U.S. Route 60

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For the U.S. Route 60 in the 1925 plan, see U.S. Route 66.
U.S. Route 60
Length: 2670 mi[1] (4300 km)
Formed: 1926[1]
West end: I-10 at Brenda Junction, AZ
Major
junctions:
I-17/I-10 at Phoenix, AZ

I-25 at Socorro, NM
I-27 at Canyon,TX
US-81 at Enid, OK
I-24 at Paducah, KY
I-65 at Louisville, KY
I-75 at Lexington, KY
US 52 at Huntington, WV

I-95 at Richmond, VA

I-64 near Richmond, VA

US 13 at Virginia Beach, VA

US 58 at Virginia Beach, VA

East end: Pacific Avenue at Virginia Beach, VA
United States Numbered Highways
List - Bannered - Divided - Replaced

U.S. Route 60 is an east-west United States highway, running 2,670 miles (4,300 km) from Virginia to Arizona. Despite the "0" in its number, indicating a transcontinental designation, the 1926 route ended in Springfield, Missouri at the intersection with Route 66. In fact, Route 66 was almost given the US 60 designation.

As of 2005, the highway's eastern terminus is in Virginia Beach, Virginia at Pacific Avenue in the city's oceanfront resort district at the Rudee Inlet Bridge. Its western terminus was from 1932 to 1966 in Los Angeles, California but was moved to east of Quartzsite, Arizona at an intersection with Interstate 10 after the highway was decommissioned through California starting in 1964. US 60 signage can be seen at this intersection which is about 5 miles (8 km) west of Brenda, Arizona. I-10 replaced US 60 from Arizona to Beaumont, California and California State Highway 60 replaced US 60 from there to Los Angeles.[2]

Contents

[edit] Route description

[edit] California

For more details on this topic, see U.S. Route 60 in California.

U.S. Route 60 has been decommissioned in California. In the Los Angeles and Inland Empire, it exists as a branch of Interstate 10, designated as State Route 60. In addition, many parts of it remain intact as 2-lane highway in the desert areas. One such section of US 60 is located in the Chuckwalla Valley and is referred to as Chuckwalla Valley Road.


[edit] Arizona

For more details on this topic, see U.S. Route 60 in Arizona.

The westernmost stretch of US 60 to the California border has been superseded by Interstate 10. The western terminus of US 60 is near Brenda, where it travels northeast to Wickenburg. From there it bears southeast to briefly rejoin I-10 in Phoenix before diverging as the Superstition Freeway. While in Phoenix, Route 60 turns into Grand Avenue, and then becomes the 60 once again. East of the Phoenix area, US 60 bears roughly east-northeast through mountainous areas, passing through Globe, Show Low, and Springerville before exiting the state at the New Mexico border.

[edit] New Mexico

It takes about 400 miles (640 km) to cross New Mexico on U.S. 60, traveling West from the Texas state line at Texico, NM to the Arizona state line between Quemado, New Mexico, and Springerville, AZ. The highway goes through Clovis, NM, passing by Cannon Air Force Base, and then on to Fort Sumner, where Billy the Kid is buried. There are some beautiful seasonal lakes near Willard, New Mexico. Continuing West, the highway goes through Mountainair, NM, where several Pop Shaffer folk-art buildings have been preserved. Several nearby pueblo ruins are preserved as part of the Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument, with headquarters in Mountanair. The highway passes between Chupadera Mesa to the South and the Southern end of the Manzano Mountains to the North, before crossing the Rio Grande, after which the highway joins Interstate 25 and follows this freeway for about 25 miles (40 km) to Socorro, NM. In Socorro, the highway continues West through Magdalena, New Mexico, across the Plains of San Agustin, past the Very Large Array, and across the Continental Divide near Pie Town, New Mexico.

