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[8] [9] With the introduction of the auto trails, this corridor was served by the Meridian Highway. [10] When the Oklahoma numbered highway system was established in 1925, the route that would eventually become US-81 was designated as State Highway 2. [11] The US-81 designation was applied the following year, on December 7, 1926. [2]
The majority of the numbered highways within Oklahoma are maintained by the Oklahoma Department of Transportation (ODOT). The only exceptions are sections of Interstate 44 (I-44) and U.S. Highway 412 (US 412), which run along turnpikes maintained by the Oklahoma Turnpike Authority (OTA).
The 1928 state highway map shows the highway extended to SH-9 (now US-62) near Prague along the present-day SH-99 alignment, with the Canadian River crossing as a toll bridge. [12] By January 1, 1929, the route had been realigned to pass through Konawa. [13] The old designation between the Canadian River and SH-3 was replaced shortly after by ...
It was the only one of the four studies to be followed upon, with completion of the 18th Street Expressway Bridge over the Kansas River completed in 1959. [1] It replaced the Argentine Boulevard bridge over the river behind the modern-day BNSF railroad yard. Originally, the highway was part of the original K-58. [2]
U.S. Route 281 (US-281) is a part of the U.S. Highway System that runs from near the Mexican border north to the International Peace Garden, north of Dunseith, North Dakota, at the Canadian border, where it continues as Highway 10. In the state of Kansas, US-281 is a main north–south highway that runs from the Oklahoma border north to the ...
Was a portion of K-13 until 1965; only state highway to match a U.S. Highway number in Kansas K-178: 3.513: 5.654 US-36 near Seneca: St. Benedict city limits 1957: current K-179: 11.588: 18.649 SH-132 at the Oklahoma state line: K-2 and K-44 in Anthony: 1955 [32] current K-180: 0.307: 0.494 K-4 south of Alta Vista: Alta Vista 1956
U.S. Highway 77 (US-77) in Oklahoma is a 267.21-mile-long (430.03 km) U.S. Highway in the U.S. state of Oklahoma.It travels from south to north, paralleling Interstate 35 (I-35), connecting Texas to Kansas through the central part of the state.
In the state highway system, approved in mid-1924, the portions of these in Oklahoma, which crossed at Oklahoma City, became SH-7 and SH-3 respectively. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] US 66 was designated in late 1926, and followed these state highways with one exception: a new SH-39 was created to carry Route 66, leaving SH-7 at Commerce and heading east and ...