U.S. Route 43
U.S. Route 43 is a north–south United States Numbered Highway spanning approximately 410 miles (660 km) through the Southern states of Alabama and Tennessee.[1] It begins at its southern terminus in Prichard, Alabama, at an intersection with U.S. Route 90 near Mobile, and ends at its northern terminus in Columbia, Tennessee, at a junction with U.S. Routes 31 and 412.[1] In Alabama, U.S. Route 43 travels northward from the Prichard-Mobile area through the western part of the state, passing through rural areas and the Black Belt region before reaching more urban centers.[2] Key cities along its path include Thomasville in Clarke County, Demopolis in Marengo County, Tuscaloosa and Northport in Tuscaloosa County, and Hamilton in Marion County, where it approaches the Tennessee state line.[2] The route serves as a vital connector for local commerce, agriculture, and industry in western Alabama, often running concurrently with Alabama State Route 13 for much of its length.[2] Upon entering Tennessee near the Alabama border, U.S. Route 43 (unsigned as Tennessee State Route 6) continues north through Lawrence County, passing through the city of Lawrenceburg, a regional hub with intersections to other state routes like SR 20 and SR 98.[3] It then proceeds into Maury County, serving as an important link for traffic heading toward Nashville, before terminating in Columbia.[1] Throughout Tennessee, the highway supports economic activity in rural communities and provides access to natural attractions and historic sites along the way.[3] Established as part of the original U.S. Highway system in 1926, Route 43 has undergone various improvements over the decades, including widening projects and bridge replacements, to enhance safety and capacity.[1] Today, it remains a principal arterial road, facilitating travel between the Gulf Coast and central Tennessee while intersecting major interstates like I-20 and I-65.[2]Route description
In Alabama
U.S. Route 43 traverses approximately 353 miles (568 km) through western Alabama, serving as a primary north-south corridor connecting the Gulf Coast to the Tennessee Valley. The route begins at its southern terminus with an intersection at U.S. Route 90 in Prichard, adjacent to Mobile, and proceeds northward, largely overlapping with State Route 13 for much of its length. It passes through a mix of urban, suburban, and rural landscapes, supporting local economies centered on timber harvesting, agriculture, and manufacturing in communities along its path.[1][4] In the southern segment, US 43 navigates the Mobile metropolitan area, starting in Prichard and heading north through Chickasaw and Saraland, where it provides access to Interstate 65 and nearby Interstate 10. Beyond the metro, the highway enters more rural terrain in Mobile County, passing Mount Vernon amid pine forests and wetlands associated with the Mobile-Tensaw River Delta. Continuing into Washington County, it winds through small communities like Creola, Satsuma, McIntosh, and Wagarville, characterized by agricultural lands and timber operations, before reaching Clarke County and crossing the Tombigbee River via the Joe C. McCorquodale Jr. Memorial Bridge near Jackson. The route then proceeds to Grove Hill, a hub for local manufacturing and forestry-related industries.[5][6][7][8] Further north in the central portion, US 43 travels through rural Choctaw and Marengo counties, passing Thomasville—a center for timber processing—and reaching Demopolis along the Tombigbee River, where agriculture and river-based commerce play key roles. The highway continues across the Black Belt region's fertile soils into Greene County via Eutaw and Forkland, then enters Tuscaloosa County. Here, it traverses the urban areas of Northport and Tuscaloosa, crossing the Black Warrior River and passing near the University of Alabama campus, supporting educational and manufacturing sectors in the area. North of Tuscaloosa, the route shifts to more rolling farmlands and wooded hills in Fayette and Marion counties, reaching Hamilton as a gateway to Appalachian-influenced terrain.[9][10][4][11] In its northern segment through Franklin and Lauderdale counties, US 43 passes Russellville amid agricultural fields and light manufacturing before entering the Shoals region. The highway culminates in Florence, crossing the Tennessee River on the O'Neal Bridge into the Tennessee Valley's broader economic zone, which includes music heritage sites and industrial activities tied to the river. Exiting Alabama north of Florence, the route has facilitated connectivity since its establishment in 1934, aiding transport of timber, crops, and manufactured goods across diverse ecosystems from coastal plains to foothills.[4][12][13]In Tennessee
