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A 2000 survey cited the poor condition of rural interstates, as well as narrow lanes on rural state highways, as areas of concern, ranking Arkansas 47th of the 50 states. [6] A 2011 study found Arkansas's rural highways fourth-most, and the state's roads overall the 16th most deadly.
The state highway system was first created on October 10, 1923, by the Commission. [12] The group traced all roads designated as "county roads" onto an official map, which became the official State Highway System of Arkansas on December 31, 1924. [13] This map was kept in Little Rock as the official log of routes.
Arkansas state highway suffixed routes are signed using standard state highway shield backgrounds. The number remains the same size and a letter is added in an almost-exponential format. Shield sizes remain, one-digit routes keep the 24-by-24-inch (61 cm × 61 cm) shields, while two-digit routes become 24-by-36-inch (61 cm × 91 cm).
List of state highways in Arkansas; 1926 Arkansas state highway numbering; 0–9. Arkansas Highway 1; Arkansas Highway 4; Arkansas Highway 5; Arkansas Highway 7;
US 59 at Oklahoma state line west of Acorn: 1934 [citation needed] current US 61: 75.3: 121.2 US 61 at Tennessee state line near West Memphis: US 61 at Missouri state line near Blytheville: 1926 [citation needed] current US 62: 329.9: 530.9 US 62 at Oklahoma state line: US 62 at Missouri state line near St. Francis: 1930 [citation needed]
The dam was completed in July 1951, with a highway atop the dam to allow highway access for the parts of northeastern Marion County separated from the county seat of Yellville by the new reservoir. Though Highway 178 doesn't appear on the March 1953 state highway map, [ 1 ] a later 1953 map shows the Highway 178 designation.
Pages in category "Lists of roads in Arkansas" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total. ... List of state highway spurs in Arkansas;
The highway was created by the Arkansas State Highway Commission on May 23, 1973 during a period of highway system expansion following the Arkansas General Assembly passing Act 9 of 1973. [3] The act directed county judges and legislators to designate up to 12 miles (19 km) of county roads as state highways in each county. [ 9 ]