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Florida State Road 471

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
State Road 471 marker
State Road 471
Map
Route information
Maintained by FDOT
Length34.909 mi[1] (56.181 km)
Major junctions
South end US 98 near Branchborough
Major intersections SR 50 at Tarrytown
North end US 301 near Sumterville
Location
CountryUnited States
StateFlorida
CountiesPolk, Pasco, Sumter
Highway system
SR 464 SR 472

State Road 471 (SR 471) is a two-lane rural highway primarily in Sumter County in the state of Florida. It runs north and south from U.S. Route 98 (US 98) in northwestern Polk County to US 301 near Sumterville in Sumter County.

Route description

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Old-style shield at a road that crosses SR 471 in Webster

State Road 471 begins at US 98 in northwestern Polk County, which is just southeast of Branchborough in Pasco County and the eastern terminus of County Road 54, a county extension of SR 54. The road soon leaves Polk County and runs along the Pasco-Polk County Line. Here the road runs entirely through preserved forest land and swampland, including the Green Swamp. Contrary to what many maps indicate it is not as straight through this area shifting from left to right and vice versa on a random basis. Crossing the Withlacoochee River, the Pasco-Polk border is replaced by the Pasco-Sumter border, and the landscape described earlier continues. Eventually it enters part of the Withlacoochee State Forest, and some distance later, the Pasco-Sumter Line is replaced by the Hernando-Sumter Line. After leaving the forest the road crosses over the Little Withlacoochee River where the Hernando-Sumter border turns west, and SR 471 is now entirely in Sumter County. Eventually, the road slows down into Tarrytown, Florida where it approaches a lumber mill, and crosses the former right-of-way for the Orange Belt Railway just south of the intersection of State Road 50.

North of Tarrytown, SR 471 becomes as straight as road maps incorrectly indicate it to be south of Tarrytown. Most of this segment of the road runs primarily through farmland interrupted only by the occasional rural road, and county road without shields. However the amount of farmland is reduced, but not eliminated, once it runs through the City of Webster, a popular farm-to-market trading post. Within Webster, SR 471 serves as a terminus of County Road 478A and 4/10 of a mile later intersects County Road 478, which spans from US 301 in the St. Catherine/Croom-A-Coochie area to Center Hill. SR 471 shares a 3/10 mile concurrency with CR 478 between Southeast First Street and Northwest Fourth Street. Outside of the Webster city limits, farmland becomes more prominent again, and the road becomes part of an unincorporated community named Belville's Corner, which is also the intersection with County Road 48, a tri-county extension of State Road 48. North of Belville's Corner, the road intersects the eastern terminus of County Road 476 and western terminus of County Road 567. Near Sumterville, SR 471 shifts slightly to the northwest and runs in close proximity to a former Seaboard Air Line Railroad line that ran towards Winter Haven, and carried Amtrak trains until 1988. Two county roads of minor significance include County Road 528 and later 526, both of which lead to a campus of the Lake-Sumter Community College. Like those two streets, SR 471 terminates at US 301. However, unlike these two the segment of US 301 is also shared with County Road 470.

Major intersections

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CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
Polk0.0000.000 US 98 (SR 35 / SR 700) – Lakeland, Dade CitySouthern terminus
SumterTarrytown21.15734.049 SR 50 – Brooksville, Groveland
Webster24.43539.324
CR 478A south
24.85039.992
CR 478 east (Southeast First Avenue)
South end of CR 478 overlap
25.19740.551
CR 478 west (Northwest Fourth Avenue)
North end of CR 478 overlap
Bevilles Corner27.71544.603 CR 48 – Bushnell, Center Hill
28.72246.224

CR 476 west / CR 567 east
34.90956.181 US 301 (SR 35) / CR 470 – Coleman, BushnellNorthern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi


References

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  1. ^ a b FDOT straight line diagrams Archived March 6, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, accessed December 2013
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