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U.S. Route 278 in Alabama

U.S. Route 278 (US 278), mostly internally designated by the Alabama Department of Transportation as State Route 74 (SR 74), is a major east–west U.S. highway across the northern part of the U.S. state of Alabama. West of Hamilton, SR 74 continues west to end at US 78 (unsigned SR 4), while US 278 turns south along US 43/SR 17/SR 171 to Guin, where it turns west along SR 118 to the Mississippi state line.

U.S. Route 278

State Route 74
US 278 highlighted in red
Route information
Auxiliary route of US 78
Maintained by ALDOT
Length199.182 mi[1] (320.552 km)
Major junctions
West end US 278 towards Amory, Mississippi and Tupelo, Mississippi
Major intersections
East end US 278 / SR 6 towards Cedartown, Georgia and Atlanta, Georgia
Location
CountryUnited States
StateAlabama
CountiesLamar, Marion, Winston, Cullman, Blount, Etowah, Calhoun, Cherokee, Cleburne
Highway system
  • Alabama State Highway System
SR 277US 278 SR 279
SR 73SR 74 SR 75

Route description

US 278 enters Alabama near Sulligent. After passing through the city, the route continues on a winding path until it reaches Guin, where it turns north and gains US 43. It then junctions with I-22/US 78. It eventually reaches Hamilton, where it junctions with SR 17 and turns off of US 43's right of way.

It continues on a curvy path until it reaches Natural Bridge, where it junctions with SR 5 and SR 13. It continues onward and enters the William B. Bankhead National Forest, where Double Springs lies. It junctions with SR 33 and SR 195. It continues onward, passing through Houston (AL). It then exits the National Forest and enters Addison, which is home to its junction with CR 41, which is a corridor connecting Jasper, Arley, Danville, and Decatur. It passes through much less hilly terrain and crosses the county line into Cullman County.

The route passes through slightly curvy terrain until its junction with I-65. It enters the city of Cullman and junctions with US 31 and SR 69. It continues east for about one mile from its second junction with SR 69 and junctions with SR 157. It continues east and eventually enters Holly Pond, which is home to its junction with SR 91. It continues onto Blount County.

It eventually junctions with US 231, which leads to SR 67 to the north and SR 79 south to the south in Cleveland. The main junction here is in Blountsville. The route continues through hilly terrain to SR 79 itself. It passes through hilly terrain to Snead, which is home to its junction with SR 75. It continues onward through hilly terrain to the county line to Etowah County.

The route is mostly hilly with three-lane stretches at points due to the steep uphills along the route, specifically eastbound. It reaches Altoona, where it junctions with SR 132. It continues to Ivalee, which is home to its junction with SR 179 and is also home to the Mountain Top Flea Market, among the biggest flea markets in the state. It almost immediately descends down a hill into Ridgeville, which is home to its junction with SR 77. It passes through a slight ridge cut and crosses a railroad line, where it junctions with Gallant Road at a fork and then junctions with US 431, which is a four-lane divided highway. The route joins US 431 into Attalla, which is home to its notable concurrency with US 11. US 278 and US 431 leave US 11, cross below a railroad track, and enter into Gadsden. It immediately junctions with I-59 and heads into town, where it junctions with SR 211, US 411, and George Wallace Drive, which leads to I-759. It leaves the city and finally splits off from US 431.

The route passes through Hokes Bluff on its way to Piedmont. In Piedmont, the route junctions SR 21. It then turns off of its right of way, the right-of-way becoming Nances Creek Indian Boulevard.

The route has no more major junctions at this point as it crosses through Cherokee County. It passes through highly hilly terrain and crosses into Cleburne County. It then crosses into Georgia at Esom Hill, Georgia, continuing on its way to Cedartown.

History

From its creation in 1955 to 1965, US-278 followed a very different route from Whitehouse to Double Springs. It followed SR-129 from Whitehouse to Haleyville; In Haleyville, the route followed SR-13 to SR-195. It would then follow SR-195 to Double Springs, where it would turn onto its present-day routing. Oddly, State Route 74 followed the present day routing between the two cities via Natural Bridge from 1956 onward.[2][3]

