U.S. Route 158 Explained

State:NC
Type:US
Route:158
Map Custom:yes
Map Notes:US 158 mainline in red, business routes in blue
Length Mi:350.2
Length Round:1
Established:1932
Direction A:West
Terminus A: in Mocksville
Junction:
Direction B:East
Terminus B: at Whalebone Junction
Counties:Davie, Forsyth, Guilford, Rockingham, Caswell, Person, Granville, Vance, Warren, Halifax, Northampton, Hertford, Gates, Pasquotank, Camden, Currituck, Dare
Previous Type:NC
Previous Route:157
Next Type:NC
Next Route:159
Spur Type:US
Spur Of:58

U.S. Route 158 (US 158) is an east - west United States highway that runs for from Mocksville to Whalebone Junction in Nags Head, entirely in the state of North Carolina. It is also a critical route that connects the cities of Winston-Salem, Summerfield, and Reidsville with one another.

Route description

US 158 is a parallel of U.S. Route 58 (which runs generally through southern Virginia). The route does not intersect its parent, instead intersecting its sibling, US 258. It currently runs for from Mocksville, at US 64/US 601 to Whalebone Junction in the town of Nags Head. A stretch skirts the Great Dismal Swamp.

In Mocksville, it begins and heads north of the US 64/US 601 junction, through the downtown area. Out of town, it turns northeasterly, following in parallel to Interstate 40 (I-40) to Winston-Salem. In the city, the route uses the name Stratford Road which is an arterial thoroughfare which enters into a busy commercial district passing by Hanes Mall and it passes two folded diamond junctions with Interstate 40 and the expressway Silas Creek Parkway (NC 67). US 158 leaves the road to merge with the freeway Salem Parkway (US 421) for a short concurrency through the downtown area. Just east of town, it leaves US 421 and turns roughly north, closely paralleling nearby US 311, heading into Walkertown where both routes intersect with the future Interstate 74, which is currently designated as NC 74, and NC 66. Here, Motorists can use both NC 66 and NC 74 to connect between US 158 and US 311 within town. It then passes through Belews Creek, taking on a northeasterly path and effectively bypassing the Kernersville area, and passes thru Stokesdale where it meets two more NC Highways, NC 65, and NC 68. Shortly after, it passes through the north part of Summerfield, intersecting Interstate 73 (which carries U.S. Route 220 along it). It then leads further east to Reidsville, where it links to US 29 Business. From Reidsville, US 158 connects the northern counties of North Carolina, going through the cities and towns of Yanceyville, Roxboro, Oxford, Henderson, Roanoke Rapids, Murfreesboro, and Elizabeth City.

From North Carolina Highway 168 (NC 168) eastward, it carries traffic from the Norfolk region to the Outer Banks. Normally, the route is a four-lane undivided highway with a speed limit of 50mph in Dare County, from its eastern terminus to the Wright Memorial Bridge. Most of the route is otherwise a four-lane divided highway with a 55mph speed limit until NC 168 (which carries traffic to Chesapeake, Virginia), where it turns left at an at-grade intersection. It then returns to being undivided.

In Dare County, the highway runs in a north - south direction, although it is signed west - east. It acts as a bypass route for the Virginia Dare Trail (NC 12), which runs parallel to US 158 to the east. For the entire length of the Outer Banks, US 158 is known as Croatan Highway.

History

US 158 was established in 1932, as a concurrency with NC 48 from Mocksville to Murfreesboro and NC 12, from Murfreesboro to Virginia state line. US 158 also replaced US 117 routing between Murfreesboro to Franklin, Virginia. In 1934, NC 48 and NC 12 were removed from its routing. In 1937 or 1938, US 158's western terminus moved from Depot Street to Main Street in Mocksville.[1] In 1941, US 158 swapped routes with NC 65 between Stokesdale and Reidsville. Also in the same year, US 158 was rerouted east at Murfreesboro, replacing NC 30 to Camden and NC 34 crossing the Croatan Sound and ending at NC 345, near Manteo; its old alignment north of Murfreesboro became part of US 258. Between 1945-1949, US 158's western terminus moved to its current location at Main and Lexington Streets, in Mocksville; also in same time period, US 158 was moved onto new routing through Roxboro; its old alignment along Main Street became US 501A. In 1946, US 158 bypassed north of Gatesville, with its old alignment became US 158A.

