Arkansas Highway 4

Highway 4 (AR 4, Ark. 4, and Hwy. 4) is a designation for two state highways in Arkansas. The western segment of 2.99 miles (4.81 km) runs from SH-4 at the Oklahoma state line and terminates in Cove.[2] An eastern segment of 22.49 miles (36.19 km) begins at U.S. Route 278 (US 278) in McGehee and heads east to Arkansas City then north to Highway 1 before terminating.[3] The two routes were formerly connected until a portion of approximately 230 miles (370 km) was redesignated US 278 in 1998. The eastern segment is part of the Great River Road.

Highway 4
Route information
Maintained by ArDOT
Existed1926–present
Section 1
Length2.99 mi[1] (4.81 km)
West end SH-4
East end US 59 / US 71 at Cove
Section 2
Length22.49 mi[1] (36.19 km)
West end US 65 / US 165 / US 278 in McGehee
East end AR 1 at Rohwer
Highway system
AR 3AR 5

Route description

Oklahoma to Cove

The route enters Arkansas as Oklahoma State Highway 4 and runs east to Cove. The route then meets US 59/US 71 and ends.[2] AR 4 formerly continued along US 59/US 71 south to Wickes, then across the state along present US 278.

McGehee to Rowher

Western terminus of Highway 4's eastern segment at US 65/US 165/US 278 in McGehee.

Highway 4 begins east of McGehee at US 65/US 165/US 278. The route winds east past the Delta Country Club and Trippe Holly Grove Cemetery before curving due east toward Arkansas City. The route runs east to Arkansas City. At Arkansas City, the route has its only spur route, which serves the historic part of town, while AR 4 turns north. The highway runs along the Mississippi River briefly before terminating at AR 1.[3]

Major intersections

CountyLocationmi[2]kmDestinationsNotes
Polk0.000.00 SH-4 west WatsonOklahoma state line
Cove2.994.81 US 59 / US 71 Mena, De Queen
Gap in route
DeshaMcGehee0.00.0 US 65 / US 165 / US 278 / Great River Road
1.11.8 AR 169 north McGehee
1.21.9 AR 980 north Airport
Trippe Junction3.04.8 AR 159 south to AR 35
Arkansas City10.216.4 AR 4S (Sprague Street) – Arkansas City Business District
22.135.6 AR 1 / Great River Road McGehee, Watson
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi

Arkansas City spur

Highway 4S
LocationArkansas City
Length1.04 mi (1.67 km)

Arkansas Highway 4S is a spur of 1.04 miles (1.67 km)[1] in Arkansas City.[3]

Former special routes

Camden business loop

Highway 4B
LocationCamden
Length6.1 mi (9.8 km)
ExistedMay 28, 1976[4]–1998

Highway 4B was a business route of 2.97 miles (4.78 km) in Camden; it was renamed U.S. 278B in the 1998 redesignation. The route began on Washington Street near the Camden Country Club and terminated at U.S. 79B.[5]

Camden spur

Highway 4S
LocationCamden

Highway 4S was a spur route in Camden, following the under-construction bypass. The route was redesignated as Highway 4 in 1976.

Warren business loop

Highway 4B
LocationWarren
Length3.8 mi (6.1 km)

Highway 4B was a business route of 3.78 miles (6.08 km) in Warren; it was renamed U.S. 278B in the 1998 redesignation.

gollark: Ah, they already made it.
gollark: Waaaaait, is there anything stopping me from creating `Common.js` and taking over the wiki?
gollark: Very interesting.
gollark: Interesting.
gollark: You can't actually parse it, only render it to HTML.

See also

References

  1. "[Arkansas] State Highways 2009 (Database)." April 2010. AHTD: Planning and Research Division. Database. Archived 2011-07-07 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved November 30, 2010.
  2. General Highway Map - Polk County, Arkansas (PDF) (Map) (10/18/00 ed.). Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department. Retrieved March 12, 2011.
  3. General Highway Map - Desha County, Arkansas (PDF) (Map) (2/11/10 ed.). Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department. Retrieved August 28, 2010.
  4. "Minutes of the Meeting" (PDF). Arkansas State Highway Commission. May 28, 1976. p. 653. Retrieved January 28, 2013.
  5. "Camden, Arkansas." Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department. AHTD Camden, Arkansas map. Retrieved on August 28, 2010.

KML is from Wikidata

Media related to Arkansas Highway 4 at Wikimedia Commons

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.