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North Carolina Highway 73

North Carolina Highway 73 (NC 73) is a primary state highway in the U.S. state of North Carolina that travels through south-central North Carolina in the United States. Most of the route is a two-lane highway that passes through both rural scenic areas; however, it also serves several small and moderate-sized cities in the state, including Concord and Albemarle. The western terminus of NC 73 is at an intersection with NC 27 east of Lincolnton and its eastern terminus is at a junction with US 15/US 501 in Eastwood (between Pinehurst and Carthage).

North Carolina Highway 73

Map of southern North Carolina with NC 73 highlighted in red
Route information
Maintained by NCDOT
Length118.5 mi[1] (190.7 km)
Existed1934–present
Tourist
routes
Pee Dee Valley Drive
Sandhills Scenic Drive
Indian Heritage Trail
Major junctions
West end NC 27 near Lincolnton
Major intersections I-77 near Huntersville
I-85 near Concord
US 52 / NC 24 / NC 27 in Albemarle
I-73 / I-74 / US 220 north of Ellerbe
East end US 15 / US 501 near Pinehurst
Location
CountryUnited States
StateNorth Carolina
CountiesLincoln, Mecklenburg, Cabarrus, Stanly, Montgomery, Richmond, Moore
Highway system
I-73 I-74

Route description edit

NC 73 begins at an intersection with NC 27 east of Lincolnton in Lincoln County. It heads eastward, passing to the south of Lincolnton-Lincoln County Regional Airport and intersecting NC 16. It passes into Mecklenburg County upon crossing over the Catawba River just below the Cowans Ford Dam at Lake Norman. The route heads along the lake shore to the vicinity of Huntersville, where it meets I-77 an interchange near the NorthCross development. Past I-77, NC 73 passes through the northern part of Huntersville on its way into Cabarrus County.

Just across the County line, NC 73 crosses the Rocky River and passes through the center of the Odell School community before running along the southern edge of the Coddle Creek reservoir. East of the reservoir, the highway intersects with Kannapolis Parkway and then passes an interchange with I-85 as it enters the city of Concord. The route proceeds through the downtown district, meeting US 601 and NC 3 before leaving Concord. NC 73 passes through the town of Mount Pleasant—where it connects to NC 49 by way of an interchange—before passing into Stanly County.

The highway goes through the crossroads community of Finger on its way to Albemarle. Here, NC 73 avoids the city center by following a four-lane bypass around the southern part of the city that also carries NC 24 and NC 27. All three routes leave the bypass at Albemarle Plaza Mall and head southeastward as a two-lane highway toward the Uwharrie Mountains. The highways enter rural Montgomery County after crossing over the Pee Dee River at Lake Tillery.

NC 73 leaves NC 24 and NC 27 just east of the county line. While the latter two routes pass through Uwharrie National Forest, NC 73 bypasses it to the south, following a southeasterly routing through the community of Pee Dee to the town of Mount Gilead. The highway passes near Town Creek Indian Mound before crossing into Richmond County, where it turns to follow a more easterly routing toward the town of Ellerbe. NC 73 joins US 220 Alternate north of the town and follows it to the vicinity of Norman, where the two highways split just west of an interchange with I-73, I-74, and US 220.

Past the freeway, NC 73 heads northeastward through a small portion of Montgomery County and the community of Windblow on its way into Moore County. Here, it serves Jackson Springs as it progresses toward the town of West End, built up around the junction of NC 73 and NC 211. The two highways overlap for one block through the center of town before splitting and continuing on their separate ways. NC 73 leaves West End and heads generally eastward to Eastwood, a community south of the county seat of Carthage and north of the village of Pinehurst, where it ends at an intersection with US 15/US 501.