The routing of U.S. Route 278 in between Double Springs and Cullman has witnessed several minor changes from 1955 to the present day. From its creation until at least 1985, the route followed present-day Winston County Roads 3800 and 3700, crossing Brushy Creek at a now-abandoned bridge before climbing up to join its present-day route into Addison. On the east side of Addison, the route followed Main Street, descending down and crossing Blevens Creek at another abandoned bridge before rejoining the modern-day route. [4] Both of these routings have been replaced with straighter routings. On the west side of Cullman, the route previously descended down into a hollow where it proceeded to cross Vest Creek before climbing up the hollow and rejoining the modern-day routing; this routing was replaced in 2012 with a much straighter bridge across the same creek. [5] Until at least 1997, the route followed 4th Street into Cullman, where it engaged in a short concurrency with U.S. Route 31 before rejoining the modern-day route; this was replaced with the modern-day routing along 3rd Street. [5]


During the 1960s–1980s, there were some different variations of the routing of US 278 through the cities of Gadsden and Attalla, however construction of four-lane segments on the western side of Gadsden and in Attalla allowed the highway to be placed on its current route which has been in place since the mid-1980s.

 

 

U.S. Route 278 Business

LocationPiedmont
Existed?–1980s

Until the mid-1980s, a US 278 Business (US 278 Bus.) existed in the city of Piedmont. US 278 is carried on a four-lane segment that bypasses the center of Piedmont. US 278 Bus. began where the four-lane segment began on the northeast side of Piedmont, then traveled southwest into the center of the city and intersected SR 9 and then traveled to the north, concurrent with SR 9 until it intersected the four-lane US 278 on the northern edge of the city.

Future

A four-laning project is ongoing east of Gadsden near the town of Hokes Bluff.

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
Lamar0.0000.000 
 
US 278 west – Tupelo
 
 
SR 118 begins
Continuation into Mississippi; western end of SR 118 concurrency
Sulligent5.7419.239  SR 17 – Vernon, Hamilton
MarionGuin17.78528.622 
 
SR 142 east
Western terminus of SR 142
19.40831.234 
 
SR 107 south – Fayette
Northern terminus of SR 107
19.69231.691 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
US 43 south / SR 118 west / SR 171 south (11th Avenue East) / SR 142 west (11th Avenue West) – Winfield
Southern end of US 43 and SR 171 concurrencies; eastern end of SR 118 concurrency
Hamilton28.05445.149   I-22 / US 78 (SR 4) – Tupelo, BirminghamI-22/US 78 exit 16
32.81152.804 
 
 
 
SR 17 south / SR 171 ends – Vernon
Southern end of SR 17 concurrency; northern end of SR 171 concurrency
33.16353.371 
 
 
 
 
 
US 43 north / SR 17 north (Military Street North) / SR 74 west (Bexar Avenue West) – Hackleburg
Northern end of US 43 and SR 17 concurrencies; western end of SR 74 concurrency
43.48669.984  SR 253 – Hackleburg, Winfield
47.78176.896 
 
 
 
SR 241 north to SR 129 – Phil Campbell
Southern terminus of SR 241
48.34277.799  SR 129 – Haleyville, Brilliant, Fayette
WinstonNatural Bridge56.40290.770 
 
SR 13 south – Tuscaloosa
Western end of SR 13 concurrency
56.85791.502 
 
 
 
SR 5 south / SR 13 north – Russellville, Jasper
Eastern end of SR 13 concurrency; northern terminus of SR 5
Double Springs69.277111.491 
 
SR 195 north – Haleyville
Western end of SR 195 concurrency
69.742112.239 
 
 
 
SR 33 north / SR 195 south – Double Springs, Moulton
Eastern end of SR 195 concurrency; southern terminus of SR 33
CullmanCullman105.738170.169  I-65 – Birmingham, HuntsvilleI-65 exit 308
107.674173.285   US 31 (SR 3 / 2nd Avenue SW) / SR 69Western end of SR 69 concurrency
110.736178.212 
 
SR 69 north – Arab, Guntersville
Eastern end of SR 69 concurrency
111.173178.916 
 
 
 
SR 157 north / CR 719 south – Moulton, Muscle Shoals, Florence
Southern terminus of SR 157
Holly Pond120.978194.695 
 
SR 91 south – Hanceville, Garden City
Northern terminus of SR 91
Blount126.822204.100  US 231 (SR 53) – Arab, Birmingham
Brooksville129.322208.124  SR 79 – Guntersville, Birmingham
Snead134.880217.068  SR 75 – Albertville, Oneonta
Etowah146.360235.544 
 
SR 132 west – Altoona, Oneonta
Eastern terminus of SR 132
148.539239.050 
 
SR 179 north
Southern terminus of SR 179
Attalla152.840245.972  SR 77 – Albertville, Lincoln
153.338246.774 
 
US 431 north (SR 1) – Albertville, Guntersville, Huntsville
Western end of US 431 concurrency
155.253249.855 
 