Around 1951, US 158 was removed from Roanoke Island and was truncated at its current eastern terminus at Whalebone Junction, on Bodie Island; its former routing was replaced by US 64/US 264. In 1951, US 158 was placed on new bypass north of Henderson, leaving behind US 158A along its old alignment.[2] Around 1954, US 158 was placed on one-way streets in downtown Winston-Salem: westbound via Clover Dale Street, Glade Street and fifth street; eastbound via first and fourth streets. In 1955, US 158 was bypassed north of Warrenton, leaving behind US 158A along its former alignment.[3]

In 1959, US 158 was moved onto new expressway between Stratford to Marshall and Cherry Streets, in Winston-Salem. In 1960, US 158 was moved onto its current routing in Bodie Island, leaving behind US 158 Business.[4]

By 1962, US 158 had completed its transition onto the freeway in Winston-Salem, leaving behind US 158 Business. Between 1963-1967, US 158 was routed onto one-way streets in Weldon.[5] In 1968, US 158 was rerouted in Elizabeth City.[6]

In 1971, US 158 was placed onto the Yanceyville bypass; its old routing through the downtown area was partly replaced by NC 62, with Main Street downgraded to secondary road.[7] In 1973, US 13/US 158 was placed on new western bypass of Winton, its old alignment became part of NC 45.[8] In 1979, US 158 was placed on bypass north of Reidsville, via US 29 Bus. and NC 14; its old alignment became mostly secondary roads, with just part remaining as NC 87.[9] In 1984, US 17/US 158 was rerouted again in Elizabeth City.[10] In 1995, US 158 was rerouted onto new bypass south of Murfreesboro, leaving behind US 158 Business.[11]

In May 2016, NCDOT's applied to AASHTO to change US 158's route in the Reidsville area. Instead of following Bus. US 29 and NC 87 north to NC 14 and then South-east on NC 14 to US 29, the route would bypass the City by taking US 158 south along Bus. US 29/NC 87 to where they split and then following NC 87 South to US 29. US 158 would then run concurrent with US 29 to the NC 14 exit where it would resume its old alignment. AASHTO approved the change on May 24 at the meeting of the Special Committee on U.S. Route Numbering in Waterloo, Iowa. NCDOT passed its ordinance approving the change on March 5, 2018.[12]

U.S. Route 117

Country:USA
Route:117
Type:US 1926
Length Mi:159
Formed:1926
Deleted:1932
Location:Norlina, NC â€“Virginia Beach, VA

See also: U.S. Route 117. U.S. Route 117 (US 117) was established in 1926 to run for from Norlina, through the towns of Warrenton, Roanoke Rapids, and Murfreesboro; from there it went north into Virginia through Franklin, Suffolk, Portsmouth, and Norfolk to Virginia Beach. It was cut back to Franklin in 1931 or 1932, being replaced by US 58 east of there, and soon afterwards the remainder was renumbered US 158.[13] [14]

Special routes

Winston-Salem business loop

State:NC
Type:US-Bus
Route:158
Location:Winston-Salem, North Carolina
Formed:1962
Deleted:1970
Length Round:1

U.S. Route 158 Business, was established in 1962 as a renumbering of mainline US 158 in downtown Winston-Salem. The business loop traversed on one-way streets: eastbound used Cherry Street, 4th Street, and Dunleith Street; westbound used Marshall Street and 5th Street. In 1970, it was decommissioned.[15]

Oxford alternate route

State:NC
Type:US 1961
Route:158A
Location:Oxford, North Carolina
Formed:1954
Deleted:1971
Length Mi:4.7
Length Round:1

U.S. Route 158 Alternate (US 158A), was established in 1954 as a partial bypass of Oxford. As an alternate spur route, it did not reconnect with US 158, instead going southwest to US 15. In 1971, US 158A was eliminated when Interstate 85 was built over it.[16]

Oxford business loop

State:NC
Type:US-Bus
Route:158
Location:Oxford, North Carolina
Formed:1994
Length Mi:4.2
Length Round:1

U.S. Route 158 Business, established in 1994, is a 4.2miles business loop that followed the original US 158 route through downtown Oxford, via Roxboro Road, College Street, and Williamsboro Street.[15]

Henderson alternate route

State:NC
Type:US 1950
Route:158A
Location:Henderson, North Carolina
Formed:1951
Deleted:1960
Length Mi:8.5
Length Round:1