History edit

The portion of modern NC 73 between Concord and Mount Gilead was a state highway as early as 1922. At the time, the remainder of what is now NC 73 was not part of the state highway system.[2] By 1926, the Concord – Mount Gilead highway was designated as part of NC 74, a route that continued east to Sanford by way of modern NC 109, NC 24 and NC 27, and US 15 and US 501. Also assigned by this time was NC 51,[3][4] which followed modern NC 73 between Mount Gilead and Ellerbe. NC 74 was altered by 1930 to bypass Mount Gilead to the north on what is now SR 1174. The west leg of its former routing became part of NC 515. NC 74 was also extended westward to Caldwell by this time. Meanwhile, NC 75 was rerouted by 1930 to utilize the modern routing of NC 73 between Ellerbe and West End.[5]

In 1934, NC 74 was renumbered to NC 73 to eliminate numerical duplication with the nearby US 74,[6] a route assigned as part of the establishment of the U.S. Highway System in 1926.[7] The new NC 73 began at an intersection with NC 18 in Toluca and proceeded northeastward to Newton on what is now NC 10. From there, it followed modern NC 16 to a junction south of Denver, where it turned to continue east to West End on what had been NC 74, NC 515, NC 51, and NC 75.[6][8] In the late 1930s, NC 73 was extended to its current eastern terminus at US 15/US 501 north of Pinehurst and truncated on its west end to NC 16 south of Denver.[8][9]

At some point between 1940 and 1951, the segment of current NC 73 west of Machpelah became part of an extended NC 273, which traveled from its current northern terminus to Machpelah by way of an overlap with NC 16 and Old Plank Road.[9][10] NC 273 was truncated back to its current northern terminus in the 1960s, at which time its former routing west of Machpelah became an extension of NC 73. In between Machpelah and NC 16, NC 73 was routed along its modern alignment.[11][12]

North Carolina Highway 74 (1921–1934) edit

 

North Carolina Highway 74

LocationDenverCarthage
Length118 mi[13] (190 km)
Existed1921–1934

North Carolina Highway 74 (NC 74) was an original state highway running from Concord, east through Albemarle, Troy and Carthage ending at NC 50 southwest of Sanford. The highway's routing appeared on the 1916 Highway Map by the North Carolina State Highway Commission for the five year federal aid program.[14] However NC 74 was not officially marked on any state highway maps until 1924; where it was routed from NC 15 in Concord east to Albemarle where the highway met NC 27 and NC 80. From there the highway turned further to the southeast, crossing the Yadkin River and intersecting NC 51 in Wadeville. The highway then turned northeast to follow a paved road to Troy. In Troy NC 74 turned east to follow along a gravel road to Carthage. The highway turned northeast in Carthage, following along a gravel road until intersecting NC 50 southwest of Sanford.[15] Between 1926 and 1930, the entirety of NC 74 was converted to a hard surface road. During the time NC 74 was truncated to Carthage, with NC 75 replacing the highway between Carthage and US 1/NC 50. However NC 74 was extended 2 miles (3.2 km) north concurrently with US 170/NC 15, and then extended west along its own routing to US 21/NC 26.[16][5][17] From 1930 to 1931, NC 74 was closed between US 311/NC 70 in Biscoe and US 15/NC 75 in Carthage. Between 1931 and 1933, NC 74 was placed concurrently along US 21/NC 26 for 2 miles to the north, and then placed along new routing from Cornelius to NC 271 south of Denver.[17][13] In 1934, NC 74 was eliminated. The routing between NC 271 and Albemarle was renumbered as NC 73. NC 27 and NC 73 were dual signed along the section between Albemarle and Wadeville. NC 27 was signed along the remainder of the routing to Carthage.[13][18]

Major intersections edit

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
LincolnBoger City0.00.0  NC 27 – Lincolnton, Stanley
Lowesville10.817.4  NC 16 – Charlotte, NewtonPartial cloverleaf interchange
11.518.5 
 
NC 16 Bus.
MecklenburgHuntersville19.731.7  I-77 – Charlotte, StatesvilleDiamond interchange, exit 25
20.032.2  US 21 (Statesville Road) – Charlotte, Cornelius
21.234.1  NC 115 (Old Statesville Road) – Charlotte, Davidson
CabarrusConcord32.251.8 
 
