North Carolina Highway 42

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NC 42
Length: 229 mi (369 km)
Formed: 1922[1]
West end: I-73/74/US 220 in Asheboro, NC
Major
junctions:
US 64 in Asheboro
US 1/15 in Sanford
US 421 in Sanford
US 401 in Fuquay-Varina
I-40 near Cleveland, Johnston County
US 70 in Clayton
I-95 near Wilson
US 264 near Wilson
US 301 in Wilson
US 258 near Pinetops
US 64 near Bethel
US 13 in Ahoskie
East end: NC 45 in Colerain, NC
Counties: Randolph, Chatham, Lee, Wake, Johnston, Wilson, Edgecombe, Bertie, Martin, Hertford
Major cities: Asheboro, Sanford, Fuquay-Varina, Clayton, Wilson, Pinetops, Conetoe, Oak City, Lewiston Woodville, Ahoskie, Powellsville
North Carolina highways
< NC 41 NC 43 >

NC 42 is a winding, country state highway that bypasses many of the larger cities in the eastern/central part of North Carolina. Despite its long length (229 miles), it is not noted for being convienent for long-distance travel; US 64 often provides a shorter, faster alternative routing for a large part of NC 42's length. Because it is well connected to many other major Interstate and US routes, NC 42 is a local connector for smaller communities along its route.

[edit] History

NC 42 was first dedicated in 1922 as a modest 19-mile connector from Wilson to Pinetops. In the 1930's & 40's it was extended west to Clayton, and by 1950 it reached Fuquay-Varina. In the late 50's, early 60's it was extended in both directions to Conetoe in the east and Asheboro to the west. The last extension came in 1990 to meet with the I 73/74/US 220 freeway in Asheboro. [1]

[edit] Sources

  1. ^ a b NCRoads - NC 42