U.S. Route 301 Explained

Country:USA
Type:US
Route:301
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:US 301 highlighted in red
Length Mi:1099
Established:1932
Direction A:South
Terminus A: in Sarasota, FL
Junction:
Direction B:North
Terminus B: in Biddles Corner, DE
States:Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Delaware
Spur Type:US
Spur Of:1

U.S. Route 301 (US 301) is a spur of U.S. Route 1 running through the South Atlantic states. It runs from Biddles Corner, Delaware, at Delaware Route 1 to Sarasota, Florida, at U.S. Route 41. It passes through the states of Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. It goes through the cities of Middletown, Delaware; Annapolis, Maryland; Richmond and Petersburg, Virginia; Rocky Mount, Wilson, and Fayetteville, North Carolina; Florence, South Carolina; Statesboro and Jesup, Georgia; and Jacksonville, Ocala, Zephyrhills, and Sarasota, Florida.

US 301 parallels Interstate 95 for much of its routing through The Carolinas and Virginia including short concurrencies in Santee, South Carolina, and Lumberton, North Carolina. It has a number of other concurrencies along its route.

Originally, US 301 was much shorter. Its former northern terminus was in Baltimore, Maryland. It followed the alignment of the current Maryland Route 3, portions of the Baltimore Beltway, and Maryland Route 648. US 301 ended in Southwestern Baltimore on Monroe Street at the intersection with US 1. (Later, MD 3 was supplanted north of Millersville by Interstate 97.)[1] It was later extended into the state of Delaware, along a different alignment that bypassed Baltimore altogether. Until 2019, the northern terminus was at US 40 in Glasgow, Delaware; the state of Delaware built a new tolled freeway to carry US 301, and it terminates southeast of the former terminus, at Delaware Route 1 just south of the Chesapeake & Delaware Canal. The original southern end was in Summerton, South Carolina, and it has been extended south many times, now to US 41 in Sarasota, Florida.

Route description

|-|FL|266|428|-|GA|169|272|-|SC|190.3|306.3|-|NC|194|312.2|-|VA|145|233|-|MD|123.30|198.43|-|DE|11.9|24.03|-|Total|1099|1,769|}

Florida

See main article: U.S. Route 301 in Florida. Concurrencies in Florida include US 1/23 between Folkston (Georgia) and Callahan, US 441 between Sparr and Belleview, US 27 between Ocala and Belleview, US 98 between Moss Town and Clinton Heights (near Dade City), and US 41 between Palmetto and South Bradenton. The road is also shared by the DeSoto Trail south of Bushnell.

Georgia

See main article: U.S. Route 301 in Georgia. In Georgia, US 301 is signed concurrently with various state routes. It uses SR 4/SR 15 from Florida to Folkston, SR 23 from Folkston to Glennville, and SR 73 from Glennville to South Carolina. Large portions of US 301 in Georgia are concurrent with US 25.

US 301 enters Georgia from Florida concurrent with US 1/US 23, also designated as SR 4/SR 15, on a bridge over the St. Marys River. In Folkston, SR 23/SR 121 join. US 1/US 23/SR 4/SR 15/SR 121 split to the northwest at a junction north of Folkston, leaving only US 301 and SR 23 to head north across US 82/SR 520 at Nahunta to Jesup.

At Jesup, US 301 crosses US 341/SR 27, where US 25 turns from US 341 onto US 301, and then merges with US 84/SR 38. The combined routes (US 25/US 84/US 301/SR 23/SR 38) cross the Altamaha River to the junction with SR 57 in Ludowici. There US 84 and SR 38 continue northeast, while US 25/US 301/SR 23 turn northwest with SR 57.

SR 23 and SR 57 split off to the northwest at Glennville. SR 73 begins there, taking US 25 and US 301 north from Glenville across US 280/SR 30 at Claxton and I-16/SR 404 to Statesboro.

