Interstate 81 in Tennessee explained

State:TN
Route:81
Type:I
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:I-81 highlighted in red
Length Mi:75.66
Length Ref:[1]
Established:August 14, 1957[2]
History:Completed August 27, 1975
Direction A:South
Terminus A: near Dandridge
Direction B:North
Terminus B: at the Virginia state line in Bristol
Counties:Jefferson, Hamblen, Greene, Washington, Sullivan
Previous Type:TN
Previous Route:80
Next Type:TN
Next Route:81

Interstate 81 (I-81) is part of the Interstate Highway System that runs 855.02miles northward from Dandridge, Tennessee, to the Thousand Islands Bridge at the Canadian border near Fishers Landing, New York. In Tennessee, I-81 serves the northeastern part of the state, running 75.66miles from its southern terminus with I-40 in Dandridge to the Virginia state line in Bristol. The route serves the Tri-Cities region of the state and the eastern parts of the Knoxville metropolitan area, terminating about 35miles east of Knoxville. I-81 bypasses most cities that it serves, instead providing access via interchanges with state and federal routes. It remains in the Ridge-and-Valley topographic region of the Appalachian Mountains for its entire length in Tennessee, and runs in a northeast to southwest direction.

I-81 roughly follows the corridors of U.S. Routes 11E and 11W in Tennessee, but unlike many stretches of Interstate Highways, does not closely parallel any U.S. Numbered Highway until it reaches Bristol. The first parts of I-81 in the state were constructed in the early 1960s, with additional progress made on the Interstate throughout that decade. However, most of the route was constructed later than the other Interstate Highways initially allocated to Tennessee, and did not open until after 1970. The last stretch of I-81 in Tennessee, which was more than half of the entire route in the state, was completed in 1975. From 1985 to 2007, the Interstate had one auxiliary route, I-181, which was renumbered as part of I-26.

Route description

I-81 is maintained by the Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT), along with all other Interstate, US, and state highways in Tennessee. In 2022, annual average daily traffic (AADT) volumes ranged from 61,299 vehicles per day at the southern terminus to 34,896 vehicles per day between US 25E and SR 160.[3]

I-81 begins at a directional T interchange with I-40 near Dandridge in unincorporated Jefferson County about 35miles east of downtown Knoxville. Traveling in a northeast-to-southwest alignment in a valley through mostly farmland and some woodlands, the Interstate has its first interchange with State Route 341 (SR 341) a short distance later near White Pine. This route connects to SR 66, providing access to Morristown to the north. Soon thereafter, the highway crosses into Hamblen County and meets US 25E south of Morristown, which is a major north–south arterial route in the region and part of the East Tennessee Crossing Byway. Continuing through mostly rural terrain, I-81 has an interchange with SR 160, the final Morristown exit, a few miles beyond. After some distance, the Interstate crosses over a ridge and into Greene County.[4] [5] [6]

About 5miles past the Greene County line is an interchange with US 11E near Mosheim, which provides access to Greeneville to the southeast and Bulls Gap to the northwest. Continuing through a predominantly rural and agricultural area, I-81 reaches SR 70, which connects to Greeneville to the south and Rogersville to the north. The Interstate proceeds through additional farmland for several more miles and passes the town of Baileyton, before beginning a slight uphill climb, with the northbound lanes utilizing a truck climbing lane for about 1.5miles near the community of Jearoldstown. Here, the route also shifts slightly to the northeast. A few miles later, I-81 veers sharply east and crosses into semi-urban Washington County. Immediately beyond this point is an interchange with SR 93, which provides access to Jonesborough to the south and Fall Branch to the north. I-81 then turns northeast again, and crosses into Sullivan County after a short distance.[4] [7] [8]

Entering a semiurbanized part of the Tri-Cities area, I-81 reaches I-26 and US 23 at a cloverleaf interchange a few miles later. This route provides access to Kingsport to the north and Johnson City to the south, two of the principal municipalities of the Tri-Cities. Shortly thereafter is an interchange with SR 36, another major connector between these two cities. The freeway then crosses the Fort Patrick Henry Lake impoundment of the Holston River and begins another slight uphill climb, once again gaining a northbound truck climbing lane. About 3miles beyond this, the truck lane terminates at an interchange with SR 357, a connector to Tri-Cities Regional Airport. The route then proceeds through a mix of farmland, woodlands, and residential neighborhoods, briefly shifting eastward and crossing a ridge after a few miles. Shifting northeastwardly again, the Interstate has an interchange with SR 394 near the unincorporated town of Blountville. Beyond this exit, the route ascends over a slight upgrade, before reaching a relatively flat stretch again. A few miles beyond here, I-81 reaches Bristol, the final of the Tri-Cities, and widens to six lanes. It then has a cloverleaf interchange with US 11W before crossing into Virginia and its twin city of Bristol 1miles later.[4] [9]

