State Route 5 | ||||
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Route information | ||||
Maintained by VDOT | ||||
Length: | 54.96 mi[1][2][3][4] (88.45 km) | |||
Existed: | 1933 – present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end: | US 60 in Richmond | |||
SR 895 near Richmond I-295 near Richmond SR 155 at Charles City VA 199 near Williamsburg |
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East end: | SR 143 in Williamsburg | |||
Highway system | ||||
Virginia Routes
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State Route 5 runs between the independent cities of Richmond and Williamsburg in the U.S. state of Virginia. Between Charles City County and James City County, it crosses the Chickahominy River via the Judith Stewart Dresser Bridge, a fixed-span bridge which replaced historic Barrett's Ferry and the former drawbridge.
Contents |
For much of its distance, SR 5 generally parallels the north bank of the James River. It passes through three of the original 8 shires created in the Colony of Virginia in 1634 by King Charles I of England. These are Henrico County, Charles City County, and James City County.
Some of the larger and older of the extant James River Plantations are along the route. All are non-government-owned, and houses and/or grounds are generally open daily to visitors with various admission fees applicable. From west to east, these are the Shirley Plantation, Edgewood Plantation, Berkeley Plantation, Westover Plantation, Evelynton Plantation, Belle Air Plantation, Piney Grove at Southall's Plantation, North Bend Plantation and Sherwood Forest Plantation.
The first piece of SR 5 was added to the state highway system in 1923, running west from Charles City for 18.5 miles (29.8 km) towards Richmond,[5] and was numbered State Route 41.[6] Three more miles (5 km) were added in 1924,[7] 6.39 miles (10.28 km) were added in 1925,[8] and the remaining 3.5 miles (5.6 km), taking it to the Richmond city limits, were added in 1927.[9]
An extension to the east, heading north from Charles City to State Route 39 (now U.S. Route 60) at Providence Forge, was added in 1926.[10] However, this became State Route 413 in the 1928 renumbering, since a new alignment of SR 41, heading east from Charles City towards Williamsburg for eight miles (13 km), was added to the state highway system, as was a 4.5-mile (7.2 km) piece at the other end, heading west from State Route 510 (now State Route 31).[11] A further 3.50 miles (5.63 km) from the west and 2.80 miles (4.51 km) from the east were added in 1930 and 1931,[12] and, in 1932, the route was completed from Richmond to Williamsburg, with 3.00 miles (4.83 km) from the west and 1.70 miles (2.74 km) from the east.[13]
The road from State Route 32 (now U.S. Route 15) at Zion Crossroads east to Oilville was added to the state highway system by 1923 as State Route 321.[14] Extensiens east from Oilville were added for four miles (6 km) in 1924,[15] six miles (10 km) in 1925,[8] and 7.5 miles (12.1 km) in 1926.[16] By 1927, SR 321 became an extension of SR 41 west from Richmond, and that year the former SR 321 was extended 3.5 miles (5.6 km), the rest of the way to Richmond.[9]
SR 321/SR 41 was also extended west for 2.0 miles (3.2 km) in 1926,[10] two more miles in 1927,[9] and 5.4 miles (8.7 km) - the rest of the way to State Route 39 (now State Route 22) at Shadwell - in 1928.[17]
In Richmond, SR 41 initially used Broad Street, a hairpin turn through Chimborazo Park, Fulton Street, Williamsburg Road, Hatcher Street, Newton Road, and New Osborne Turnpike.[18][19]
State Route 39 from Shadwell west to Monterey, now U.S. Route 250, was part of the initial 1918 state highway system (numbered State Route 9 until 1923). It initially continued west from Monterey on present US 250,[20] but by 1924 it used current State Route 84 west to West Virginia. The road west from Monterey towards West Virginia Route 56[21] (now U.S. Route 250) for 7.86 miles (12.65 km) was added to the state highway system in 1930[22] and 1932 as State Route 835;[23] the remaining mileage to the state line was added in 1933.[24]
In the 1933 renumbering, State Routes 41 and 835 both became part of a new State Route 5, as did the piece of State Route 39 from Monterey to Shadwell. By 1935,[25] the whole route west of Richmond became an extension of U.S. Route 250 into Virginia, truncating SR 5 to its present Richmond-Williamsburg route.
SR 5 was extended east along State Route 31 through Williamsburg to State Route 168 (now State Route 143) "to improve the service to travelers interchanging between Route 5 and Routes 60 and 168" in 1958.[26] SR 31 has since been truncated to the SR 5 junction.
County | Location | Mile [1][2] [3][4] |
Destinations | Notes | |
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City of Richmond | 0.00 | US 60 west (25th street) – Midlothian | Western terminus; West end of concurrency with US 60 | ||
0.30 | US 60 east (Williamsburg Avenue) – Williamsburg | East end of concurrency with US 60 | |||
Henrico | Varina | 8.35 | I-295 to I-64 / I-95 – Norfolk, Rocky Mount | Cloverleaf interchange | |
Richmond National Battlefield Park |
13.05 | SR 156 north (Willis Church Road) – Mechanicsville | West end of concurrency with SR 156 | ||
Charles City | Kimages | 19.11 | SR 106 / SR 156 south (Roxbury Road) – Talleysville, Hopewell, Prince George | East end of concurrency with SR 156 | |
Charles City | 28.48 | SR 155 north (Courthouse Road) – Providence Forge, New Kent | |||
41.76 | Judith Stewart Dresser Bridge over the Chickahominy River | ||||
James City | 49.95 | SR 199 west (Humelsine Parkway) – Lightfoot | West end of concurrency with SR 199 | ||
City of Williamsburg | 50.41 | SR 31 south (Jamestown Road) / SR 199 east (Humelsine Parkway) – Surry, Williamsburg, Busch Gardens | East end of concurrency with SR 199 | ||
52.34 | SR 132 south (S. Henry Street) – Jamestown | West end of concurrency with SR 132 | |||
52.72 | SR 132 north (Lafayette Street) – Camp Peary | East end of concurrency with SR 132 | |||
53.78 | US 60 east (Page Street) – Newport News, Virginia Beach | West end of Wrong-way concurrency with US 60 | |||
54.34 | US 60 west (Bypass Road) – Richmond | East end of Wrong-way concurrency with US 60 | |||
54.96 | SR 143 (Merrimac Trail) – Newport News, Camp Peary | Eastern terminus | |||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi |
Location | Name | Notes |
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City of Richmond | E. Main Street | Western terminus |
Henrico County | Old Osborne Turnpike | |
Osborne Turnpike | ||
New Market Road | ||
Charles City County | John Tyler Memorial Highway | |
James City County | ||
City of Williamsburg | Humelsine Parkway | Concurrency with SR 199 |
Jamestown Road | ||
S. Boundary Street | ||
W. Francis Street | ||
Henry Street (South/North) | Concurrency with SR 132 | |
Lafayette Street | Old SR 162 alignment | |
Page Street | ||
Capitol Landing Road | Eastern terminus |
< SR 40 | Two‑digit State Routes 1923-1933 |
SR 42 > |
none | Spurs of SR 32 1923-1928 |
SR 322 > |
< SR 834 | District 8 State Routes 1928–1933 |
SR 836 > |