I-85 south – Charlotte
 
 
I-85 north – Greensboro
Diverging diamond interchange; I 85 exit 55[19]
35.256.6 
 
 
 
US 29 south / US 601 south (Concord Parkway) – Charlotte, Midland
South end of US 29/US 601 overlap
35.557.1 
 
 
 
US 29 north / US 601 north (Concord Parkway) – Kannapolis, Salisbury
North end of US 29/US 601 overlap
38.361.6  NC 3 (Branchview Drive) – Kannapolis
Mount Pleasant45.372.9  NC 49 – Harrisburg, RichfieldDiamond interchange
StanlyAlbemarle60.497.2 
 
US 52 north – Salisbury
North end of US 52 overlap
61.398.7 
 
  
 
US 52 south (Aquadale Road) / NC 24 / NC 27 west (Spaulding Street) – Wadesboro, Charlotte
South end of US 52 and west end of NC 24/27 overlap
61.599.0 
 
 
US 52 Bus. north (Second Street)
North end of US 52 Bus. overlap
63.4102.0 
 
NC 740 north – Badin
Pee Dee River69.4111.7James B. Garrison Bridge
Montgomery69.6112.0 
 
 
 
NC 24 east / NC 27 east – Troy
East end of NC 24/27 overlap
Mount Gilead77.3124.4  NC 109 (Wadesboro Boulevard/Troy Road) – Wadesboro, Troy
77.6124.9  NC 731 – Norwood, Candor
RichmondEllerbe94.8152.6 
 
US 220 south – Rockingham
South end of US 220 overlap
99.5160.1 
 
US 220 north – Candor
North end of US 220 overlap
99.8160.6   I-73 / I-74 – Rockingham, AsheboroDiamond interchange, exit 33
MooreWest End110.8178.3  NC 211 – Pinehurst, CandorBrief .2-mile (0.32 km) concurrency
Whispering Pines118.5190.7   US 15 / US 501 – Pinehurst, Carthage
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Special routes edit

 
East-West NC 73 Truck, in Concord

Concord truck route edit

 

 

North Carolina Highway 73 Truck

LocationConcord, North Carolina
Length13.0 mi[20] (20.9 km)

