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Oklahoma has a large network of numbered highways maintained by the state. These roads fall into one of three categories: Interstate Highways , U.S. Highways , and state highways . Interstate and U.S. Highways are continuous with surrounding states, while state highways are not (though Oklahoma and another state's department of transportation ...
State Highway 4, abbreviated as SH-4 or OK-4, is a designation for two distinct highways maintained by the U.S. state of Oklahoma. One of them serves as an important route through the suburbs west of Oklahoma City, while the other connects US-259 to the Arkansas state line west of Cove, Arkansas. SH-4 has no lettered spur routes.
New Mexico state line southwest of Felt: Arkansas state line east of Moffett: 1926: current US 66: 374.6 [9] 602.9 Texas state line west of Erick: Kansas state line south of Baxter Springs, Kan. 1926: 1985 Replaced by I-40 and SH-66: US 69: 260.82 [10] 419.75 Texas state line south of Colbert: Kansas state line north of Picher
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
From Tulsa, the highway continues southeast, leaving Oklahoma just west of Fort Smith, Arkansas. In addition to Tulsa, US-64 serves fifteen Oklahoma counties and the cities of Guymon, Woodward, Enid, and Muskogee. US-64 has been a part of the United States Numbered Highways system from the program's inception in 1926.
Spanning across the central part of the state, SH-9 begins at the Texas state line west of Vinson, Oklahoma, and ends at the Arkansas state line near Fort Smith, Arkansas. State Highway 9 is a major highway around the Norman area. At 348.1 miles (560.2 km), [1] [2] [3] SH-9 is Oklahoma's second-longest state highway (second to State Highway 3).
The current iteration of State Highway 44 was first added to the Oklahoma State Highway system on April 14, 1932. [2] The highway as originally designated was a split route; its southern section began at SH-34 in Eldorado, and proceeded northeast to end at US-62 west of Altus. Another section of SH-44 began at the route's current southern ...
Because it runs mainly north–south, it has an even number (which is normal for Oklahoma state highways, but opposite from national highways). Highway 8 runs from U.S. Highway 277 in Cyril, Oklahoma to the state line south of Kiowa, Kansas, for a total length of 179.1 miles (288.2 km) [1] The highway has two lettered spur routes.