U.S. Route 123
Route information | |||
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Auxiliary route of US 23 | |||
Length | 75.12 mi[1][2] (120.89 km) | ||
Major junctions | |||
South end | US 23 / US 441 / SR 15 / SR 365 near Clarkesville, GA | ||
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North end | I-385 BS in Greenville, SC | ||
Location | |||
Country | United States | ||
States | Georgia, South Carolina | ||
Counties | GA: Habersham, Stephens SC: Oconee, Pickens, Greenville | ||
Highway system | |||
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U.S. Route 123 (US 123) is a spur of
Route description
US 123 has a length of 17.70 miles (28.49 km) in Georgia and 57.42 miles (92.41 km) in South Carolina.[1][2] The U.S. Highway runs concurrently with SR 365 for its entire length in Georgia.[1] US 123 is part of the National Highway System from its southern terminus to SR 17 and SR 184 near Toccoa and from US 76 and SC 28 in Clemson to SC 183 in Greenville.[3][4][5]
Clarkesville to Seneca
US 123 begins at a partial interchange with US 23, US 441, SR 15 and SR 365 east of Clarkesville. The interchange provides access between US 123 and those highways in the direction of
US 123 and SR 184 gain a center turn lane and cross a Norfolk Southern rail line as they approach the downtown area. In the center of town, the highway begins to parallel the Greenville District rail line and intersects Broad Street, which carries
US 123 and US 76 head east on Windsor Street, meet the western end of SC 183 (Westminster Highway), and temporarily expand to a four-lane divided highway as they pass under the rail line. The U.S. Highways reduce to two lanes to pass through downtown Westminster, which includes the historic
Seneca to Greenville
US 123, US 76, and SC 28 cross the railroad and continue east from Seneca as Clemson Boulevard, a four-lane divided highway. The highways begin to closely parallel the railroad shortly before they meet the western end of SC 93 (Pendleton Road), which provides access to Clemson University. The highways continue as Tiger Boulevard and, after crossing the Keowee River branch of Lake Hartwell into Pickens County, Calhoun Memorial Highway. In the town of Clemson, the three highways intersect SC 133 (College Avenue) before US 76 and SC 28 turn south onto Anderson Highway. US 123 veers away from the railroad and becomes a freeway at its diamond interchange with SC 93 (Old Greenville Highway). The U.S. Highway has diamond interchanges at Issaqueena Trail, at 18 Mile Road on the edge of the town of Central, and at Ruhamah Road (identified as ROAD 17 on directional signs), US 178 (Moorefield Memorial Highway), and Cartee Road around the town of Liberty. US 123 enters the city of Easley and has a partial interchange with US 123 Connector (Ross Avenue), which leads west to SC 93; there is no access from northbound US 123 to the westbound connector route. The freeway ends at the highway's diamond interchange with SC 135 (Pendleton Street), which leads to SC 8.[6][8]
US 123 continues east as a four-lane road with center turn lane to its directional intersection with the eastern end of SC 93 (Greenville Road), where the U.S. Highway becomes a divided highway again and briefly parallels the Greenville District rail line. The highway has a
National Highway System
The entire length of US 123 is part of the National Highway System, a system of routes determined to be the most important for the nation's economy, mobility, and defense.[9][10][11]
History
US 123 replaced all of SC 13 in 1946. SC 13 was SC 17 before 1928.
South Carolina Highway 13
This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (October 2020) |
SC 13's Greenville alternate route
Location | Greenville, South Carolina |
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Existed | c.1940–c.1950 |
South Carolina Highway 13 Alternate (SC 13 Alt.) was an alternate route for the original SC 13 (that was replaced by US 123). It existed in Greenville, South Carolina. It was formed around 1940 from SC 250 (now US 25) to SC 13. Approximately 1950, SC 13 Alt. was decommissioned, and US 123 replaced its path.
