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Beginning at the US 72/SR 57 intersection, SR 177 turns from a two-lane road into a six-lane highway, and continues in this form through to its north terminus, and from the Wolf River bridge until the I-40 junction, the road is six-lane and has 10-foot-wide (3.0 m) paved outside shoulders on both sides, which only occasionally give way to a ...
US 41 at the Kentucky state line in Montgomery County: 1923: current SR 12: 62.46: 100.52 US 31/US 41/US 41A/US 431/SR 6/SR 11 in Nashville: US 41A at the Kentucky state line in Clarksville: 1923: current SR 13: 153.01: 246.25 SR 17 at the Alabama state line in Wayne County: US 79 at the Kentucky state line in Montgomery County: 1923
New Mexico State Road 177; New York State Route 177; North Carolina Highway 177; Ohio State Route 177; Pennsylvania Route 177; Rhode Island Route 177; South Carolina Highway 177; Tennessee State Route 177; Texas State Highway 177 (former) Texas State Highway Loop 177; Farm to Market Road 177 (Texas) Utah State Route 177 (former) Virginia State ...
Highway 177 (AR 177, Ark. 177, and Hwy. 177) is a north–south state highway that runs in north central Arkansas. The route runs 16.20 miles (26.07 km) from Herron north over the Norfork Dam , then south to Pineville .
U.S. Route 70 (US 70) enters the state of Tennessee from Arkansas via the Memphis & Arkansas Bridge in Memphis, and runs west to east across 21 counties in all three Grand Divisions of Tennessee, with a total length of 478.48 miles (770.04 km), to end at the North Carolina state line in eastern Cocke County.
Nashville is a city in Howard County, Arkansas, United States. The population was 4,627 at the 2010 census. [4] The estimated population in 2018 was 4,425. [5] The city is the county seat of Howard County. [6] Nashville is situated at the base of the Ouachita foothills and was once a major center of the peach trade in southwest Arkansas. Today ...
The state highway portion varies between two and three lanes on each side. The portion that runs between Knight Arnold Road and Winchester Road is built as a four-lane Freeway . A wide median (with a fairly large drainage ditch) and grade-separated interchanges at major routes exist in the portion between Winchester Road and E. Raines Road.
The route became a state highway in 1930, running from Highway 18 north to the Mississippi River. Highway 137 was a gravel/stone route of 7.1 miles (11.4 km) in length. Highway 150 was added to the system around 1940, and the two routes both ended at Huffman. Highway 137 was first paved in 1951, and extended north to Missouri in 1958.