Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In Nashville, US 431, known as Hillsboro Pike, traverses the exit 3 interchange on I-440, and eventually merges into US 70/SR 1 before entering the downtown area. US 431 then joins US 31 and US 41A onto the James Robertson Parkway .
US 431 northbound on Hillsboro Pike in Nashville. A few miles north of the state line, in Fayetteville, US 231 and 431 split again, with 431 heading northwest in combination with State Route 50. In the town of Petersburg, the combined route briefly joins with State Route 129; the trio head a few miles northwest before SR-129 splits off to the west.
Del Rio Pike at its junction with Hillsboro Rd. 35°55′50″N 86°52′37″W / 35.930556°N 86.876944°W / 35.930556; -86.876944 ( Toussaint L'Overture County Franklin
Broadway, First Avenue (South), Hermitage Avenue, Lebanon Pike SR 45: Old Hickory Boulevard: SR 65 / SR 65 [a] West Trinity Lane, Whites Creek Pike SR 100: Highway 100 West SR 106 [a] Hillsboro Pike SR 112 [a] Clarksville Pike SR 155 / SR 155: Briley Parkway, Thompson Lane, Woodmont Blvd. SR 171: Old Hickory Boulevard, Hobson Pike SR 174
5401 Hillsboro Pike 36°05′07″N 86°50′04″W / 36.085278°N 86.834444°W / 36.085278; -86.834444 ( Guildford Dudley, Sr. and Anne Dallas Forest Hills
Turning further southeast and passing near Centennial Park and Vanderbilt University, the highway has a parclo interchange with US 431 (21st Avenue, South Hillsboro Pike) some distance beyond. I-440 then turns directly east and reaches I-65 south of downtown Nashville about two miles (3.2 km) later in the top level of a symmetrical four-level ...
Green Hills is located south of downtown Nashville on Hillsboro Pike (U.S. Highway 431/Tennessee State Route 106). Green Hills is within a region extending south to Forest Hills and Williamson County and east-west to Oak Hill and Belle Meade. The neighborhood is in close proximity to three area universities – Vanderbilt, Belmont, and Lipscomb.
This route is shown on a map prepared by the National Park Service in 1935. With the decline of travel on the Natchez Trace, this roadbed became known as Compton Road, named for the prominent Compton family of the vicinity. Compton Road, shown on various maps of the 19th century, was separate from Hillsboro Pike through Green Hills.