Oklahoma State Highway 78

State Highway 78 is 60-mile (97 km) long[1] (97 km) state highway in southern Oklahoma. It runs from the Red River (where it crosses into Texas as State Highway 78) to Tishomingo. It has no lettered spur routes.

State Highway 78
Route information
Maintained by ODOT
Length60 mi (100 km)
Major junctions
South end SH 78 at the Texas state line
North end US-377/SH-99 in Tishomingo (concurrent with SH-22)
Highway system
Oklahoma State Highway System
US-77SH-79

Route description

SH-78 crossing the Red River

State Highway 78 enters Oklahoma across the Red River on the State Highway No. 78 Bridge at the Red River, near the unincorporated community of Karma. Near Yuba, SH-78 curves west to head toward Achille, where it meets State Highway 91. It curves back north here, meets State Highway 70E, and then passes through the east part of Durant, where it crosses US-70. In northern Durant, SH-78 has an interchange with the US-69/75 freeway.

Three miles north of US-69/75, SH-78 turns west to head through Cobb and Brown before turning north to meet State Highway 199. It meets SH-22 for the first time at Nida. It then passes through Emet and turns back west at Milburn. It then meets SH-22 for a second time three miles (5 km) east of Tishomingo. It then joins SH-22 into Tishomingo, where it ends at US-377/SH-99.

History

The road that would become SH-78 was originally commissioned as SH-299 on 1938-11-22.[2] SH-299 was renumbered to SH-78 in its entirety in 1955,[3] most likely to match the route number of TX-78.

Previous Routes

SH-78 was originally designated as a route from Boise City to the Texas Border.[4] This route became US 385 in 1955.

Junction list

CountyLocationmi[1]kmDestinationsNotes
BryanRed River0.000.00 SH 78 southContinuation into Texas
State Highway 78 Bridge at the Red River
Achille15.925.6 SH-91
22.436.0 SH-70E
Durant US-70Interchange
30.549.1 US-69 / US-75 Atoka, Denison TXHalf-folded diamond interchange[5]
32.852.8 SH-48Southern terminus of SH-48
Brown40.965.8 SH-199Eastern terminus of SH-199
JohnstonNida44.171.0 SH-22 east CaddoSouth end of SH-22 overlap
44.371.3 SH-22 west – Butcher PenNorth end of SH-22 overlap
Milburn52.284.0 SH-48A
57.492.4 SH-22 east NidaSouth end of SH-22 overlap
Tishomingo60.096.6 US-377 / SH-99 north (Kemp Avenue)
US-377 / SH-99 south (SH-22 west)
Northern terminus; north end of SH-22 overlap; road continues west as US-377/SH-99 south/SH-22 west (Main Street)
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
gollark: Listening to train noises all day is not, personally, my idea of interesting.
gollark: We already have had those.
gollark: I read some rough prediction that humanity has a 1 in 6 risk of being entirely wiped out in the next 100 years.
gollark: Neither of which would be very good, of course.
gollark: Possibly? But wiping out *all humanity* is hard. Wiping out civilization is much easier though.

References

  1. Stuve, Eric. "OK-78". OKHighways.com. Retrieved 2007-04-26.
  2. Oklahoma Department of Transportation, Planning & Research Division. "Memorial Dedication & Revision History - SH-22". Retrieved 2007-05-08.
  3. Official State Highway Map (Map) (1956 ed.). Oklahoma Department of Transportation.
  4. Official State Highway Map (Map) (1940 ed.). Oklahoma Department of Transportation.
  5. Google (June 8, 2009). "Oklahoma State Highway 78" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved June 8, 2009.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.