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Dixon was platted in 1869 at the time a railroad was extended through to the neighborhood and a post office bearing the name of the town has been in operation since that time. [4] [5] The community takes its name from Dixon, Illinois, the native home of a share of the railway builders. [4]
Route 58 is a highway in western Missouri. Its eastern terminus is at U.S. Route 50 west of Warrensburg; its western terminus is at Route D west of Belton, Missouri. It is one of only a very few highways to end at a state supplemental route. Route 58 is one of the original 1922 state highways.
Pulaski County's earliest settlers were the Quapaw, Missouria and Osage Native Americans. After the Lewis and Clark Expedition of the early 19th century, white settlers came to the area, many from Kentucky, Tennessee and the Carolinas; the earliest pioneers appeared to have settled as early as 1818, and the town of Waynesville was designated the county seat by the Missouri Legislature in 1833.
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 .
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 — — — —
State-posted signs mark most of the alignment of the road. Major north–south routes near Crocker include: [6] Route 133 runs north from Interstate 44, exit 145, approximately two miles east of Hazelgreen to Richland, Swedeborg, Crocker, and about two miles west of Dixon, then north out of the county.
Missouri also maintains a secondary set of roads, supplemental routes, which are lettered rather than numbered. Route 366 in St. Louis Missouri has also changed highway designations with a US route or an interstate with the same number is designated through the state (Route 40 was redesignated Route 14 to avoid duplicating numbers with US-40 ...
Route 133 is a highway in central Missouri. Its northern terminus is at U.S. Route 63 near Westphalia; its southern terminus is at Interstate 44 about fourteen miles (21 km) west of Waynesville. Highway 133 passes through Richland, where the highway intersects with Route 7.