US 25 and US 301 meet US 80/SR 26 and SR 67 in Statesboro. SR 67 joins south of the US 80/SR 26 crossing and then turns west with US 80/SR 26, as does US 25; US 25 and SR 67 split from US 80/SR 26 about to the west. US 301 and SR 73 continue north from Statesboro through Sylvania to the Savannah River and the border with South Carolina.

South Carolina

See main article: U.S. Route 301 in South Carolina. US 301 enters South Carolina over the Savannah River southwest of Allendale. Concurrencies include U.S. 321 in and around Ulmer, U.S. 601 between Bamberg and Orangeburg, then I-95/U.S. 15 Santee, at Exit 97 before all three move across Lake Marion. The U.S. 15-301 multiplex leaves I-95 at Exit 102, running in close proximity to I-95, but U.S. 15 breaks away at Summerton. Other concurrencies include U.S. 521 in Manning, U.S. 52 between Effingham and just south of Florence, U.S. 76 eastbound from east of Florence until Pee Dee, and finally joins U.S. 501 in Latta, where they both approach the South of the Border roadside attraction complex at the interchange with I-95 on the North Carolina-South Carolina border.

North Carolina

See main article: U.S. Route 301 in North Carolina. US 301-501 enters North Carolina at the interchange with I-95 where it passes the South of the Border roadside attraction complex, then closely parallels by I-95 throughout North Carolina. Concurrencies include US 501 between Latta (South Carolina) and Rowland, I-95 between exit 10 and exit 22 in Lumberton, I-95 BL in Fayetteville, and US 158 between Weldon and Garysburg.

Virginia

See main article: U.S. Route 301 in Virginia.

Entering Virginia just south of the community of Skippers, the route parallels I-95 though much of the Southside region of Virginia, often times serving as the frontage road for I-95, deviating from it only in the city of Emporia, where it takes a more direct route through the center of the city. In the Richmond metro area, it passes through the historic centers of the cities of Petersburg (where it meets its parent route, U.S. 1) and Colonial Heights. Passing east of Chester, the two conjoined routes enter Richmond and pass through the Manchester portion of the city along a major boulevard, crossing the James River along the Robert E. Lee Memorial Bridge over Belle Isle Park, and following Belvidere Street and Chamberlayne Avenue through central Richmond. At the extreme northern border of Richmond, the two routes split again, with U.S. 301 veering to the northeast past the community of Mechanicsville, Virginia and turning back to the north.

Traveling through numerous rural areas and small communities of central Virginia, the route turns northeast along a bypass around Bowling Green and passing close to Fort Walker as it turns to a more east-northeasterly direction, leaving the state in Dahlgren on the Harry W. Nice Memorial Bridge across the Potomac River.

Maryland

See main article: U.S. Route 301 in Maryland. U.S. Route 301 enters Maryland along the Governor Harry W. Nice Memorial Bridge across the Potomac River from Virginia. A four-lane highway through most of the state, it is known locally as the Crain Highway and it connects several rural communities and small exurbs at the outer edges of the Washington metropolitan area, connecting communities such as La Plata, St. Charles, Waldorf and Upper Marlboro. The route follows a generally northeast-southwest alignment until Bowie, where it leaves the Crain Highway (which continues on as Maryland Route 3) and joins the John Hanson Highway/U.S. Route 50, which also carries the hidden designation of I-595.

The John Hanson Highway is a freeway that travels roughly due east-west and carries both U.S. 50 and U.S. 301 into and through Annapolis, where the name changes to Blue Star Memorial Highway. The freeway continues onto Maryland's Eastern Shore via the Chesapeake Bay Bridge, passing across Kent Island. At the end of the freeway, the two routes split, each following a four-lane divided road through the eastern shore, with U.S. 50 going generally south and U.S. 301 going generally north.

The four lane divided road continues generally northeast through the rural Eastern Shore region before crossing into Delaware and becoming a freeway.

