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Revision as of 18:09, 25 July 2006 by NE2 (talk | contribs) (Finished the history with the extension to Delaware.)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)U.S. Route 301 is a spur of U.S. Route 1. It currently runs 1,099 miles (1,769 km) from Glasgow, Delaware at U.S. Route 40 to Sarasota, Florida. It passes through the states of Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. It goes through the cities of Annapolis, Maryland; Richmond, Virginia; Petersburg, Virginia; Rocky Mount, North Carolina; Fayetteville, North Carolina; Florence, South Carolina; Statesboro, Georgia; Ocala, Florida; Zephyrhills, Florida; Tampa, Florida; Brandon, Florida; and Sarasota, Florida.
US 301 has a number of concurrencies along its route. It is multiplexed with U.S. Route 50 from Bowie, Maryland to Queenstown, Maryland, including the Chesapeake Bay Bridge; with secret Interstate 595 from Bowie, Maryland to Annapolis, Maryland; and Maryland Route 5 in Waldorf, Maryland among others.
US 301 formerly had its terminus in Baltimore, Maryland. It followed the alignment of the current Maryland Route 3, portions of the Baltimore Beltway, and Maryland Route 648. Route 301 ended in Southwestern Baltimore on Monroe Street at the intersection with U.S. 1. Route 3 was supplanted north of Millersville by Interstate 97.
Major bridges
U.S. Route 301 crosses the Chesapeake Bay near Annapolis, Maryland on the Chesapeake Bay Bridge. It crosses the Potomac River between Maryland and Virginia on the Harry W. Nice Memorial Bridge. It crosses the James River in Richmond, Virginia on the Robert E. Lee Memorial Bridge, and the Appomattox River between Colonial Heights and Petersburg, Virginia on the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Bridge.
States traversed
The highway passes through the following states:
Delaware
Parallel to US 13 and Delaware Route 1 until heading west from Middletown at Delaware Route 299.
Maryland
Concurrent with U.S. Route 50 from Bowie to Queenstown, with secret Interstate 595 from Bowie to Annapolis, and Maryland Route 5 in Waldorf, as described above.
Virginia
After crossing the Potomac River, US 301 intersects with US 17 in Port Royal. South of Fort A.P. Hill Military Reservation in Bowling Green, it moves closer to Interstate 95, until it reaches US 1 in Richmond, where it becomes concurrent with US 1 and parallel to I-95. In Petersburg, US 1 breaks away and follows Interstate 85 instead, making Route 301 the parallel route along I-95 throughout much of the Carolinas.
North Carolina
Closely paralleled by Interstate 95 throughout the state. Concurrencies include US 158 between Garysburg and Weldon, Interstate Business Loop 95 in Fayetteville, Interstate 95 between Exit 10 and Exit 22 in Lumberton, and US 501 between Rowland and Latta (South Carolina).
South Carolina
US 301 follows Interstate 95 until Santee, where it breaks away in a southwesterly direction. Concurrencies include US 501 between Rowland (North Carolina) and Latta, US 76 between Pee Dee and Florence, US 52 between Florence and Effingham, US 15 between Summerton and Santee, I-95/US 15 across Lake Marion, US 601 between Orangeburg and Bamberg, and US 321 in and around Ulmer.
Georgia
In Georgia, US 301 is signed concurrently with various state routes. It uses State Route 4/State Route 15 from Florida to Folkston, State Route 23 from Folkston to Glennville, and State Route 73 from Glennville to South Carolina. Large portions of US 301 in Georgia are concurrent with U.S. Highway 25.
US 301 enters Georgia from Florida concurrent with U.S. Highway 1 and U.S. Highway 23, also designated as State Route 4 and State Route 15, on a bridge over the St. Marys River. In Folkston, State Route 23 and State Route 121 join. US 1, US 23, SR 4, SR 15 and SR 121 split to the northwest at a junction north of Folkston, leaving only US 301 and SR 23 to head north across U.S. Highway 82/State Route 520 at Nahunta to Jesup.
At Jesup, US 301 crosses U.S. Highway 341/State Route 27, where U.S. Highway 25 turns from US 341 onto US 301, and then merges with U.S. Highway 84/State Route 38. The combined routes (US 25, US 84, US 301, SR 23 and SR 38) cross the Altamaha River to the junction with State Route 57 in Ludowici. There US 84 and SR 38 continue northeast while US 25, US 301 and SR 23 turn northwest with SR 57.
SR 23 and SR 57 split off to the northwest at Glennville. State Route 73 begins there, taking US 25 and US 301 north from Glenville across U.S. Highway 280/State Route 30 at Claxton and Interstate 16/State Route 404 to Statesboro.
US 25 and US 301 meet U.S. Highway 80/State Route 26 and State Route 67 in Statesboro. SR 67 joins south of the US 80 crossing and then turns west with US 80, as does US 25; US 25 and SR 67 split from US 80 and SR 26 about seven miles to the west. US 301 and SR 73 continue north from Statesboro through Sylvania to the Savannah River and the border with South Carolina.
Florida
Concurrencies include US 1/23 between Folkston(Georgia) and Callahan, US 441 between Sparr and Bellview, US 27 between Ocala and Bellview, US 98 between Moss Town and Clinton Heights(near Dade City), and US 41 between Palmetto and South Bradenton.
Speed trap alley
Since Route 301 is a popular short cut between Northeastern Florida and the Gulf Coast region, a number of towns along the road have been notorious speed traps. Many have accused the police in Waldo, Starke, Lawtey, and others of giving tickets simply to raise money. The American Automobile Association has strongly advised motorists to avoid this stretch of the road. A Starke Bypass has been proposed for construction by the Florida Department of Transportation for the year 2010, however, some have even gone as far as suggesting that 301 should be upgraded into a limited-access highway between Ocala and north of Jacksonville, with a possible spur to Gainesville.
