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South Carolina Highway 9 (SC 9) is a 259.570-mile (418 km) major state highway in the U.S. state of South Carolina. The highway travels from Cherry Grove Beach to the North Carolina state line upstate. The highway is currently the longest state highway in South Carolina. It is signed as a north–south highway, even though it travels in an east ...
Description: Map of South Carolina Highway 9: Date: 10 March 2018: Source: Own work, data from U.S. Census Bureau and KML files on South Carolina highway articles: Author: Mr. Matté (if there is an issue with this image, contact me using this image's Commons talk page, my Commons user talk page, or my English Wikipedia user talk page; I'll know about it a lot faster)
SC 9 west of Chesterfield: 1940: 1947 SC 101: 56.522: 90.963 US 76 / Neeley Ferry Road in Hickory Tavern: SC 11 / Highway 912 near Tigerville: 1928: current SC 102: 25.550: 41.119 US 15 Bus. / US 15 Truck / Patrick Highway in North Hartsville: SC 9 in Chesterfield: 1936: current SC 103 — — SC 114 southeast of Gaffney
US 1 / US 52 / US 52 Truck / SC 9 / SC 9 Truck in Cheraw — — Completely concurrent with US 52 Truck US 15 Alt. — — Walterboro: North Carolina state line near McColl: 1937: 1946 The entire route was in concurrency with US 15 in South Carolina. US 15 Conn. 2.140: 3.444 US 15 / US 301 southwest of Santee: SC 6 in Santee — — Unsigned US ...
The first section to officially open happened in 1968, from South Carolina Highway 527 (SC 527), near Gable, to SC 9/SC 57, in Dillon. In 1971–1972, more sections of I-95 was completed: going north from SC 9/SC 57, in Dillon, to the North Carolina state line and going south from SC 527, near Gable, along the recently completed 1968-built Lake ...
SC 9 north (Main Street) – Lake View, Dillon: North end of SC 9 overlap: Horry 291.4: 469.0: SC 9 south – North Myrtle Beach, Myrtle Beach: South end of SC 9 overlap 297.9: 479.4: US 76 east – Fair Bluff, Wilmington: Continuation into North Carolina: 1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
There are 11 Interstate Highways—5 primary and 6 auxiliary—that exist entirely or partially in the U.S. state of South Carolina.As of December 31, 2013, the state had a total of 850.80 miles (1,369.23 km) of interstate and 11.80 miles (18.99 km) of interstate business, all maintained by the South Carolina Department of Transportation (SCDOT).
South Carolina utilizes a numbering system to keep track of all non-interstate and primary highways that are maintained by SCDOT. First appearing in 1947 [citation needed] (when a huge amount of highways were cancelled or truncated), the "state highway secondary system" [4] carries the number of the county followed by a unique number for the particular road.