North Carolina Highway 705

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NC 705
Length: 26 mi (42 km)
Formed: 1931
North end: US 220 I-73 I-74 near Seagrove, NC
Major
junctions:

in Seagrove

NC 24/NC 27 south of Robbins

South end: NC 211 near Eagle Springs, NC
Counties: Randolph, Moore
Major cities: Seagrove, Robbins, Eagle Springs
North Carolina highways
< NC 704 NC 710 >

NC 705 is a state highway in central North Carolina; it travels mostly through the southern Piedmont Triad. The route is marked as the Pottery Highway and as a North Carolina Scenic Byway[1] due to the large number of potters in and surrounding Seagrove.

Contents

[edit] Route

[edit] Randolph County

NC 705 begins at a northern terminus near Seagrove, North Carolina at I-73/I-74US 220 exit 45. It passes through Seagrove, crossing US 220 Alternate. The highway travels southeasterly in Randolph County where it passes through the community of Whynot southeast of Seagrove. An anecdote concerning the naming of the community suggests that after hours of disagreement upon the name of the community (e.g., "Why not name it A?" or "Why not name it B"), someone finally suggested naming the community Whynot.

[edit] Moore County

The route passes into Moore County just north of the communities of Dover and Westmoore. It continues southwesterly through Robbins, North Carolina where it junctions with NC 24/NC 27 just south of Robbins at the community of Garners Store. From the junction, the route turns southeasterly and continues through the community of Zion Grove until it ends in the community of Elberta near Eagle Springs, North Carolina.

[edit] History

Portions of the route are part of the Fayetteville and Western Plank Road connecting the city of Fayetteville, North Carolina with Moravian settlements near Bethania, North Carolina (northwest of Winston-Salem).

[edit] References

  1. ^ National Scenic Byways Online. Pottery Road - Overview (HTML). Retrieved on 2006-12-29.