U.S. Route 43 enters Tennessee from Alabama near Florence at the community of Saint Joseph in Lawrence County and proceeds northward for approximately 57 miles (92 km) through rural landscapes of the Highland Rim, terminating at the intersection of US 31 and US 412 in Columbia, Maury County.[14] The highway primarily consists of two lanes, catering to agricultural areas with scattered farmlands and hardwood forests, though it includes short four-lane segments near urban centers like Lawrenceburg to accommodate local traffic.[14] From Saint Joseph, the route travels through Loretto before reaching Lawrenceburg, the Lawrence County seat, where it intersects State Route 64 and provides access to nearby David Crockett State Park along Shoal Creek. Lawrenceburg features the David Crockett Museum along Locust Avenue (US 43), honoring the frontiersman's early life and political career in the area. Continuing north, US 43 passes through Ethridge, a notable Amish settlement, emphasizing the route's role in connecting rural communities and cultural enclaves.[15][16][17] Entering Maury County, the highway traverses Mount Pleasant and Culleoka, crossing the Duck River just south of Columbia. In Columbia, US 43 serves as a key link to the Nashville metropolitan area, facilitating regional travel while maintaining its character as a predominantly rural corridor through southern Middle Tennessee.[14]History
Establishment and early development
U.S. Route 43 traces its origins to early 19th-century paths in Alabama, including Native American trails that connected the Mobile area to the Tennessee Valley region. These trails, used by tribes such as the Choctaw and Chickasaw for hunting and trade, formed the basis for later settler roads and were gradually widened into wagon paths during the territorial period.[18] A key precursor in northern Alabama was the Byler Road, authorized by the Alabama legislature on December 16, 1819, just days after statehood, making it the state's first public road. Constructed in the early 1820s by Captain John Byler, a veteran of the Battle of Horseshoe Bend, this toll road extended over 140 miles from the Jackson Military Road in Lauderdale County southward to the falls of the Black Warrior River in Northport, Tuscaloosa County, following buffalo trails and Indian paths through rugged terrain to facilitate cotton transport to river ports. Portions of this alignment were incorporated into the modern route of US 43, serving agricultural and trade needs in the Black Belt and Tennessee Valley.[19] By the 1920s, segments of these early roads in Alabama had been designated as part of the state's nascent highway system under the Federal Aid Road Act of 1916 and the Federal Highway Act of 1921, which provided matching funds for rural post roads and interstates. Alabama's State Highway Department, established in 1918, prioritized improvements along these paths, with progress maps from 1925 showing completed and under-construction federal-aid routes aligning with the future US 43 corridor from Mobile through Tuscaloosa to the Tennessee border. These efforts focused on grading and gravel surfacing to support growing automobile traffic.[20][21] US 43 was officially commissioned in 1934 by the American Association of State Highway Officials (AASHO) as a north-south highway spanning approximately 410 miles from US 90 in Prichard, Alabama (near Mobile), to US 31 in Columbia, Tennessee. The designation replaced portions of existing state highways in both states, including Alabama State Route 9 and segments of Tennessee State Route 6, while deliberately avoiding major overlaps with US 31 to address AASHO's concerns over split routings like US 31W and US 31E. Initially planned to extend farther north to Hopkinsville, Kentucky, the route was truncated at Columbia due to state signing delays and jurisdictional issues.[1][22] Early development in the 1930s and 1940s emphasized paving and widening, funded by New Deal programs such as the National Industrial Recovery Act. In Alabama, about 200 miles of the route received initial asphalt or concrete surfacing by 1940, connecting agricultural heartlands and reducing travel times for farmers hauling cotton and livestock. World War II rationing and material shortages delayed full completion, with some sections remaining gravel until 1945. Postwar expansions in the late 1940s, driven by the Federal-Aid Highway Act of 1944, upgraded alignments to handle increased truck traffic in rural economies, incorporating shoulders and bridges over rivers like the Tennessee.Major changes and proposals
