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Jacob Fork is a 41.09-mile (66.13 km) long, fourth-order tributary of the South Fork Catawba River in Burke and Catawba Counties, North Carolina. According to the Geographic Names Information System , it has also been known historically as [ 1 ] Jacobs Creek.
NC 127 is a rural two-lane highway, except in Hickory. It begins at an intersection with NC 10 in the unincorporated Catawba County community of Propst Crossroads and travels north over Jacobs Fork into the census designated place (CDP) of Mountain View. In Mountain View, NC 127 has an interchange with US 321 which provides access to Interstate 40.
The South Fork Catawba River (better known as the South Fork River) [5] begins south of Hickory, North Carolina just northwest of the intersection of US Highway 321 and North Carolina Highway 10, at the confluence of the Henry Fork and Jacob Fork located adjacent to the east side of the Jacob Fork Newton City Park.
Downgraded to secondary road NC 291 — — — — 1930: c. 1935: Downgraded to secondary road NC 292 — — — — 1931: c. 1939: Downgraded to secondary road NC 293 — — — — 1931: 1947 Replaced by US 19A (became part of rerouted US 19 the next year) NC 294: 13.3: 21.4 SR 123 at the Tennessee state line
Jacob Fork River; Lower Little River ... New River – southeastern North Carolina; Nolichucky River; ... USGS Hydrologic Unit Map – State of North Carolina (1974)
Henry Fork rises about 0.25 miles southeast of Propst Mountain in Burke County, North Carolina. Henry Fork then flows northeast into Catawba County then southeast to form South Fork Catawba River with Jacob Fork about 3 miles southwest of Startown.
North Carolina Highway 111 (NC 111) is a 126.0-mile-long (202.8 km) primary state highway in the U.S. state of North Carolina. Traveling north–south through Eastern North Carolina , it connects the various rural towns and communities with the cities of Jacksonville (via U.S. Route 258 (US 258) and NC 24 ), Goldsboro and Tarboro .
North Carolina Highway 286 (NC 286) was an original state highway that began from the Georgia state line, near Otto, to NC 10, along Old Alarka Road. In 1927, NC 286 was renumbered as an extension of NC 285, from the Georgia state line to Franklin. Around 1938, NC 286 was replaced by NC 28 and moved to the north terminus to the community of ...