History

Predecessor highways

Prior to the settlement of Tennessee by European Americans, a series of Native American trails existed in the area that I-81 now passes through.[10] Most of these were part of the Great Indian Warpath, which the Interstate follows for most of its length.[11] A lesser used trail reportedly existed east of this path, which became part of the Great Wagon Road, also known as the Great Valley Road.[12] The northeastern part of Tennessee was the first part of the state to be significantly explored and settled, with long hunters exploring much of the region during the 1760s and the first permanent settlements arising by the end of that decade.[13] The Great Indian Warpath from Knoxville to Abingdon, Virginia, became a wagon road known as the Old Stage Road, and was used extensively by early Tennesseans and travelers from other states.[14]

In 1911, a series of Tennessee businesspeople formed the Memphis to Bristol Highway Association to encourage the state to improve the network of roads that ran between Memphis and Bristol.[15] After the formation of the Tennessee Department of Highways and Public Works, the predecessor agency to TDOT, in 1915, the Old Stage Road was designated as part of the Memphis to Bristol Highway.[16] This section became part of the Lee Highway, an auto trail, in 1919.[17] When the Tennessee State Route System was established in 1923, this part of the Lee Highway became part of State Route 1 (SR 1), and the network of roads to the east that followed part of the Great Wagon Road became SR 34.[18] When the United States Numbered Highway System was formed by Congress in 1926, Lee Highway became US 11, and SR 34 was designated as US 511. Tennessee officials objected to this numbering scheme, and in 1929 successfully petitioned the American Association of State Highway Officials (AASHO) to redesignate US 11 as US 11W and US 511 as US 11E in an event that came to be known as "The Tennessee Split".[19]

Planning and construction

The general location of the highway that became I-81 was included in the National Interregional Highway Committee's 1944 report, titled Interregional Highways, and a subsequent 1947 plan produced by the Public Roads Administration of the now-defunct Federal Works Agency. These blueprints recommended that it terminate east of Knoxville with the highway that became I-40.[20] [21] During the planning phase, it was also suggested that the Interstate follow the corridor of US 11W from Knoxville to Bristol, but residents of Grainger County were opposed to this.[22] The alignment was reaffirmed in a map produced by the Bureau of Public Roads, the predecessor agency to the Federal Highway Administration, in September 1955.[23] I-81 was part of the original 1047.6miles of Interstate Highways authorized for Tennessee by the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1956, commonly known as the Interstate Highway Act.[24] The numbering was approved by the AASHO on August 14, 1957.[2] That year, the Johnson City Planning Commission unsuccessfully lobbied to move the routing a few miles south between Morristown and Bristol to run closer to Johnson City and the Tri-Cities Regional Airport.[25]

The first stretch of I-81 in Tennessee to be completed was the 1adj=onNaNadj=on segment between US 11W and the Virginia state line, along with the southernmost 5.6miles of the Interstate in Virginia. Referred to at the time as the "Bristol Bypass", this section opened to traffic on November 20, 1961, along with I-381 directly across the state line.[26] [27] Grading and bridge construction on the interchange with I-40 took place in the early 1960s, but this interchange was not opened to traffic until work on the approaches was complete.[28] [29] The contract to construct the segment between the southern terminus with I-40 and US 25E near Morristown was awarded in June 1964,[30] [31] and completed in December 1966, along with the connecting section of I-40.[32] [33] Like much of the Interstate System in Tennessee, priority was generally given to completing sections in Middle and West Tennessee over East Tennessee. For this reason, most of I-81 was not constructed in the state until after the late 1960s.[34] The decision to prioritize other Interstate Highways was criticized by some due to the unsafe conditions and high accident rate on US 11W, which had earned the nickname "Bloody 11W" and was the site of the deadliest traffic collision in state history in 1972.[35] [36] The slow progress on the Interstate became an issue in the 1966 gubernatorial election, when Democratic candidate John Jay Hooker accused primary opponent Buford Ellington, who served as Governor from 1959 to 1963, of neglecting the stretch allocated for Tennessee.[37] Ellington, who was elected that fall, responded with a promise to complete I-81 by 1971, the year the next governor would leave office, as well as improve US 11W.[38] [39]

