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Meridianville is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Madison County, Alabama, United States, and is included in the Huntsville–Decatur combined statistical area. As of the 2020 census, the population of the CDP was 8,209.
In Alabama, US 231 is paired with unsigned State Route 53 (SR 53) from Huntsville to Dothan. The route passes through mostly straight terrain between the Tennessee state line and Meridianville, which is home to its junction with Bob Wade Lane, which eventually becomes SR 255. The route descends down a slight hill and enters Huntsville.
Madison County was the largest county in Alabama in population from 1810 to 1840. [6] [7] In the 1810 census alone, Madison County made up nearly half of the population in what would become Alabama, though this did not include Native American tribes and their people. By 1850 however it would lose the title and be the 7th due to its population ...
SR 255 was created around 1969 as part of a proposed northern bypass of Huntsville. The original route ran from Redstone Arsenal Gate 9 to US 72 as limited access highway with exits for U.S. Route 72 Alternate/SR 20 (now Interstate 565), Old Madison Pike, and ending at US 72, with plans to extend north.
Mòdul:Location map/data/USA Alabama; Mòdul:Location map/data/USA Alabama/ús; Usage on de.wikipedia.org WTTO-Fernsehsendemast; George Wallace Tunnel; Vorlage:Positionskarte USA Alabama; Isle aux Herbes; Cheaha Peak; Talsperre Wilson (Alabama) WUAL-FM; WBHM; WLRH; Tuscaloosa-Raffinerie; William B. Bankhead National Forest; Usage on es ...
Greenlawn (also known as the William Madison Otey House) is a historic residence between Meridianville and Huntsville, Alabama. The house was built in 1849–50 by William Otey, replacing a log house built by his father in the early 1810s. Following William and his wife's deaths, the house was taken over by one of their granddaughters in 1907.
U.S. Bureau of Land Management map showing the principal meridians of Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama. The Huntsville meridian begins on the northern boundary of Alabama, in latitude 34° 59′ 27" north, longitude 86° 34′ 16″ west [1] from Greenwich, extends south to latitude 33° 06′ 20″ north, and governs the surveys in the northern district of Alabama.
State Route 69 (SR 69) is a 280-mile-long (450 km) state highway that extends from the southwestern to the northeastern parts of the U.S. state of Alabama. The southern terminus of the highway is at an intersection with SR 177 at Jackson. The northern terminus of the highway is at an intersection with US 431/SR 79 at Guntersville.