End of US highway 129 |
1926-1930
| 1930-1934
| 1934-1940
|
1940-1947
| 1947-1958
| 1958-present
|
US 129 was there in the beginning, though it was a relatively short Georgia intra-state route (meeting its parent route, US 29, in Athens). In Macon, US 129 came into town on North Avenue, and then Spring Street down to Mulberry Street. It is possible that US 129 junctioned with US 41 and/or US 80 at that intersection (this map is not clear about intra-city routings): |
Regardless, given highway signage practices during that time period, it is almost certain that US 129 would have extended east on Mulberry, ending at the courthouse on 2nd Street: | This interactive image is looking the opposite direction (west on Mulberry), which was northbound US 41 and westbound US 80. It is uncertain whether one or both routes continued straight ahead on Mulberry, or angled to the left via Cotton Avenue. But it is very probable that the south beginning of US 129 was straight ahead on Mulberry (pan right to see the courthouse): |
In Gainesville at the time, it was US 19 (not US 23) that ran through town. The north end of US 129 was at its junction with US 19: In those days, neither E.E. Butler Parkway nor Jesse Jewell Parkway had been built yet. Rather, historic maps indicate that US 19 used Spring Street through town, and that US 129 came in on Athens Highway and Green Street. | This image was looking north on Green; the half-block just before reaching Spring (the cross street) has since been closed to vehicles, but just ahead (at the location of the archway) was where US 129 originally ended at US 19: |
That terminus did not last for long, either: in 1935 the north end of US 129 was extended to Knoxville. Before it had been routed onto the modern four-lane between Knoxville and Maryville, US 129 ran along what is now TN secondary hwy. 33, or the Maryville Pike. At Chapman Highway/Henley Street (which is now US 441), traffic was directed north into downtown Knoxville, ending either at Main Street or Cumberland Avenue (depending which historic maps were correct). This one indicates that US 11-70 remained on Cumberland... |
...but this one shows that traffic veered onto Main to connect with Henley: | This shot was taken from a vantage point between Main and Cumberland, looking north on Henley. Today northbound US 11 and eastbound US 70 come in from the left on one-way Main Street (one block behind the camera), and are then routed north here onto Henley, along with US 441. But there was no US 441 here at the time when US 129 ended here: |
In 1941 the south end of US 129 was extended to US 41 at Jasper: | This shot was looking west on northbound US 41-129. It was taken just a few years after US 129 had been extended further south (behind the camera), but this is almost certainly how the junction looked when the south beginning of US 129 was to the right: |
This shot was looking east on US 98, which is also southbound US 19-27A: In 1947 that was only US 19, and for about the next decade, the south beginning of US 129 was to the left on today's FL 349. The sign for northbound traffic is essentially the same: |
Then in 1959, US 129 was rerouted along its present course south of Branford, ending at its current terminus in Chiefland. Meanwhile, its former corridor between Branford and Old Town was designated Alt. US 129: | Here are a couple views looking northwest on Young Boulevard (or northbound Alt. US 27 as well as US 19-98, which joined this road just behind the camera: |
Almost allcolored shields in Florida have long since been replaced. US 129 begins to the right on Rodgers Boulevard; here is a view from the opposite direction... | ...and for drivers who turn to the north there, the first confirming assembly looks like this: |
Heading the opposite direction, there was no "End" sign, but this assembly was posted at US 129's south terminus. The green sign in the distance points left to Inglis, Cedar Key, and St. Petersburg; and Fanning Springs to the right. |
In 1966 TNDoT extended Alcoa Hwy to then-new I-40 (so now there is a grade-separated interchange at Kingston Pike, meaning that junction looks a lot different now than it did when US 129 ended there). This map was included in TNDoT's application to have AASHO extend the US 129 designation along the new segment: |