Tennessee State Route 68

State Route 68 marker

State Route 68
Route information
Maintained by TDOT
Length: 107.2 mi[1] (172.5 km)
Major junctions
South end: SR 5 / SR 60 in Copperhill, Tennessee/McCaysville, Georgia at TN/Ga state line
  US 64 / US 74 / SR 40 in Ducktown
SR 165 (Cherohala Skyway) in Tellico Plains
US 411 / SR 33 in Madisonville
I-75 in Sweetwater
US 27 / SR 29 near Spring City
North end: US 127 / SR 28 in Crossville
Location
Counties: Polk, Monore, McMinn, Meigs, Rhea, Cumberland
Highway system
SR 67SR 69

State Route 68 (SR 68) is a 107.2-mile-long (172.5 km) state highway in the eastern part of the U.S. state of Tennessee.

Route description

SR 68 sign, near Farner

SR-68 begins in southeastern Tennessee, at an intersection with Georgia State Route 5 and Georgia State Route 60 at the Tennessee–Georgia state line in Copperhill, Tennessee and McCaysville, Georgia. It then goes north to Ducktown, Tennessee where it junctions with U.S. Route 64 (US-64) and US-74. The route continues north and enters the Cherokee National Forest and goes through a mostly rural area, then in Turtletown it turns east and junctions with the shortest state route in Tennessee: SR-123. SR-68 then turns back north and continues through a sparsely populated area and crosses over the Hiwassee River, The route then becomes curvy and dangerous. It then enters Monroe County and goes through Coker Creek and then Tellico Plains and junctions with SR-165 the Cherohala Skyway. In Tellico Plains, SR-68 serves as the eastern terminus for SR-39 it then proceeds north to Madisonville where it has an interchange/junction with US-411 and SR-33. After this junction, the route then turns more northwesterly toward Sweetwater and passes The Lost Sea. In Sweetwater, it turns west and junctions with US-11 and Interstate 75. Just past the I-75 junction, the route enters McMinn County where there are no highway junctions. It then enters Meigs County and Ten Mile and junctions with SR-305, SR-58, and has a brief concurrency with SR-304. It then crosses Watts Bar Dam and the Tennessee River into Rhea County near the Watts Bar Nuclear Plant and continues west. The route then has a 1-mile-long (1.6 km) concurrency with SR-302 and a 2.7-mile-long (4.3 km) concurrency with US-27. US-27 and SR-68 go north to Spring City where SR-68 turns back west and US-27 goes north. Just after leaving Spring City, it turns back to north crosses over Waldens Ridge into Cumberland County where the route ends at US-127 in Crossville near Cumberland Mountain State Park and the Cumberland Homestead Towers.

Major intersections

CountyLocationmikmDestinationsNotes
PolkCopperhill SR 5 south / SR 60 south Mineral Bluff, Blue RidgeGeorgia state line
Ducktown US 64 / US 74 (SR 40) Cleveland, Murphy, NC, Ocoee Riverinterchange
  SR 123 east to NC 294 Hiwassee Dam
MonroeTellico Plains SR 165 east (Cherohala Skyway) Tellico Plains, Bald River Falls, Indian Boundary
SR 39 west Etowah
Madisonville US 411 (SR 33) Athensinterchange
Christianburg SR 307 south
Sweetwater US 11 (Main Street / SR 2)
I-75 Chattanooga, KnoxvilleI-75 exit 60
Meigs  SR 305 south Athens
  SR 58 Decatur, Kingston
Ten Mile SR 304 north Ten Mile, Kingstonsouth end of SR 304 overlap
  SR 304 south Decaturnorth end of SR 304 overlap
Tennessee RiverWatts Bar Dam
Rhea  SR 302 south (Old Stage Road)south end of SR 302 overlap
  SR 302 northnorth end of SR 302 overlap
  US 27 south (SR 29) Dayton, Chattanoogasouth end of US 27 / SR 29 overlap
Spring City US 27 north (SR 29) Rockwoodnorth end of US 27 / SR 29 overlap
CumberlandCumberland Homesteads US 127 (SR 28) Crossville, Jamestown, Pikeville, Cumberland Mountain State Park
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

  1. Google (July 11, 2014). "Tennessee State Route 68" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved July 11, 2014.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, November 18, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.