History
The present US 301 was established in 1932 as a replacement of the piece of U.S. Route 17-1 north of Wilson, North Carolina and the whole of U.S. Route 217. Thus US 301 initially ran from U.S. Route 17 (now U.S. Route 76) at Pee Dee, South Carolina northeast through Dillon, South Carolina, Pembroke, North Carolina, Fayetteville, North Carolina, Dunn, North Carolina, Smithfield, North Carolina, Wilson, North Carolina, Rocky Mount, North Carolina, and Emporia, Virginia, ending at U.S. Route 1 in Petersburg, Virginia. This entire route is now paralleled by Interstate 95.
In 1935, US 301 was extended southwest to U.S. Route 15 at Summerton, South Carolina. This extension took it west on U.S. Route 76 (formerly U.S. Route 17) to Florence, South Carolina and south on U.S. Route 52 (also formerly US 17) to Effingham, South Carolina. There it split to the southwest, running along what had been S.C. Route 4 via Manning, South Carolina to Summerton. This again runs parallel to Interstate 95.
The next extension was to the north in late 1940, coinciding with the opening of the Potomac River Bridge. US 301 was extended north along U.S. Route 1 from Petersburg, Virginia to Richmond, Virginia, then north on Route 2 to Bowling Green, Virginia, northeast on Route 207 to the junction with Route 3, and then on a new alignment to the bridge. In Maryland it continued along the new alignment off the bridge to Newburg, Maryland, and then replaced Maryland Route 3 all the way to U.S. Route 1 in Baltimore, Maryland.
In the late 1940s, US 301 was extended again, south all the way to Tampa, Florida. In South Carolina it ran along U.S. Route 15 southwest to Santee, South Carolina and replaced S.C. Route 4 west to Orangeburg, South Carolina. From Orangeburg, US 301 ran southwest with U.S. Route 601 to Bamberg, South Carolina, replaced S.C. Route 33 to Ulmer, South Carolina, replaced S.C. Route 508 to Allendale, South Carolina, and replaced S.C. Route 73 to the Georgia state line. In Georgia, US 301 was marked along State Route 73 to Glennville, Georgia, State Route 23 to Folkston, Georgia, and State Route 4 to the border with Florida, numbers that it still has today. In Florida it ran along State Road 15 to Callahan, Florida, State Road 200 to Ocala, Florida, State Road 25/State Road 500 to Belleview, Florida, State Road 35 to Dade City, Florida, State Road 39 to Zephyrhills, Florida, and State Road 41 to Tampa, Florida. As with Georgia, these State Road numbers still exist.
The final extension to the south was made in the early 1950s. US 301 was realigned to turn east on U.S. Route 92/State Road 600 in northern Tampa and south on State Road 43; SR 43 was later extended north to meet State Road 41 at Thonotosassa, Florida. This was done at the same time as U.S. Route 541 was eliminated and U.S. Route 41 was moved onto the former US 541 south of Tampa; US 301 ran along what had been US 41. This extension took US 301 south to Palmetto, Florida along SR 43/former US 41, south on State Road 45/US 41 over the Manatee River into Bradenton, Florida (replaced 1957 by a new bridge to the east on State Road 55), and south on State Road 683 to end at SR 45/US 41 in Sarasota, Florida.
In 1960, US 301 was extended to its greatest extent, Sarasota, Florida to Farnhurst, Delaware. The part from near Bowie, Maryland north to Baltimore, Maryland reverted to Maryland Route 3, and US 301 was extended east along U.S. Route 50 from near Bowie over the Chesapeake Bay Bridge to Queenstown, Maryland. There it split to the northeast, replacing Maryland Route 71 to the Delaware state line. In Delaware, it continued concurrent with State Route 71 to Middletown, Delaware. There it split into a one-way pair on two two-way roads. US 301 northbound turned east at Middletown along State Route 299, then running north on U.S. Route 13 to its end at Farnhurst, Delaware at Interstate 295 - the Delaware Memorial Bridge approach. Southbound US 301 began at the same place, but only used US 13 to the SR 71 junction near Red Lion, Delaware. From there it followed SR 71 all the way to Maryland, rejoining northbound at Middletown. In the early 1970s, the northbound alignment was modified, continuing north on Middletown with SR 71 across the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal on the Summit Bridge. After crossing the canal it continued north on State Route 896 to Glasgow, Delaware, where it turned east with U.S. Route 40 to its merge with US 13 at State Road, Delaware. In the mid-1980s, both directions were moved to run east from Mount Pleasant, Delaware to U.S. Route 13. Then in 1992, AASHTO approved relocating both directions to the path northbound had followed, joining US 40 at Glasgow. Signage now indicates that US 301 ends there.
See also
References
- U.S. Highways: From US 1 to (US 830), North-South routes - US 1 to US 101
- ^ The Highways of South Carolina, US 301
- Virginia Highways Project, US 301
- MDRoads, Route 3
- State Highway Department of Georgia, System of State Roads, corrected as of April 1, 1939
- Rand McNally & Company, Florida, 1947, distributed by Sinclair
- Historic Roads and Highways of Florida, US 301
- AARoads, U.S. Highway 301 Delaware
Resources
External links
- Endpoints of U.S. highways
- Federal Highway Administration Home Page
- Mile by Mile: U.S. Highway 301 Travel Guide - Georgia/Florida State Line to the City of Ocala
- US 301 @ Florida in Kodachrome
- AAA Speed Trap Billboards