Proposed in 1903 by
Mayor Samuel H. Ashbridge as part of the
City Beautiful movement, the 300-foot-wide thoroughfare originally extended from Broad Street to the
Torresdale neighborhood, and was first named Torresdale Boulevard, then Northeast Boulevard in 1914 when the road was completed. On its extension to
Pennypack Creek in 1918, it was finally renamed to Roosevelt Boulevard, in honor of
Theodore Roosevelt. The road was designated
U.S. 1 in 1926, and was extended through
Philadelphia to neighboring
Bucks County in the post-World War II years. The Roosevelt Expressway was built to connect the boulevard with the nearby Schuylkill Expressway (
I-76). In 1998 a series of gang-related
criminal rock throwing attacks on cars driving near Ridge Avenue, Henry Avenue and Fox Street "terrorized" Philadelphia drivers. In 2000, by act of the state legislature, the Boulevard was designated the "Police Officer Daniel Faulkner Memorial Highway" in memory of
Daniel Faulkner, a
Philadelphia police officer whom
Mumia Abu-Jamal was convicted of having slain in the line of duty in 1981. The designation is alongside the roadway's official name of Roosevelt Boulevard. There have been several plans to change the boulevard into an expressway-like artery, like the Roosevelt Expressway itself, and construct a subway underneath the boulevard, but no such plans have been acted upon. Today, Roosevelt Boulevard is among the most congested arteries in the country. According to a 2001 report by
State Farm Insurance, the second- and third-worst intersections in the country are both found on the Boulevard, at Red Lion Road and Grant Avenue, respectively, only a mile apart from each other.
Red light cameras have been installed at these intersections, as well as Cottman Avenue, and have been operational since June 1, 2005. New cameras installed at the intersections with 9th Street, Mascher Street, Levick Street, Rhawn Street, Welsh Road, and Southampton Road became operational in summer 2007. Additional plans include adding cameras at Devereaux Avenue and Tyson Avenue. In 2016, the junction of the boulevard's outer lanes with Holme Avenue and Solly Avenue was rebuilt, converting the
roundabout (known locally as the Pennypack Circle) into an at-grade intersection. Construction began in 2014 with an estimated cost of $15.5 million (equivalent to $ in ). On June 1, 2020,
speed cameras were activated along Roosevelt Boulevard, with a 60-day warning period before fines are issued. ==Major intersections==