Delaware

See main article: U.S. Route 301 in Delaware. US 301 in Delaware is a four-lane tolled freeway that enters the state from Maryland and heads northeast past Middletown before coming to its northern terminus at an interchange with Delaware Route 1 in Biddles Corner, south of the Senator William V. Roth Jr. Bridge over the Chesapeake & Delaware Canal in St. Georges. The new alignment opened in January 2019 and replaces the former routing that ended at U.S. Route 40 in Glasgow.

History

US 301 was established in 1932 as a replacement of the piece of US 17-1 north of Wilson and the whole of US 217. Thus US 301 initially ran from US 17 (now US 76) at Pee Dee, South Carolina northeast through Dillon, Lumberton, Fayetteville, Dunn, Smithfield, Wilson, Rocky Mount, and Emporia, ending at US 1 in Petersburg, Virginia. This entire route is now paralleled by Interstate 95. US 301 was at one time alternately referred to as Federal Route No. 301 early in its existence.[2]

In 1935, US 301 was extended southwest to US 15 at Summerton.[3] This extension took it west on US 76 (formerly US 17) to Florence and south on US 52 (also formerly US 17) to Effingham. There it split to the southwest, running along what had been SC 4 via Manning to Summerton.[4] This again runs parallel to Interstate 95.

The next extension was to the north in late 1940, coinciding with the opening of the Potomac River Bridge. US 301 was extended north along US 1 from Petersburg to Richmond, then north on SR 2 to Bowling Green, and northeast on SR 207 to the bridge.[5] [6] In Maryland it continued along the new alignment off the bridge to Newburg, Maryland, and then replaced MD 3 all the way to US 1 in Baltimore, Maryland.[1]

In the late 1940s, US 301 was extended again, south all the way to Tampa, Florida. In South Carolina it ran along US 15 southwest to Santee, South Carolina and replaced SC 4 west to Orangeburg, South Carolina. From Orangeburg, US 301 ran southwest with US 601 to Bamberg, South Carolina, replaced SC 33 to Ulmer, South Carolina, replaced SC 508 to Allendale, South Carolina, and replaced SC 73 to the Georgia state line.[4] In Georgia, US 301 was marked along SR 73 to Glennville, Georgia, SR 23 to Folkston, and SR 4 to the border with Florida, numbers that it still has today.[7] In Florida it ran along SR 15 to Callahan, SR 200 to Ocala, SR 25/SR 500 to Belleview, SR 35 to Dade City, SR 39 to Zephyrhills, and State Road 41 to Tampa, Florida.[8] As with Georgia, these State Road numbers still exist.

The final extension to the south was made in the early 1950s. US 301 was realigned to turn east on U.S. Route 92/SR 600 in northern Tampa and south on SR 43; SR 43 was later extended north to meet SR 41 at Thonotosassa. This was done at the same time as US 541 was eliminated and US 41 was moved onto the former US 541 south of Tampa; US 301 ran along what had been US 41. This extension took US 301 south to Palmetto along SR 43/former US 41, south on SR 45/US 41 over the Manatee River into Bradenton, Florida (replaced 1957 by a new bridge to the east on SR 55), and south on SR 683 to end at SR 45/US 41 in Sarasota.