[edit] Texas

US 60 runs in a northwesterly direction across the Texas Panhandle. It enters the state as a four-lane divided highway at Farwell on the Texas-New Mexico border, and heads northeast, intersecting U.S. Route 385 at Hereford. At Canyon, the route begins a concurrency with both U.S. Route 87 and Interstate 27; the three routes are united to Amarillo.

At Amarillo, the road crosses Interstate 40 and has a short concurrency with Historic US 66 on Amarillo Boulevard. The road continues as a divided highway, heading northeast to Pampa, where the road goes to two lanes. At Canadian, the route briefly returns to four-lane status and forms a concurrency with U.S. Route 83. US 60 leaves Texas for Oklahoma two miles (3 km) east of Higgins.

[edit] Oklahoma

Except for a couple of short sections near Enid and Vinita, US-60 is a two-lane highway its entire length across Oklahoma. It enters the state fourteen miles (21 km) west of Arnett and travels east to Orienta where it begins a concurrency with U.S. Highway 412. At Enid, it leaves the concurrency with US-412 and begins another with U.S. Highway 64 with which it is united for 24 miles (39 km). Near Tonkawa, US-60 has an interchange with Interstate 35.

At Ponca City, US-60 enters the Osage Indian Reservation, leaving it at Bartlesville. From Vinita to Afton, the highway has a concurrency with Historic U.S. Highway 66 and U.S. Highway 69. The road will cross Interstate 44 at each Vinita and Afton. It passes through Twin Bridges State Park about 12 miles (19 km) west of the Missouri state line.

[edit] Missouri

US 60 crosses the southern part of Missouri, south of Interstate 44. Prior to the creation of the U.S. Highway system, U.S. Route 60 was Route 16.

Between the Oklahoma state line (south of Seneca) and Republic, US 60 is a two-lane highway. At Republic, the road becomes a four-lane divided highway, turning southeast onto the James River Freeway at the Springfield city limits.

Portions of the route east of Springfield are four-lane divided. Several stretches are freeway-grade. The Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDOT) is in the process of upgrading US 60 to four lanes along a 59-mile (95 km) segment between Willow Springs and Van Buren. The project, which is expected to be complete in 2010, will complete US 60 as a four-lane facility from Springfield to Charleston, a distance of approximately 240 miles (390 km).

US 60 intersects Interstate 55 and Interstate 57 just southeast of Sikeston, and runs concurrently with I-57 from this junction to the east side of Charleston.

From Charleston to Bird's Point, where the route leaves Missouri on a bridge crossing of the Mississippi River, US 60 is concurrent with U.S. Route 62 and, for a short distance, Route 77.

William Jefferson Blythe, Jr., father of former president Bill Clinton, died on Route 60 (now Route 114) outside of Sikeston, Missouri after being thrown from his car and drowning in a drainage ditch.


[edit] Illinois

U.S. 60 continues its concurrency with U.S. Highway 62 for its entire length, 0.92 miles (1.48 km), in Illinois.[3] The routes enter Illinois at its very southern tip between the Mississippi and Ohio rivers.

The concurrent routes pass Fort Defiance State Park, which lies at the lowest and southernmost point of Illinois, then intersect with U.S. 51 south of Cairo, turning eastward along with southbound U.S. 51 to cross the Ohio River into Kentucky.

For the U.S. Route 60 in the 1925 plan, see U.S. Route 66.
U.S. Route 60
Length: 2670 mi[1] (4300 km)
Formed: 1926[1]
West end: I-10 at Brenda Junction, AZ
Major
junctions:
I-17/I-10 at Phoenix, AZ

I-25 at Socorro, NM
I-27 at Canyon,TX
US-81 at Enid, OK
I-24 at Paducah, KY
I-65 at Louisville, KY
I-75 at Lexington, KY
US 52 at Huntington, WV

I-95 at Richmond, VA

I-64 near Richmond, VA

US 13 at Virginia Beach, VA

US 58 at Virginia Beach, VA

East end: Pacific Avenue at Virginia Beach, VA
United States Numbered Highways
List - Bannered - Divided - Replaced

U.S. Route 60 is an east-west United States highway, running 2,670 miles (4,300 km) from Virginia to Arizona. Despite the "0" in its number, indicating a transcontinental designation, the 1926 route ended in Springfield, Missouri at the intersection with Route 66. In fact, Route 66 was almost given the US 60 designation.

