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In 1926, the U.S. Highway System was created and many of the highways listed below became part of a new U.S. Highway; in some cases, a highway's number was changed so as not to conflict with a U.S. Highway number (or, later, an Interstate Highway number) which came through Missouri.
Decommissioned in Missouri. [7] US 78 — — — — — — Former proposal highway in Missouri. US 80 — — — — — — Former proposal highway in Missouri. US 136: 257.457: 414.337 US 136 west of Rock Port: US 136 west of Keokuk, IA: 1951: current US 159: 17.648: 28.402 US 159 east of Rulo, NE: US 59 north of St. Joseph: 1935: current ...
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 ...
I‑435 at Kansas City: I‑435 Kansas state line at Parkville — — Missouri section of the beltway around Kansas City I-470: 17.081: 27.489 I‑435/US 50/US 71 in Kansas City: I‑70 in Independence: 1970 [5] current I-635: 3.766: 6.061 I‑635 at Kansas City: I‑29/US 71 in Kansas City — — I-670: 2.323: 3.739 I‑670 at Kansas City: I ...
U.S. Route 60 (US 60) is a part of the United States Numbered Highway System that runs from Brenda, Arizona, east to Virginia Beach, Virginia.In the state of Missouri, US 60 is a main east–west highway that runs through the southern part of the state, from the Oklahoma border to the Illinois border.
The highway then widens to a four-lane divided highway, bypassing West Plains to the south and west, intersecting U.S. Route 160 then continues on a divided highway to Willow Springs. The route then joins US Route 60, and the two highways run concurrently northwest to Cabool. US 63 south of Vienna
U.S. Route 95 was a late addition to Arizona's U.S. Highway system, having been extended into the state around 1960 during the dawn of the Interstate Highway System. [6] [7] Though it is a short section of highway, only traveling between Ehrenberg and San Luis at the Mexico–United States border, it also serves as the main north–south highway to the cities of Yuma, San Luis, and Quartzsite. [2]
State Route 195 (SR 195), also known as the Robert A. Vaughan Expressway, is a 22.08-mile (35.53 km) state highway in Yuma County, Arizona, United States, that serves the Yuma area. It begins in Yuma east of downtown, intersecting with Interstate 8 (I‑8) and heads south and then west, coming to an end at the intersection with Avenue E½ near ...