North Carolina Highway 9
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NC 9 |
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Length: | 45 mi (72 km) | ||||||||
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Formed: | 1938 | ||||||||
North end: | Montreat Road near Montreat, NC | ||||||||
Major junctions: |
I-40 in Black Mountain; US 74 near Columbus |
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South end: | SC 9 near Landrum, SC | ||||||||
Counties: | Buncombe, Henderson, Rutherford, Polk. | ||||||||
Major cities: | Black Mountain, Lake Lure | ||||||||
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NC 9 is a 45-mile North Carolina state highway. It serves as a connector route from the important S.C. Highway 9 to eastern portions of the Appalachians around Asheville.
[edit] Route description
As mentioned, NC 9 meets SC 9 at the state border. SC 9 is South Carolina's most important state highway, though the same could not be said for NC 9. NC 9 begins in Rutherford County.
N.C. 9 is co-signed with US 64/74A in the city of Lake Lure. This is about 10 miles north of the southern terminus.
After crossing into Buncombe County NC 9 crosses over the Eastern Continental Divide at Lakey Gap and crosses I-40 at exit 64.
The 18-mile stretch of 9 from Bat Cave north to Black Mountain is hilly, twisty and grading. A sign heading south from Black Mountain points out the troubles of the road for trucks.
The highway runs through the town of Black Mountain, North Carolina (just east of Asheville). Nearly 7 miles after leaving it, NC 9 ends at a vaulted archway at the Presbyterian camp of Montreat.
[edit] History
1930-1937: There was a previous NC 9 before the current day routing and was known as Leesville Road. The first 9 dates from about 1930, and ran from Raleigh northwest to Durham. Today, part of that road is US 70. It ran in conjunction with US 15A through downtown Raleigh in front of the Capitol Building. The original NC 9 lasted until late 1937, when it was renumbered as US 70A.
1938: NC 9 in Raleigh is renumbered, while NC 192 is renumbered to NC 9 from the SC Border to Lake Lure, and renumbering NC 119 from Chimney Rock Park (just north of Lake Lure) area north to Montreat. The number was chosen because of the SC 9 renumbering in early 1938.
1972: An I-40-related rerouting just south of downtown Black Mountain in 1972. In the years before the Interstate was built 9 entered town along Black Mountain Avenue, proceeding east onto Sutton Avenue before continuing north on Broadway Street. With the completion of I-40, NC 9 followed an extension of Broadway Street. This is the last major change.