-151-9620_11057-410097--RSS,00.html |title = US 12 (Michigan Avenue) Project in Ypsilanti Township Scheduled to Begin in Early May |date = April 24, 2017 |publisher = Michigan Department of Transportation |access-date = November 17, 2017 }}{{cite web |first = Kelby |last = Wallace |date = n.d. |url = http://www.michigan.gov/mdot/0,4616,7-151-9621_11058-392218--,00.html |title = US 12 in Ypsilanti (Proposed Changes) |publisher = Michigan Department of Transportation |access-date = November 17, 2017 }}

Memorial highway and byway names

File:Iron Brigade Memorial Highway Sign.JPG

The roads that have carried US 12 in Michigan have been given a number of memorial highway names. In 1922, after the publication of Main Street by Sinclair Lewis, that street name took on a pejorative connotation. The newspaper in Jackson advocated that the main road from Detroit to Chicago which formed the main street through many communities in southern Michigan should be given a new name. It was already labeled the Michigan–Detroit–Chicago Highway on travel maps of the time, so the paper suggested that the roadway should be renamed to create the longest street in the country. Both Chicago and Detroit had streets named Michigan Avenue, so that is what the newspaper suggested for a new name. Albion was the first community to change the name of its street followed by Jackson and Marshall in 1924, Battle Creek in 1928, and Kalamazoo in 1929.

In 1952, US 12 was dedicated to the 32nd Infantry Division. The division used a red arrow as its insignia to symbolize how they pierced the German Hindenburg Line during World War I and Japanese defenses during World War II. The soldiers who composed the division were drawn from the Michigan and Wisconsin national guards. After other proposals failed, US 12 was named the Red Arrow Highway on August 30, 1952, and dedicated on March 22, 1953. Jurisdiction of most of the roadways that composed US 12 at that time has passed to local governments as I-94 was built, but the highway still bears that name in Berrien{{harvp|Barnett|2004|p=183}}. and Van Buren counties.{{cite map |author = Van Buren County Road Commission |year = 2011 |title = Van Buren County General Road Map |url = https://www.vbco.org/downloads/050361_vbc.pdf |edition = 2011 |scale = Scale not given |location = Lawrence, Michigan |publisher = Van Buren County Road Commission |section = G10 |access-date = November 17, 2017 }}

Count Casimir Pulaski was a Polish-born noble and soldier who fought on the side of the Americans during the Revolutionary War. He was appointed a brigadier general on the recommendations of George Washington and later became known as the "Father of the American Cavalry". He was severely wounded during the siege of Savannah and died while being treated on the brigantine Wasp. The route of US 112 was designated the Pulaski Memorial Highway by Public Act 11 of 1953 and formally dedicated in Detroit on October 4, 1953. The segment of what is now US 12 in Berrien County still bears this name.{{harvp|Barnett|2004|p=179}}.

US 12 has also been designated as the Iron Brigade Memorial Highway, a designation which it also has in Indiana,{{cite web |author = Indiana Department of Transportation |date = n.d. |url = http://www.in.gov/indot/3005.htm |title = Memorial Highways and Bridges |publisher = Indiana Department of Transportation |access-date = June 18, 2010 |author-link = Indiana Department of Transportation |archive-date = December 15, 2010 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20101215222524/http://www.in.gov/indot/3005.htm |url-status = dead }} Illinois,{{cite web |url = http://www.ilga.gov/legislation/fulltext.asp?DocName=&SessionId=3&GA=93&DocTypeId=HR&DocNum=688&GAID=3&LegID=12641&SpecSess=&Session= |title = HR 0688 |author = Illinois General Assembly |date = May 30, 2004 |publisher = State of Illinois |access-date = June 19, 2010 |author-link = Illinois General Assembly }} and Wisconsin.{{cite web |author = Wisconsin Department of Transportation |url = http://www.dot.wisconsin.gov/travel/road/commemorative.htm |title = Commemorative Highways and Bridges |publisher = Wisconsin Department of Transportation |date = June 4, 2010 |access-date = June 18, 2010 |author-link = Wisconsin Department of Transportation |archive-date = July 9, 2012 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20120709024409/http://www.dot.wisconsin.gov/travel/road/commemorative.htm |url-status = dead }} The name honors the 24th Michigan Infantry Regiment, part of the Iron Brigade from the American Civil War. The regiment lost more troops than any other on the Union side during the war and provided the military escort for Abraham Lincoln's funeral in Springfield, Illinois. The unit traveled along the Chicago Road to join the war effort. The highway was dedicated in twin ceremonies in New Buffalo on October 9, 1994, and in Detroit on November 11, 1995, to the Iron Brigade.{{harvp|Barnett|2004|p=113}}.

