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U.S. Route 441 (US 441) stretches for 83.28 miles (134.03 km) through the mountains of East Tennessee, connecting Rocky Top with Knoxville, Sevierville, Gatlinburg, and the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, crossing into North Carolina at Newfound Gap.
View of Gatlinburg and Mount LeConte from an overlook on the Gatlinburg Bypass. The need for a bypass around Gatlinburg was reportedly first raised when the Great Smoky Mountains National Park was established in 1934. [3] Preliminary planning for the bypass began in the mid-1950s as tourism to the national park surged during the post-World War ...
Ozark Mountain Highroad south: Unbuilt continuation beyond Route 76 0.000: 0.000: Route 76 (76 Country Blvd) / Route 376 – Branson West, Branson: Southern terminus: Taney 4.674: 7.522: Route 248 – Branson, Reeds Spring 7.294: 11.739: West Outer Road (Adair Road) At-grade intersection; north end of freeway 7.488– 7.557: 12.051– 12.162
The Great Smoky Mountains Parkway is a highway that travels 23.4 miles (37.7 km) between the Great Smoky Mountains National Park and Interstate 40 (I-40) in Kodak, Tennessee, in East Tennessee.
US 441 south (Newfound Gap Road/SR 71 south) – Gatlinburg, Cherokee: Western end of US 441/SR 71 concurrency: Gatlinburg Bypass – Pigeon Forge: Interchange: Gatlinburg: US 441 north / US 321 north (East Parkway/Parkway/SR 71 north/SR 73 north) – Pigeon Forge, Cosby: Eastern terminus: 1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
From 1922 to 1926, US 65 in Missouri was known as Route 3.US 65 originally followed Route 248 and US 160 between Branson and Springfield.Route 3 was originally planned on a shorter route between Springfield and Preston, with Route 71 on the longer alignment via Buffalo, but Route 3 was quickly shifted east, absorbing Route 71.
Mount Le Conte is the tallest (i.e., from immediate base to summit) mountain in the range, rising 5,301 feet (1,616 m) from its base in Gatlinburg to its 6,593-foot (2,010 m) summit. [ 7 ] Mountain
Mountain Home is a city in and the county seat of Baxter County, Arkansas, United States, [3] in the southern Ozark Mountains near the northern state border with Missouri. As of the 2010 census , the city had a population of 12,448. [ 4 ]