Contracts for construction of the stretch between US 25E near Morristown and US 11E near Mosheim were let in August 1967 and February 1968,[40] [41] and the section opened to traffic on December 10, 1970.[42] [43] Contracts for sections in Sullivan County were awarded throughout 1969,[44] [45] and work on what became the final stretch of I-81 in Tennessee to be completed, the 43miles section located between US 11E and SR 126 near Blountville, began on July 7, 1969, in the southern part of that county.[46] [47] The remaining Sullivan County portions were contracted for construction in December 1970 and March 1971,[48] and sections in Washington and Greene Counties were let in November and December 1971.[49] [50] The last construction contract for I-81 in Tennessee, which was for the northernmost 5.8miles in Greene County, was awarded in March 1972.[51] [52] The opening of the 9.6miles stretch between SR 126 and US 11W in Bristol was announced on December 23, 1972.[53] [54] Once all remaining construction began, completion of I-81 in Tennessee was expected by late 1973,[55] but was delayed by the energy crisis that year.[56] On December 20, 1974, the entire final stretch between US 11E and SR 126 was dedicated by then-Governor Winfield Dunn, and partially opened, with some portions restricted to two lanes.[57] [58] This stretch cost $49.4 million (equivalent to $ in), and was dedicated on the same day that the last sections of I-40 and I-75 in Tennessee were opened.[59] [60] I-81 was officially completed in Tennessee on August 27, 1975, when all four lanes of the final section were fully opened to traffic.[61]

Later history

On April 6, 1997, a carjacking that culminated in the Lillelid murders occurred at the I-81 southbound rest area near Baileyton.[62] A group of six youths from Pikeville, Kentucky, forced the four members of the Lillelid family into their van and to drive approximately 3.5miles on the Interstate to the SR 172 interchange, which was the next exit.[63] The family was then taken to a secluded road nearby where they were shot. Three of the victims died, and the lone survivor was left permanently disabled.[64] The perpetrators were apprehended two days later in Douglas, Arizona, trying to flee into Mexico, and later sentenced to life in prison.[65]

Work to widen the northernmost 1.3miles of I-81 in Tennessee to six lanes, along with the southernmost 7.5miles in Virginia, began in April 1998.[66] Initially planned for completion in late 2000, the project experienced multiple delays and cost overruns, and was not completed until March 2003.[67] [68] A 2008 study conducted by TDOT on the I-40 and I-81 corridors identified a number of steep grades on both Interstates difficult for trucks to ascend, causing congestion and safety hazards. This study resulted in the construction of a truck climbing lane on I-81 northbound between the Holston River and SR 357 that was completed in 2019.[69] [70]

Between September 2011 and June 2014, the interchange with US 25E was modified in a project that replaced the southbound loop onramp with a traditional diamond ramp, widened the radius of the northbound loop exit ramp, replaced the US 25E overpass with a wider bridge, and added turn lanes at the intersections with the ramps. This project was necessitated by the hazardous conditions of the previous configuration and the adoption of US 25E as part of an alternate route to I-75.[71]

