State Road 55 marker

State Road 55

Route information
Maintained by FDOT
Length259.700 mi[1] (417.947 km)
Existed1945–present
Major junctions
South end US 41 / SR 684 near Bradenton
Major intersections I-275 in St. Petersburg
SR 60 in Clearwater
SR 50 in Weeki Wachee
SR 44 in Crystal River
US 129 in Chiefland
US 19 / US 27 / US 98 in Perry
US 90 in Greenville
North end US 221 / SR 76 towards Quitman, GA
Location
CountryUnited States
StateFlorida
CountiesManatee, Hillsborough, Pinellas, Pasco, Hernando, Citrus, Levy, Gilchrist, Dixie, Taylor, Madison, Jefferson
Highway system
SR 54 SR 56

State Road 55 (SR 55) is mainly the internal or secret designation of U.S. Route 19 through Florida, although it has appeared on maps and atlases on several occasions. State Road 55 originates at the Georgia state line north of Ashville, and ends at SR 684 in Bradenton. North of Perry, it is the secret route for US 221, continuing north into Georgia as Georgia State Route 76. South of Memphis, it is a secret designation for US 41; it is also a secret designation for US 301 in the Bradenton - Palmetto area, along a segment co-signed with US 41.

Very little evidence of SR 55's existence can be found, except in Levy, Dixie, and Taylor counties. In Dixie County, for example, there's a CR 55A in Old Town and Fanning Springs. In Chiefland, US 19's status as SR 55 is exposed in street-name signs, and one shield south of US 27 ALT.

Route description

SR 55 begins at the eastern terminus of unsigned SR 684 in Bradenton, Florida, which heads west as US 41. The road is the hidden state road for US 41, heading north. SR 55 serves as the northern terminus for hidden State Road 683, but not its exposed route US 301. From this point, it is the hidden route for a concurrency of US 41 and 301. After the intersection with SR 64, US 41-301-SR 55 concludes its journey through Bradenton and crosses the Hernando Desoto Bridge over the Manatee River and enters Palmetto. The concurrency ends when US 301 makes a sharp right turn onto SR 43 at a diamond interchange, and SR 55 becomes a hidden route only of US 41 again. Right after an interchange with the norther terminus of US 41 BUS, SR 45 shares the hidden concurrency with US 41, but almost instantly, SR 55 meets another interchange with US 19 in Memphis and moves onto that road, only to join I-275(State Road 93) at Exit 5, where they both use the Sunshine Skyway Bridge. At Exit 17, SR 55 leaves I-275 and resumes its role as the hidden route along US 19 once again, as it will do throughout most of the west coast of the state.

In Pasco County, despite the fact that US 19 ALT terminates in Holiday, its hidden route State Road 595 secretly joins US 19-SR 55 only to branch off a few blocks later as County Road 595 on Mile Stretch Road. CR 595 is encountered again without any markings from New Port Richey to Aripeka, where shields can actually be found approaching Aripeka Road. In Hernando County, the road appears again as County Road 595 which terminates at the gateway to Hernando Beach, Florida. This terminus is across from the intersection of County Road 574, a road that serves as the gateway to Spring Hill, Florida.

US 98 joins US 19 in Chassahowitzka, where State Road 700 ends. From here, it becomes the hidden state route of both US 19 and 98. Further northwest in Homosassa Springs, US 19-98-SR 55 takes County Road 490 with it as all four routes pass by the entrance to Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park. A block after the eastern terminus of County Road 490A, CR 490 branches off to the east as it heads towards Lecanto.

After entering Crystal River and passing by the Crystal River Airport, SR 55 encounters the eastern terminus of County Road 44W, which secretly joins the road in order to meet the western terminus of State Road 44.

The at-grade interchange with State Road 121 in Lebanon Station also includes County Road 336 and secretly takes the road with it to a local street in Otter Creek.

SR 55 shield on US 19-98 in Chiefland, Florida

US 27 ALT joins US 19-98 in Chiefland, where State Road 500 ends. From here, it becomes the hidden state route of US 19, 98, and ALT 27, and instantly intersects US 129, which at one time shared the intersection with US 27 ALT. Still in Chiefland, US 19-98-Alt. 27-SR 55 encounters the eastern terminus of State Road 320, which joins these roads for several blocks before turning east and becoming County Road 320.

In the City of Perry, State Road 30 joins US 19-98-Alt 27, and SR 55 moves onto US 221. The road narrows down to two lanes at the intersection of US 27, although trucks must use a detour. Intersections north of here include CR 14 (an extension of SR 14) in Shady Grove, an interchange with Interstate 10, and a brief concurrency with US 90 in Greenville before finally terminating at the Georgia State Line, where US 221 continues onto Georgia State Route 76.

History

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
Manatee0.0000.000
US 41 south (Cortez Road / SR 684 west) / 44th Avenue Connection
see US 41 (mile 225.226-231.305)
6.0799.783
US 41 north (SR 45) Port Manatee, Tampa
north end of US 41 / SR 45 overlap; south end of US 19 overlap
see US 19 (mile 0.000-213.643)
TaylorPerry219.722353.608





US 19 north / US 27 Alt. north / US 98 north / US 221 Truck north (Byron Butler Parkway / SR 30 west) Tallahassee

CR 361A south (Puckett Road)
north end of US 19 / US 27 Alt. / US 98 overlap; south end of US 221 overlap
see US 221 (mile 0.000-39.978)
Jefferson259.700417.947

US 221 north / SR 76 east Quitman
Georgia state line
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Dixie County

County Road 55A marker

County Road 55A

LocationEugene Old Town

County Road 55A is an east-west county road that runs along the south side of SR 55 between Eugene and Old Town, just west of the Suwannee River.

Levy and Gilchrist Counties

County Road 55A marker

County Road 55A

LocationFanning Springs

East of the Suwannee River, County Road 55A is a north-south bi-county road entirely within the City of Fanning Springs that connects US 19-ALT 27-98 with State Road 26.

References

  1. 1 2 FDOT straight line diagrams Archived March 6, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, accessed March 2014
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