North Carolina Highway 73 Truck (NC 73 Truck) is a bypass route for truck drivers that are traveling through the city of Concord. This 13-mile (21 km) route goes south around the downtown area, via US 601 (Concord Parkway North & Warren Coleman Boulevard) and NC 49.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Google (October 23, 2015). "Overview map of NC 73" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved October 23, 2015.
  2. ^ North Carolina State Highway Commission (1922). State Highway System of North Carolina (PDF) (Map). Raleigh: North Carolina State Highway Commission. Retrieved January 5, 2010.
  3. ^ Rand McNally and Company (1926). "Western Carolinas" (Map). Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas. Chicago: Rand McNally and Company. Retrieved January 5, 2010.
  4. ^ Rand McNally and Company (1926). "Eastern Carolinas" (Map). Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas. Chicago: Rand McNally and Company. Retrieved January 5, 2010.
  5. ^ a b North Carolina State Highway Commission (1930). State Highway System of North Carolina (PDF) (Map). Bynum Publishing Company. Retrieved August 18, 2016.
  6. ^ a b "Mapmikey"; Prince, Adam (November 10, 2008). "N.C. 73". NCRoads.com Annex. Retrieved January 5, 2010.
  7. ^ Bureau of Public Roads & American Association of State Highway Officials (November 11, 1926). United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials (Map). 1:7,000,000. Washington, DC: United States Geological Survey. OCLC 32889555. Retrieved November 7, 2013 – via Wikimedia Commons.
  8. ^ a b Thibodeau, William A. (1938). The ALA Green Book (1938–39 ed.). Automobile Legal Association.
  9. ^ a b North Carolina State Highway Commission (1940). North Carolina Primary Highway System (PDF) (Map). Raleigh: North Carolina State Highway Commission. Retrieved January 5, 2010.
  10. ^ North Carolina State Highway and Public Works Commission (1951). North Carolina Primary Highway System (PDF) (Map). Raleigh: North Carolina State Highway and Public Works Commission. Retrieved January 5, 2010.
  11. ^ North Carolina State Highway Commission (1960). North Carolina Highway System (PDF) (Map). Raleigh: North Carolina State Highway Commission. Retrieved January 5, 2010.
  12. ^ North Carolina State Highway Commission (1970). North Carolina Official Highway Map (PDF) (Map). Raleigh: North Carolina State Highway Commission. Retrieved January 5, 2010.
  13. ^ a b c North Carolina State Highway Commission (1933). State Highway System of North Carolina (Map). Bynum Publishing Company. Retrieved August 18, 2016.
  14. ^ North Carolina State Highway Commission (1916). Highway Map of North Carolina (Map). North Carolina State Highway Commission. Retrieved August 18, 2016.
  15. ^ North Carolina State Highway Commission (1924). State Highway System of North Carolina (Map). North Carolina State Highway Commission. Retrieved August 18, 2016.
  16. ^ North Carolina State Highway Commission (1926). State Highway System of North Carolina (Map). North Carolina State Highway Commission. Retrieved August 18, 2016.
  17. ^ a b North Carolina State Highway Commission (1931). State Highway System of North Carolina (Map). Bynum Publishing Company. Retrieved August 18, 2016.
  18. ^ North Carolina State Highway and Public Works Commission (1935). State Highway System of North Carolina (Map). North Carolina State Highway and Public Works Commission. Retrieved August 18, 2016.
  19. ^ Marusak, Joe (February 4, 2012). . Charlotte, NC: Charlotte Observer. Archived from the original on June 1, 2012. Retrieved March 2, 2013.
  20. ^ Google (May 13, 2014). "NC 73 Truck - Concord, North Carolina" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved May 13, 2014.

External links edit

KML is from Wikidata
  •   Media related to North Carolina Highway 73 at Wikimedia Commons
  • NCRoads.com: N.C. 73