Auxiliary routes

Interstate 181 (I-181) was designated by the Federal Highway Administration on December 4, 1985, for the 23.85miles controlled-access segment of US 23 between US 321/SR 67 in Johnson City and US 11W in Kingsport, which had been constructed as part of Corridor B of the Appalachian Development Highway System.[72] On June 9, 1986, the designation was officially established by the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO). Exit numbers were based on US 23 mileage, which at the time was in the process of being upgraded to a freeway to the North Carolina state line. On August 5, 2003, AASHTO approved extending I-26 west into Tennessee, replacing I-181 from Johnson City to I-81. They ruled against an extension of the I-26 designation along the remainder of I-181 to Kingsport, however, since federal guidelines usually require mainline Interstate Highways to end at a junction with another Interstate Highway, an international border, or a seacoast.[73] TDOT had proposed to renumber that stretch as I-126, but rescinded that proposal later that year.[74] The act, signed into law on August 10, 2005, authorized the remainder of I-181 to be redesignated as part of I-26. This took place in March 2007, when the remainder of I-181 was officially decommissioned, and replaced with I-26 signage.[75]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: December 31, 2021 . Table 1: Main Routes of the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System Of Interstate and Defense Highways . July 14, 2022 . FHWA Route Log and Finder List . Federal Highway Administration.
  2. Public Roads Administration . Public Roads Administration . August 14, 1957 . Official Route Numbering for the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways as Adopted by the American Association of State Highway Officials . Washington, DC . Public Roads Administration . June 14, 2018 . .
  3. Web site: Tennessee Department of Transportation . Transportation Data Management System . ms2soft.com . MS2 . November 27, 2021 .
  4. DeLorme . Tennessee Atlas & Gazetteer . 2017 . 2017 . DeLorme . Yarmouth, Maine . 1 in:2.5 mi . 978-1946494047 .
  5. Tennessee Department of Transportation Long Range Planning Division Office of Data Visualization. Jefferson County. 2018. Tennessee Department of Transportation.
  6. Tennessee Department of Transportation Long Range Planning Division Office of Data Visualization. Hamblen County. 2018. Tennessee Department of Transportation.
  7. Tennessee Department of Transportation Long Range Planning Division Office of Data Visualization. Greene County. 2018. Tennessee Department of Transportation.
  8. Tennessee Department of Transportation Long Range Planning Division Office of Data Visualization. Washington County. 2018. Tennessee Department of Transportation.
  9. Tennessee Department of Transportation Long Range Planning Division Office of Data Visualization. Sullivan County. 2018. Tennessee Department of Transportation.
  10. Web site: Historic Trails . Smith . David Ray . October 8, 2017 . Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture . November 6, 2022 .
  11. Web site: Keenan . William . 1853 . Map of Cumberland & Franklin . Tennessee State Library and Archives . Nashville . 945721812 . June 1, 2023 . Tennessee Virtual Archive.
  12. Book: Doughty, Richard Harrison . 1975 . Greeneville: One Hundred Year Portrait (1775-1875) . Kingsport, Tennessee . Kingsport Press . 4 . .
  13. Book: Finger, John R. . Tennessee Frontiers: Three Regions in Transition . 40-41 . Indiana University Press . 2001 . 978-0-253-33985-0 . Google Books.
  14. News: Hill . Ann . June 8, 1969 . The Old Stage Road: a trip with history . 5 . Johnson City Press-Chronicle . June 1, 2023 . Newspapers.com.
  15. Web site: Memphis-Nashville-Bristol Highway Association . 1911 . Route of Memphis-Nashville-Bristol Highway, Tennessee's First State Road . Tennessee State Library and Archives . Nashville . 957558404 . February 10, 2021 . Tennessee Virtual Archive.
  16. Web site: Brief History of TDOT . . 2014 . Tennessee Department of Transportation . April 28, 2020 . January 23, 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200123205455/https://www.tn.gov/content/dam/tn/tdot/documents/TDOT-History.pdf . live .
  17. News: . December 14, 1919 . Lee Highway Body Meets In Bristol . 1 . The Bristol Herald Courier . June 1, 2023 . Newspapers.com.
  18. Book: Report . Highway Planning Survey Division . 1925 . Biennial Report of the Commissioner of the Department of Highways and Public Works State of Tennessee for the Years 1923 and 1924 . Nashville . Tennessee Department of Highways and Public Works . May 19, 2023 . 39-44 .