In 1986, Michigan Department of Transportation (MDOT) consulted with its counterparts in Wisconsin (WisDOT), Minnesota (MnDOT) and Ontario (Ministry of Transportation of Ontario, MTO) about the formation of a circle tour around Lake Superior.{{cite news |last = Davis |first = R. Matt |title = Signs to Mark Lake Circle Tour |work = The Daily Mining Gazette |location = Houghton, Michigan |date = May 1, 1986 |page = 16 |oclc = 9940134 }} The LMCT was signed on maps by 1988.{{cite MDOT map |year = 1988 |at = Map Symbols }} In May 2001, the section of US 12 through Saline was designated a Michigan Historic Heritage Route. The segment through Clinton was given the same status in October 2002. On June 9, 2004, the full length of US 12 was dedicated as the US 12 Heritage Trail.{{harvp|Barnett|2004|p=288}}. In December 2014, this became a Pure Michigan Byway when Governor Rick Snyder signed legislation renaming the Michigan Heritage Route System to the Pure Michigan Byway System.{{cite press release |first1 = Sara |last1 = Wurfel |first2 = Dave |last2 = Murray |name-list-style = amp |url = http://www.michigan.gov/snyder/0,4668,7-277-57577-344557--,00.html |title = Gov. Rick Snyder Signs Bills Focused on Creating Good Government Practices: Also Signs Memorial Highway, 'Pure Michigan Byways' Bills |date = December 31, 2014 |publisher = Office of the Governor |access-date = January 1, 2015 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150103071754/http://www.michigan.gov/snyder/0,4668,7-277-57577-344557--,00.html |archive-date = January 3, 2015 }}

Major intersections

{{MIinttop|exit|length_ref={{cite MDOT PRFA |link = yes |access-date = August 11, 2013 }}}}

{{MIint|exit

|county=Berrien

|cspan=5

|location=New Buffalo Township

|lspan=2

|mile=0.000

|espan=4

|road={{jct|state=IN|US|12|Tour|LMCT|dir1=west|dir2=west|city1=Michigan City}}

|notes=Indiana state line}}

{{MIint

|type=concur

|mile=5.758

|mile2=5.868

|road={{jct|state=MI|I|94|Tour|LMCT|city1=Detroit|location2=Chicago}}

|notes= Eastern end of LMCT concurrency; exit 4 on I-94}}

{{MIint

|location=Bertrand Township

|lspan=2

|mile=26.260

|mile2=26.304

|road={{jct|state=MI|US|31|name1=St. Joseph Valley Parkway|location1=South Bend|city2=Holland}}

|notes=Exit 3 on US 31 }}

{{MIint

|mile=27.213

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|139|dir1=north|name1=Chicago Road}}

|notes= Former Bus. US 12; western end of Niles Bypass; southern terminus of M-139

}}

{{MIint|exit

|location=Niles Township

|mile=29.85

|exit=—

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|51|city1=Niles|location2=South Bend}}

|notes= Former interchange, converted to at-grade intersection in 2024

}}

{{MIint|exit

|county=Cass

|cspan=5

|location=Milton Township

|ctdab=Cass

|mile=31.413

|exit=—

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|60|name1=Detroit Road|dir1=east|city1=Three Rivers}}
East Main Street

|notes=Interchange; US 12 departs via exit ramps, M-60 continues easterly past eastern end of Niles Bypass as divided highway; western terminus of M-60