In 1934, U.S. Route 43 was initially commissioned with a proposed northern extension from its Tennessee terminus at Columbia northward through segments of U.S. Route 31 and what is now U.S. Route 41A to Hopkinsville, Kentucky, as part of a broader plan to consolidate the split U.S. 31W and 31E routes.[1] However, the extension faced opposition from Kentucky and Tennessee state officials due to high construction costs and jurisdictional disputes, leading to its abandonment before implementation; Tennessee did not signpost the route north of Columbia until later adjustments, and the American Association of State Highway Officials (AASHO) retained Hopkinsville as the official northern terminus in descriptions until 1952.[23] During the mid-20th century, several modifications addressed growing congestion along U.S. 43 in Alabama's urban areas. In the 1950s and 1960s, bypass alignments were constructed around Tuscaloosa to divert through traffic from the city's central business district, improving flow on what became McFarland Boulevard (concurrent with Alabama State Route 69).[4] Similarly, in Mobile, early reroutings in the 1960s shifted the route eastward to avoid downtown bottlenecks, with further adjustments in the late 1970s culminating in the 1973 completion of the George Wallace Tunnel under the Mobile River as part of the broader Interstate 10 corridor, which indirectly alleviated pressure on nearby U.S. 43 segments by enhancing regional connectivity. From the 1970s through the 1990s, significant widening projects transformed portions of U.S. 43 in Alabama's Black Belt region into four-lane divided highways to support agricultural and industrial growth. Over 80 miles of the route, from Mobile County northward through Marengo and Choctaw counties to Tuscaloosa, were upgraded in phases during this period, with segments like the Thomasville area finalized in the 1990s to facilitate economic development in rural communities.[24] In Tennessee, minor realignments near Lawrenceburg in the 1980s and 1990s improved safety by straightening curves and adding shoulders along the North Fork Buffalo River corridor, reducing accident rates in hilly terrain.[25] Key integrations with the Interstate Highway System further shaped U.S. 43's evolution. The interchange with Interstate 65 near Satsuma, Alabama, opened in the early 1960s as part of I-65's southward expansion, providing a critical link for freight and commuter traffic between the Gulf Coast and central Alabama.[26] In the 1980s, proposals for comprehensive urban relocations—such as fully bypassing downtown Mobile and Tuscaloosa—were advanced to separate local and long-distance travel, with partial adoption including the 1981 shift of U.S. 43 in Mobile from Craft Highway to a more efficient eastern alignment concurrent with State Route 158.[27]Junctions
Alabama
U.S. Route 43 in Alabama features numerous junctions with interstates, other U.S. routes, and state highways, reflecting its role as a key north-south corridor through the state's western region. The route is co-signed with Alabama State Route 13 (SR 13) from its southern terminus northward for approximately 227 miles until near Berry in Fayette County, providing overlapping signage and maintenance responsibilities. Concurrency segments, such as with U.S. Route 278 (US 278) near Haleyville, facilitate east-west connections in rural northwest Alabama. The following table summarizes major interchanges and intersections from south to north, including approximate mile markers based on the route's progression from the southern terminus (total ~353 miles in Alabama), exit numbers where applicable, and notes on significance such as traffic volumes or local landmarks.| Mile | Location | Junction | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | Prichard | US 90 (SR 16) | Southern terminus of US 43; beginning of concurrency with SR 13, serving as a gateway from Mobile's urban area to rural western Alabama. High local traffic due to proximity to Port of Mobile.[28] |