Major intersections
State | County | Location | mi [1][2] | km | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Atlanta, Cornelia | Southern terminus; southern end of SR 365 concurrency; northbound exit and southbound entrance; interchange | |||||
| 0.51 | 0.82 | SR 17 north to US 23 north / US 441 north (SR 15 north) – Clarkesville, Clayton, Helen, North Georgia Technical College | Southern end of SR 17 concurrency | ||
Stephens | | 6.49 | 10.44 | SR 17 south / SR 184 south to I-85 – Lavonia | Northern end of SR 17 concurrency; southern end of SR 184 concurrency | |
Toccoa | 9.75 | 15.69 | SR 63 south / SR 106 south / SR 184 north (M.L. King Way / Broad Street) – Clayton, Helen, Carnesville, Toccoa Falls, Toccoa Falls College | Northern terminus of SR 63/SR 106; northern end of SR 184 concurrency | ||
10.83 | 17.43 | |||||
Tugaloo River | 17.70 0.00 | 28.49 0.00 | Lake Hartwell – Georgia–South Carolina state line; northern terminus of SR 365; northern end of SR 365 concurrency | |||
South Carolina | Oconee | Westminster | 10.27 | 16.53 | US 76 west (Long Creek Highway) – Clayton, Long Creek, Chau-Ram County Park | Southern end of US 76 concurrency |
10.50 | 16.90 | SC 183 north (Westminster Highway) – Walhalla | Southern terminus of SC 183 | |||
11.57 | 18.62 | SC 24 east (West Oak Highway) to I-85 – Townville, Oakway | Western terminus of SC 24 | |||
| 14.50 | 23.34 | SC 11 to I-85 – Walhalla, World of Energy | Interchange | ||
Seneca | 18.60 | 29.93 | SC 28 west (Blue Ridge Boulevard) / SC 59 south (West North First Street) – Walhalla, Seneca | Southern end of SC 28 concurrency | ||
19.90 | 32.03 | Northampton Road / North Pine Street | Interchange | |||
21.04 | 33.86 | Historic Downtown Seneca | ||||
| 25.40 | 40.88 | Oconee County Airport | Western terminus of SC 93 | ||
Pickens | Clemson | 27.29 | 43.92 | SC 133 north (College Avenue) – Six Mile, Clemson, Clemson University, John C. Calhoun Home | Southern terminus of SC 133 | |
27.67 | 44.53 | US 76 east / SC 28 east (Anderson Highway) to I-85 – Anderson, John C. Calhoun Home | Northern end of US 76 and SC 28 concurrencies | |||
28.43 | 45.75 | SC 93 – Clemson, Central, Norris | Interchange; southern end of freeway | |||
29.93 | 48.17 | Issaqueena Trail | ||||
Central | 32.09 | 51.64 | To SC 88 / Road 18 – Central, Pendleton | |||
| 36.60 | 58.90 | Road 27 – Liberty | |||
| 39.12 | 62.96 | US 178 – Liberty, Anderson | |||
| 40.42 | 65.05 | Cartee Road | |||
Easley | 44.00 | 70.81 | Ross Avenue west (US 123 Conn. west) to SC 93 – Liberty, Norris | Southbound exit and northbound entrance; eastern terminus of US 123 Conn. and Ross Avenue | ||
44.34 | 71.36 | SC 8 / SC 135 – Pelzer, Easley | Interchange; northern end of freeway | |||
46.38 | 74.64 | SC 93 west (East Main Street) – Easley, Pickens | No left turn northbound; eastern terminus of SC 93 | |||
47.93 | 77.14 | SC 153 south to I-85 | Interchange | |||
| 50.04 | 80.53 | SC 124 east (Old Easley Highway) – Parker | No northbound entrance; western terminus of SC 124 | ||
Greenville | Welcome–Parker line | 53.21 | 85.63 | US 25 to I-85 | Interchange | |
Greenville | 55.06 | 88.61 | SC 124 (Pendleton Road) | |||
56.11 | 90.30 | Broad Street | Interchange; southbound exit only | |||
56.55 | 91.01 | SC 183 west (College Street) | Eastern terminus of SC 183 | |||
57.19 | 92.04 | US 29 (North Church Street) | ||||
57.42 | 92.41 | East North Street ( I-385 – Columbia, Spartanburg | Northern terminus | |||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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Special routes
Seneca business loop
Location | Seneca, South Carolina |
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Length | 3.1 mi[12] (5.0 km) |
Existed | 1958–2000 |
U.S. Route 123 Business (US 123 Bus) was established in 1958 as a renumbering of mainline US 123 through downtown Seneca, via North 1st Street. It was decommissioned in 2000, renumbered as part of SC 59 and SC 130.