As of 2005, the highway's eastern terminus is in Virginia Beach, Virginia at Pacific Avenue in the city's oceanfront resort district at the Rudee Inlet Bridge. Its western terminus was from 1932 to 1966 in Los Angeles, California but was moved to east of Quartzsite, Arizona at an intersection with Interstate 10 after the highway was decommissioned through California starting in 1964. US 60 signage can be seen at this intersection which is about 5 miles (8 km) west of Brenda, Arizona. I-10 replaced US 60 from Arizona to Beaumont, California and California State Highway 60 replaced US 60 from there to Los Angeles.[2]

[edit] Route description

[edit] California

For more details on this topic, see U.S. Route 60 in California.

U.S. Route 60 has been decommissioned in California. In the Los Angeles and Inland Empire, it exists as a branch of Interstate 10, designated as State Route 60. In addition, many parts of it remain intact as 2-lane highway in the desert areas. One such section of US 60 is located in the Chuckwalla Valley and is referred to as Chuckwalla Valley Road.


[edit] Arizona

For more details on this topic, see U.S. Route 60 in Arizona.

The westernmost stretch of US 60 to the California border has been superseded by Interstate 10. The western terminus of US 60 is near Brenda, where it travels northeast to Wickenburg. From there it bears southeast to briefly rejoin I-10 in Phoenix before diverging as the Superstition Freeway. While in Phoenix, Route 60 turns into Grand Avenue, and then becomes the 60 once again. East of the Phoenix area, US 60 bears roughly east-northeast through mountainous areas, passing through Globe, Show Low, and Springerville before exiting the state at the New Mexico border.

[edit] New Mexico

It takes about 400 miles (640 km) to cross New Mexico on U.S. 60, traveling West from the Texas state line at Texico, NM to the Arizona state line between Quemado, New Mexico, and Springerville, AZ. The highway goes through Clovis, NM, passing by Cannon Air Force Base, and then on to Fort Sumner, where Billy the Kid is buried. There are some beautiful seasonal lakes near Willard, New Mexico. Continuing West, the highway goes through Mountainair, NM, where several Pop Shaffer folk-art buildings have been preserved. Several nearby pueblo ruins are preserved as part of the Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument, with headquarters in Mountanair. The highway passes between Chupadera Mesa to the South and the Southern end of the Manzano Mountains to the North, before crossing the Rio Grande, after which the highway joins Interstate 25 and follows this freeway for about 25 miles (40 km) to Socorro, NM. In Socorro, the highway continues West through Magdalena, New Mexico, across the Plains of San Agustin, past the Very Large Array, and across the Continental Divide near Pie Town, New Mexico.

[edit] Texas

US 60 runs in a northwesterly direction across the Texas Panhandle. It enters the state as a four-lane divided highway at Farwell on the Texas-New Mexico border, and heads northeast, intersecting U.S. Route 385 at Hereford. At Canyon, the route begins a concurrency with both U.S. Route 87 and Interstate 27; the three routes are united to Amarillo.

At Amarillo, the road crosses Interstate 40 and has a short concurrency with Historic US 66 on Amarillo Boulevard. The road continues as a divided highway, heading northeast to Pampa, where the road goes to two lanes. At Canadian, the route briefly returns to four-lane status and forms a concurrency with U.S. Route 83. US 60 leaves Texas for Oklahoma two miles (3 km) east of Higgins.