  19. Web site: Weingroff. Richard. U.S. 11 - Rouses Point, New York, to New Orleans, Louisiana. . December 19, 2020.
  20. Web site: Weingroff . Richard F. . Designating the Urban Interstates . Federal Highway Administration . August 5, 2018.
  21. National System of Interstate Highways . . Scale not given . Washington, DC . Public Roads Administration . August 2, 1947 . September 4, 2010 . .
  22. Web site: The Price of Power: How the Tennessee Valley Authority Impacted Attitudes Towards Economic Development in East Tennessee . Appalachian Free Press . February 20, 2022 . January 12, 2022.
  23. General Location of National System of Interstate Highways Including All Additional Routes at Urban Areas Designated in September 1955 . Bureau of Public Roads . September 1955 . Scale not given . Washington, DC . Government Printing Office . September 4, 2010 . 4165975 . Wikimedia Commons .
  24. Book: Report . Tennessee State Highway Department Highway Planning Survey Division . Tennessee Department of Transportation . Bureau of Public Roads . Federal Highway Administration . 1959 . History of the Tennessee Highway Department . Nashville . Tennessee State Highway Department . April 26, 2020 . 51–52 .
  25. News: Smith . Paul . Planning Group Unanimously Approves Alternate To Proposed Highway Route . December 30, 2022 . Johnson City Press-Chronicle . July 21, 1957 . 1-A, 6-A . Newspapers.com.
  26. News: . November 19, 1961 . Interstate 81, City Spur To Open Here Tomorrow . 2 B . Bristol Herald Courier . Bristol, Tennessee . September 24, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  27. News: . November 20, 1961 . Bristol Bypass Section Of New Interstate Highway Opened Today . 3 . Kingsport Times . January 28, 2023 . Newspapers.com.
  28. News: . December 11, 1962 . $4 Million In ET Jobs May Be Let . 1 . The Knoxville Journal . October 2, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  29. News: . October 24, 1963 . Parting of Ways (Photo) . 15 . The Knoxville Journal . October 2, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  30. News: . June 14, 1964 . I-81 Stretch Set for Bids . A-8 . The Knoxville News-Sentinel . October 2, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  31. News: . May 12, 1964 . I-81 Stretch Bids Slated . 2 . The Knoxville Journal . October 2, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  32. News: . Traffic May Utilize New Interstate Highway Segment . 2 . The Dandridge Banner . December 18, 1966.
  33. News: . Interstate highways to be opened. 24. Johnson City Press-Chronicle. United Press International. October 22, 1966. 2020-04-30. Newspapers.com.
  34. News: Where Do We Stand On The Interstate? . 8-A . May 2, 1965 . . August 1, 2020 . .
  35. News: Blood on the asphalt: 11W wreck left 14 people dead . Matt . Lakin . August 26, 2012 . June 22, 2020 . The Knoxville News-Sentinel.
  36. News: Smith . Bob . May 14, 1972 . 11-W Disaster Brings New Highway Pleas . 1-A, 10-A . Kingsport Times-News . December 29, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  37. News: . April 19, 1966 . Hooker Raps Road Gaps Here: Politics? . 1 . Kingsport Times . December 29, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  38. News: Binkley . Ellis . June 29, 1966 . Ellington Pledges 11-W Improvements . 1-A, 6-A . Kingsport Times . December 29, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  39. News: Jennings . Bill . Ellington moves into Johnson City today with no-tax pledge . 1, 2 . Johnson City Press-Chronicle . January 28, 2023 . Newspapers.com.
  40. News: . July 19, 1967 . I-40 Bids on Knox Link Set . 36 . The Knoxville News-Sentinel . October 2, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  41. News: . January 4, 1968 . I-81, I-75 Jobs in Feb. 23 Letting . 5 . The Knoxville News-Sentinel . October 2, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  42. News: . I-24 Section Opened Today. 1 . The Daily News-Journal. Murfreesboro, Tennessee. December 9, 1970. 2020-11-12. Newspapers.com.
  43. News: . December 10, 1970 . I-81 Open In Hamblen and Greene Counties . 1 . Morristown Gazette-Mail . Morristown, Tennessee.
  44. News: Jennings . Bill . April 24, 1969 . Governor well pleased with area highway construction . 1 . Johnson City Press-Chronicle . October 2, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  45. News: . May 18, 1969 . 81 Moving Along: Chamber . 5-A . Kingsport Times-News . October 2, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  46. News: Interstate 81–New Section Complete . October 2, 2022 . Kingsport Times . November 17, 1972 . 6 . Newspapers.com.
