Mississippi Highway 57 | ||||
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Route information | ||||
Maintained by MDOT | ||||
Length | 97.6 mi[1] (157.1 km) (90.780 mi excluding concurrencies) | |||
Existed | 1960[2]–present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
South end | US 90 in Fontainebleau | |||
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North end | US 45 in State Line | |||
Location | ||||
Country | United States | |||
State | Mississippi | |||
Counties | Jackson, George, Greene, Wayne | |||
Highway system | ||||
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Mississippi Highway 57 (MS 57) is a state highway in southeastern Mississippi. It runs in a north/south direction for approximately 97.6 miles (157.1 km), serving four counties: Jackson, George, Greene, and Wayne.
Route description
MS 57 begins in Jackson County on the Ocean Springs/Gautier city line in the small community of Fontainebleau at an intersection with U.S. Route 90 (US 90). It heads north as four-lane divided highway through mostly rural woodlands, passing by some homes and businesses here and there, for a little under 3.0 miles (4.8 km) to have an interchange with Interstate 10 (I-10) at its exit 57. The highway now narrows to two-lanes as it leaves Fontainebleau, as well as the city limits of both towns, to wind its way northward through a mix of farmland and wooded areas for several miles to pass through the community of Vancleave before paralleling the Pascagoula River along its western banks and crossing into George County.
MS 57 continues winding its way north to cross Black Creek and travel through the community of Benndale, where it has an intersection with MS 26, before passing through the De Soto National Forest and traveling past where the Pascagoula River splits into the Leaf and Chickasawhay rivers, with MS 57 following the Leaf River and crossing into Greene County.
The highway passes through the community of Leaf before crossing over a railroad track to enter the town of McLain and have an intersection with MS 198. It now bypasses downtown along its eastern side before having an intersection and becoming concurrent (overlapped) with US 98. They head east as a four-lane divided highway to immediately cross a bridge over the Leaf River, as well as leave McLain, and travel through woodlands for couple miles, where they have another intersection with MS 198 (through this section is a short dead end due to the demolition of that highway's bridge over the Leaf River), before MS 57 splits off as a two-lane highway and travels through another section of the De Soto National Forest for the next several miles. MS 57 crosses over Big Creek to leave the National Forest and pass through the community of Hillman, and travel past the Green County Campus of Jones College, before entering the town of Leakesville and becoming concurrent with MS 63. They pass through town along Main Street, traveling through some neighborhoods and a business district before traveling straight through downtown. They then pass through more neighborhoods before crossing a 0.5 miles (0.80 km) long bridge over the Chickasawhay River to leave Leakesville and pass through some woodlands for the next few miles (where it has an intersection with its old alignment) to an interchange with MS 594, where MS 57 splits off and heads north along a four-lane divided expressway through remote woodlands (part of the Kurtz State Forest) for the next several miles.
MS 57 has a couple more intersections with its former two-lane alignment before entering the town of State Line, which it mostly bypasses along its eastern side as it has an interchange with MS 42 (St. Peter Street), where it crosses into Wayne County. MS 57 comes to an end shortly thereafter at a large interchange with US 45.[3]
History
Former MS 57
Mississippi Highway 57 | |
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Location | Biloxi–Wiggins |
Existed | 1932–1967 |
The MS 57 designation was first used from 1932–1960 along what is now the southern segment of MS 15 between Biloxi and its north end, as well as a portion MS 26 to the town of Wiggins.[2]
MS 59
Mississippi Highway 59 | |
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Location | Fontainebleau–State Line |
Existed | 1932–1960 |
Between 1932 and 1958, the current routing of MS 57 was designated as Mississippi Highway 59 (MS 59). In 1960, it was renumbered to MS 57 in order to avoid confusion with the then new I-59.[2]
Four-lane expressway
Between Leakesville and the highway's northern end in State Line, MS 57 was completely transformed from a narrow, rural, two-lane highway to a modern four-lane divided expressway. The project was completed in 2007, with portions of the new highway either overlapping or bypassing the original route. The purpose of this project was to connect four-lane US 45, which continues on to Meridian, to the Mississippi Gulf Coast, via the expressway continuing south along MS 63 into Pascagoula.
The original two-lane alignment followed MS 63 across the Chickasawhay River out of downtown Leakesville, as it does today (through it was on the original, now closed bridge on River Street). MS 57 then split off of MS 63 immediately thereafter and headed north along Old Highway 57 through farmland, then woodlands as it enters Kurtz State Forest, for several miles to join the current alignment for the next several miles. MS 57 then split off along Old Highway 57 to have an intersection Highway 45 Shortcut Road (a connector to the community of Yellow Pine) before entering the town of State Line along Main Street and passing through neighborhoods. Old MS 57 then came to an end at an intersection with MS 42 at the southern edge of downtown.
Major intersections
County | Location | mi | km | Destinations | Notes |
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Jackson | Gautier–Ocean Springs line | 0.0 | 0.0 | US 90 – Fontainebleau, Gautier, Ocean Springs, Mississippi Vietnam Veterans Memorial Park, Gulf Islands National Seashore | Southern terminus |
Gautier | 2.7– 2.9 | 4.3– 4.7 | I-10 – New Orleans, Mobile | I-10 exit 57 | |
George | Benndale | 36.5 | 58.7 | MS 26 – Wiggins, Lucedale | |
Greene | McLain | 53.4 | 85.9 | MS 198 west – Downtown | Eastern terminus of MS 198 |
54.1 | 87.1 | US 98 west – Beaumont, Hattiesburg | South end of US 98 overlap | ||
| 55.0 | 88.5 | MS 198 west – McLain | Former eastern terminus of MS 198; now closed due to demolition of bridge across Leaf River | |
| 56.0 | 90.1 | US 98 east – Lucedale | North end of US 98 overlap | |
| 56.9 | 91.6 | Neely Road – Neely | ||
Leakesville | 70.0 | 112.7 | MS 63 north – Sand Hill | South end of MS 63 overlap | |
| 73.7 | 118.6 | MS 63 south / MS 594 east – Citronelle, Lucedale | Interchange; north end of MS 63 overlap; western terminus of MS 594 | |
Wayne | State Line | 96.4– 96.9 | 155.1– 155.9 | MS 42 – State Line, Hattiesburg | Interchange |
| 97.6 | 157.1 | US 45 – Waynesboro, Citronelle, Mobile | Interchange; northern terminus | |
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
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References
- ↑ "Mississippi Public Roads Selected Statistics" (PDF). Mississippi Department of Transportation. 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-12-03. Retrieved 2010-06-03.
- 1 2 3 "Five Highways Are Being Renumbered". The Hattiesburg American. January 8, 1960. p. 3. Retrieved December 18, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
- ↑ Google (May 31, 2021). "Map of Mississippi Highway 57" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved May 31, 2021.
External links
- Media related to Mississippi Highway 57 at Wikimedia Commons