In 1960, US 301 was extended to its greatest extent, Sarasota to Farnhurst. The part from near Bowie north to Baltimore reverted to MD 3, and US 301 was extended east along US 50 from near Bowie over the Chesapeake Bay Bridge to Queenstown. There it split to the northeast, replacing MD 71 to the Delaware state line. In Delaware, it continued concurrent with DE 71 to Middletown. There it split into a one-way pair on two two-way roads. US 301 northbound turned east at Middletown along DE 299, then running north on US 13 to its end at Farnhurst at I-295 - the Delaware Memorial Bridge approach. Southbound US 301 began at the same place, but only used US 13 to the DE 71 junction near Red Lion. From there it followed DE 71 all the way to Maryland, rejoining northbound at Middletown. In the early 1970s, the northbound alignment was modified, continuing north on Middletown with DE 71 across the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal on the Summit Bridge. After crossing the canal it continued north on DE 896 to Glasgow, where it turned east with US 40 to its merge with US 13 at State Road. In the mid-1980s, both directions were moved to run east from Mount Pleasant to US 13. Then in 1992, AASHTO approved relocating both directions to the path northbound had followed, joining US 40 at Glasgow. Signage currently now indicates that US 301 ends there, but on November 14, 2006, the Delaware Department of Transportation (DelDOT) announced that a new four-lane US 301 bypass will be built. The bypass, which had been proposed since the 1950s, would go west of Middletown, alleviating traffic conditions in state's fourth most populous town, and then travel in a northeasterly direction, intersecting the current DE 896 near Boyds Corner and then terminate at DE 1 near the highway's Biddles Corner toll plaza. A spur route, also following the old 1960s highway route, will connect US 301 with the four-lane Summit Bridge just south of Glasgow. When built, the road, like Delaware Route 1 and I-95, will charge a toll to cover the costs of building the new bypass, which is heavily used by trucks between Philadelphia and the Washington, D.C. metro areas.[9] This bypass opened to traffic on January 10, 2019.

According to one source, US 301 had been known as "Tobacco Trail" prior to its renaming in 1960 to "The Miss Universe Highway".[10]

Prior to 2019, US 301 in Delaware started at the intersection of U.S. 40 and Delaware Route 896 in Glasgow. The highway was cosigned with DE 896, picking up Delaware Route 71 only three miles south of U.S. 40. Running parallel to US 13 and Delaware Route 1, the highway crossed the Chesapeake and Delaware Canal on the four-lane Summit Bridge. At Mount Pleasant, DE 896 headed east to intersect U.S. 13 at Boyd's Corner, while DE 71 continued to be cosigned with U.S. 301 until the road reached Middletown. U.S. 301 continued alone until it picked up two other roads, Delaware Route 15 and Delaware Route 299, which followed the highway to near the Maryland state line. On November 14, 2006, DelDOT announced that a new four-lane bypass around Middletown will reroute US 301 west of Middletown, with the road directly connecting to DE 1 in Biddles Corner. This bypass opened to traffic on January 10, 2019.[11]

U.S. Route 217

Country:USA
Type:US 1926
Route:217
Location:Pee Dee, SCWilson, NC
Formed:1926
Deleted:1932
Length Mi:151.1

U.S. Route 217 (US 217) was an original US highway, established in 1926. It traversed from US 17, in Pee Dee, South Carolina, to US 17-1/NC 40, south of Wilson, North Carolina. Its routing connected the cities of Dillon, Lumberton, Fayetteville, Dunn, and Smithfield. In 1932, the entire route was renumbered as part of US 301.

