Alabama State Route 144

State Route 144 (SR 144) is a 26.663-mile-long (42.910 km) east–west state highway in the eastern part of the U.S. state of Alabama. It travels from U.S. Route 231 (US 231) in St. Clair County near Pell City to US 431 at Alexandria in Calhoun County. The highway is two lanes for its entire length. The highway also crosses the Coosa River using the bridge across the Neely Henry Dam.

State Route 144
Route information
Maintained by ALDOT
Length26.663 mi[1] (42.910 km)
Major junctions
West end US 231 north of Pell City
  SR 77 near Ohatchee
East end US 431 in Alexandria
Location
CountiesSt. Clair, Calhoun
Highway system
  • Alabama Highways
SR 143SR 145

Route description

History

Until 1997, the section of SR 144 between SR 77 and US 431 was designated as SR 62. SR 62 is now assigned to a short highway in Marshall County. Also, the section of SR 144 between SR 77 and Ragland was signed as St. Clair County Route 26 (CR 26) until SR 144 was extended eastward.

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
St. ClairWattsville0.0000.000 US 231 (Heart of Dixie Highway/SR 53) Pell City, AshvilleWestern terminus
Coosa River17.07327.476Neely Henry Dam
CalhounOhatchee18.12329.166 SR 77 Lincoln, Southside
Alexandria26.66342.910 US 431 (SR 1) Anniston, Saks, Glencoe, GadsdenEastern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
gollark: I've seen graphite thermal pad things. Maybe that would work.
gollark: *try and calculate something**accidentally fall over*
gollark: I wonder what calculators actually designed in this century could be like. Probably just somewhat specialized tablets with low-powered CPUs and higher battery life.
gollark: Not that I'm much of a brainologist or something.
gollark: It might just be done on some more general-purpose higher-reasoning bit.

See also

  •  U.S. Roads portal
  •  United States portal

References

KML is from Wikidata
  1. Alabama Department of Transportation. "Milepost Maps". Archived from the original on July 27, 2011. Retrieved April 10, 2011.
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