Oklahoma State Highway 101
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State Highway 101 |
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Maintained by ODOT | |||||||||
Length: | 23.4 mi (38 km) | ||||||||
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West end: | U.S. Highway 59 | ||||||||
East end: | AR-220, Arkansas state line | ||||||||
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State Highway 101 is a 23.4 mile[1] (37⅔ km) state highway in Sequoyah Co., Oklahoma. It runs from US-59 north of Sallisaw to the Arkansas state line. After crossing the line, it becomes Highway 220.
The highway connects to Sequoyah's Cabin, the home of Sequoyah, the man who invented the Cherokee alphabet. SH-101 has no lettered spurs.