Louisiana Highway 111

Louisiana Highway 111 marker

Louisiana Highway 111
Route information
Maintained by Louisiana DOTD
Length: 45.8 mi[1] (73.7 km)
Existed: 1955 renumbering – present
Major junctions
South end: US 190 in Junction
  LA 8 in Burr Ferry
US 171 in Anacoco
East end: LA 117 near Leesville
Location
Parishes: Beauregard, Vernon
Highway system
  • Louisiana Highway System
LA 110LA 112

Louisiana Highway 111 (LA 111) is a state highway in Louisiana. It spans 45.8 miles (73.7 km) and runs from south to north though its northernmost 19-mile-long (31 km) segment runs east-west. LA 111 is a mostly rural two lane highway. The southern terminus is at an intersection with U.S. Route 190 (US 190) in the unincorporated community of Junction and its northern terminus at an intersection with LA 117. The north-south portion of the highway skirts the Texas border and forms a loop around the city of Leesville.

Route description

LA 111 begins at a Y-intersection with US 190 in Junction, an unincorporated community in northern Beauregard Parish. It travels north and crosses the Bayou Anacoco into Vernon Parish. Just north of the crossing, LA 111 curves to the left and intersects LA 464 at its southern terminus. Throughout most of its north-south segment, LA 111 passes through forested areas, portions of which are a part of the Clear Creek Wildlife Management Area. In the middle of the forest, the highway passes through the community of Evans. LA 111 continues north before reaching LA 8 in Burr Ferry. LA 8 and LA 111 form a brief concurrency through Burr Ferry. LA 111 continues north, running parallel with the Sabine River, and intersects and merges with LA 392 east. LA 392 heads west from here and crosses into Texas over the Sabine River across the Toledo Bend Dam. LA 392 east splits running north while LA 111 continues east, crosses over the northern part of Vernon Lake, and enters Anacoco, intersecting with US 171. Continuing east LA 111 ends at the eastern terminus at LA 117 about five miles (8.0 km) north of Leesville.[1]

History

LA 111 is an old historic trail/road that among other things ran between two Ferries in Vernon Parish. Burr's Ferry in the south and one at a crossing near Toledo Bend in the north, was in an area that some considered the heart of the Neutral Strip (Louisiana), long before the Louisiana Purchase and even after the Adams-Onís Treaty. After the purchase and up until the first bridges these crossings were two of only four passages from Texas into Louisiana and LA 111 was an important road. For many years, until railroads were built, these were main trails for cattle entering Louisiana heading east to Alexandria, then New Orleans and farther points east.

Major junctions

ParishLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
BeauregardJunction0.00.0 US 190
Vernon 3.04.8 LA 464 northSouthern terminus of LA 464
Burr Ferry16.426.4 LA 8 west Burkeville, TX, Jasper, TXSouthern end of LA 8 concurrency
16.927.2 LA 8 east LeesvilleNorthern end of LA 8 concurrency
 26.342.3 LA 392 west South Toledo Bend State ParkSouthern end of LA 392 concurrency
 31.450.5 LA 392 east HornbeckNorthern end of LA 392 concurrency
Anacoco37.059.5 US 171 (Main Street) Many, Leesville
 45.873.7 LA 117 Kurthwood, Leesville
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

  1. 1 2 3 Google (January 27, 2015). "Louisiana Highway 111" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved January 27, 2015.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, January 27, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.