M-76 (Michigan highway)

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M-76
Decommissioned Trunkline
Existed: ca. 1920[1] – 1973
South end: US 23 in Standish
North end: M-22 in Empire at greatest extent

US 27 in Grayling at decommissioning

Counties: Arenac, Ogemaw, Roscommon, Crawford (Kalkaska, Grand Traverse, Leelanau before truncation)
Michigan highways
< M-75 M-77 >

M-76 is a former state highway route designation in the U.S. state of Michigan.

Contents

[edit] Route description

Circa 1920, the initial routing of M-76 connected Standish with Roscommon via a circuitous path through Sterling, Maple Ridge, Prescott, Selkirk, West Branch, and St. Helen. In 1923, M-76 moved to a less roundabout routing between Standish and West Branch. In 1925, M-76 was extended north to Grayling and west to Kalkaska. In 1934, a short non-contiguous segment of M-76 opened near Empire, extending eastward to Co.Rd. 669 (corner called Dewings). In 1940, M-76 was shortened so that Roscommon became the northern terminus. All of M-76 from Grayling to Kalkaska and the segment near Empire was redesignated as M-72.

[edit] History

Beginning in 1958, I-75 in Michigan was constructed in several discontinuous segments. M-76 was to become one of the portions incorporated into the route of I-75. Although other portions of I-75 were completed and designated in noncontiguous segments, the portion from Standish to Roscommon was first signed as M-76 and the entire stretch rebuilt as freeway before it was redesignated as I-75. This was likely done to avoid confusion, since a temporary connecting TO-75 designation between Bay City to Grayling followed a different path along what is now US 10 and US 127.

From the late 1960s through the early 1970s, M-76 was rebuilt to Interstate standards in stages. The first freeway segment completed was a 17-mile stretch in Arenac County from US 23 just southwest of Standish to Alger. In 1970, two more segments of the M-76 freeway were completed: from Alger to just south of West Branch and about 5 miles of freeway from the southern end of a completed segment of I-75 south of Grayling to just west of Roscommon.

In 1971, both the northern and southern sections of the M-76 freeway were extended: on the south, around the west side of West Branch to M-55, or from present-day exits 212 to 215; and on the north, on the west side of Roscommon, from present-day exits 244 to 239. In 1973, the final 25-mile segment of M-76 freeway was completed. However, the entire M-76 designation is decommissioned and that segment of freeway opens as I-75. This was the final segment of I-75 to be completed in the State of Michigan.

As segments of the freeway were completed, the former portions of M-76 were turned over to local control. There are several places where these old portions are referred to as "Old 76".

On most GPS systems, the M-76 marker remains on the entire routing.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Bessert, Christopher J. (2005-10-11). Michigan Highways: Highways 250 through 696. Michigan Highways. Retrieved on 2006-08-22.

[edit] External links