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South Carolina Highway 9 (SC 9) is a 259.570-mile (418 km) major state highway in the U.S. state of South Carolina. The highway travels from Cherry Grove Beach to the North Carolina state line upstate. The highway is currently the longest state highway in South Carolina. It is signed as a north–south highway, even though it travels in an east ...
Gaffney is a city in and the seat of Cherokee County, South Carolina, United States, [5] in the Upstate region of South Carolina. Gaffney is known as the "Peach Capital of South Carolina". The population was 12,539 at the 2010 census, [6] with an estimated population of 12,609 in 2019. [7]
US 29 south – Gaffney: Continuation from South Carolina: 0.1: 0.16: NC 226 north – Shelby, Grover 2.2: 3.5: NC 216 south to I-85: South end of NC 216 overlap 3.5: 5.6: NC 216 north – Kings Mountain: North end of NC 216 overlap 3.9: 6.3: I-85 south – Spartanburg, Greenville
South Carolina Highway 180 (SC 180) was established as a new primary routing between U.S. Route 29 (US 29) and SC 18 northeast of Gaffney. In 1948, it was decommissioned and was downgraded to secondary road S-11-32. [6] Around 1982, most of the former route became part of SC 329.
SC 11 northwest of Gaffney: North Carolina state line near Gaffney: 1942: 1947 SC 169 — — SC 170 north of Bluffton: Near Chelsea: 1940: 1946 SC 170: 49.010: 78.874 SR 25 at the Georgia state line southwest of Limehouse: U.S. Route 21 Bus. / Polk Street in Beaufort: 1931: current SC 171 — —
SC 18 was established in 1938 as a renumbering of SC 111, from U.S. Route 29 (US 29) in Gaffney, to the North Carolina state line. In 1940, SC 18 was extended south along new primary routing to SC 9 in Pacolet. [4] In 1942, it was extended again along new primary routing to SC 56 south of Glenn Springs. [5] In 1960-1961, SC 18 was rerouted at ...
North Carolina–South Carolina line: 0.00: 0.00: US 301 south / US 501 south – South of the Border, Dillon: Continuation into South Carolina: I-95 – Lumberton, Fayetteville, Florence: I-95 exit 1: Robeson: Rowland: 2.7: 4.3: US 501 north / NC 130 – Laurinburg, Fairmont: North end of US 501 overlap 11.8: 19.0: I-95 south – Florence
The first section to officially open happened in 1968, from South Carolina Highway 527 (SC 527), near Gable, to SC 9/SC 57, in Dillon. In 1971–1972, more sections of I-95 was completed: going north from SC 9/SC 57, in Dillon, to the North Carolina state line and going south from SC 527, near Gable, along the recently completed 1968-built Lake ...