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Pipe Creek is a stream located primarily in Bandera County, Texas, in the United States. [1] Pipe Creek was so named in 1852, when a pioneer settler lost his tobacco pipe there. [2] The stream is the namesake of the community Pipe Creek, located near the intersection of SH 16 and FM 1283.
Pipe Creek is located on Texas State Highway 16, about 9 mi (14 km) east of Bandera [4] and 30 mi (48 km) north of San Antonio [5] in central Bandera County. Other notable places located in Pipe Creek include churches, the public library, and parts of the Bandera Falls residential community. Large portions of the area are accessed from FM1283.
Lakehills is a census-designated place (CDP) in Bandera County, Texas, United States. The population was 5,295 at the 2020 census , making it the most populous place in Bandera County. It is part of the San Antonio Metropolitan Statistical Area .
The other parts of SH 40 became parts of other US highways (US 77 north of Dallas by 1926; [23] US 271 south of Jacksonville from 1930 to 1934, [24] when the designation transitioned to US 69 [25]) as well (Map sources into at least the mid-1930s show a co-signing of US 175 and SH 40 along US 175's entire route; it is unclear whether these were ...
Community County Population Notes/Refs; Alderbranch: Anderson: Zaferdeniz: Anderson: Blackfoot: Anderson: Bois d'Arc: Anderson: Bradford: Anderson: Broom City: Anderson
The highway runs northwest out of the park, before a sharp turn to the southeast near Comanche Trail. After passing by a subdivision, PR 37 turns back to the northeast. The highway runs north–south through the town of Lakehills, serving as its main street. The highway turns sharp right at 3rd Street West, running in an east–west direction.
U.S. Route 380 (US 380) is an east–west United States highway.The highway's eastern terminus is in Greenville, Texas at an intersection with Interstate 30, of which the easternmost 3–4 miles are concurrent with US 69 in a loop around the west and south sides of Greenville.
The Interstate Highways have replaced several portions of the U.S. Highway network in Texas and as a result, they have been removed from the State Highway System. Several examples include US 81 from Fort Worth to Laredo in favor of I-35, US 75 from Dallas to Galveston in favor of I-45, and US 80 from Dallas to El Paso in favor of I-10 and I-20.