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U.S. Route 411
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| Length: |
314 mi (505 km) |
| Formed: |
1934[1] |
| South end: |
US-78 at Leeds, AL |
Major
junctions: |
I-20 at Moody, AL
US-231 at Ashville, AL
 US-278 / US-431 at Gadsden, AL
US 27 at Rome, GA
US 41 at Cartersville, GA
I-75 at Cartersville, GA
US 76 at Chatsworth, GA
 US-64 / US-74 east of Cleveland, TN
 US-129 / US-321 at Maryville, TN
US-441 at Sevierville, TN
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| North end: |
US-25 at Newport, TN |
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
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U.S. Route 411 is a spur of U.S. Route 11. It currently runs for 314 miles (505 km) from U.S. Route 78 in Leeds, Alabama to U.S. Route 25 in Newport, Tennessee. It passes through the states of Alabama, Georgia, and Tennessee, most notably by way of the cities of Gadsden, Alabama, Rome, Georgia, and the popular tourist destination of Sevierville, Tennessee.
Residents along the route commonly pronounce its numeric designation "four-eleven" or "four-leven".
Route description
- See also: U.S. Route 411 in Alabama
Most of the distance that U.S. Highway 411 travels is rural countryside, with no major metropolitan areas along its route, although it passes near the cities of Birmingham, Alabama, Atlanta, Georgia and Knoxville, Tennessee. In Sevier County, Tennessee, the highway is used by many tourists as a gateway to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, of which the highway passes about 20 miles north. Though generally a two lane route, the Tennessee Department of Transportation is in the processing of completing its widening of the highway between Maryville, Tennessee & Benton, Tennessee, with portions from Maryville, Tennessee to Madisonville, Tennessee and Englewood, Tennessee to Delano, Tennessee (Polk County) completed.
Although it carries a north-south designation, the lengthy section between Cartersville, Georgia, and Gadsden, Alabama, is east-west.
References
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