north, carolina, highway, confused, with, interstate, north, carolina, primary, state, highway, state, north, carolina, that, travels, through, south, central, north, carolina, united, states, most, route, lane, highway, that, passes, through, both, rural, sce. Not to be confused with Interstate 73 in North Carolina North Carolina Highway 73 NC 73 is a primary state highway in the U S state of North Carolina that travels through south central North Carolina in the United States Most of the route is a two lane highway that passes through both rural scenic areas however it also serves several small and moderate sized cities in the state including Concord and Albemarle The western terminus of NC 73 is at an intersection with NC 27 east of Lincolnton and its eastern terminus is at a junction with US 15 US 501 in Eastwood between Pinehurst and Carthage North Carolina Highway 73Map of southern North Carolina with NC 73 highlighted in redRoute informationMaintained by NCDOTLength118 5 mi 1 190 7 km Existed1934 presentTouristroutesPee Dee Valley Drive Sandhills Scenic Drive Indian Heritage TrailMajor junctionsWest endNC 27 near LincolntonMajor intersectionsI 77 near Huntersville I 85 near Concord US 52 NC 24 NC 27 in Albemarle I 73 I 74 US 220 north of EllerbeEast endUS 15 US 501 near PinehurstLocationCountryUnited StatesStateNorth CarolinaCountiesLincoln Mecklenburg Cabarrus Stanly Montgomery Richmond MooreHighway systemNorth Carolina Highway System Interstate US State Scenic I 73 I 74 Contents 1 Route description 2 History 2 1 North Carolina Highway 74 1921 1934 3 Major intersections 4 Special routes 4 1 Concord truck route 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksRoute description editNC 73 begins at an intersection with NC 27 east of Lincolnton in Lincoln County It heads eastward passing to the south of Lincolnton Lincoln County Regional Airport and intersecting NC 16 It passes into Mecklenburg County upon crossing over the Catawba River just below the Cowans Ford Dam at Lake Norman The route heads along the lake shore to the vicinity of Huntersville where it meets I 77 an interchange near the NorthCross development Past I 77 NC 73 passes through the northern part of Huntersville on its way into Cabarrus County Just across the County line NC 73 crosses the Rocky River and passes through the center of the Odell School community before running along the southern edge of the Coddle Creek reservoir East of the reservoir the highway intersects with Kannapolis Parkway and then passes an interchange with I 85 as it enters the city of Concord The route proceeds through the downtown district meeting US 601 and NC 3 before leaving Concord NC 73 passes through the town of Mount Pleasant where it connects to NC 49 by way of an interchange before passing into Stanly County The highway goes through the crossroads community of Finger on its way to Albemarle Here NC 73 avoids the city center by following a four lane bypass around the southern part of the city that also carries NC 24 and NC 27 All three routes leave the bypass at Albemarle Plaza Mall and head southeastward as a two lane highway toward the Uwharrie Mountains The highways enter rural Montgomery County after crossing over the Pee Dee River at Lake Tillery NC 73 leaves NC 24 and NC 27 just east of the county line While the latter two routes pass through Uwharrie National Forest NC 73 bypasses it to the south following a southeasterly routing through the community of Pee Dee to the town of Mount Gilead The highway passes near Town Creek Indian Mound before crossing into Richmond County where it turns to follow a more easterly routing toward the town of Ellerbe NC 73 joins US 220 Alternate north of the town and follows it to the vicinity of Norman where the two highways split just west of an interchange with I 73 I 74 and US 220 Past the freeway NC 73 heads northeastward through a small portion of Montgomery County and the community of Windblow on its way into Moore County Here it serves Jackson Springs as it progresses toward the town of West End built up around the junction of NC 73 and NC 211 The two highways overlap for one block through the center of town before splitting and continuing on their separate ways NC 73 leaves West End and heads generally eastward to Eastwood a community south of the county seat of Carthage and north of the village of Pinehurst where it ends at an intersection with US 15 US 501 History editThe portion of modern NC 73 between Concord and Mount Gilead was a state highway as early as 1922 At the time the remainder of what is now NC 73 was not part of the state highway system 2 By 1926 the Concord Mount Gilead highway was designated as part of NC 74 a route that continued east to Sanford by way of modern NC 109 NC 24 and NC 27 and US 15 and US 