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U.S. Route 385 (US 385) is a part of the United States Numbered Highway System that travels from Big Bend National Park in Texas to US 85 in Deadwood, South Dakota.Within the state of Nebraska, the highway is known as the Gold Rush Byway, one of nine scenic byways across the state. [2]
Arkansas Highway 7 Business is a business loop of 5.55 miles (8.93 km) in Smackover. [1] The route is known as Pershing Highway east of town, and West 7th Street west of town. [ 5 ] Highway 7B passes the Smackover Historic Commercial District on the National Register of Historic Places .
Highway 7 continues into Hot Springs, crossing US 70/US 270. The route enters Hot Springs National Park with Highway 128. The route meets Highway 298 north of Hot Springs Village, running with it until an area near the Perry County line. [10] The route runs through the Ouachita National Forest until the Fourche Junction meeting with Highway 60 ...
Arkansas Highway 16 Spur is an east–west state highway spur route in Siloam Springs. The route of 0.43 miles (0.69 km) runs from US 412 / Highway 59 east to Highway 16. [ 3 ] Locally posted as East Kenwood Road, it serves as a short connector route for traffic eastbound on US 412 to access eastbound Highway 16 or for traffic westbound on ...
U.S. Highway 20 (US-20) is a part of the United States Numbered Highway System that runs for 3,365 miles (5,415 km) from Newport, Oregon, to Boston, Massachusetts.Within the state of Nebraska, it is a state highway that begins on the Wyoming–Nebraska state line west of Harrison near the Niobrara River and runs to the Nebraska–Iowa state line in South Sioux City.
US 70B west / AR 5 north – Hot Springs, Fountain Lake, Hot Springs Village: Signed as exits 11B (west) and 11A (north) eastbound, exits 6A (west) and 6B (north) westbound 102.4: 164.8: Eastern end of freeway section 112.7: 181.4: AR 128 west – Fountain Lake: Eastern terminus of AR 128: Saline 114.1: 183.6: AR 88 west – Lonsdale
The center of Hot Springs is the oldest federal reserve in the United States, today preserved as Hot Springs National Park. The hot spring water has been popularly believed for centuries to possess healing properties, and was a subject of legend among several Native American tribes.
The highway was listed as a "Proposed Primary Federal Aid Road" on a state map in the first issue of "Arkansas Highways Magazine" (1924), but not numbered. [11] The road brought much traffic through the hills of Arkansas, previously resistant to development. Eureka Springs was a popular stop on the route, with many motor inns and