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Lenoir Gông (North Carolina) Usage on ceb.wikipedia.org Lenoir County; Usage on ce.wikipedia.org Ленуар (гуо, Къилбаседа Каролина) Usage on cy.wikipedia.org Lenoir County, Gogledd Carolina; Usage on de.wikipedia.org Lenoir County; Vorlage:Navigationsleiste Orte im Lenoir County; Usage on eo.wikipedia.org Kantono Lenoir
Lenoir County (/ l ɛ ˈ n ɔːr / le-NOR) [1] is a county in the U.S. state of North Carolina. As of the 2020 census, its population was 55,122. [2] Its county seat is Kinston, [3] located on the Neuse River, across which the county has its territory. Lenoir County comprises the Kinston, NC Micropolitan Statistical Area.
This list includes properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in Orange County, North Carolina. Click the "Map of all coordinates" link to the right to view an online map of all properties and districts with latitude and longitude coordinates in the table below. [1]
North Carolina Highway 268 Alternate (NC 268A) was established in 1940 as a renumbering of NC 268. This short 0.18-mile-long (0.29 km) route serves as a cutoff between NC 268 and NC 18; it is four-lanes throughout. Signage at the location only indicate it as part of NC 268; however, NCDOT county maps identify it specifically as NC 268A. [14]
In Pink Hill the road ran along modern-day Old Beulaville Road to College Street. In 1930, the section in Duplin County was considered a graded road, while the section between the Lenoir County line and College Street was a gravel, sand-clay, or topsoil road. The segment of NC 11 running along Front Street was paved. [12] [11] By 1944, the ...
North Carolina Highway 401 (NC 401) was established as a new primary spur of NC 40 to the North Carolina Coastal Plains Experiment Station (agriculture testing facility), south of Wallace. [7] In 1940, NC 401 was replaced by an extension of NC 11, which was eventually downgraded to secondary road by 1963 (today Jonestown Road).
In 1929, NC 90 extended east from Columbia to Fort Landing. In 1932, US 64 was established and was overlapped on NC 90 from just west of Statesville to Fort Landing. In late 1934, NC 90 was removed from all overlap with US 64 east of Statesville; at same time, NC 90 was extended west from Lenoir to US 221 near Linville, replacing NC 171.
North Carolina Highway 55 Alternate (NC 55A) was established around 1950–1953 as a renumbering of a piece of mainline NC 55 in Bridgeton. It was created thanks to a new bridge carrying US 17/NC 55 over the Neuse River and a spur was needed to be made to connect each highway.