U.S. Route 19W
U.S. Route 19W traverses approximately from Cane River, North Carolina, to Bluff City, Tennessee.
Route description
US 19W begins in North Carolina in western Yancey County in the community of Cane River, at the intersection of US 19/US 19E. Several signs at the beginning of the route strongly recommend truckers against using this route. The road then proceeds north through Pisgah National Forest, connecting the communities of Elk Shoal, Ramseytown, and Sioux, to the Tennessee state line, a drive of frequent curves and elevation changes.Once past the state line in Tennessee, the road enters the Cherokee National Forest and is much the same for another to State Route 352 /Flag Pond Road. From Flag Pond Road, it is just to Interstate 26, where US 19W merges with the Interstate to Johnson City. US 19W overlaps with I-26/US 23 from exit 43 to exit 20. There it leaves I-26 and continues north on the Bristol Highway, overlapped with US 11E, for, after which it reconnects with US 19E to reform US 19 near Bluff City.
History
Established in 1930, US 19 was split at Cane River into US 19E and US 19W. US 19E follows the original routing via Spruce Pine and Elizabethton to Bluff City. US 19W was rerouted with US 23 and North Carolina Highway 692 into Tennessee, then through the cities of Erwin and Johnson City, before rejoining US 19E in Bluff City. In late 1934, NC 692 was dropped along the route; then, in 1952, US 23 abandoned US 19W in North Carolina by rerouting west through Faust and Wolf Laurel, meeting back at Ernestville. In 1984, US 19 was realigned on a straighter path in Yancey County; US 19W was thus extended.In late September 2024, several large sections of US 19W was washed out by the effects of Hurricane Helene in North Carolina. In November, the North Carolina Department of Transportation stated that it expects to spend $1 billion to rebuild the two-lane highway, which could take six to 10 years. A new, permanent US 19W would be to modern standards, which likely mean wider shoulders and possibly wider travel lanes; concrete walls will also be used instead of earthen embankments in some places. Until then, temporary gravel roads are being used to connect isolated communities.