County Route 541 (New Jersey)

County Route 541 (CR 541) is a county highway in the U.S. state of New Jersey. The highway extends 23.8 miles (38.3 km) from US 206 in Shamong to US 130/CR 543 in Burlington.

County Route 541 marker
County Route 541
Map
CR 541 highlighted in red, CR 541 Truck highlighted in blue
Route information
Length23.8 mi[1] (38.3 km)
Major junctions
South end US 206 in Shamong
Major intersections
North end US 130 / CR 543 in Burlington
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNew Jersey
CountiesBurlington
Highway system
CR 540 CR 542

Route description

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View north along CR 541 at Route 206 in Shamong
 
The divided portion of CR 541 in Westampton Township

CR 541 begins at an intersection of US 206 in Shamong, Burlington County, heading northwest on two-lane undivided Stokes Road. The road passes through forested areas before intersecting, entering a mix of farms and homes. The route reaches the intersection of Willow Grove Road (CR 648) before crossing the intersection of Oakshade Road (CR 534). CR 541 continues through wooded areas with a few farm fields before heading into forested areas with a few residences and intersects with Indian Mills Road (CR 620). The route briefly joins with CR 620 as it crosses into Medford and intersects with Tuckerton Road (CR 622), where CR 620 splits from CR 541 by turning northwest on Tuckerton Road. CR 541 eventually forms the border between Medford to the west and Medford Lakes to the east before fully entering Medford Lakes as it continues through forested residential subdivisions to the west of Aetna Lake. After the intersection of Tabernacle Road (CR 532), the route gains a center left-turn lane and borders Medford Lakes to the west and Medford to the east before fully entering Medford again as it passes businesses, with a four-lane stretch near the intersection of Jackson Road. The road narrows to two lanes and passes a few farms before coming into the residential and commercial downtown of Medford, where CR 541 becomes South Main Street and North Main Street. The route crosses the intersection of Route 70, at which point it becomes Medford-Mount Holly Road and passes residential areas as it reaches the intersection of Church Road (CR 616). CR 541 continues through a mix of farmland, woodland, and some homes as it crosses into Lumberton. Here, the road intersects with Fostertown Road (CR 636/CR 612). The route briefly joins with CR 612 and splits from CR 541 by turning east on Bridge Road before coming near a few residential subdivisions as it comes to the intersections of Creek Road (CR 640) and Landing Street (CR 641), with the road name continuing as Main Street.[1][2]

 
View northbound along CR 541 from I-295 in Burlington Township

CR 541 passes near woods and homes before splitting from Main Street by turning west onto the four-lane undivided Mount Holly Bypass, with CR 691 continuing north on Main Street towards Mount Holly. The road turns north and becomes a divided highway as it passes through industrial areas and comes to an intersection of Route 38. After this, the route enters Hainesport and passes more industry before crossing the Conrail Shared Assets Operations' Pemberton Industrial Track railroad line and intersects with Marne Highway (CR 537). The road turns northwest and then northeast through wooded areas and crosses into Mount Holly. After crossing the Rancocas Creek, the route intersects with Rancocas Road (CR 626) and heads north, bordering Westampton to the west and Mount Holly to the east, passing residential neighborhoods and briefly enters Mount Holly. Upon intersecting with High Street (CR 691), CR 541 turns northwest onto Burlington-Mount Holly Road, a four-lane divided highway that has intersections with jughandles. The route fully enters Westampton and crosses the intersection of Woodlane Road (CR 630), where it heads into agricultural areas with some businesses, meeting the intersection of Burrs Road (CR 638). CR 541 comes to an interchange with the New Jersey Turnpike and intersects with Irick Road (CR 637) a short distance later. From this point, the road becomes a six-lane divided highway and crosses into Burlington Township, where it heads into businesses areas, passing the former Burlington Center Mall. The route comes to a cloverleaf interchange with I-295 and narrows back to four lanes, passing more businesses. At the intersection of Sunset Road (CR 634), CR 541 narrows into an undivided road that passes a mix of residences and commercial establishments, becoming Mount Holly Road before intersecting with Rancocas Road (CR 635). At this point, the route turns north onto High Street, a three-lane road with a center left-turn lane that runs through residential areas as it comes into Burlington. After the intersection of Morris Street (CR 632), CR 541 becomes a four-lane undivided road that passes businesses before coming to its northern terminus at the intersection of US 130/CR 543. High Street continues north from here into Downtown Burlington.[1][2]

