U.S. Route 431 in Tennessee explained

State:TN
Type:US
Route:431
Maint:TDOT
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:US 431 highlighted in red
Length Mi:116.10
Length Round:2
Established:January 1954[1]
Spur Type:US
Spur Of:31
Direction A:South
Terminus A: at the Alabama state line south of Fayetteville
Junction:
Direction B:North
Terminus B: at the Kentucky state line near Springfield
Previous Type:Sec
Previous Route:429
Next Type:Sec
Next Route:431

U.S. Route 431 (US 431) in Tennessee totals an estimated through Lincoln, Marshall, Maury, Williamson, Davidson, and Robertson counties in Middle Tennessee.[2]

Route description

Alabama state line to Nashville

US 431 runs concurrently with US 231 upon entry into Tennessee from Madison County, Alabama, where the concurrency begins. The state line also marks the beginning of a secret concurrency with, and the southern terminus of unsigned State Route 10 (SR 10). The two U.S. Routes plus SR 10 do not split until they reach downtown Fayetteville. While US 231 goes into a north-northeasterly path, US 431 turns northwest into Marshall County, bypassing around Lewisburg, and later into northeastern Maury and into Williamson County. It traverses the city of Franklin, Tennessee before entering the Metropolitan Nashville and Davidson County area.[2] [3]

In Nashville, US 431, known as Hillsboro Pike, traverses the exit 3 interchange on I-440, and eventually merges into US 70/SR 1 before entering the downtown area. US 431 then joins US 31 and US 41A onto the James Robertson Parkway. After crossing I-24's exit 47 interchange, US 431 then follows US 41 (SR 11) and US 31W towards the northern suburbs.[2] [4]

Nashville to the Kentucky state line

State:TN
Type:TN
Route:65
Location:Nashville to the Kentucky state line
Formed:October 1, 1923[5]
Length Mi:34.98
Length Round:2

US 431, now paired with a secret SR 65 designation, then follows Trinity Lane, crossing the I-65/I-24 exit 87 interchange, and turns right onto Whites Creek Pike. A few miles later, it intersects Briley Parkway (SR 155)] and Old Hickory Boulevard near Whites Creek. Like most major routes in and out of Nashville, US 431 crosses Old Hickory Boulevard. twice, the first time in the southern suburbs, and the other in the north. US 431/SR 65 continues northward to traverse I-24's Joelton interchange, exit 35, before entering Robertson County.[2] [3]

It traverses the Springfield area, running concurrently with US 41 (SR 11) through town. It then splits off again, and US 431 continues north to the Kentucky state line, which marks the northern terminus of SR 65.[2]

Concurrencies and secret designations

In Tennessee, when a US Highway runs concurrently with a state highway, the state highway's designation is not signed, but is a secret designation. Along US 431 in Tennessee, the secret designations include:

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: U.S. 431, U.S. 280 Markers Now Up . December 21, 2019 . The Opelika Daily News . January 26, 1954 . Opelika, Alabama . 1 . Newspapers.com .
  2. Rand McNally . 2016 . Tennessee . The Road Atlas . c. 1:1,900,800 . 2016 Walmart . Chicago . Rand McNally . 94–95 . A11–F11, F12–G12 . 0-528-00626-6 .
  3. Tennessee Department of Transportation . 2016 . Tennessee's Official Transportation Map . 2016–2017 . c. 1:633,600 . Nashville . Tennessee Department of Transportation . A7, B7–B8, C7–C8, D7–D8, E8 (West) . February 28, 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170225051652/http://www.tennessee.gov/assets/entities/tdot/attachments/2016-17_Official_SMap_(Front_Side)083116.pdf . February 25, 2017 .
  4. Tennessee Department of Transportation . 2016 . Tennessee's Official Transportation Map . PDF . 2016–2017 . Nashville . Tennessee Department of Transportation . Nashville . February 18, 2017 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170113081033/https://www.tn.gov/assets/entities/tdot/attachments/2016-17_Official_SMap_(Back_Side)083116.pdf . January 13, 2017 .
  5. 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 .