US 11 south (SR 7 / 3rd Street SW)
Western end of US 11 concurrency
155.585250.390 
 
US 11 north (SR 7 / 3rd Street NW)
Eastern end of US 11 concurrency
156.428251.746  I-59 – Birmingham, ChattanoogaI-59 exit 183
Gadsden159.707257.024 
 
SR 211 north (Noccalula Road)
Southern terminus of SR 211
161.182259.397  US 411 (SR 25 / Albert Rains Boulevard) – Centre, Rainbow City, AshvilleInterchange
161.469259.859 
 
 
 
SR 291 south (Hood Avenue) to I-759
Northern terminus of SR 291
163.243262.714 
 
US 431 south (SR 1 / East Meighan Boulevard) – Anniston
Eastern end of US 431 concurrency
CalhounPiedmont184.081296.250 
 
SR 21 south (Tom Bible Memorial Highway) – Jacksonville, Anniston, Atmore, Pensacola
Northern terminus of SR 21
184.605297.093 
 
SR 9 south (N. Main Street)
Western end of SR 9 concurrency
184.693297.235 
 
SR 9 north – Centre
Eastern end of SR 9 concurrency
Cherokee
No major junctions
Cleburne199.182320.552 
 
 
 
US 278 east / SR 6 east – Atlanta
Continuation into Georgia
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

See also

References

KML is from Wikidata
  1. ^ a b . Alabama Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on April 2, 2015. Retrieved March 21, 2015.
  2. ^ http://cartweb.geography.ua.edu/lizardtech/iserv/calcrgn?cat=North%20America%20and%20United%20States&item=States/Alabama/State%20Roads//Alabama1955a.sid&wid=1000&hei=900&props=item(Name,Description),cat(Name,Description)&style=simple/view-dhtml.xsl
  3. ^ http://cartweb.geography.ua.edu/lizardtech/iserv/calcrgn?cat=North%20America%20and%20United%20States&item=States/Alabama/State%20Roads//Alabama1964a.sid&wid=1000&hei=900&props=item(Name,Description),cat(Name,Description)&style=simple/view-dhtml.xsl
  4. ^ https://ngmdb.usgs.gov/img4/ht_icons/overlay/AL/AL_Addison_303079_1969_24000_geo.jpg
  5. ^ a b "Historic Aerials: Viewer".


