Minnesota State Highway 28
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Trunk Highway 28 |
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Length: | 125 mi[1] (201 km) | ||||||||
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Formed: | 1933[1] | ||||||||
East end: | 10-miles west of Little Falls | ||||||||
West end: | Browns Valley, Minn. at the South Dakota border |
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Major cities: | Sauk Centre Glenwood Morris |
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Minnesota State Highway 28 is a highway in west-central Minnesota, which runs from the intersection of Minnesota Highway 27 and Minnesota 28 (ten miles west of Little Falls) and continues west to its western terminus at the South Dakota state line (at Browns Valley, Minn.), where it becomes South Dakota Highway 10.
Minnesota Highway 28 is 125-miles in length and passes through the communities of:
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[edit] Notes
Minnesota Highway 28 serves as an east-west arterial route between Little Falls, Sauk Centre, Glenwood, Morris, and Browns Valley in west-central Minnesota.
Minnesota Highway 28 passes through the counties of:
Minnesota Highway 28 parallels Minnesota Highway 27 throughout its route.
The Sam Brown Monument State Wayside Park is located on Highway 28 in Traverse County. The park is located at Browns Valley.
Locals believe that Highway 28 is one of the most patrolled roads in the state.
[edit] Termini
The eastern terminus for Minnesota 28 is its intersection with Minnesota Highway 27 (ten miles west of Little Falls) in central Minnesota.
The western terminus for Minnesota 28 is at the Minnesota - South Dakota border; at the Little Minnesota River (at Browns Valley); where it becomes South Dakota Highway 10 upon crossing the state line.
[edit] History
Highway 28 was authorized in 1933.
All of Highway 28 was paved by 1940.
[edit] References
- ^ a b Riner, Steve. Details of Routes 26-50. The Unofficial Minnesota Highways Page. Retrieved on 2007-02-24.