Tennessee State Route 144

State Route 144 (SR 144) is a 7.9-mile-long (12.7 km) state highway in Union County, Tennessee. It connects Hickory Star and Maynardville with Plainview.

State Route 144
Route information
Maintained by TDOT
Length7.9 mi (12.7 km)
Major junctions
West end SR 170 near Maynardville
  SR 33 / SR 61 in Maynardville
East end SR 131 in Plainview
Location
CountiesUnion
Highway system
SR 143SR 145

Route description

SR 144 begins as Hickory Star Road in Hickory Star at an intersection with SR 170. The highway goes southeast and crosses over a ridge to enter Maynardville and have a short concurrency with SR 33/SR 61, just west of downtown. SR 144 then leaves Maynardville and continues southeast as Ailor Gap Road and crosses over another Ridge to come to an intersection with SR 370. SR 144 continues southeast to enter Plainview and come to an end at an intersection with SR 131 just west of town, where the road continues southeast as Corryton Road to Corryton.

Junction list

The entire route is in Union County.

LocationmikmDestinationsNotes
0.00.0 SR 170 (Hickory Valley Road) Andersonville, Hickory Star, Big Ridge State ParkWestern terminus; road continues north to Hickory Star
Maynardville2.64.2 SR 33 south / SR 61 west (Maynardville Highway) Halls Crossroads, KnoxvilleWestern end of SR 33/SR 61 concurrency
2.94.7 SR 33 north / SR 61 east (Maynardville Highway) New Tazewell, TazewellEastern end of SR 33/SR 61 concurrency
6.410.3 SR 370 north (Wolfe Road) Potato ValleySouthern terminus of SR 370
Plainview7.912.7 SR 131 (Tazewell Pike) Luttrell, Corryton, KnoxvilleEastern terminus; road continues south as Corryton Road to Corryton
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
gollark: The problem is worse in a spæce future, because of the fact that spaceships have lots of kinetic energy.
gollark: Hey, humans could TOTALLY mess up in that way too!
gollark: *But* some single humans could... probably break civilization.
gollark: Not entirely, no.
gollark: As technology improves this will probably get even more problematic as individual humans get able to throw around more energy to do things.

See also

  •  United States portal
  •  U.S. Roads portal

References


    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.