Nevada State Route 379 Explained

State:NV
Type:SR
Route:379
Alternate Name:Duckwater Road
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:SR 379 highlighted in red
Length Mi:19.532
Length Round:3
Length Ref:[1]
Established:1976
Direction A:South
Terminus A: in Currant
Direction B:North
Terminus B:Duckwater
Previous Type:SR
Previous Route:378
Next Type:US
Next Route:395

State Route 379 (SR 379) covers Duckwater Road, a 19.532miles state highway in Nye County, Nevada, United States. The route serves the Duckwater Indian Reservation, connecting the community of Duckwater to U.S. Route 6 at Currant. The highway was formerly a part of State Route 20 prior to the 1970s.

Route description

SR 379 begins in the small town of Currant, located approximately 52miles southwest of Ely. From there, the highway heads northwest about 15miles as it passes through Railroad Valley. Upon meeting the foothills of the Pancake Range, the route curves northward and then turns west again before reaching the town of Duckwater.[2]

History

50px|thumb|right|SR 379 was originally a part of State Route 20.

State maps show a road leading to Duckwater existed as early as 1919, although it was longer and followed a more north - south alignment.[3] The route connected to State Route 4 (now US 6) southwest of Currant at the town of Butler's and proceeded north of Duckwater to a junction with State Route 2 (now US 50) south of Eureka. This road was designated State Route 20 by 1929.[4] In 1941, the southern end of the 57miles route to Duckwater had been graded.[5] This portion of the SR 20 was paved and the remainder of the highway graded by 1956.[6] (Another unimproved road, stretching north from Eureka to Carlin via Blackburn and Palisade, was also designated part of SR 20 in 1929.[4] This northern section would be renumbered to State Route 51 by 1965;[7] it is now State Route 278.[2])

The highway remained unchanged for several years afterward. In the 1976 renumbering of Nevada's state highways, SR 20 was altered. The paved portion of the road, from US 6 to Duckwater, was reassigned to State Route 379 on July 1, 1976;[8] this change was first seen on state maps in 1978.[9] The unpaved remainder of SR 20 was deleted from the state highway system by 1982.[10]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: State Maintained Highways of Nevada: Descriptions and Maps . Nevada Department of Transportation . Nevada Department of Transportation . January 2017 . 2017-04-10.
  2. Nevada Department of Transportation . Official Highway Map of Nevada . 2007–08 . 2007 . C5,D5 .
  3. Nevada Department of Highways . Road Map of the State of Nevada . 1919 . 2009-01-14 .
  4. Nevada Department of Highways . Highway Map State of Nevada . 1929 . 1" = 25 mi . 2009-01-14 .
  5. Nevada Department of Highways . Official Road Map of the State of Nevada . 1941 . 2009-01-14 .
  6. Nevada Department of Highways . Official Highway Map of Nevada . 1956 . D6,E6 . 2009-01-14 .
  7. Nevada State Highway Department . Official Highway Map of Nevada . 1965 . C5,E6 . 2009-01-14 .
  8. Book: Nevada State Maintained Highways: Descriptions, Index and Maps . January 2001 . . 112 .
  9. Nevada State Highway Department . Official Highway Map of Nevada . 1978–79 . 1978 . C5,D5 . 2009-01-14 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150122214240/http://contentdm.library.unr.edu/u?%2Fhmaps%2C535 . 2015-01-22 . dead .
  10. Nevada Department of Transportation . Official Highway Map of Nevada . 1965 . C5,D5 . 2009-01-14 .