501 Also assigned by this time was NC 51 3 4 which followed modern NC 73 between Mount Gilead and Ellerbe NC 74 was altered by 1930 to bypass Mount Gilead to the north on what is now SR 1174 The west leg of its former routing became part of NC 515 NC 74 was also extended westward to Caldwell by this time Meanwhile NC 75 was rerouted by 1930 to utilize the modern routing of NC 73 between Ellerbe and West End 5 In 1934 NC 74 was renumbered to NC 73 to eliminate numerical duplication with the nearby US 74 6 a route assigned as part of the establishment of the U S Highway System in 1926 7 The new NC 73 began at an intersection with NC 18 in Toluca and proceeded northeastward to Newton on what is now NC 10 From there it followed modern NC 16 to a junction south of Denver where it turned to continue east to West End on what had been NC 74 NC 515 NC 51 and NC 75 6 8 In the late 1930s NC 73 was extended to its current eastern terminus at US 15 US 501 north of Pinehurst and truncated on its west end to NC 16 south of Denver 8 9 At some point between 1940 and 1951 the segment of current NC 73 west of Machpelah became part of an extended NC 273 which traveled from its current northern terminus to Machpelah by way of an overlap with NC 16 and Old Plank Road 9 10 NC 273 was truncated back to its current northern terminus in the 1960s at which time its former routing west of Machpelah became an extension of NC 73 In between Machpelah and NC 16 NC 73 was routed along its modern alignment 11 12 North Carolina Highway 74 1921 1934 edit For the proposed State Highway in Winston Salem see North Carolina Highway 74 nbsp North Carolina Highway 74LocationDenver CarthageLength118 mi 13 190 km Existed1921 1934 North Carolina Highway 74 NC 74 was an original state highway running from Concord east through Albemarle Troy and Carthage ending at NC 50 southwest of Sanford The highway s routing appeared on the 1916 Highway Map by the North Carolina State Highway Commission for the five year federal aid program 14 However NC 74 was not officially marked on any state highway maps until 1924 where it was routed from NC 15 in Concord east to Albemarle where the highway met NC 27 and NC 80 From there the highway turned further to the southeast crossing the Yadkin River and intersecting NC 51 in Wadeville The highway then turned northeast to follow a paved road to Troy In Troy NC 74 turned east to follow along a gravel road to Carthage The highway turned northeast in Carthage following along a gravel road until intersecting NC 50 southwest of Sanford 15 Between 1926 and 1930 the entirety of NC 74 was converted to a hard surface road During the time NC 74 was truncated to Carthage with NC 75 replacing the highway between Carthage and US 1 NC 50 However NC 74 was extended 2 miles 3 2 km north concurrently with US 170 NC 15 and then extended west along its own routing to US 21 NC 26 16 5 17 From 1930 to 1931 NC 74 was closed between US 311 NC 70 in Biscoe and US 15 NC 75 in Carthage Between 1931 and 1933 NC 74 was placed concurrently along US 21 NC 26 for 2 miles to the north and then placed along new routing from Cornelius to NC 271 south of Denver 17 13 In 1934 NC 74 was eliminated The routing between NC 271 and Albemarle was renumbered as NC 73 NC 27 and NC 73 were dual signed along the section between Albemarle and Wadeville NC 27 was signed along the remainder of the routing to Carthage 13 18 Major intersections editCountyLocationmi 1 kmDestinationsNotes LincolnBoger City0 00 0 nbsp NC 27 Lincolnton Stanley Lowesville10 817 4 nbsp NC 16 Charlotte NewtonPartial cloverleaf interchange 11 518 5 nbsp nbsp NC 16 Bus MecklenburgHuntersville19 731 7 nbsp I 77 Charlotte StatesvilleDiamond interchange exit 25 20 032 2 nbsp US 21 Statesville Road Charlotte Cornelius 21 234 1 nbsp NC 115 Old Statesville Road Charlotte Davidson CabarrusConcord32 251 8 nbsp nbsp I 85 south Charlotte nbsp nbsp I 85 north GreensboroDiverging diamond interchange I 85 exit 55 19 35 256 6 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 29 south US 601 south Concord Parkway Charlotte MidlandSouth end of US 29 US 601 overlap 35 557 1 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 29 north US 601 north Concord Parkway Kannapolis SalisburyNorth end of US 29 US 601 overlap 38 361 6 nbsp NC 3 Branchview Drive Kannapolis Mount Pleasant45 372 9 nbsp NC 49 Harrisburg RichfieldDiamond interchange StanlyAlbemarle60 497 2 nbsp nbsp US 52 north SalisburyNorth end of US 52 overlap 61 398 7 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp US 52 south Aquadale Road NC 24 NC 27 west Spaulding Street Wadesboro CharlotteSouth end of US 52 and west end of NC 24 27 overlap 61 599 0 nbsp nbsp nbsp US 52 Bus north Second Street North end of US 52 Bus overlap 63 4102 0 nbsp nbsp NC 740 north Badin Pee