Major intersections

Florida
  • in Sarasota
  • on the BradentonWest Samoset city line. The highways travel concurrently to Palmetto.
  • in Ellenton
  • in Palm River-Clair Mel
  • in East Lake-Orient Park
  • south of Dade City. The highways travel concurrently to Lacoochee.
  • in Belleview. US 27/US 301 travels concurrently to Ocala. US 301/US 441 travels concurrently to southeast of Reddick.
  • south-southwest of Baldwin
  • in Baldwin. The highways travel concurrently through Baldwin.
  • in Callahan. The highways travel concurrently to Homeland, Georgia.
    Georgia
  • in Nahunta
  • in Jesup. US 25/US 301 travels concurrently to Statesboro.
  • in Jesup. The highways travel concurrently to Ludowici.
  • in Claxton
  • south-southeast of Register
  • in Statesboro
    South Carolina
  • in Allendale. The highways travel concurrently through Allendale.
  • in Ulmer. The highways travel concurrently to northeast of Ulmer.
  • in Bamberg. The highways travel concurrently to Orangeburg.
  • in Bamberg
  • in Orangeburg
  • southeast of Wilkinson Heights south-southwest of Elloree
  • south-southwest of Santee. The highways travel concurrently to Summerton.
  • south-southeast of Santee. The highways travel concurrently to south-southwest of Summerton.
  • southwest of Manning
  • in Manning. The highways travel concurrently to north-northeast of Manning.
  • in Turbeville. The highways travel concurrently through Turbeville.
  • in Effingham. The highways travel concurrently to Florence.
  • east of Florence. The highways travel concurrently to Pee Dee.
  • south of Latta. The highways travel concurrently to Rowland, North Carolina.
    South Carolina–North Carolina
  • at the South CarolinaNorth Carolina state line at South of the Border
    North Carolina
  • east of Raynham. The highways travel concurrently to Lumberton.
  • southwest of Lumberton
  • north of Lumberton
  • north of St. Pauls
  • in Dunn
  • northeast of Four Oaks
  • in Selma
  • southwest of Kenly
  • south-southwest of Wilson
  • south-southwest of Wilson
  • south-southwest of Wilson
  • in Rocky Mount
  • in Weldon. The highways travel concurrently to Garysburg.
    Virginia
  • in Emporia
  • south of Jarratt
  • in Carson
  • in Templeton
  • south-southeast of Petersburg
  • in Petersburg
  • in Petersburg. The highways travel concurrently to Richmond.
  • in Richmond
  • in Richmond
  • in Richmond
  • in Richmond
  • in Chamberlayne
  • in Mechanicsville
  • in Port Royal Cross Roads
    Maryland
  • in Bowie. I-595/US 301 shares a hidden concurrency to Parole. US 50/US 301 travels concurrently to Queenstown.
  • in Parole
    Delaware
  • in Biddles Corner[12]

    Special routes

    See main article: Special routes of U.S. Route 301. There are currently eight active special routes along US 301:

    External links

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Routes 1-6. 2007-01-08. 19 September 2006. MDRoads: an unofficial guide to Maryland highways. Mike Pruett.
    2. News: Route 301 Has Been Restored To 5th Street. Staff. 6 May 1935. The Robesonian. Lumberton, North Carolina. subscription . 2016-07-10. Newspapers.com.
    3. News: The Popular Route. Zeigler. J. A.. 31 May 1936. Florence Morning News. Editorial Comments. Florence, South Carolina. 14. This newspaper says that U. S. 301 that begins at Petersburg, Va., and ends at Summerton, S. C., is running the Petersburg Pike to Richmond a close race for popularity.. subscription . 2016-07-10. Newspapers.com.
    4. The Highways of South Carolina, US 301
    5. Web site: US 1 and branches . Froehlig. Adam . Roberson, Mike . September 17, 2006 . January 8, 2007 . Virginia Highway Index. The Virginia Highways Project.
    6. Web site: Minutes of the Meeting of the State Highway Commission of Virginia (Richmond, Virginia) . January 8, 2007. Massie. Wade H. May 28, 1940. Virginia Department of Transportation. Excerpt:
    7. Web site: Georgia System of State Roads. January 8, 2007. April 1, 1939 . JPG. Hargrett Rare Book & Manuscript Library: Rare Map Collection . University of Georgia Libraries (originally published by State Highway Department of Georgia) .
    8. [Rand McNally]
    9. News: Andrew . Tangel . DelDOT Picks U.S. 301 Bypass Route . Delaware News-Journal . November 14, 2006 . January 8, 2007. URL provided is an archive search
    10. News: U. S. Route 301 Officially Renamed for "Miss Universe". Staff. 3 April 1960. The Terre Haute Tribune. Terre Haute, Indiana. 84. U. S. Route 301, from the Delaware Bay Bridge to Florida, has been officially renamed "The Miss Universe Highway".. subscription . 2016-07-10. Newspapers.com.
    11. Web site: U.S. Route 301 toll road open today in Middletown area. Mace. Ben. January 10, 2019. Middletown Transcript. January 10, 2019.
    12. Book: Rand McNally . 2014 . The Road Atlas . Walmart . Chicago . Rand McNally . 24, 26-29, 47, 74-75, 92, 107. 978-0-528-00771-2.