North Carolina Highway 130 Explained

State:NC
Type:NC
Route:130
Map:NC 130 map.svg
Length Mi:101.5
Direction A:West
Direction B:East
Terminus A: in Maxton
Junction:
Terminus B:Ocean Boulevard in Holden Beach
Counties:Robeson, Columbus, Brunswick
Established:1928
Previous Type:US
Previous Route:129
Next Type:NC
Next Route:131

North Carolina Highway 130 (NC 130) is a primary state highway in the U.S. state of North Carolina. The highway serves the towns and rural communities in southern Robeson County, acts as a direct route between Whiteville and Shallotte through the Green Swamp, and provides access to Holden Beach.

Route description

NC Highway 130 begins at U.S. Route 74 Business (US 74 Bus.) and NC 71 in Maxton and ends at Ocean Boulevard in Holden Beach.

It overlaps several highways along its route, including US 501, US 74 (proposed Interstate 74), US 76, NC 410 and US 17 Bus.

History

NC 130 was established around 1928 as a renumbering of part of NC 201 between NC 30 in Supply, to the intersection of Moore Street and Atlantic Avenue in Southport. In 1930, NC 130 was extended west along NC 30 to Shallotte, then northwest along new primary routing to NC 23 near Whiteville.[1] In 1940, NC 130 made its final westward extension, by overlapping with US 701 to US 74 in Whiteville; in concurrency, it travels with US 74 until Boardman, then replaced NC 71 through Fairmont and Rowland before ending at US 74/NC 71 in Maxton.[2]

By 1944, NC 130 was rerouted in Shallotte onto Whiteville Road and Powell Street to US 17 on Village Road; its old alignment of Bridger Road and Mulberry Street was downgraded to secondary roads. In 1949, NC 130 was extended north on new primary routing from Southport, through the Sunny Point Army Terminal (opened 1955) and Orton Plantation, to US 17/US 74/US 76 in Belville.[3] In 1957, NC 130 was truncated in Shallotte; with Supply to Southport becoming part of NC 211 and Southport to Belville part of NC 40. In 1959, NC 130 was extended on new primary routing to Holden Beach.[4] By 1962, NC 130 was adjusted onto Main Street instead of Village Road in Shallotte, downgrading Powell Street to secondary road.[5]

In 1965, NC 130 was rerouted on new bypass southeast of Fairmont, with its old alignment through town becoming NC 130 Business.[6] In 1972, US 74/NC 130 was placed on new alignment between the Lumber River and Chadbourn; its old alignment through Boardman and Evergreen became Old US 74 (SR 1574).[7] In 1975, US 74/NC 130 was rerouted onto new alignment north of Chadbourn to NC 410, where then continued together south into town; five months later, the concurrencies would change to US 74 Bus. and US 76 Bus. between Chadbourn and Whiteville.[8] [9] NC 130 was rerouted in 2012 onto new four-lane Smith Avenue in Shallotte; NC 130 Business was established continuing along the old alignment with US 17 Bus. and onto Holden Beach Road, then on new routing on Edgewater Drive back to the mainline.[10]

Special routes

Fairmont business loop

State:NC
Type:NC-Bus
Route:130
Location:Fairmont, North Carolina
Formed:1965
Length Mi:4.5
Length Round:1

North Carolina Highway 130 Business (NC 130 Bus.) is a 4.5miles business loop that goes through downtown Fairmont, via Iona Street, Main Street and Cottage Street; it also shares a short concurrency with NC 41. It was established in 1965 when mainline NC 130 was moved to a bypass route south of town.[6]

Shallotte alternate spur

State:NC
Type:NC 1957
Route:130A
Location:Shallotte, North Carolina
Formed:1944
Deleted:1962
Length Mi:0.2

North Carolina Highway 130A (NC 130A) was established in 1944 as cutoff between NC 130 and US 17 (today Village Road). By 1962, US 17 was rerouted onto new primary highway in Shallotte, thus decommissioning the cutoff as NC 130 was adjusted further west.[11]

Shallotte business loop

State:NC
Type:NC-Bus
Route:130
Location:Shallotte, North Carolina
Length Mi:0.6
Formed:2012

North Carolina Highway 130 Business (NC 130 Bus) is a 0.6miles business loop in Shallotte.[10]

External links

Notes and References

  1. North Carolina State Highway Commission . State Highway System of North Carolina . PDF . NCSHC . 1930 . March 7, 2016.
  2. North Carolina State Highway and Public Works Commission . North Carolina Primary Highway System . PDF . NCSHC . 1940 . March 7, 2016.
  3. North Carolina State Highway Commission . North Carolina County Road Survey 1949 . PDF . NCSHC / U.S. Bureau of Public Roads . 1949 . March 7, 2016.
  4. North Carolina State Highway and Public Works Commission . North Carolina Primary Highway System . PDF . NCSHC . 1960 . March 7, 2016.
  5. North Carolina State Highway Commission . North Carolina County Road Survey 1962 . PDF . NCSHC / U.S. Bureau of Public Roads . 1962 . March 7, 2016.
  6. Web site: North Carolina Department of Transportation . Route Change (1965-10-08) . October 8, 1965 . March 7, 2016.
  7. Web site: North Carolina Department of Transportation . Route Change (1972-10-05) . October 5, 1972 . March 7, 2016.
  8. Web site: North Carolina Department of Transportation . Route Change (1975-09-01) . September 1, 1975 . March 7, 2016.
  9. Web site: North Carolina Department of Transportation . Route Change (1976-02-01) . February 1, 1976 . March 7, 2016.
  10. Web site: North Carolina Department of Transportation . Route Change (2012-02-20) . February 20, 2012 . March 7, 2016.
  11. North Carolina State Highway Commission . North Carolina County Road Survey 1944 . PDF . NCSHC / U.S. Bureau of Public Roads . 1944 . March 7, 2016.