}}

{{MIint|exit

|location=Edwardsburg

|mile=39.901

|espan=18

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|62|city1=Cassopolis}}

|notes=

}}

{{MIint

|location=Mason Township

|ctdab=Cass

|mile=46.995

|road=Old M-205

|notes=Formerly M-205

}}

{{MIint

|location_special=MasonPorter township line

|mile=50.994

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|217|name1=Michiana Parkway|dir1=south|location1=Elkhart}}

|notes=Northern terminus of M-217

}}

{{MIint

|location=Porter Township

|ctdab=Cass

|mile=55.473

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|40|dir1=north|city1=Marcellus}}

|notes=Southern terminus of M-40

}}

{{MIint

|county=St. Joseph

|cspan=4

|location=Mottville

|mile=57.857

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|103|dir1=south|location1=Elkhart}}

|notes=Northern terminus of M-103

}}

{{MIint

|location=White Pigeon

|mile=62.742

|road={{jct|state=MI|US|131|city1=Kalamazoo|location2=Middlebury}}

|notes=

}}

{{MIint

|location=Sturgis

|lspan=2

|mile=74.909

|type=concur

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|66|name1=Centerville Road|dir1=south|location1=Lagrange}}

|notes=Western end of M-66 concurrency; to Indiana Toll Road

}}

{{MIint

|mile=75.419

|type=concur

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|66|name1=Nottawa Street|dir1=north|city1=Battle Creek}}

|notes=Eastern end of M-66 concurrency

}}

{{MIint

|county=Branch

|cspan=3

|location=Coldwater Township

|ctdab=Branch

|mile=98.516

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|86|name1=Colon Road|dir1=west|city1=Three Rivers}}

|notes=Eastern terminus of M-86

}}

{{MIint

|location=Coldwater

|lspan=2

|mile=100.759

|type=concur

|road={{jct|state=MI|BL|69|dab1=Coldwater|dir1=south}}

|notes=Western end of BL I-69 concurrency

}}

{{MIint

|mile=102.203

|mile2=102.227

|type=concur

|road={{jct|state=MI|I|69|location1=Ft. Wayne|city2=Lansing}}
{{jct|state=MI|BL|69|dab1=Coldwater|dir1=south}}

|notes=Eastern end of concurrency BL I-69; exit 13 on I-69

}}

{{MIint

|county=Hillsdale

|cspan=4

|location=Allen

|mile=113.064

|type=concur

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|49|name1=Allen Road|dir1=north|city1=Litchfield}}

|notes=Western end of M-49 concurrency

}}

{{MIint

|location=Allen Township

|ctdab=Hillsdale

|mile=113.589

|type=concur

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|49|name1=Edon Road|dir1=south|city1=Reading}}

|notes=Eastern end of M-49 concurrency

}}

{{MIint

|lspan=2

|location=Jonesville

|mile=118.539

|type=concur

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|99|name1=Carleton Road|dir1=south|city1=Hillsdale}}

|notes=Western end of M-99 concurrency

}}

{{MIint

|mile=118.879

|type=concur

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|99|name1=Homer Road|dir1=north|city1=Albion}}

|notes=Eastern end of M-99 concurrency

}}

{{MIint

|county=Lenawee

|cspan=3

|location=Woodstock Township

|mile=136.114

|road={{jct|state=MI|US|127|US|223|name1=Meridian Road|to2=y|city1=Jackson|city2=Hudson}}

|notes=

}}

{{MIint

|location=Cambridge Township

|lspan=2

|mile=143.423

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|50|city1=Jackson|city2=Monroe}}

|notes=

}}

{{MIint

|mile=147.669

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|124|name1=Wamplers Lake Road|location1=W.J. Hayes State Park|dir1=west}}

|notes=Eastern terminus of M-124}}

{{jctco|state=MI|county_special=LenaweeWashtenaw county line}}

{{MIint|exit

|county=Lenawee

|location=Franklin Township

|ctdab=Lenawee

|mile=154.540

|espan=2

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|52|city1=Chelsea|city2=Adrian}}