History

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From Mount Holly to Medford, the road was once maintained by the Mount Holly, Lumberton, and Medford Turnpike, chartered in 1854. The road from Mount Holly to Burlington was once maintained by the Mount Holly and Burlington Turnpike, chartered in 1857.

The Mount Holly Bypass was formerly County Route 541 Alternate while CR 541 ran through the town. The former route of CR 541 through Mount Holly is now Burlington County Route 691.[3]

Major intersections

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The entire route is in Burlington County.

Locationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
Shamong Township0.00.0  US 206 – Trenton, HammontonSouthern terminus
2.94.7  CR 534 (Oakshade Rd)
Medford LakesMedford
municipal line
7.512.1 
 
CR 532 east (Tabernacle Rd)
Western terminus of CR 532
Medford10.516.9  Route 70
Lumberton16.326.2  
 
Route 38 to I-295
Hainesport Township16.827.0  CR 537 (Marne Hwy)
Westampton20.132.3  N.J. TurnpikeExit 5 (New Jersey Turnpike); access northbound CR 541 to the New Jersey Turnpike via Hancock Lane
Burlington Township21.634.8  I-295 – Camden, Del Mem Br, TrentonExit 47 (I-295)
Burlington23.838.3   US 130 / CR 543 – BordentownNorthern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

CR 541 Truck

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County Route 541 Truck
LocationBurlington TownshipBurlington
Length1.4 mi[4] (2.3 km)
 
CR 541 Truck northbound past its southern terminus at Cadillac Road in Burlington Township

County Route 541 Truck (CR 541T) is a bypass of a section of CR 541 near Burlington. The route runs along the Burlington Bypass between Cadillac Road in Burlington Township, north to Jacksonville Road (CR 670) in Burlington. The bypass is maintained by Burlington County and its construction was originally funded by the Burlington County Bridge Commission.[5]

The bypass begins at Cadillac Road, just east of CR 541 and an offramp from CR 541 northbound. The two to three-lane road heads north-northwest between businesses and restaurants. At an apartment complex entrance, a ramp for southbound traffic to connect directly to CR 541 and Sunset Road (CR 634) is present. The road narrows to two lanes where is passes between Burlington Township Middle School and a fire station. Continuing north-northwest on a straight course, CR 541T intersects with Fountain Avenue, crosses into the city limits of Burlington, and ends at a signalized intersection of Jacksonville Road (CR 670). Signage at this intersection indicates that CR 541T continues west along Jacksonville Road (CR 670) to US 130.[6]

CR 541T was constructed on the right-of-way of the former Burlington and Mount Holly Railroad. Construction began on the road in November 1985 and was opened in August 1986. Following completion of the bypass road, trucks were banned on CR 541 in Burlington.[5] The road is maintained by Burlington County.[7]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d NJDOT County Route 541 Straight Line Diagram (PDF) (NJDOT) (Straight line diagram)
  2. ^ a b "overview of County Route 541" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved January 3, 2011.
  3. ^ Steve Alpert. "New Jersey Roads – NJ State Highways – CR 531–544". Retrieved 2008-08-28.[self-published source]
  4. ^ "Route 541 Truck Straight Line Diagram" (PDF). NJDOT. 2019. Retrieved September 7, 2022.
  5. ^ a b Koncos, Jim (August 19, 1986). "County to open 1.6-mile bypass route". Courier-Post. Retrieved September 7, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  6. ^ "Overview of CR 541T" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved September 7, 2022.
  7. ^ Burlington County Map (northern) (Map). Burlington County. 2021. Retrieved September 7, 2022.
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