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Vermont Route 14 (VT 14) is a 108.946-mile-long (175.332 km) north–south state highway in northeastern Vermont, United States. It extends from U.S. Route 4 (US 4) and US 5 in White River Junction to VT 100 in Newport .
The Laura Ingalls Wilder Historic Highway incorporates US 14 from De Smet in the west to Rochester, Minnesota, in the east. US 14 and US 83 serve Pierre, one of only four state capitals not on the Interstate Highway System. The South Dakota section of US 14 is legally defined at South Dakota Codified Laws § 31-4-134. [2]
U.S. Route 14 or U.S. Highway 14 (US 14), an east–west route, is one of the original United States Numbered Highways of 1926. It is about 1,445 miles (2,326 km) long. It is roughly parallel to Interstate 90 (I-90). The highway's eastern terminus is in Chicago, Illinois.
The highway was first designated in 1995 as U.S. Route 14 from Lake Benton in southwest Minnesota to Mankato in the south-central part of the state. Since then, it has been extended into South Dakota, Iowa, and Wisconsin. Within Minnesota, the highway is primarily made up of US 14 from the South Dakota border eastward to Rochester at U.S. Route 63.
Redesignated as South Dakota Highway 8: SD 19: 86.974: 139.971 N-15 at the Nebraska state line south of Vermillion: SD 34 southeast of Madison: 1926: current Designated as part of US 12: SD 19A: 8.161: 13.134 SD 19/SD 46 south of Centerville: SD 19 west of Centerville: 1950: current Originally part of SD 19: SD 20: 385.079: 619.725
U.S. Highway 14 Business (US 14 Bus.) is an unmarked business loop of US 14 in Huron, South Dakota.The business route begins at the intersection with West Park Avenue running south in an overlap to Old Highway 14, then turns left onto Old Highway 14 running in close proximity of the south side of the Rapid City, Pierre and Eastern Railroad (RCPE)'s Pierre Subdivision.
A baby without a father. A mother who carries her son in an urn. Two teens behind bars. Nearly two years after the shooting outside a Whataburger, the families involved are still reeling.
The Black and Yellow Trail was the promotional name for the portion of U.S. Route 14 (US 14) nominally linking the Black Hills of South Dakota to Yellowstone National Park. [1] The signed auto trail route was extended by promoters to Chicago in the east.