A39 road

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A39 road
Direction South West - North East
Start Falmouth
Primary
destinations1
Truro
Wadebridge
Bude
Barnstaple
Bideford
Bridgwater
Glastonbury
End Bath
Roads joined A4 road
A368 road
A37 road
A361 road
A38 road
A396 road
A399 road
A361 road
A377 road
A3072 road
A386 road
A361 road
A389 road
A3059 road
A392 road
A30 road
A390 road
A393 road
A394 road
Notes
  1. Primary destinations as specified by the Department for Transport.

The A39 is an A road in south west England. It runs south-west from Bath in Somerset through Wells, Glastonbury, Street and Bridgwater. It then follows the north coast of Somerset and Devon through Williton, Minehead, Porlock, Lynmouth, Barnstaple, Bideford, Stratton, Camelford, Wadebridge and St Columb Major. It then joins the route of the A30 road for around five miles, re-emerging near Zelah to head for the south Cornish coast via Truro and Falmouth.

In Cornwall and North Devon (until the junction with the A361 "North Devon Link Road"), the road is known as the Atlantic Highway, and was classified as a trunk road until 2002.

Contents

[edit] Porlock Hill

Porlock Hill is a section of the A39 from the village of Porlock the road climbs approximately 400 metres in under 2 miles up onto Exmoor, producing a very steep hill with a gradient of 1 in 4 and hairpin bends. The hill must be driven slowly and with great care. At the bottom of the hill there have been numerous accidents when coaches have crashed into walls as their brakes fail.

There is a less steep toll road that small vehicles and cyclists can take as an alternative route.

[edit] Woody Bay

At Martinhoe Cross in Devon — about five miles west of Lynton and two miles east of Parracombe — on the north side of the A39 lies a once disused but, in 2004, restored and reopened railway station. Woody Bay was once an intermediate stop on, and is now the main operating centre of, the Lynton & Barnstaple Railway a narrow-gauge line built in 1898, which closed in 1935. Over- and under-bridges and other traces of the line can be seen at various locations along this stretch of the road.

[edit] Atlantic Highway

Atlantic Highway is the nomenclature of a section of the A39, as it passes from the North Devon Link Road in Devon until it reaches the A30 at Fraddon in Cornwall, England.[1]

It is so called, as it is the main road (it was formerly a trunk road until 2002) that goes from mid-Cornwall to North Devon and follows the line of the Atlantic Ocean's coast. It is also named thus due to the former Southern Railway express that ran in this part of North Devon and North Cornwall (the Atlantic Coast Express). Views of the Atlantic can be seen along its length, although the road does not approach very close to the coastline itself.

The road is signified as the Atlantic Highway by road signs indicating the route mileage throughout its length, in both directions, in white on brown above the green background of the route mileage boards.

It passes by Wadebridge, Bude and Bideford, and directly through Camelford.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Official Naming Ceremony For Atlantic Highway. Cornwall County Council. Retrieved on 2007-10-28.

[edit] External links