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Missouri State Highway Patrol troopers on Monday shared a video on social media of a car sliding down an ice-slicked hill and careening off the edge of the road into a snow bank in Cass County ...
AR 139 at the Arkansas state line: IL 150 at the Illinois state line 1922: current Route 52 — — — — 1922: 1926 Route 52: 173: 278 K-52 at the Kansas state line: Route 133 east of St. Elizabeth: 1926: current Route 53: 33: 53 Route 25 in Holcomb: U.S. Route 160 / US 67 Bus. in Poplar Bluff: 1922: current Route 54 — — — —
The Interstate Highways in Missouri are the segments of the national Dwight D. Eisenhower System of Interstate and Defense Highways [2] that are owned and maintained by the U.S. state of Missouri. Primary Interstates
Missouri Department of Transportation workers set up road block signs in Boone County to warn drivers of flooding. The Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDOT, / m oʊ ˈ d ɒ t /) is a state government organization in charge of maintaining public roadways of the U.S. state of Missouri under the guidance of the Missouri Highways and Transportation Commission (MHTC).
Missouri also maintains a secondary set of roads, supplemental routes, which are lettered rather than numbered. Route 366 in St. Louis Missouri has also changed highway designations with a US route or an interstate with the same number is designated through the state (Route 40 was redesignated Route 14 to avoid duplicating numbers with US-40 ...
Pages in category "State highways in Missouri" The following 198 pages are in this category, out of 198 total. ... Missouri Route 799; 1926 Missouri highway ...
Missouri Route 5 is the longest state highway in Missouri and the only Missouri state highway to traverse the entire state. To the north, it continues into Iowa as Iowa Highway 5 and to the south it enters Arkansas as Arkansas Highway 5 as part of a three state 650 mile highway 5. With only a few exceptions, it is mostly a two-lane for its ...
The section that runs east from US 71 - US 65 (1935), to US 54, and later on to US 66 (1953) was once called State Route 35. This was changed to Route 7 in 1959. This was changed to Route 7 in 1959. In the early 1970s with the creation of Truman Lake, the Osage River Bridge was bypassed with a new mile long span.