| 12 | Satsuma (near Mobile) | I-65 (Exit 31) | Diamond interchange connecting to Montgomery and Nashville; significant for freight and passenger traffic, with annual average daily traffic (AADT) exceeding 50,000 vehicles near the Mobile metropolitan area (as of 2023).[28] |
| 57 | Jackson | SR 177 (US 43 Truck) | At-grade intersection with business loop to downtown Jackson; handles local commercial traffic in Clarke County.[4] |
| 150 | Grove Hill | US 84 / SR 5 | Four-way at-grade intersection; key east-west linkage across southern Alabama, with moderate AADT around 10,000; near historic county seat.[28] |
| 195 | Demopolis | US 80 / SR 14 | At-grade intersection in Black Belt region; connects to Selma and supports agricultural transport; concurrency with SR 13 continues.[28] |
| 220 | Northport (near Tuscaloosa) | I-20 / I-59 (Exit 71A) / US 82 | Partial cloverleaf interchange; high-volume access (AADT over 80,000 as of 2023) to University of Alabama and industrial zones in Tuscaloosa County, via nearby I-359 spur to downtown. |
| 230 | Near Berry (Fayette County) | SR 18 (end of SR 13 concurrency) | At-grade intersection marking the end of long SR 13 overlap near Berry; serves local rural connections in Fayette County. |
| 260 | Fayette | SR 171 | At-grade intersection; serves local rural connections in Fayette County. |
| 300 | Haleyville | US 278 / SR 195 | At-grade intersection with beginning of US 43 / US 278 concurrency eastward to Hamilton; important for northwest Alabama commerce, near Bankhead National Forest; AADT around 15,000 (as of 2023).[29] |
| 340 | Muscle Shoals (near Florence) | US 72 / SR 20 | Partial cloverleaf interchange; major connection to Memphis and the Tennessee Valley, with high traffic (AADT over 40,000 as of 2023) due to industrial and Shoals-area economic activity; near O'Neal Bridge over Tennessee River.[28] |
| 353 | Colbert County | Tennessee state line (SR 13 ends) | Northern extent in Alabama (~353 miles total); transitions to Tennessee; rural crossing with lower AADT under 10,000 (as of 2023).[28] |
Tennessee
In the Tennessee segment of U.S. Route 43, which spans approximately 56 miles through rural Lawrence and Maury Counties, daily traffic volumes are relatively low, typically ranging from 6,500 to 8,200 vehicles in the southern rural stretches (as of 2023), reflecting its primary role in serving agricultural communities and local travel rather than high-volume regional corridors.[31] The route intersects several state highways and major county roads, with notable concurrencies including a brief overlap with U.S. Route 64 (State Route 15) in Lawrenceburg; key junctions provide access to local attractions and parks.[3][32] Note: Mile markers are approximate from the Alabama state line.| Mile | Location | Intersections and Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 0.0 | Saint Joseph (Lawrence County, at Alabama state line) | Northern end of Alabama's US 43; enters Tennessee as a two-lane rural highway; local access via State Line Road and nearby county ties like Factory Road.[3] |
| ~10 | Near Lawrenceburg (Lawrence County) | SR 242 (West Point Road) – Provides access to David Crockett State Park via connections to US 64; rural two-way intersection with moderate local traffic.[3] SR 227 (brief concurrency southward); major county road ties include Hurricane Creek Road for farm access.[3] |
| ~20 | Lawrenceburg (Lawrence County) | US 64/SR 15 (concurrent northeastward through downtown on North Locust Avenue and East Gaines Street) – Key commercial hub; access to county seats and Amish communities; AADT around 8,000 (as of 2023).[3][31] Additional ties: SR 98 (Iron City Road) and Napier Road for rural connectors.[3] |
| ~30 | Near Mount Pleasant (Maury County) | SR 20 (Pull Tight Hill Road) – Two-lane at-grade intersection serving local traffic to Summertown; emphasis on agricultural routes; county roads like Buffalo Road tie in here.[32] Lower rural volumes, AADT approximately 6,500 (as of 2023).[31] |
| 56.0 | Columbia (Maury County, northern terminus) | US 31/US 412 (concurrent with SR 6/7 on Nashville Highway) – Ends at signalized intersection; indirect link to I-65 via US 31 north; higher urban-adjacent traffic; local ties include North Main Street.[32][31] |