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Central Community Transit (CCT) is the primary provider of mass transportation in Litchfield and Willmar, Minnesota with two routes serving the region in addition to countywide demand-response services. As of 2019, the system provided 227,429 rides over 51,272 annual vehicle revenue hours with 5 buses and 27 paratransit vehicles.
Kerkhoven (/ ˈ k ɜːr k h oʊ v ə n / KURK-hoh-vən) [4] is a city in Swift County, Minnesota, United States, located roughly 100 miles (160 km) west of the Twin Cities region of Minneapolis/St. Paul along U.S. Route 12. The population was 759 as per the 2010 census. [5]
MN 67 west – Clarkfield: Western end of MN 67 concurrency: Granite Falls: 49.062: 78.958: MN 23 west / MN 67 east – Marshall, Redwood Falls: Western end of MN 23 concurrency, eastern end of MN 67 concurrency: Chippewa: Granite Falls Township: 50.469: 81.222: CR 40 / Minnesota River Valley Scenic Byway: Chippewa–Renville county line ...
US 12 west (Main Street) – Big Stone City, Milbank: Continuation into South Dakota: Big Stone: Ortonville: 0.821: 1.321: MN 7 west (2nd Street SE) / Minnesota River Valley Scenic Byway – Browns Valley: Western end of MN 7 concurrency: 0.950: 1.529: MN 7 east (SE 2nd Street) – Appleton: Eastern end of MN 7 concurrency: 1.350: 2.173
Kerkhoven Township (/ ˈ k ɜːr k h oʊ v ə n / KURK-hoh-vən) [3] is a township in Swift County, Minnesota, United States. The population was 286 at the 2000 census . Settled in the 1860s, Kerkhoven Township was named for a railroad promoter.
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Minnesota State Highway 40 (MN 40) is a 72.723-mile-long (117.036 km) state highway in west-central Minnesota, which travels from South Dakota Highway 20 (SD 20) at the South Dakota state line near Marietta and continues east to its eastern terminus at its intersection with County State-Aid Highway 5 (CSAH 5) in Willmar.
Kandiyohi County is named for a Dakota word meaning "where the buffalo fish come". [5] (kandi’ - the buffalo fish + oh-hi’-yu - v. of hiyu - to come through). [6]It was organized on March 20, 1858, with Kandiyohi established as the county seat in 1870 (it was then called Kandiyohi Station, as it was merely a stop on the railroad line).