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State Route 290 (SR 290) is a 19.7-mile-long (31.7 km) state highway in Jackson and Putnam counties in the U.S. state of Tennessee. It connects SR 53 northeast of Granville to SR 135 in Cookeville via SR 56 and Bloomington Springs .
US 41 at the Kentucky state line in Montgomery County: 1923: current SR 12: 62.46: 100.52 US 31/US 41/US 41A/US 431/SR 6/SR 11 in Nashville: US 41A at the Kentucky state line in Clarksville: 1923: current SR 13: 153.01: 246.25 SR 17 at the Alabama state line in Wayne County: US 79 at the Kentucky state line in Montgomery County: 1923
Kentucky Route 290 (KY 290) is a 8.850-mile (14.243 km) north–south road in Jackson County, Kentucky. Its south end is in Annville on KY 3630 and the north end is in Downtown McKee on US 421 . Route description
The U.S. Highways in Tennessee are the segments of the United States Numbered Highway System that are maintained by the Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) in the state of Tennessee. All of these highways in Tennessee have a state highway designation routed concurrently along them, though the state highway is hidden and only signed ...
Interstate 290 (multiple highways) U.S. Route 290; Arkansas Highway 290; Florida: Florida State Road 290 (former) County Road 290 (Escambia County, Florida) Georgia State Route 290 (former) Kentucky Route 290; Maryland Route 290; Minnesota State Highway 290 (former) Montana Secondary Highway 290; Nevada State Route 290; New Mexico State Road ...
I-24/US 60 in Paducah: I-24/KY 1954 in Paducah — — Between Exits 4-11 on I-24 I-165: 70.184: 112.950 I-65 in Bowling Green: US 60 / US 231 in Owensboro: 2019: current Replaced the William H. Natcher Parkway. I-169: 34.271: 55.154 I-24 south of Hopkinsville: I-69/Western Kentucky Parkway northeast of Nortonville: 2024: current
First State Road commemorative sign on US 70/SR 1 in Cumberland County. This highway was initially known as the Memphis to Bristol Highway. The Tennessee Department of Highways and Public Works was established by the Tennessee General Assembly in 1915 and tasked with constructing, maintaining, and improving roads throughout the state.
The Kentucky Revised Statute 177.020(1) [1] [2] provides that the Department of Highways, a part of the Kentucky Transportation Cabinet, is responsible for the establishment and classification of a State Primary Road System which includes the state primary routes, interstate highways, parkways and toll roads, state secondary routes, rural secondary routes and supplemental roads.