  U.S. Route 278
Previous state:
Mississippi
Alabama Next state:
Georgia

route, alabama, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, available, as. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as Reflinks documentation reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article is about the section of U S Route 278 in Alabama For the entire route see U S Route 278 U S Route 278 US 278 mostly internally designated by the Alabama Department of Transportation as State Route 74 SR 74 is a major east west U S highway across the northern part of the U S state of Alabama West of Hamilton SR 74 continues west to end at US 78 unsigned SR 4 while US 278 turns south along US 43 SR 17 SR 171 to Guin where it turns west along SR 118 to the Mississippi state line U S Route 278State Route 74US 278 highlighted in redRoute informationAuxiliary route of US 78Maintained by ALDOTLength199 182 mi 1 320 552 km Major junctionsWest endUS 278 towards Amory Mississippi and Tupelo MississippiMajor intersectionsUS 43 in Guin and Hamilton I 22 US 78 near Hamilton I 65 in Cullman US 31 in Cullman US 231 in Blountsville US 431 west of Attalla US 11 in Attalla I 59 in Attalla US 411 in GadsdenEast endUS 278 SR 6 towards Cedartown Georgia and Atlanta GeorgiaLocationCountryUnited StatesStateAlabamaCountiesLamar Marion Winston Cullman Blount Etowah Calhoun Cherokee CleburneHighway systemUnited States Numbered Highway SystemList Special DividedAlabama State Highway SystemInterstate US State SR 277US 278 SR 279 SR 73SR 74 SR 75 Contents 1 Route description 2 History 3 Future 4 Major intersections 5 See also 6 ReferencesRoute description EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message US 278 enters Alabama near Sulligent After passing through the city the route continues on a winding path until it reaches Guin where it turns north and gains US 43 It then junctions with I 22 US 78 It eventually reaches Hamilton where it junctions with SR 17 and turns off of US 43 s right of way It continues on a curvy path until it reaches Natural Bridge where it junctions with SR 5 and SR 13 It continues onward and enters the William B Bankhead National Forest where Double Springs lies It junctions with SR 33 and SR 195 It continues onward passing through Houston AL It then exits the National Forest and enters Addison which is home to its junction with CR 41 which is a corridor connecting Jasper Arley Danville and Decatur It passes through much less hilly terrain and crosses the county line into Cullman County The route passes through slightly curvy terrain until its junction with I 65 It enters the city of Cullman and junctions with US 31 and SR 69 It continues east for about one mile from its second junction with SR 69 and junctions with SR 157 It continues east and eventually enters Holly Pond which is home to its junction with SR 91 It continues onto Blount County It eventually junctions with US 231 which leads to SR 67 to the north and SR 79 south to the south in Cleveland The main junction here is in Blountsville The route continues through hilly terrain to SR 79 itself It passes through hilly terrain to Snead which is home to its junction with SR 75 It continues onward through hilly terrain to the county line to Etowah County The route is mostly hilly with three lane stretches at points due to the steep uphills along the route specifically eastbound It reaches Altoona where it junctions with SR 132 It continues to Ivalee which is home to its junction with SR 179 and is also home to the Mountain Top Flea Market among the biggest flea markets in the state It almost immediately descends down a hill into Ridgeville which is home to its junction with SR 77 It passes through a slight ridge cut and crosses a railroad line where it junctions with Gallant Road at a fork and then junctions with US 431 which is a four lane divided highway The route joins US 431 into Attalla which is home to its notable concurrency with US 11 US 278 and US 431 leave US 11 cross below a railroad track and enter into Gadsden It immediately junctions with I 59 and heads into town where it junctions with SR 211 US 411 and George Wallace Drive which leads to I 759 It leaves the city and finally splits off from US 431 The route passes through Hokes Bluff on its way to Piedmont In Piedmont the route junctions SR 21 It then turns off of its right of way the right of way becoming Nances Creek Indian Boulevard The route has no more major junctions at this point as it crosses through Cherokee County It passes through highly hilly terrain and crosses into Cleburne County It then crosses into Georgia at Esom Hill Georgia continuing on its way to Cedartown History EditThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2016 This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message From its creation in 1955 to 1965 US 278 followed a very different route from Whitehouse to Double Springs It followed SR 129 from Whitehouse to Haleyville In Haleyville the route followed SR 13 to SR 195 It would then follow SR 195 to Double Springs where it would turn onto its present day routing Oddly State Route 74 followed the present day routing between the two cities via Natural Bridge from 1956 onward 2 3 The routing of U S Route 278 in between Double Springs and Cullman has witnessed several minor changes from 1955 to the present day From its creation until at least 1985 the route followed present day Winston County Roads 3800 and 3700 crossing Brushy Creek at a now abandoned bridge before climbing up to join its present day route into Addison On the east side of Addison the route followed Main Street descending down and crossing Blevens Creek at another abandoned bridge before rejoining the modern day route 4 Both of these routings have been replaced with straighter routings On the west side of Cullman the route previously descended down into a hollow where it proceeded to cross Vest Creek before