| U.S. Route 220 | ||||
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Route of US 220 in North Carolina in red
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| Route information | ||||
| Maintained by NCDOT | ||||
| Length: | 123.4 mi (198.6 km) | |||
| Existed: | 1935 – present | |||
| Major junctions | ||||
| South end: |
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| North end: |
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| Location | ||||
| Counties: | Richmond, Montgomery, Randolph, Guilford, Rockingham | |||
| Highway system | ||||
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| U.S. Route 411 | |
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| Location: | Rockingham–Madison, NC |
| Length: | 112.3 mi (180.7 km) |
| Existed: | 1932–1935 |
| North Carolina Highway 897 | |
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| Location: | Winston-Salem–VA State Line |
| Length: | 43.3 mi (69.7 km) |
| Existed: | 1921–1925 |
In the U.S. state of North Carolina, U.S. Route 220 (US 220) is a north–south highway that connects the cities of Rockingham, Asheboro and Greensboro, in the central Piedmont.
US 220 in North Carolina feature a few dedicated or memorialized stretches of freeway.
Established in 1935 when US 220 was extended south from Virginia; it replaced: US 311/NC 77 from the state line to Madison, US 411/NC 704 from Madison to Greensboro, US 411/NC 70 from Greensboro to Candor, US 411/NC 170 from Candor to Norman, and US 15/NC 75 from Norman to Rockingham.