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North Carolina Highway 22

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North Carolina Highway 22 marker
North Carolina Highway 22
Route of NC 22 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NCDOT
Length59.3 mi[1] (95.4 km)
Existed1934–present
Major junctions
South end NC 2 in Southern Pines
Major intersections US 15 / US 501 in Carthage
US 64 in Ramseur
North end NC 62 in Climax
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNorth Carolina
CountiesMoore, Chatham, Randolph, Guilford
Highway system
US 21 US 23

North Carolina Highway 22 (NC 22) is a North Carolina state highway that runs in the central-north region of the state. It runs between Southern Pines and Climax. The route is signed north–south, and is 59 miles (95 km) in length.

Route description

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NC 22 begins at a roundabout at the junction with NC 2, just shy of the interchange at US 1 in Southern Pines. It heads north along Central Drive and then runs independently after the roundabout at Airport Road. NC 22 then runs concurrent with US 15/US 501 for about 1 mile (1.6 km) before entering Carthage from the south. At the intersection with Monroe Street in Carthage, NC 22 joins NC 24/NC 27 and heads west sharing its concurrency with NC 24 and NC 27 for about 5 miles (8.0 km). NC 22 then heads north again, passing through High Falls before it meets NC 42. From there, NC 22 becomes concurrent with NC 42 heading into Coleridge and intersects the western terminus of NC 902 south of Bennett. After entering Coleridge, NC 22 splits from NC 42 and heads north into Ramseur. It meets US 64 and runs concurrent with it along Jordan Road before heading west through Franklinville. The route continues north until it reaches its northern terminus at the junction of NC 62 in Climax.

History

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Original NC 22

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  • The original NC 22 appeared in 1922, running from NC 20 in Whiteville northward toward Fayetteville where it ended at NC 40.
  • 1925: NC 22 is realigned coming out of Fayetteville, now going straight southward through Lumberton and then to the South Carolina state border, where it becomes SC 23.
  • 1927: US 217's new routing makes the entire NC 22 route also part of that highway.
  • 1932: US 301 replaces US 217 on NC 22.
  • 2004: A seven-mile (11 km) segment of NC 22 north of Climax is truncated as a result of the construction of the I-85 Greensboro Bypass. NC 22's former northern terminus at US 421 was eliminated. This truncated segment of NC 22 went through the town Pleasant Garden.[2]

Current route

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  • 1934: With US 301's entire route being NC 22, the number could be better assigned elsewhere. With the arrival of US 64, NC 22 was reassigned to NC 64. It was then a much shorter highway, running from NC 27 in Carthage to US 421 in Greensboro.
  • 1952: NC 22's southern end is aligned to its current ending in Southern Pines.
  • 2004: NC 22 is shortened just west of 421 to NC 62 in Climax. Apparently, I-85's relocation to the new southern Greensboro bypass cut off NC 22 from US 421.[3]

Major intersections

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CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
MooreSouthern Pines0.00.0 NC 2 (Midland Road) – PinehurstSouthern terminus
Carthage8.313.4

US 15 south / US 501 south – Pinehurst, Aberdeen
South end of US 15/501 overlap
9.214.8

US 15 north / US 501 north – Sanford
North end of US 15/501 overlap
11.318.2

NC 24 east / NC 27 east (Monroe Street) – Cameron
South end of NC 24 / NC 27 overlap
Parkwood16.426.4

NC 24 west / NC 27 west – Biscoe
North end of NC 24 / NC 27 overlap
Chatham27.243.8
NC 42 east – Sanford
South end of NC 42 overlap
Bennett28.545.9
NC 902 east – Bear Creek, Pittsboro
Western terminus of NC 902
RandolphColeridge36.658.9
NC 42 west – Asheboro
North end of NC 42 overlap
Ramseur44.371.3

US 64 east / NC 49 north (Jordan Road) – Siler City, Liberty
South end of US 64 / NC 49 overlap
44.571.6

US 64 west / NC 49 south (Jordan Road) – Asheboro
North end of US 64 / NC 49 overlap
GuilfordClimax59.395.4 NC 62 – High Point, Archdale, Julian, BurlingtonNorthern terminus at NC 62.
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

References

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KML is from Wikidata
  1. ^ a b "North Carolina Highway 22" (Map). Google Maps. Retrieved February 5, 2016.
  2. ^ NCRoads Annex - NC 19-23[self-published source] Archived August 28, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ State Ends - NC 22[self-published source] Archived August 21, 2006, at the Wayback Machine