Established in late 1934 as a renumbering of NC 15, it traversed from Lake Wylie to Morehead and
Tryon Street, in
Charlotte, where it connected with
US 21/
US 29/
US 74/
NC 27. In 1940, NC 49 was extended northeast from Charlotte to the Virginia state line, near
Virgilina, Virginia; its routing went as follows: In Charlotte, it was overlapped with US 29 along Tryon Street and Old Concord Road. Traveling through
Concord, via Old Charlotte Road, it then overlapped with
NC 73 to
Mount Pleasant. Replacing NC 62, it travels northeast, through
Richfield and
Farmer, to Asheboro. With a brief overlap with
US 220 (Fayetteville Street), it continues its northeasterly along Old Liberty road, replacing NC 62, through
Liberty,
Graham,
Haw River, to
Pleasant Grove. Going east from Pleasant Grove, NC 49 replaced
NC 144, through
Roxboro, to the Virginia state line, near Virgilina. In or by 1947, NC 49 was rerouted in Richfield, removing a concurrency with
US 52. And in Asheboro, NC 49 was rerouted onto
US 64 to
Ramseur, then northeast to Liberty; its old alignment becoming NC 49A. In 1949, NC 49 was rerouted in Roxboro from Main Street onto newly constructed Madison Boulevard. In 1953, NC 49 was given its modern routing bypassing Concord and a concurrency with NC 73; that same year, in the Charlotte area, it was moved from Old Concord Road to University City Boulevard. Around 1960, NC 49 was given a new alignment south of Farmer, in
Randolph County. By 1962, in Roxboro, NC 49 was removed along Morgan Street and Concord Road to an overlap with
US 158 on Leasburg Road. In 1982, NC 49, in concurrency with US 29, was rerouted in
Uptown Charlotte from Tryon Street onto Morehead and Graham Streets, cutting back onto Tryon Street via Dalton Avenue. By 1993, NC 49 was adjusted in Pleasant Grove to intersect with NC 62; before it would turn nearby without connecting. In 2004, NC 49/
NC 57 was rerouted from a section of Leasburg Road onto Long Avenue, in Roxboro.
North Carolina Highway 15 North Carolina Highway 15 (
NC 15) was an original state highway, established in 1921. It began at the intersection of Trade and
Tryon Street in
Charlotte, connecting with
NC 20/
NC 27, traversing northeast along Tryon Street and Old Concord Road to
Harrisburg and Concord. From Concord, it went north through
Kannapolis and
Landis before ending in Salisbury at Main and Innes Street, connecting with
NC 10/
NC 80. In 1927,
US 170 was assigned on all of NC 15. By 1930, NC 15 was extended south on Tryon Street/York Road to
SC 163, at Lake Wylie. In 1932, US 170 was renumbered as an extension of
US 29. In 1934, because of
US 15 establishing in the state, NC 15 was removed on all sections overlapping with US 29 and the remaining section was renumbered to NC 49. ==Major intersections==