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The beginning of SH-1, just north of the junction with US-177/SH-199. SH-1 eastbound begins at US-177/SH-199 between Mannsville and Madill. It then winds northward to the town of Ravia, and becomes concurrent with SH-7 at through Mill Creek. Highway 7 splits off to the west soon after and SH-1 continues northward to Hickory, Oklahoma and Roff.
The majority of the numbered highways within Oklahoma are maintained by the Oklahoma Department of Transportation (ODOT). The only exceptions are sections of Interstate 44 (I-44) and U.S. Highway 412 (US 412), which run along turnpikes maintained by the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority (OTA).
To cite ODOT control section maps The ODOT Control Section Maps are the "bible" of the Oklahoma highway system and often clarify map and signage issues, as well as providing some lengths to two decimal places. The maps themselves are available at . You can use {{odot control}} to reference these maps.
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United States Numbered Highways in Oklahoma are part of a nationwide network of roadways passing through the 48 contiguous states. These U.S. Highways are the second-highest category of road classifications in the Oklahoma road system, just below the Interstate Highways. U.S. Highways are marked with a number contained inside a white shield in ...
By March 1, 1930, the department name had been modified slightly to simply the Oklahoma Department of Highways. [9] In 1976, the Oklahoma Legislature restructured the Department of Highways as an overall coordinating agency for the state's highways, railways and waterways and renamed to the Oklahoma Department of Transportation.
[8] [9] With the introduction of the auto trails, this corridor was served by the Meridian Highway. [10] When the Oklahoma numbered highway system was established in 1925, the route that would eventually become US-81 was designated as State Highway 2. [11] The US-81 designation was applied the following year, on December 7, 1926. [2]
The old I-40 Crosstown Expressway bridge in downtown Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, as shot from the median, looking eastbound. The Oklahoma Department of Transportation hosted a public event on the bridge after traffic had been shifted to its replacement. More recently, the Crosstown project has come under serious controversy.