U.S. Route 158 Alternate (US 158A), was established in 1951, when mainline US 158 bypassed north of Henderson. US 158A followed the original route through downtown Henderson until 1960, when it was renumbered to US 158 Business.[16]

Henderson business loop

State:NC
Type:US-Bus
Route:158
Location:Henderson, North Carolina
Formed:1960
Length Mi:8.5
Length Round:1

U.S. Route 158 Business, established in 1960, is a 8.5miles business loop through downtown Henderson, via Oxford Road, Dabney Drive, and Garnett Street.[15]

Warrenton alternate route

State:NC
Type:US 1950
Route:158A
Location:Warrenton, North Carolina
Formed:1950
Deleted:1960
Length Mi:7.5
Length Round:1

U.S. Route 158 Alternate (US 158A), was established in 1950, when mainline US 158 bypassed north of Gatesville. US 158A followed the original route through downtown Warrenton until 1960, when it was renumbered to US 158 Business.[16]

Warrenton business loop

State:NC
Type:US-Bus
Route:158
Location:Warrenton, North Carolina
Formed:1960
Length Mi:7.5
Length Round:1

U.S. Route 158 Business, established in 1960, is a 7.5miles business loop through downtown Warrenton.[15]

Murfreesboro business loop

State:NC
Type:US-Bus
Route:158
Location:Murfreesboro, North Carolina
Formed:1996
Length Mi:4.4
Length Round:1

U.S. Route 158 Business, established in 1996, is a 4.4miles business loop that followed the original US 158 route through downtown Murfreesboro, via Main Street.[15]

Gatesville alternate route

State:NC
Type:US 1950
Route:158A
Location:Gatesville, North Carolina
Formed:1948
Deleted:1960
Length Mi:4.9
Length Round:1

U.S. Route 158 Alternate (US 158A), was established in 1948, two years after mainline US 158 bypassed north of Gatesville. It followed the original route through downtown Gatesville. In 1960, it was renumbered to US 158 Business.[16]

Gatesville business loop

State:NC
Type:US-Bus
Route:158
Location:Gatesville, North Carolina
Formed:1960
Length Mi:4.9
Length Round:1

U.S. Route 158 Business, established in 1960, is a 4.9miles business loop through downtown Gatesville.[15]

Kill Devil Hills business loop

State:NC
Type:US-Bus
Route:158
Location:Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina
Formed:1960
Deleted:1988
Length Mi:15.2
Length Round:1

U.S. Route 158 Business, was established in 1960 as a renumbering of mainline US 158 on Bodie Island. In 1988, US 158 Business was decommissioned, replaced by a northern extension of NC 12.[15]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. North Carolina Department of Transportation . North Carolina Primary Highway System . PDF . NCDOT . 1940 . July 15, 2014.
  2. North Carolina Department of Transportation . North Carolina Primary Highway System . PDF . NCDOT . 1951 . July 15, 2014.
  3. North Carolina Department of Transportation . North Carolina County Maps . PDF . 1957 . July 15, 2014.
  4. North Carolina Department of Transportation . North Carolina Primary Highway System . PDF . NCDOT . 1960 . July 15, 2014.
  5. North Carolina Department of Transportation . North Carolina County Maps . PDF . 1968 . July 15, 2014.
  6. Web site: North Carolina Department of Transportation . Route Change (1968-12-06). December 6, 1968 . July 15, 2014.
  7. Web site: North Carolina Department of Transportation . Route Change (1971-09-02). September 2, 1971 . July 15, 2014.
  8. Web site: North Carolina Department of Transportation . Route Change (1973-05-02). May 2, 1973 . July 15, 2014.
  9. Web site: North Carolina Department of Transportation . Route Change (1979-07-01). July 1, 1979 . July 15, 2014.
  10. Web site: North Carolina Department of Transportation . Route Change (1984-11-01). November 1, 1984 . July 15, 2014.
  11. Web site: North Carolina Department of Transportation . Route Change (1995-03-20). March 20, 1995 . July 15, 2014.
  12. Web site: North Carolina Department of Transportation . Route Change (2008-04-05). April 5, 2018 . June 4, 2018.
  13. Web site: NCRoads.com: U.S. 117. July 14, 2013.
  14. http://www.vahighways.com/route-log/us117.htm Virginia Highways Page: US 117
  15. Web site: NCRoads.com: U.S. 158-B. January 24, 2013.
  16. Web site: NCRoads.com: U.S. 158-A. January 24, 2013.