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Many Oklahoma state highways have short spur routes connecting them to towns which lie off of the main route. Many times, these bear the same number as the parent highway, with a letter suffix. Some state highway spurs and loops from US highways have designations that are drawn from the parent US Highway designation.
Texas state line in Texhoma: Kansas state line northeast of Tyrone: 1926: current US 56: 71.17 [4] 114.54 New Mexico state line southwest of Felt: Kansas state line south of Elkhart, Kan. 1956: current US 59: 216.47 [5] 348.37 Arkansas state line southeast of Page: Kansas state line north of Welch: 1935: current US 60: 352.39 [6] 567.12
[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 current highway shield should be used for all current highways and highways decommissioned after 2006. These images are at Oklahoma State Highway X.svg. Prior to this, Oklahoma used circular highway shields; these are at Elongated circle X.svg. Previous signs before this exist, but the date each was used still needs to be pinned down for ...
Near Ft. Gibson, US-62 begins to concur with State Highway 10, and the two routes stay joined through Tahlequah. US-62 starts to overlap State Highway 51 in Tahlequah as well; the two highways split up near Eldon. The route enters Adair County near Proctor. It intersects with US-59 in Westville before US-62 crosses the state line into Arkansas. [2]
Texas state line west of Erick: Arkansas state line west of Fort Smith, Arkansas: 1959: current I-42: 166: 267 I-35 in Noble County, Oklahoma: Arkansas state line in Siloam Springs, Arkansas: proposed — Future Interstate I-44: 328.53: 528.72 Texas state line north of Burkburnett, Tex. Missouri state line west of Joplin, Mo. 1964: current
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State Highway 10 (abbreviated SH-10) is a state highway in northeastern Oklahoma. It makes a 233.1 miles (375.1 km) crescent through the northeast corner of the state, running from SH-99 in Osage County to Interstate 40 (I-40) near Gore. It has two lettered spur routes. SH-10 first appeared as part of the original highway system designated in 1924.