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Emblem Highway WYO 33: 1.39: 2.24 BLM route near Forester Gulch: WYO 32 near Lovell — — Mileage marker starts at 2.89, coinciding with WYO 32 mileage at junction WYO 34: 52.38: 84.30 US 30/US 287 south of Bosler: I-25/US 87 south of Wheatland: 1949 [3] current Laramie–Wheatland Road WYO 35: 1.08: 1.74 Big Horn CR R7 near Cowley: US 310 ...
Longest interstate in Wyoming; also known as the Lincoln Highway I-90: 208.80: 336.03 I-90 / US 87 at the Montana state line towards Billings: I-90 / US 14 at the South Dakota state line towards Rapid City: 1956: current Only Interstate that does not serve Cheyenne: I-180: 1.09: 1.75 I-80 in Cheyenne: I-80 Bus. / US 30 in Cheyenne: 1984: current
The U.S. Highways in Wyoming are the segments of the United States Numbered Highway System owned and maintained by the Wyoming Department of Transportation. List [ edit ]
Interstate 25 Business (Douglas, Wyoming) Interstate 25 Business (Glenrock, Wyoming) Interstate 25 Business (Wheatland, Wyoming) Interstate 80 in Wyoming; Interstate 80 Business (Cheyenne, Wyoming) Interstate 80 Business (Evanston, Wyoming) Interstate 80 Business (Fort Bridger–Lyman, Wyoming) Interstate 80 Business (Green River, Wyoming ...
The highway also ran through several more cities in Wyoming that both I-80 and US 30 were rerouted from, such as Green River, Rock Springs, and Laramie, and it mostly follows the path of the two highways' respective business routes. In addition, some of the old roads US 30 historically traveled on that it does not follow and runs concurrently ...
In Wyoming, the Interstate Highway runs 300.530 miles (483.656 km) from the Colorado state line near Cheyenne north to its national terminus at I-90 near Buffalo. I-25 connects Wyoming's largest city and capital, Cheyenne, with its second largest city, Casper, and the smaller communities of Wheatland, Douglas, and Buffalo. The highway also ...
The final Wyoming section of I-90 was opened to traffic on October 10, 1985, following four years of construction on 10 miles (16 km) between the Montana state border and Ranchester. It was also the final section of the Interstate Highway System to be completed in the state. [10]
(12,424 km 2) Carbon County: 007: Rawlins: 1868: One of the original five counties. The vast coal beds in the county. 14,334: 7,897 sq mi (20,453 km 2) Converse County: 009: Douglas: 1888: Parts of Albany County and Laramie County. Amasa Rice Converse (1842–1885), a banker and rancher from Cheyenne, Wyoming. 13,809: 4,255 sq mi (11,020 km 2 ...