Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Wallace is an unincorporated community in southern Buchanan County, Missouri, United States. [1] Wallace is located approximately twelve miles northwest of Platte City. Its post office has closed and mail now comes from nearby Dearborn. The community is part of the St. Joseph, MO–KS Metropolitan Statistical Area.
While on the bypass, the highway intersects Route 6 and Missouri Route 11, and the two east-west state routes form a three-mile long Wrong-way concurrency with each other following US 63. Leaving the Kirksville bypass, US 63 returns to a two-lane surface highway, and enters Schuyler County .
Map of the United States with Missouri highlighted. Missouri is a state located in the Midwestern United States. In Missouri, cities are classified into three types: 3rd Class, 4th Class, and those under constitutional charters.
AR 139 at the Arkansas state line: IL 150 at the Illinois state line 1922: current Route 52 — — — — 1922: 1926 Route 52: 173: 278 K-52 at the Kansas state line: Route 133 east of St. Elizabeth: 1926: current Route 53: 33: 53 Route 25 in Holcomb: U.S. Route 160 / US 67 Bus. in Poplar Bluff: 1922: current Route 54 — — — —
Route 13 is a highway in Missouri which runs almost the entire north–south length of the state. Its northern terminus is at U.S. Route 69/136 in Bethany.Its southern terminus is at the Arkansas state line in downtown Blue Eye, Missouri–Arkansas where it continues as Highway 21.
Missouri Route 73 is a short state highway in southwest Missouri. It runs from an intersection with U.S. Route 65 in the northern part of Buffalo in Dallas County to U.S. Route 54 near Macks Creek in Camden County. The route is two lanes for its entire length. [2]
Route 86 is a highway in southwest Missouri.The eastern terminus is at U.S. Route 65 just north of Ridgedale.From there, the road crosses the Long Creek arm of Table Rock Lake and continues to Blue Eye west between the Arkansas state line on the south and Table Rock Lake on the north. [1]
The latter stream, crossing the state and cutting the eastern and western borders at or near St Louis and Kansas City respectively, has a length within Missouri of 430 miles (690 km). The areas drained into the Mississippi outside the state through the St. Francis , White and other minor streams are relatively small.