U.S. RouteĀ 1/9 (USĀ 1/9 or USĀ 1-9) is the 31.0-mile-long (49.9Ā km) concurrency of USĀ 1 and USĀ 9 from their junction in Woodbridge in Middlesex County, New Jersey, north to New York City. The route is a multilane road with some freeway portions that runs through urbanized areas of North Jersey adjacent to New York City. Throughout most of its length in New Jersey, the road runs near the New Jersey Turnpike (InterstateĀ 95 [I-95]). In Fort Lee, USĀ 1/9 merges onto I-95 and crosses the Hudson River on the George Washington Bridge, where the two U.S. Routes split a short distance into New York. USĀ 1/9 intersects several major roads, including I-278 in Linden, RouteĀ 81 in Elizabeth, I-78 and USĀ 22 in Newark, RouteĀ 139 in Jersey City, RouteĀ 3 and RouteĀ 495 in North Bergen, and USĀ 46 in Palisades Park. USĀ 1/9 also serves as the primary access point to Newark Airport. Between Newark and Jersey City, USĀ 1/9 runs along the Pulaski Skyway. Trucks are banned from this section of road and must use Truck USĀ 1/9. The concurrency between USĀ 1 and USĀ 9 is commonly referred to as "1 and 9". Some signage for the concurrency, as well as the truck route, combines the two roads into one shield, separated by a hyphen (1-9) or an ampersand (1&9).
The current alignment of USĀ 1/9 south of Elizabeth was planned as RouteĀ 1 in 1916; this road was extended to the Holland Tunnel in Jersey City in 1922. When the U.S. Highway System was created in 1926, USĀ 1 and USĀ 9 were marked concurrent through northern New Jersey between Rahway on the current alignments of RouteĀ 27 and Truck USĀ 1/9. In 1927, RouteĀ 1 became RouteĀ 25, and RouteĀ 1 and RouteĀ 6 were legislated along the current USĀ 1/9 north of Jersey City. USĀ 1/9 originally went to the Holland Tunnel on RouteĀ 25; after the George Washington Bridge opened, the two routes were realigned to their current routing north of Jersey City. After the Pulaski Skyway opened in 1932, USĀ 1/9 and RouteĀ 25 were routed to use this road, which soon had a truck ban resulting in the creation of RouteĀ 25T (now USĀ 1/9 Truck). South of Newark, USĀ 1/9 was moved from RouteĀ 27 to RouteĀ 25. In 1953, the state highways running concurrent with USĀ 1/9 in New Jersey were removed. In 1964, the approaches to the George Washington Bridge were upgraded into I-95.