North Carolina Highway 70
NC Highway 70 | |
---|---|
Route information | |
Maintained by NCDOT | |
Existed: | 1920's – 1934 |
Major junctions | |
South end: | South Carolina state line at Rowland |
North end: | Virginia state line |
Highway system | |
North Carolina Highway 70 (NC 70) was one of the original state highways in the U.S. state of North Carolina. It went from the South Carolina state line to the Virginia state line north of Greensboro. NC 70 went through Greensboro, Aberdeen, and Fayetteville. In 1925, NC 70 was rerouted to Lumberton, then down south to the South Carolina state line following today's NC 41. The part from Lumberton to Rowland became NC 22. In 1926, NC 70 was placed onto the current US 220 Alternate near Seagrove. In 1927, U.S. Route 170 (US 170) got the routing from Greensboro to the Virginia state line. That part of the route later became US 29. In 1932, US 411 was given the routing from Greensboro to Randleman. In 1934, NC 70 ceased to exist. The part from Lumberton to the South Carolina state line became NC 41. The section of routing from Lumberton to Red Springs became NC 72. Routing from Red Springs to Aberdeen became NC 211. The route from Pinehurst to Candor became NC 2 and from Candor to Greensboro became US 220. US 29 replaced both US 170 and NC 70 from Greensboro to the Virginia state line.[1]
See also
- North Carolina portal
- U.S. Roads portal
References
External links
- Media related to North Carolina Highway 70 at Wikimedia Commons