|notes=

}}

{{MIint

|county=Washtenaw

|cspan=7

|location=Pittsfield Township

|mile=174.258

|mile2=174.278

|road={{jct|state=MI|US|23|city1=Ann Arbor|location2=Toledo}}

|notes=Exit 34 on US 23

}}

{{MIint|exit

|location=Ypsilanti Township

|mile=176.400

|mile2=176.419

|exit=181

|type=concur

|road={{jct|state=MI|I|94|dir1=west|location1=Chicago}}

|notes=Western end of I-94 concurrency

}}

{{MIint|exit

|location=Ypsilanti

|mile=178.211

|exit=183

|road={{jct|state=MI|US-Bus|12|dab1=Ypsilanti|name1=Huron Street|dir1=east|city1=Ypsilanti}}

|notes=

}}

{{MIint|exit

|location=Ypsilanti Township

|lspan=4

|mile=181.332

|exit=185

|type=concur

|road={{jct|state=MI|I|94|dir1=east|city1=Detroit}}

|notes=Eastern end of I-94 concurrency; eastbound exit and westbound entrance

}}

{{MIint|exit

|mile=182.150

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|17|dir1=west|city1=Ypsilanti}}

|notes=Eastern terminus of M-17; former westbound exit and eastbound entrance, replaced 2022 by Michigan left{{cite web | url=https://www.wcroads.org/wcrc-project/us-12-improvements/ | title=US-12 Improvements | publisher=Washtenaw County Road Commission | accessdate=May 14, 2022}}

}}

{{MIint|exit

|mile=182.527

|road=Willow Run Airport – Plant Truck Access

|notes=Former Y-interchange with Wiard Road; replaced 2017–2018 by signalized intersection

}}

{{MIint|exit

|mile=183.323

|road=Willow Run Airport – Plant Traffic

|type=former

|notes=Former Y-interchange

}}

{{MIint|exit

|county_special=WashtenawWayne county line

|location_special=YpsilantiVan Buren township line

|mile=183.761

|exit=—

|type=incomplete

|road=Ecorse Road –Willow Run Airport East and North Access

|notes=Eastbound exit and westbound entrance

}}

{{MIint|exit

|county=Wayne

|cspan=11

|location=Van Buren Township

|mile=184.597

|exit=—

|road={{jct|state=MI|US-Bus|12|dab1=Ypsilanti|name1=Michigan Avenue|dir1=west}}

|notes=Channelized intersection, formerly a westbound exit and eastbound entrance

}}

{{MIint|exit

|location=Canton Township

|mile=189.537

|mile2=189.564

|exit=—

|road={{jct|state=MI|I|275|city1=Flint|location2=Toledo}}

|notes=Exit 22 on I-275

}}

{{MIint|exit

|location=Dearborn

|lspan=6

|mile=198.478

|mile2=198.487

|exit=—

|road={{jct|state=MI|US|24|name1=Telegraph Road}}

|notes=Interchange

}}

{{jctplace|exit

|mile=200.353

|place=Western end of expressway

}}

{{MIint|exit

|mile=201.506

|mile2=201.512

|exit=—

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|39|name1=Southfield Freeway}}

|notes=Exit 6 on M-39

}}

{{MIint|exit

|mile=202.605

|exit=—

|road=Greenfield Road

|notes=Interchange}}

{{jctplace|exit

|mile=202.846

|place=Eastern end of expressway

}}

{{MIint|exit

|mile=204.481

|mile2=204.497

|espan=4

|road={{jct|state=MI|I|94|name1=Edsel Ford Freeway}}

|notes= Exit 210 on I-94

}}

{{MIint

|location=Detroit

|lspan=3

|mile=204.718

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|153|name1=Ford Road|dir1=west}}

|notes=Eastern terminus of M-153

}}

{{MIint

|mile=208.380

|mile2=208.413

|road={{jct|state=MI|I|75|name1=Fisher Freeway}}

|notes= Exit 47 on I-75

}}

{{MIint

|mile=210.077

|road=Cass Avenue

|notes=Eastern terminus of US 12; Michigan Avenue continues to Woodward Avenue

}}

{{jctbtm|exit|keys=concur,incomplete,former}}

Related routes

=Kalamazoo alternate route=

{{infobox road small

|state=MI

|type=US 1948-Alt

|route=12

|location=KalamazooComstock

|formed=1931

|decommissioned=1954

|length_mi=3.767

|length_ref=

}}

US Highway 12A (US 12A) was an alternate route of US 12 in the Kalamazoo area. The highway followed Michigan Avenue from Kalamazoo eastward along the north side of the Kalamazoo River to Comstock, where it terminated at an intersection with M-96. The highway was formed in 1931 when US 12 was rerouted in the area. In 1954, the designation was decommissioned when M-96 was extended to Kalamazoo on the south side of the Kalamazoo River along King Highway.