  47. News: . December 17, 1974 . Interstate Opening Slated Friday . 1A, 8A . Kingsport Times . October 2, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  48. News: . November 22, 1970 . Ft. Henry, I-81 Bids To Be Asked . 8-A . Kingsport Times-News . October 2, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  49. News: . November 20, 1971 . I-81 bids opened in Nashville . 1 . Johnson City Press-Chronicle . October 2, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  50. News: . December 18, 1971 . Low bids opened for road building . 1 . Johnson City Press-Chronicle . October 2, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  51. News: . January 21, 1972 . I-75, I-81 in Next Lettings . 1, 16 . The Knoxville News-Sentinel . October 2, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  52. News: . March 24, 1972 . I-81 gets new work contracts . 1, 10 . Johnson City Press-Chronicle . January 22, 2023 . Newspapers.com.
  53. News: . December 23, 1972 . New I-81 Section Opens In County . 15 . Bristol Herald-Courier . Bristol, Tennessee . June 20, 2023 . Newspapers.com.
  54. News: . December 24, 1972 . I-81 Section Opens . B-6 . The Knoxville News-Sentinel . October 2, 2022 . Newspaper.com.
  55. News: . February 25, 1973 . All of state's I-81 expected to be open by December . 3 . Johnson City Press-Chronicle . Johnson City, Tennessee . October 8, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  56. News: Oleson . Lee . Oil Shortage Stalls Highway: 81 May Not Be Done Till '75 . October 8, 2022 . Kingsport Times-News . September 9, 1973 . 1-A, 10-A . Newspapers.com.
  57. News: Samples. Henry. December 20, 1974. Dunn opens interstate from Blountville to Greeneville. 1. Johnson City Press-Chronicle. Johnson City, Tennessee. 2020-04-30. Newspapers.com.
  58. News: East Tennessee's Christmas Present . 11 . December 10, 1974 . Kingsport Times-News . June 18, 2018 . Newspapers.com .
  59. News: . Dunn Opens 96 Interstate Miles . 32 . The Tennessean . Associated Press . December 21, 1974 . 1053-6590 . April 18, 2019 . Newspapers.com .
  60. News: Yarbrough . Willard . All Interstates in ET Open; Dunn Dedicates New Sections . December 30, 2021 . The Knoxville News-Sentinel . December 21, 1974 . 1, 14.
  61. News: All four lanes of Interstate 81 to be opened today . 16 . August 27, 1975 . Johnson City Press-Chronicle . December 8, 2019 . Newspapers.com .
  62. News: Sharp . Ashley . April 6, 2022 . 25 years after gruesome murders, community remembers Lillelid family . . Johnson City, Tennessee . September 30, 2022.
  63. News: DeLozier . Stan . April 9, 1997 . 6 suspects in triple slaying caught at U.S.-Mexico border; 'Wild bunch' charged in deaths of Powell family . 1A, 3A . The Knoxville News-Sentinel . September 30, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  64. News: Wilhoit . Robin . May 9, 2022 . Overcoming tragedy: Peter Lillelid 25 years later . . Knoxville . September 30, 2022.
  65. News: April 6, 2017 . 20 years later: 'Evil' killing of Powell family resonates . WBIR-TV . Knoxville . September 30, 2022.
  66. News: Rutledge . Mark . VDOT to celebrate I-81 expansion plan . September 24, 2022 . Johnson City Press . April 9, 1998 . 3 . Newspapers.com.
  67. News: Watson . James . Lengthy I-81 project nearing end of road . September 24, 2022 . Johnson City Press . December 20, 2002 . 1, 10 . Newspapers.com.
  68. News: Powers . Gregg . Today's the big day at BMS . September 24, 2022 . Johnson City Press . March 23, 2003 . 1, 8.
  69. News: Osborne . J. H. . What's all that work off I-81 about? . December 30, 2022 . Kingsport Times News . July 2, 2017.
  70. News: Wagner . Rick . Tennessee seeks input on Interstates 40/81 . December 30, 2022 . Kingsport Times News . February 6, 2020.
  71. News: From the archives, 2013; TDOT opens 81 access ramp at Exit 8 . December 31, 2022 . Citizen Tribune . November 16, 2018.
  72. News: . December 25, 1985 . Part of Route 23 gets interstate label . 3A . Kingsport Times-News . January 28, 2023 . Newspapers.com.
  73. News: Watson . James . July 25, 2003 . Kingsport won't get I-26 through town, state rules . 1A, 4A . Johnson City Press. October 3, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  74. News: Watson . James . April 19, 2003 . Kingsport fighting uphill battle to get I-26 into town . 1, 8 . Johnson City Press . October 3, 2022 . Newspapers.com.
  75. News: Barber . Rex . March 2, 2007 . New Directions: I-181 to become I-26 in Sullivan; all exit signs, markers to change . 1A, 4A . Johnson City Press . October 3, 2022 . Newspapers.com.