North Carolina Highway 10
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
NC 10 |
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Length: | 48 mi (77 km) | ||||||||
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Formed: | 1911[1] | ||||||||
East end: | I-40 near Catawba, NC | ||||||||
Major junctions: |
US 70 near Catawba; US 321 near Hickory |
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West end: | NC 226 in Polkville, NC | ||||||||
Counties: | Catawba, Lincoln, Cleveland | ||||||||
Major cities: | Catawba, Newton, Casar | ||||||||
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NC 10 is a 48-mile (77 km) North Carolina state highway. It served as the state's Central Highway in the 1910s and early 1920s, but now only connects a few small towns in the North Carolina foothills.
Contents |
[edit] Route
[edit] Catawba County
NC 10's eastern terminus is at Interstate 40 (exit 138) in Catawba County, just southwest of Statesville, North Carolina and just northeast from Claremont, North Carolina. From this point, NC 10 travels in a southerly (signed west) direction as Oxford School Road, crossing US 70 and entering the town of Catawba. As Main Street, NC 10 travels through the heart of the town and turns right on Second Avenue. Exiting the town to the southwest, NC 10 travels to the city of Newton where it merges with NC 16 for a short while and takes the name of D Street, and later C Street. After leaving Newton, NC 10 has an interchange with the US 321 freeway and meets a terminus of NC 127 before crossing the county line.
[edit] Lincoln County
After NC 10 enters Lincoln County, it meets NC 18 in the community of Laurel Hill. NC 18 and NC 10 are concurrent for about a one-mile stretch before NC 10 splits in a westerly direction. The route then crosses another county line.
[edit] Cleveland County
Shortly after passing into Cleveland County, NC 10 meets the western terminus of NC 27, one of the state's longest state highways. Curving through the North Carolina foothills as Casar Road, NC 10 passes through the town of Casar, and eventually arrives in Polkville. There, NC 10 meets its southern terminus at NC 226 in the center of town.
[edit] History
- 1911: North Carolina state legislation brings the Central Highway project into being. The Central Highway was a conceived plan for a continuous highway that stretched from the westernmost portions of North Carolina to the coast.
- Late 1910s: The second and third State Highway Commissions surveyed a route for NC 10, which was the number designated for the Central Highway. Existing roads were linked with new roads to form the east-west route.
- 1924: About one-half of the Central Highway was paved at this point; the rest remained as clay or gravel roads.
- 1926: Nearly all of NC 10 was paved. Also, many citizens of Newton, who were upset that the Central Highway was not routed through their city, took the State Highway Commission to court. The case was finally decided in the North Carolina Supreme Court, which ruled that NC 10 must pass by the Newton courthouse. The already constructed NC 10 bypassing Newton was given the designation NC 110, and most travlers took this bypass anyway.
- 1927: U.S. Highways arrived in North Carolina; US 70 and US 19 shared much of NC 10's routing.
- 1929: Both NC 10 and NC 110 were completely paved.
- 1930: NC 110 was renamed NC 10A
- 1933: North Carolina eliminated most state highways that coincided with U.S. highways. Most of NC 10 is truncated.
- 1932: US 70 moved from NC 10's former routing to NC 10A, replacing it completely in the Newton area. NC 10 reoccupied its routing east of Newton.
- 1938: NC 10 is extended west to terminate at NC 18.
- 1940: NC 10 is extended west again to end at its current western terminus in Polkville.
- Mid 1990s: NC 10's eastern terminus is extended about one mile north from US 70 to I-40.
Part of an early routing of NC 10 is still visible in Orange county. Just east of Mebane, previous NC 10 ran parallel to current I-40/85, just a mile south of the highway. At Efland, the road crossed the interstate and ran parallel route just north of the current interstate on Ben Johnson Road. The road followed the Eno River to Hillsborough and turned left on King St. (no longer an intersection). The route turned right onto Churton St. (NC 86), and turned eastward after crossing the interstate and followed the railroad to a junction to US 70 at the Durham County Line.
[edit] References and external links
- Cecil Kenneth Brown, Ph.D. The State Highway System of North Carolina: Its Evolution and Present Status. Chapel Hill, N.C.: UNC Press, 1931. 54-55.
- NCRoads (mirror) - NC 10
- Filpus Roadgeek - Historic NC 10
- State Ends - NC 10