Major intersections

{{MIinttop|former=yes|county=Kalamazoo|length_ref=}}

{{MIint

|location=Kalamazoo

|lspan=2

|mile=0.000

|type=concur

|road={{jct|state=MI|US 1948|12|M 1948|43|dir2=west|nolink1=yes|city1=Kalamazoo}}

|notes=Western end of M-43 concurrency

}}

{{MIint

|mile=0.196

|type=concur

|road={{jct|state=MI|M 1948|43|dir1=east|city1=Lansing}}

|notes=Eastern end of M-43 concurrency

}}

{{MIint

|location=Comstock

|mile= 3.767

|road={{jct|state=MI|M 1948|96|dir1=east|city1=Battle Creek}}

|notes=

}}

{{jctbtm|keys=concur}}

=Niles business loop=

{{infobox road small

|header_type=former

|state=MI

|route=112

|type=US 1948-Bus

|location=Niles

|length_mi=5.505

|length_ref=

|formed=1956

|deleted=January 1962

}}

{{infobox road small

|header_type=former

|state=MI

|route=12

|type=US-Bus

|location=Niles

|length_mi=5.327

|length_ref=

|formed=January 1962

|deleted=March 5, 2010{{cite web |url = http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/greatlakesroads/message/15942 |archive-url = https://archive.today/20120715141303/http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/greatlakesroads/message/15942 |url-status = dead |archive-date = July 15, 2012 |title = Contract Number 2010-0086 |publisher = Michigan Department of Transportation |via = Yahoo! Groups: Great Lakes Roads |author = Michigan Department of Transportation |date = May 7, 2010 |access-date = May 7, 2010 |url-access = registration }}

}}

Business US Highway 12 (Bus. US 12) was a business route running in Niles. The western terminus was at the corner of West Chicago Road and US 12 (Pulaski Highway) east of the US 12/US 31 interchange. From there, the business loop followed Chicago Road northeasterly through residential areas on the west side of town. Bus. US 12 turned north along Lincoln Avenue and then east on Main Street, crossing the St. Joseph River. The loop intersected the southern end of M-139 at Front Street one block east of the river in downtown Niles. Four blocks further east, Bus. US 12 met M-51. The two highways merged along Main Street and then turned south along 11th Street at an intersection that also marks the western terminus of Bus. M-60 (Oak Street). Bus. US 12/M-51 continued south along 11th Street to the corner of US 12 (Pulaski Highway) and M-51 (South 11th Street) where the business loop terminated.{{cite MDOT map |year = 2010T |inset = Niles }}{{google maps |url = https://www.google.com/maps/dir/41.8051863,-86.2982821/41.8011363,-86.2483221/@41.8149374,-86.3101158,15251m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m14!4m13!1m10!3m4!1m2!1d-86.2618261!2d41.829599!3s0x88112ace06994cb5:0x35ab1071221a952d!3m4!1m2!1d-86.2553494!2d41.8299191!3s0x8816d532bc077793:0x1f8d6afb2d940325!1m0!3e0 |title = Overview Map of Former Bus. US 12 in Niles |access-date = May 5, 2015 |link = no }}

