Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
US 60 is the longest route in Kentucky, running 495 miles (797 km) across the width of the state, passing through 22 of Kentucky's counties and through the cities of Paducah, Henderson, Owensboro, Louisville, the state capital of Frankfort, and Lexington.
US 60 Alt. in Louisville — — KY 876: 2.81: 4.52 I-75 in Richmond: US 25 / US 421 in Richmond — — KY 880: 2.834: 4.561 US 231 in Bowling Green: KY 234 near Bowling Green: 1983: current KY 913: 4.337: 6.980 KY 155 near Jeffersontown: US 60 near Middletown — — KY 914: 13.301: 21.406 Cumberland Parkway west of Somerset: KY 80 east of ...
US 31/US 31W/US 60 at Louisville: 1926: current US 37 — — Glasgow: Louisville: 1934: 1952 Existed only on paper and always signed as US 31E along the highway US 41: 148: 238 US 41 at the TN state line: US 41 at the IN state line 1926: current US 42: 105.287: 169.443 US 31E/US 60 in Louisville: US 42/US 127 at the OH state line 1926: current ...
Byway/Highway name [1] Counties Routes involved Route description Length Boone Creek Scenic Byway Fayette, Clark County: KY 418, Grimes Mill Road, McCalls Mill Road Loop around two back roads off KY 418 near Athens: 8.6 miles (13.8 km) Pigsah Pike Woodford: KY 1967: From US 60 north to KY 1681 5.069 miles (8.158 km) Rice, VanMeter, and Elk ...
By the time the 1968 Official Kentucky Highway Map was released, the expressway expanded to four lanes, and went from the US 60 corridor to the US 431 corridor. [4] The remainder of the expressway from US 431 to another junction with US 60 on the west side of Owensboro was opened to traffic by 1969–70.
Bath County, Montgomery County, Morgan County, Powell County and Wolfe County: Richard H. Menefee, United States Congressman from Kentucky (1837–39) 6,286: 204 sq mi (528 km 2) Mercer County: 167: Harrodsburg: 1785: Lincoln County: Hugh Mercer (1726–77), Revolutionary War hero who was killed at the Battle of Princeton: 23,097: 251 sq mi ...
In the list below, 1937C is only used if the route is on the 1937 county map but not the 1939 state map. Otherwise a C indicates that it first appears on a county map. Parentheses indicate it was overprinted as part of the "rural highway series" rather than being included on the original map.
The Kentucky Revised Statute 177.020(1) [1] [2] provides that the Department of Highways, a part of the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet, is responsible for the establishment and classification of a State Primary Road System which includes the state primary routes, interstate highways, parkways and toll roads, state secondary routes, rural secondary routes and supplemental roads.