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River City Casino Boulevard at the St. Louis city–county line: US 61 / US 67 near Mehlville — — Route 269: 3.320: 5.343 Front Street in Kansas City: I-35 in Kansas City — — Route 271 — — — — — — Route 273: 22: 35 Route 92 in Tracy: US 59 / Route 45 at the Kansas state line — — Route 283: 2.2: 3.5 Route 9 in North ...
Route 8 is a 69-mile-long (111 km) state highway in the eastern part of the U.S. state of Missouri. It travels from Interstate 44 (I-44) in St. James to U.S. Route 67 (US 67) and US 67 Business in Desloge. It acts as a bypass, from I-44 in St. James, to US 67 in Desloge.
Downtown Loop in Kansas City, Missouri: I‑29 at Iowa state line south of Hamburg, IA: 1963: current I-35: 114.448: 184.186 I‑35 at Kansas City, Missouri: I‑35 north of Eagleville: 1972: current I-44: 293.184: 471.834 I‑44 west of Joplin: I‑70 in St. Louis: 1956: current I-49: 178.717: 287.617 I-49 south of Pineville: I‑470 in Kansas ...
The highway then widens to a four-lane divided highway, bypassing West Plains to the south and west, intersecting U.S. Route 160 then continues on a divided highway to Willow Springs. The route then joins US Route 60, and the two highways run concurrently northwest to Cabool. US 63 south of Vienna
Route 68 is a highway in central and southern Missouri. [2] Its eastern (or southern) terminus is at Route 19 in Salem; its western (or northern) terminus is at U.S. Route 63 north of Rolla. Even though it is an even- numbered route, it tends to run more north–south than east–west.
Decommissioned in Missouri. [7] US 78 — — — — — — Former proposal highway in Missouri. US 80 — — — — — — Former proposal highway in Missouri. US 136: 257.457: 414.337 US 136 west of Rock Port: US 136 west of Keokuk, IA: 1951: current US 159: 17.648: 28.402 US 159 east of Rulo, NE: US 59 north of St. Joseph: 1935: current ...
At Halltown, the road curves back to due east, beginning to follow the general pathway of old US 66, which it does all the way to downtown St. Louis. I-44 then goes around the western and northern sides of Springfield , serving as the western terminus of the James River Freeway , as well as crossing both Route 13 and US 65 .
The settlement was originally known as Big Prairie because of its location on the natural prairie of that name in the area. In 1859, when a man by the name of John Wood anticipated the extension of the St. Louis-San Francisco Railway, the settlement became known for a short time as Scioto, named after the town of Scioto, Ohio, where many of the town's early settlers originated.