The trunkline was first designated in 1956 as a business route of US 112. At that time, US 112 and M-60 were transferred to a bypass south of Niles. When US 112 was decommissioned in January 1962, Bus. US 112 was redesignated Bus. US 12 to match the new US 12 designation. In 1986, US 33 was truncated in Michigan to end at US 12.{{AASHTO minutes |year = 1986S |link = yes }} Bus. US 12 was rerouted in Niles to replace US 33 through town;{{cite MDOT map |year = 1986 |section = N7 }} Bus. US 31 was added a year later when the signage was updated in the area.{{cite MDOT map |year = 1987 |section = N7 }}{{cite MDOT map |year = 1988 |section = N7 }} In 1998, US 33 was removed from Michigan completely. At this time, M-51 was extended over former US 33 and replaced part of the Bus. US 31 designation in Niles.{{cite news |title = Portion of US 33 Is Now Indiana 933: Name Changes Along Lincoln Way, North to State Line |url = https://www.newspapers.com/clip/29885094/portion_of_us_33_is_now_indiana_933/ |work = South Bend Tribune |date = April 18, 1998 |page = A6 |access-date = March 24, 2019 |oclc = 8793233 |via = Newspapers.com }} On March 5, 2010, the segment of Bus. US 12 between Bus. US 31 and M-51 was turned over to local control. In April 2010 the Bus. US 12 designation was retired when an extended M-139 replaced it from the local control section southwestward prior to maps and signage being changed.{{cite news |url = https://www.newspapers.com/clip/29885189/forum_set_for_bridge_project/ |title = Forum Set for Bridge Project |work = The Herald-Palladium |location = St. Joseph, Michigan |date = April 27, 2010 |pages = A3, [https://www.newspapers.com/clip/29885241/forum_set_for_bridge_projet_part_2/ A4] |access-date = March 24, 2019 |via = Newspapers.com }} The concurrent segment along M-51 became M-51 only.{{cite MDOT map |year = 2011T |inset = Niles }}

Major intersections

{{MIinttop|county=St. Joseph|former=yes|length_ref=}}

{{MIint

|location=Bertrand Township

|mile=0.000

|road={{jct|state=MI|US|12|nolink1=yes|city1=New Buffalo|city2=Coldwater}}

|notes=}}

{{MIint

|location=Niles

|lspan=3

|mile=2.900

|road={{jct|state=MI|M 1973|139|dir1=north}}

|notes=Southern terminus of M-139}}

{{MIint

|mile=3.145

|type=concur

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|51|dir1=north|city1=Dowagiac}}

|notes=Northern end of M-51 concurrency}}

{{MIint

|mile=3.549

|road={{jct|state=MI|M-Bus|60|dir1=east}}

|notes=Western terminus of Bus. M-60}}

{{MIint

|location=Niles Township

|mile= 5.327

|type=concur

|road={{jct|state=MI|US|12|nolink1=yes|city1=New Buffalo|city2=Coldwater}}
{{jct|state=MI|M|51|dir1=south|location1=South Bend}}

|notes=Southern end of M-52 concurrency; interchange on US 12}}

{{jctbtm|keys=concur}}

=Ypsilanti business loop=

{{infobox road small

|state=MI

|type=US 1948-Byp

|route=112

|length_mi=8.023

|length_ref=

|location=Ypsilanti

|formed={{circa|1942}}.

|decommissioned=1956

}}

{{infobox road small

|state=MI

|type=US 1948-Bus

|route=112

|length_mi=8.020

|length_ref=

|location=Ypsilanti

|formed=1956

|decommissioned=January 1962

}}

{{infobox road small

|state=MI

|type=US-Bus

|route=12

|length_mi=8.020

|length_ref=

|location=Ypsilanti

|formed=January 1962

}}

Business US Highway 12 (Bus. US 12) is a business route running in Ypsilanti. The loop starts at exit 183 on I-94/US 12 south of downtown Ypsilanti and runs northward along the one-way pairing of Huron Street (northbound) and Hamilton Street (southbound). At the intersection with Michigan Avenue in downtown, the two directions reunite and turn eastward, merging onto M-17 in the process. Michigan Avenue crosses the Huron River and continues due east until an intersection at Prospect Street where it turns northeasterly. M-17 separates from Bus. US 12 at Ecorse Road, and Michigan Avenue continues through commercial areas, exiting the city of Ypsilanti. Once Bus. US 12 crosses from Washtenaw County into Wayne County, it expands into a boulevard with Michigan left turns. Just north of the Willow Run industrial complex, Bus. US 12 terminates where US 12 merges onto Michigan Avenue.{{cite MDOT map |year = 2014T |inset = Ann Arbor }}{{google maps |url = https://www.google.com/maps/dir/42.2292513,-83.6167143/42.258075,-83.5335966/@42.243767,-83.6491565,30296m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m9!4m8!1m5!3m4!1m2!1d-83.5782553!2d42.2466619!3s0x883b57cefb768e23:0xfa1f14be301f4854!1m0!3e0 |title = Overview Map of Bus. US 12 in Ypsilanti |access-date = May 5, 2015 |link = no }}

