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FM 1431-J), [a] designated along a former alignment of RM 1431 in Burnet County east of Marble Falls. [4] The 0.5-mile (0.8 km) business route was created in 2010 [11] and serves the community of Smithwick. [10] The route was created when RM 1431 was aligned along a more direct path from west to east bypassing the business route's more ...
The river is an important source of water for farming, cities, and electrical power production. Major man-made reservoirs on the river include Lake Buchanan, Inks Lake, Lake LBJ, Lake Marble Falls, Lake Travis, Lake Austin, Town Lake now called Lady Bird Lake in Austin. Collectively, these lakes are known as the Highland Lakes.
Marble Falls is a city in Burnet County, Texas, United States. As of the 2020 United States Census, the city population was 7,037. Lake Marble Falls is part of the Highland Lakes on the Colorado River, the largest chain of lakes in Texas. [4] Marble Falls was founded by Adam Rankin Johnson [5] in 1887, a former Indian fighter and Confederate ...
Marble Falls: US 281 – Marble Falls, Burnet, Johnson City, San Antonio: Cloverleaf Interchange Spur 191 north – Spicewood: Blanco: No major junctions: Travis RM 2322 north (Pace Bend Road) – Briarcliff, Pace Bend State Park: Bee Cave: RM 3238 west (Hamilton Pool Road) RM 620 north – Lakeway, Round Rock: RM 2244 east – West Lake Hills ...
U.S. Route 281 (US 281) is a United States Numbered Highway that runs from the Mexican border in the Rio Grande Valley to the Canadian border near Dunseith, North Dakota.In the state of Texas, the highway is a major south–north corridor, connecting Brownsville to the Oklahoma state line at the Red River in Burkburnett.
US 83 at Carrizo Springs, TX: US 57 at Eagle Pass, TX US 90 at Del Rio, TX I-10 at Sonora, TX US 67 / US 87 at San Angelo, TX US 83 / US 84 at Abilene, TX I-20 at Abilene, TX US 82 / US 183 / US 283 at Seymour, TX I-44 / US 281 / US 287 at Wichita Falls, TX US 62 / US 81 / SH-9 at Chickasha, OK: North end
Lake Marble Falls is a reservoir on the Colorado River in the Texas Hill Country in the United States. The reservoir was formed in 1951 by the construction of Max Starcke Dam by the Lower Colorado River Authority. Originally named Marble Falls Dam, the dam was renamed in 1962 for Max Starcke, the second general director of the LCRA.
With 30 square miles of surface area, Lake Travis has the largest storage capacity of the seven reservoirs known as the Highland Lakes, and stretches 65 miles (105 km) upriver from western Travis County (near Lago Vista, Texas) in a highly serpentine course into southern Burnet County to Max Starcke Dam, southwest of the town of Marble Falls ...