climbing up the hollow and rejoining the modern day routing this routing was replaced in 2012 with a much straighter bridge across the same creek 5 Until at least 1997 the route followed 4th Street into Cullman where it engaged in a short concurrency with U S Route 31 before rejoining the modern day route this was replaced with the modern day routing along 3rd Street 5 During the 1960s 1980s there were some different variations of the routing of US 278 through the cities of Gadsden and Attalla however construction of four lane segments on the western side of Gadsden and in Attalla allowed the highway to be placed on its current route which has been in place since the mid 1980s U S Route 278 BusinessLocationPiedmontExisted 1980sUntil the mid 1980s a US 278 Business US 278 Bus existed in the city of Piedmont US 278 is carried on a four lane segment that bypasses the center of Piedmont US 278 Bus began where the four lane segment began on the northeast side of Piedmont then traveled southwest into the center of the city and intersected SR 9 and then traveled to the north concurrent with SR 9 until it intersected the four lane US 278 on the northern edge of the city Future EditThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it December 2016 This section needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information December 2016 This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message A four laning project is ongoing east of Gadsden near the town of Hokes Bluff Major intersections EditCountyLocationmi 1 kmDestinationsNotesLamar 0 0000 000 US 278 west Tupelo SR 118 beginsContinuation into Mississippi western end of SR 118 concurrencySulligent5 7419 239 SR 17 Vernon HamiltonMarionGuin17 78528 622 SR 142 eastWestern terminus of SR 14219 40831 234 SR 107 south FayetteNorthern terminus of SR 10719 69231 691 US 43 south SR 118 west SR 171 south 11th Avenue East SR 142 west 11th Avenue West WinfieldSouthern end of US 43 and SR 171 concurrencies eastern end of SR 118 concurrencyHamilton28 05445 149 I 22 US 78 SR 4 Tupelo BirminghamI 22 US 78 exit 1632 81152 804 SR 17 south SR 171 ends VernonSouthern end of SR 17 concurrency northern end of SR 171 concurrency33 16353 371 US 43 north SR 17 north Military Street North SR 74 west Bexar Avenue West HackleburgNorthern end of US 43 and SR 17 concurrencies western end of SR 74 concurrency 43 48669 984 SR 253 Hackleburg Winfield 47 78176 896 SR 241 north to SR 129 Phil CampbellSouthern terminus of SR 241 48 34277 799 SR 129 Haleyville Brilliant FayetteWinstonNatural Bridge56 40290 770 SR 13 south TuscaloosaWestern end of SR 13 concurrency56 85791 502 SR 5 south SR 13 north Russellville JasperEastern end of SR 13 concurrency northern terminus of SR 5Double Springs69 277111 491 SR 195 north HaleyvilleWestern end of SR 195 concurrency69 742112 239 SR 33 north SR 195 south Double Springs MoultonEastern end of SR 195 concurrency southern terminus of SR 33CullmanCullman105 738170 169 I 65 Birmingham HuntsvilleI 65 exit 308107 674173 285 US 31 SR 3 2nd Avenue SW SR 69Western end of SR 69 concurrency110 736178 212 SR 69 north Arab GuntersvilleEastern end of SR 69 concurrency111 173178 916 SR 157 north CR 719 south Moulton Muscle Shoals FlorenceSouthern terminus of SR 157Holly Pond120 978194 695 SR 91 south Hanceville Garden CityNorthern terminus of SR 91Blount 126 822204 100 US 231 SR 53 Arab BirminghamBrooksville129 322208 124 SR 79 Guntersville BirminghamSnead134 880217 068 SR 75 Albertville OneontaEtowah 146 360235 544 SR 132 west Altoona OneontaEastern terminus of SR 132 148 539239 050 SR 179 northSouthern terminus of SR 179Attalla152 840245 972 SR 77 Albertville Lincoln153 338246 774 US 431 north SR 1 Albertville Guntersville HuntsvilleWestern end of US 431 concurrency155 253249 855 US 11 south SR 7 3rd Street SW Western end of US 11 concurrency155 585250 390 US 11 north SR 7 3rd Street NW Eastern end of US 11 concurrency156 428251 746 I 59 Birmingham ChattanoogaI 59 exit 183Gadsden159 707257 024 SR 211 north Noccalula Road Southern terminus of SR 211161 182259 397 US 411 SR 25 Albert Rains Boulevard Centre Rainbow City AshvilleInterchange161 469259 859 SR 291 south Hood Avenue to I 759Northern terminus of SR 291163 243262 714 US 431 south SR 1 East Meighan Boulevard AnnistonEastern end of US 431 concurrencyCalhounPiedmont184 081296 250 SR 21 south Tom Bible Memorial Highway Jacksonville Anniston Atmore PensacolaNorthern terminus of SR 21184 605297 093 SR 9 south N Main Street Western end of SR 9 concurrency184 693297 235 SR 9 north CentreEastern end of SR 9 concurrencyCherokee No major junctionsCleburne 199 182320 552 US 278 east SR 6 east AtlantaContinuation into Georgia1 000 mi 1 609 km 1 000 km 0 621 mi Concurrency terminusSee also Edit U S roads portal United States portalReferences EditKML file edit help Template Attached KML U S Route 278 in AlabamaKML is from Wikidata a b Milepost Maps Alabama Department of Transportation Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved March 21 2015 http cartweb geography ua edu lizardtech iserv calcrgn cat North 20America 20and 20United 20States amp item States Alabama State 20Roads Alabama1955a sid amp wid 1000 amp hei 900 amp props item Name Description cat Name Description amp style simple view dhtml xsl http cartweb geography ua edu lizardtech iserv calcrgn cat North 20America 20and 20United 20States amp item States Alabama State 20Roads Alabama1964a sid amp wid 1000 amp hei 900 amp props item Name Description cat Name Description amp style simple view dhtml xsl https ngmdb usgs gov img4 ht icons overlay AL AL Addison 303079 1969 24000 geo jpg a b Historic Aerials Viewer U S Route 278Previous state Mississippi Alabama Next state Georgia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title U S Route 278 in Alabama amp oldid 1155904515, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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