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U.S. Route 29 (US 29) is a major north–south route in the commonwealth of Virginia. It covers 248.0 miles (399.1 km) from the North Carolina border at the city of Danville to the Key Bridge in Washington DC .
Since 1996, there has been an unusually high number of cases involving young women disappearing along U.S. Route 29 (US 29) in Virginia, or an area known as the "Route 29 Corridor". [1] Five young women disappeared in five years between 2009 and 2014, earning it a particularly notorious reputation. [ 2 ]
U.S. Route 170 (US 170) was the portion of US 29 from US 70 at Charlotte, North Carolina, northeast to Lynchburg, Virginia, from 1926 until 1931, when US 29 became part of the route. The US 170 designation was then removed and the route remained as US 29 only.
The following highways in Virginia have been known as State Route 29: State Route 29 (Virginia 1923–1933), now mostly Virginia State Route 14; U.S. Route 29 in Virginia, 1931–present; State Route 29 (Virginia 1933-1947), Culpeper to Warrenton
At 6 p.m., Alicia's car was found abandoned along a highway near Culpeper, Virginia. Witnesses later came forward to police saying they had seen Alicia along Route 29 talking to a man with a blue pickup truck on the side of the road. Her body was discovered in a wooded area fifteen miles (24 km) to the southeast of where she had gone missing on ...
The route of the Lee Highway is now roughly designated by the following routes: US 1: New York to Washington, D.C. [citation needed] US 29: Key Bridge from Washington to Rosslyn, Virginia; US 29: traversing Arlington County, Virginia, where it carries the name Langston Boulevard.
US 29 at the District of Columbia line 1931: current US 33: 135.60: 218.23 US 33 at the West Virginia state line: SR 33 in Richmond: 1938: current US 48: 14.26: 22.95 US 48 at the West Virginia state line: I-81 & SR 55 in Strasburg: 2002: current Signage not Posted until 2017 US 50: 86.00: 138.40 US 50 at the West Virginia state line
U.S. Route 29 (US 29) enters Washington, D.C., via the Key Bridge from Arlington County, Virginia, and exits at Silver Spring, Maryland.It predominantly follows city surface streets, although the portion of the route from the Key Bridge east to 26th Street Northwest is an elevated highway better known as the Whitehurst Freeway.