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The first North Carolina Highway 192 (NC 192) was established as a new primary routing between NC 19, in Mill Spring, and US 74/NC 20, in Lake Lure. [3] In 1931, NC 192 was extended southeast from Mill Spring along new primary routing to the South Carolina state line, where it continued as SC 177 towards Spartanburg . [ 4 ]
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 ...
South Carolina Highway 38 (SC 38) is a 43.694-mile (70.319 km) state highway that extends from Marlboro County near Hamlet, North Carolina to U.S. Route 501 (US 501) in Marion County. The highway travels generally north-to-south (but is signed as west–east) across the eastern portion of the state, and is one of the most popular routes to ...
NC 85 at the North Carolina state line near Chesterfield: c. 1926: 1938 First form SC 95 — — SC 9 in Little Rock: Fairley Road at the North Carolina state line east of Clio: 1939: 1952 Second form SC 96 — — US 1 / SC 9 in Cheraw: NC 80 at the North Carolina state line near Cheraw: 1926: 1933
U.S. Route 176 (US 176) is a spur of US 76 in the U.S. states of North Carolina and South Carolina.The U.S. Highway runs 237.98 miles (382.99 km) from US 25 Business and North Carolina Highway 225 (NC 225) in Hendersonville, North Carolina, east to US 52 in Goose Creek, South Carolina.
Renumbered NC 381 to match South Carolina NC 78: 4.6: 7.4 US 1/US 15/US 501 in Tramway: US 421/NC 42/NC 87 in Sanford: 1940: current Second form NC 79: 8.7: 14.0 SC 79 at the South Carolina state line: US 15/US 401/US 501/US 74 Bus. in Laurinburg: 1934: current NC 80 — — Mount Airy: Virginia state line 1921: 1940
In North Carolina, US 1 runs for 174.1 miles (280.2 km) across the central region of the state. The highway enters North Carolina from South Carolina, southwest of Rockingham. US 1 runs northeast, passing through or closely bypassing Southern Pines and Sanford in the Sandhills region.
North Carolina Highway 771 (NC 771) first appeared as a new primary routing in 1930, traveling from US 311/NC 77, east of Winston-Salem, to US 421/NC 60, in Kernersville. In 1936, NC 771 was replaced by an extension of NC 150 .