US Highway 17 is not a highway that appears on most national dangerous-road lists. It lacks the dramatic mountain passes of I-70 or the oilfield chaos of US-285. It is, in most sections, a moderately traveled two-lane or four-lane road through the coastal South — passing through resort towns, fishing villages, agricultural land, and coastal wetlands from Virginia to Florida. That ordinariness is part of what makes it dangerous.
The highway’s accident rate reflects a confluence of hazards that individually seem manageable but in combination produce consistent, serious crashes: poor infrastructure, varied and unpredictable traffic, inadequate lighting, and terrain that limits sight distances in ways that drivers unfamiliar with the route don’t anticipate.
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