File:U.S Route 12 business loop Ypsilanti Michigan.JPG

In 1942 or 1943, Ypsilanti was bypassed by a Byp. US 112. US 112 continued to run along its routing in Ypsilanti.{{cite MDOT map |date = 1942-06-01 |section = M12 }}{{cite MDOT map |date = 1943-06-01 |section = M12 }} The first business loop in Ypsilanti was created in 1956 when US 112 was realigned to bypass downtown along the former Byp. US 112. The former route through downtown was then numbered Bus. US 112. The current designation was changed to Bus. US 12 in 1962 when US 12 replaced US 112.

{{Clear}}

Major intersections

{{MIinttop|length_ref=}}

{{MIint

|county=Washtenaw

|cspan=3

|location=Ypsilanti

|lspan=3

|mile=0.000

|road={{jct|state=MI|I|94|US|12|nolink2=yes|location1=Chicago|city2=Detroit}}

|notes=Exit 183 on I-94/US 12}}

{{MIint

|mile=1.104

|type=concur

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|17|dir1=west}}

|notes=Western end of M-17 concurrency}}

{{MIint

|mile=1.774

|type=concur

|road={{jct|state=MI|M|17|dir1=east}}

|notes=Eastern end of M-17 concurrency}}

{{MIint

|county=Wayne

|location=Van Buren Township

|mile= 8.020

|road={{jct|state=MI|US|12|nolink1=yes|city1=Coldwater|city2=Detroit}}

|notes=}}

{{jctbtm|keys=concur}}

{{Clear}}

=Suffixed route=

{{infobox road small

|header_type=former

|state=MI

|type=US 1926

|route=112S

|location=Union, MI to Elkhart, IN

|length_mi=8.68

|length_ref={{cite book |author = Indiana Department of Transportation |url = http://www.in.gov/indot/files/StateWide_2004.pdf |title = Reference Post Book |publisher = Indiana Department of Transportation |at = S-19 |year = 2004 |location = Indianapolis |access-date = May 20, 2010 |archive-date = June 15, 2011 |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20110615200707/http://www.in.gov/indot/files/StateWide_2004.pdf |url-status = dead }}

|formed=1933

|deleted=1935

}}

US Highway 112S (US 112S) was a spur route of US 112 in the mid-1930s. Originally, US 112 turned southward at Union and ran to US 20 in Elkhart, Indiana. In 1933, this section of highway was renumbered US 112S, before US 112 was relocated to go through Michigan's southwesternmost counties in 1935. At the same time, US 112S was renumbered M-205, a designation it would hold until it was transferred to local control on October 10, 2002,{{cite news |title = Michiana Parkway Will Benefit Region |url = https://www.newspapers.com/clip/29885411/michigan_parkway_will_benefit_region/ |work = South Bend Tribune |date = October 6, 2002 |access-date = March 24, 2019 |page = B8 |oclc = 8793233 |via = Newspapers.com }} decommissioning the trunkline.{{cite MDOT map |year = 2002 |section = N8 }}{{cite MDOT map |year = 2003 |section = N8 }}

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See also

  • {{Portal-inline|Michigan Highways}}

Notes

{{reflist|group=lower-alpha}}

References

{{reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book |title = Michigan's US 12 Heritage Trail: America's Second Federal Highway |first2 = Susan |last2 = Kosky |first1 = Gladys |last1 = Saborio |name-list-style = amp |year = 2015 |location = Traverse City, Michigan |publisher = Arbutus Press |isbn = 978-1933926551 |oclc = 905667950 }}