Easley business loop
Location | Easley, South Carolina |
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Length | 3.5 mi[13] (5.6 km) |
Existed | 1958–1964 |
U.S. Route 123 Business (US 123 Bus) was established in 1958 as a renumbering of mainline US 123 through downtown Easley, via Liberty Drive and Main Street. It was decommissioned in 1963 when mainline US 123 was rerouted further south along new freeway; the alignment was renumbered as part of SC 93.
Easley connector route
Location | Easley, South Carolina |
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Length | 0.740 mi[14] (1,191 m) |
U.S. Route 123 Connector (US 123 Conn.) is a 0.740-mile (1.191 km) connector route in the west-central part of Easley that connects SC 93 (Greenville Highway / Liberty Drive) with US 123 (Calhoun Memorial Highway). The connector route is not signed along SC 93 or US 123, but there is signage along its actual path. The entire length is known as Ross Avenue.
US 123 Conn. and Ross Avenue begin at an intersection with SC 93 mainline and travel to the east. Immediately, they curve to the southeast. They curve back to the east just before reaching their eastern terminus, an intersection with US 123.[15]
Greenville alternate route
This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (January 2021) |
Location | Greenville, South Carolina |
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Existed | 1950–1972 |
See also
References
- ^ a b c d Geographic Transportation Reporting Analysis and Query System (GeoTRAQS) (Map). Georgia Department of Transportation. Archived from the original on December 27, 2012. Retrieved June 7, 2012.
- ^ a b c Highways - Zipped Shapefile of roads maintained by SCDOT - Statewide (ESRI shapefile) (Map). South Carolina Department of Transportation. 2012. Retrieved June 7, 2012.
- ^ National Highway System: Georgia (PDF) (Map). Federal Highway Administration. December 2003. Retrieved June 9, 2012.
- ^ National Highway System: South Carolina (PDF) (Map). Federal Highway Administration. December 2003. Retrieved June 9, 2012.
- ^ National Highway System: Greenville, SC (PDF) (Map). Federal Highway Administration. December 2003. Retrieved June 9, 2012.
- ^ a b c d e f Google (June 7, 2012). "U.S. Route 123" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved June 7, 2012.
- ^ a b Office of Transportation Data. "County Maps". Georgia Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 7, 2012.
- ^ a b c d "General County Highway Maps". South Carolina Department of Transportation. Retrieved June 7, 2012.
- Oconee County (PDF)
- Pickens County (PDF)
- Greenville County (PDF)
- ^ National Highway System: Georgia (PDF) (Map). Federal Highway Administration. May 8, 2019. Retrieved August 15, 2019.
- ^ National Highway System: South Carolina (PDF) (Map). Federal Highway Administration. May 9, 2019. Retrieved August 15, 2019.
- ^ National Highway System: Greenville, SC (PDF) (Map). Federal Highway Administration. May 9, 2019. Retrieved August 15, 2019.
- ^ Google (June 22, 2013). "Overview map of US 123 Bus. (Seneca, South Carolina)" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved June 22, 2013.
- ^ Google (June 22, 2013). "Overview map of US 123 Bus. (Easley, South Carolina)" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved June 22, 2013.
- ^ "Highway Logmile Report". South Carolina Department of Transportation. Retrieved December 9, 2020.
- ^ Google (December 9, 2020). "Overview map of US 123 Conn. (Easley, South Carolina)" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved December 9, 2020.
External links
- Media related to U.S. Route 123 at Wikimedia Commons
- The Highways of South Carolina: US 123
- Endpoints of U.S. Highway 123