Oklahoma State Highway 88

State Highway 88, abbreviated to SH-88 or OK-88, is a state highway in Oklahoma. It runs for 26.0 miles[2] (42 km) northsouth through Rogers County. It has no lettered spur routes.

State Highway 88
Route information
Maintained by ODOT
Length26.0 mi (41.8 km)
Existedca. 1940[1]–present
Major junctions
South endInola
North end US-169 in Oologah
Highway system
Oklahoma State Highway System
SH-87SH-89

SH-88 dates back to 1940 or early 1941.

Route description

SH-88 begins in Inola and heads northwest out of town, paralleling a Union Pacific rail line.[3] It has an interchange with an old alignment of SH-33, followed by an interchange with SH-33's successor, U.S. Highway 412.[4] From US-412, the route continues northwest, crossing over Inola Creek near its source. Approximately one mile later, the highway passes near the McFarlin railroad siding. Further northwest, the highway passes through unincorporated Tiawah. It then crosses the Tiawah Hills and Panther Creek.[5] The highway then passes under Interstate 44, the Will Rogers Turnpike, though no interchange exists. It then enters the town of Claremore.

In Claremore, SH-88 has a brief concurrency with both SH-66 and SH-20. After emerging from the west side of town, the highway turns onto a due north course, which it continues along until it reaches Lake Oologah. It then turns west, running along the south shore of the lake. Upon reaching the lake's southwest corner, it crosses the dam. The highway turns back to the north, running west of the lake, before turning back west toward Oologah. It then ends at US-169 in Oologah.[5]

History

State Highway 88 is first shown on the April 1941 state highway map, implying it was commissioned sometime between then and April 1940, when the previous map was published. SH-88 had an entirely gravel surface at that time.[1] The 1948 map is the first that shows SH-88 with a wholly paved driving surface.[6]

Prior to the construction of the Lake Oologah Dam, Highway 88 proceeded on a more southerly course north of Claremore, crossing the Verdigris River downstream of the current dam location and ending at US-169 south of Oologah. The 1965 map is the first to show the route crossing Oologah Dam.[7] The route has had no further major changes since then.

Junction list

The entire route is in Rogers County.

Locationmi[2]kmDestinationsNotes
Inola0.00.0Commercial Street[8]Southern terminus
0.50.80EW590 Road[5]Formerly part of SH-33
0.91.4 US-412Partial cloverleaf interchange[8]
Claremore13.020.9 SH-66Southern end of SH-66 concurrency
13.121.1 SH-20Southern end of SH-20 concurrency
13.221.2 SH-66Northern end of SH-66 concurrency
14.022.5 SH-20Northern end of SH-20 concurrency
Oologah26.041.8 US-169Northern terminus
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi
gollark: I agree! qntm's reasoning is bad.
gollark: Unlike gollark software.
gollark: I can install a different OS.
gollark: You could give me access to it.
gollark: It's bad compared to the amazingly powerful osmarksdevices™.

References

  1. Map Showing Condition of Improvement of the State Highway System (PDF) (Map) (April 1941 ed.). Oklahoma Department of Highways. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  2. Stuve, Eric. "OK-88". OKHighways.com. Retrieved 2007-06-11.
  3. State Railroad Map (PDF) (Map) (2009 ed.). Oklahoma Department of Transportation. Retrieved 2010-03-11.
  4. Official State Map (Map) (2005-2006 ed.). Oklahoma Department of Transportation.
  5. Oklahoma Atlas and Gazetteer (Map). 1:200,000. DeLorme. 2006.
  6. Map of Oklahoma's State Highway System (PDF) (Map) (1948 ed.). Oklahoma Department of Highways. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  7. Oklahoma 1965 (PDF) (Map). Oklahoma Department of Highways. Retrieved 2010-03-16.
  8. Google (2007-07-06). "Oklahoma State Highway 88" (Map). Google Maps. Google. Retrieved 2007-07-06.

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