Dee River69 4111 7James B Garrison Bridge Montgomery 69 6112 0 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp NC 24 east NC 27 east TroyEast end of NC 24 27 overlap Mount Gilead77 3124 4 nbsp NC 109 Wadesboro Boulevard Troy Road Wadesboro Troy 77 6124 9 nbsp NC 731 Norwood Candor RichmondEllerbe94 8152 6 nbsp nbsp US 220 south RockinghamSouth end of US 220 overlap 99 5160 1 nbsp nbsp US 220 north CandorNorth end of US 220 overlap 99 8160 6 nbsp nbsp I 73 I 74 Rockingham AsheboroDiamond interchange exit 33 MooreWest End110 8178 3 nbsp NC 211 Pinehurst CandorBrief 2 mile 0 32 km concurrency Whispering Pines118 5190 7 nbsp nbsp US 15 US 501 Pinehurst Carthage 1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminusSpecial routes edit nbsp East West NC 73 Truck in Concord Concord truck route edit nbsp nbsp North Carolina Highway 73 TruckLocationConcord North CarolinaLength13 0 mi 20 20 9 km North Carolina Highway 73 Truck NC 73 Truck is a bypass route for truck drivers that are traveling through the city of Concord This 13 mile 21 km route goes south around the downtown area via US 601 Concord Parkway North amp Warren Coleman Boulevard and NC 49 See also editLake Norman North Carolina Bicycle Route 6References edit a b Google October 23 2015 Overview map of NC 73 Map Google Maps Google Retrieved October 23 2015 North Carolina State Highway Commission 1922 State Highway System of North Carolina PDF Map Raleigh North Carolina State Highway Commission Retrieved January 5 2010 Rand McNally and Company 1926 Western Carolinas Map Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas Chicago Rand McNally and Company Retrieved January 5 2010 Rand McNally and Company 1926 Eastern Carolinas Map Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas Chicago Rand McNally and Company Retrieved January 5 2010 a b North Carolina State Highway Commission 1930 State Highway System of North Carolina PDF Map Bynum Publishing Company Retrieved August 18 2016 a b Mapmikey Prince Adam November 10 2008 N C 73 NCRoads com Annex Retrieved January 5 2010 Bureau of Public Roads amp American Association of State Highway Officials November 11 1926 United States System of Highways Adopted for Uniform Marking by the American Association of State Highway Officials Map 1 7 000 000 Washington DC United States Geological Survey OCLC 32889555 Retrieved November 7 2013 via Wikimedia Commons a b Thibodeau William A 1938 The ALA Green Book 1938 39 ed Automobile Legal Association a b North Carolina State Highway Commission 1940 North Carolina Primary Highway System PDF Map Raleigh North Carolina State Highway Commission Retrieved January 5 2010 North Carolina State Highway and Public Works Commission 1951 North Carolina Primary Highway System PDF Map Raleigh North Carolina State Highway and Public Works Commission Retrieved January 5 2010 North Carolina State Highway Commission 1960 North Carolina Highway System PDF Map Raleigh North Carolina State Highway Commission Retrieved January 5 2010 North Carolina State Highway Commission 1970 North Carolina Official Highway Map PDF Map Raleigh North Carolina State Highway Commission Retrieved January 5 2010 a b c North Carolina State Highway Commission 1933 State Highway System of North Carolina Map Bynum Publishing Company Retrieved August 18 2016 North Carolina State Highway Commission 1916 Highway Map of North Carolina Map North Carolina State Highway Commission Retrieved August 18 2016 North Carolina State Highway Commission 1924 State Highway System of North Carolina Map North Carolina State Highway Commission Retrieved August 18 2016 North Carolina State Highway Commission 1926 State Highway System of North Carolina Map North Carolina State Highway Commission Retrieved August 18 2016 a b North Carolina State Highway Commission 1931 State Highway System of North Carolina Map Bynum Publishing Company Retrieved August 18 2016 North Carolina State Highway and Public Works Commission 1935 State Highway System of North Carolina Map North Carolina State Highway and Public Works Commission Retrieved August 18 2016 Marusak Joe February 4 2012 New interchange planned for bottlenecked I 77 exit Charlotte NC Charlotte Observer Archived from the original on June 1 2012 Retrieved March 2 2013 Google May 13 2014 NC 73 Truck Concord North Carolina Map Google Maps Google Retrieved May 13 2014 External links editKML file edit help Template Attached KML North Carolina Highway 73KML is from Wikidata nbsp Media related to North Carolina Highway 73 at Wikimedia Commons NCRoads com N C 73 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title North Carolina Highway 73 amp oldid 1121550264 North Carolina Highway 74 1921 1934, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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