Florida State Road 39

State Road 39
Route information
Maintained by FDOT
Length: 19.91 mi[1] (32.04 km)
Major junctions
South end: SR-60/CR-39 near Plant City
  US 92 / SR 600 in Plant City
I-4 / SR 400 in Plant City
North end: US 301 / SR 41 in Zephyrhills
Highway system

Florida State and County Roads
Interstate • US • SR (Pre-1945) • Toll • County

SR 37 SR 40

State Road 39 is a north–south highway in eastern Pasco and Hillsborough County, Florida, United States. Between Plant City and Zephyrhills, the road is named Paul S. Buchman Highway. North of Zephyrhills, Florida the road is a secret state designation for U.S. Route 301 until the southern terminus of the concurrency with U.S. Route 98 south of Dade City, Florida.

Contents

Route description

In 2007, a resurfacing project of US 98-301 in Dade City led to the exposure of the road's status as State Road 39, as detour signs popped up around downtown. This was also part of an effort to realign US 98-301 to the truck route. SRs 35 & 700 remain hidden state roads in this segment.

Former segments

Hillsborough and Manatee Counties

South of SR 60 former State Road 39 continues as Hillsborough County Road 39, through Manatee County into SR 62 near Duette. The road is known as Kickliter Road from SR 62 to Florida State Road 674 in Fort Lonesome, and Plant City-Picnic Road from SR 674 to SR 60.

Hernando County

In and around Ridge Manor, Former SR 39 ran along what is today US 98(SR 700) and old SR 50 to Croom-Rital Road. It then broke away from US 98/SR 50 and was the designation for Croom-Rital Road, a street which runs along what today is the Withlacoochee State Trail, until reaching the unincorporated hamlet of Croom. North of Croom Road, SR 39 went onto Nobleton Road, which is a dirt road that also follows the Withlacoochee State Trail until it becomes the paved Edgewater Avenue, and crosses the trail heading into scenic Nobleton, where it terminates and used to turns west to overlap Hernando CR 476.[2] In Istachatta, another former section exists as Hernando County Road 439, then crosses into Citrus County.

Citrus County Road 39

When the road crosses into Pineola in Citrus County, it resumes its designation as County Road 39, however the designation exists in two sections. It winds along the Withlacoochee State Trail, but eventually the trail moves to the northwest. After running across Bradley Lake, it finally terminates at Citrus County Road 48. The journey of former SR 39 doesn't end there though, as it secretly overlaps westbound along CR 48 towards Floral City, Florida. North of Floral City, former SR 39 runs along Old Floral City Avenue, where it runs along the Withlacoochee State Trail past Citrus County Road 39A, and Fort Cooper State Park, before entering Inverness South.

Again between Stoke's Ferry at State Road 200 and US 41 in Citrus Springs, Florida, Citrus County Road 39 winds along the south side of the Withlacoochee River as the Withlacoochee Trail.

Former proposals

In the early 20th century, a connection between County Road 48 and SR 200 was planned to run along the west-north side of the Withlacoochee River. This is why there are two sections of CR 39 in Citrus County. It was proposed to end at US 41.

Major intersections

County Location[3] Mile[4] Destinations Notes
Hillsborough 0.00 SR 60 / CR 39 south – Brandon, Mulberry Southern Terminus of SR-39; Northern Terminus of CR-39
Plant City 5.43
US 92 / SR 600 east (Reynolds Street) – Lakeland
5.64
US 92 / SR 600 west (Baker Street) – Tampa
6.86 I-4 / SR 400 – Tampa, Orlando Exit 21 on I-4
Pasco Zephyrhills 19.91 US 301 / SR 41 (Gall Blvd.), Dade City Northern Terminus of SR-39

References

  1. ^ FDOT GIS data
  2. ^ [Florida Travel Saver, July–September 2001]
  3. ^ U.S. Census Bureau. "2009 Boundary and Annexation Survey Maps". http://www.census.gov/geo/www/bas/bas09/st12_fl/enttype_12.html. Retrieved June 4, 2009. 
  4. ^ Florida Department of Transportation. "FDOT Interchange Report" (PDF). Archived from the original on October 25, 2007. http://web.archive.org/web/20071025050109/http://www.dot.state.fl.us/planning/statistics/pdfs/interchange.pdf. Retrieved October 4, 2007. 

External links