[edit] Oklahoma

Except for a couple of short sections near Enid and Vinita, US-60 is a two-lane highway its entire length across Oklahoma. It enters the state fourteen miles (21 km) west of Arnett and travels east to Orienta where it begins a concurrency with U.S. Highway 412. At Enid, it leaves the concurrency with US-412 and begins another with U.S. Highway 64 with which it is united for 24 miles (39 km). Near Tonkawa, US-60 has an interchange with Interstate 35.

At Ponca City, US-60 enters the Osage Indian Reservation, leaving it at Bartlesville. From Vinita to Afton, the highway has a concurrency with Historic U.S. Highway 66 and U.S. Highway 69. The road will cross Interstate 44 at each Vinita and Afton. It passes through Twin Bridges State Park about 12 miles (19 km) west of the Missouri state line.

[edit] Missouri

US 60 crosses the southern part of Missouri, south of Interstate 44. Prior to the creation of the U.S. Highway system, U.S. Route 60 was Route 16.

Between the Oklahoma state line (south of Seneca) and Republic, US 60 is a two-lane highway. At Republic, the road becomes a four-lane divided highway, turning southeast onto the James River Freeway at the Springfield city limits.

Portions of the route east of Springfield are four-lane divided. Several stretches are freeway-grade. The Missouri Department of Transportation (MoDOT) is in the process of upgrading US 60 to four lanes along a 59-mile (95 km) segment between Willow Springs and Van Buren. The project, which is expected to be complete in 2010, will complete US 60 as a four-lane facility from Springfield to Charleston, a distance of approximately 240 miles (390 km).

US 60 intersects Interstate 55 and Interstate 57 just southeast of Sikeston, and runs concurrently with I-57 from this junction to the east side of Charleston.

From Charleston to Bird's Point, where the route leaves Missouri on a bridge crossing of the Mississippi River, US 60 is concurrent with U.S. Route 62 and, for a short distance, Route 77.

William Jefferson Blythe, Jr., father of former president Bill Clinton, died on Route 60 (now Route 114) outside of Sikeston, Missouri after being thrown from his car and drowning in a drainage ditch.


[edit] Illinois

U.S. 60 continues its concurrency with U.S. Highway 62 for its entire length, 0.92 miles (1.48 km), in Illinois.[3] The routes enter Illinois at its very southern tip between the Mississippi and Ohio rivers.

The concurrent routes pass Fort Defiance State Park, which lies at the lowest and southernmost point of Illinois, then intersect with U.S. 51 south of Cairo, turning eastward along with southbound U.S. 51 to cross the Ohio River into Kentucky.

[edit] Kentucky

Upon entering Kentucky, U.S. 60 is concurrent with U.S. 51 and U.S. 62 from the Ohio River bridge to the town of Wickliffe. At Wickliffe, U.S. 60 separates from the other routes and heads generally northeast toward the city of Paducah. Between Wickliffe and Paducah, the towns of Barlow, La Center and Kevil are situated along the route.

Upon reaching Paducah, U.S. 60 intersects with Interstate 24, and I-24's business loop enters the city concurrent with U.S. 60. In the downtown area, the route once again meets U.S. 62, and also meets U.S. 45. Once out of the city of Paducah, U.S. 60 again veers to the northeast, generally following the Ohio River until reachingSmithland, where the route again turns to the east, passing through the small town of Burna.

The next city along the route is Marion. At Marion, U.S. 60 turns once more to the north, where it heads toward Sturgis. From Sturgis, the route continues generally northward to Morganfield. In recent years, a by-pass of U.S. 60 around the south and east sides of Morganfield has taken a great deal of traffic out of Morganfield proper.

U.S. 60 passes through Waverly and Corydon before reaching Henderson. At Henderson, the route intersects Kentucky Highway 136, Kentucky Highway 425 and U.S. Highway 41 Alternate. U.S. 41-A is concurrent with U.S. 60 along Green Street in the city of Henderson as it intersects with Kentucky Highway 812 and Kentucky Highway 351. At the U.S. Highway 41/Pennyrile Parkway interchange, U.S. 41-A ends and U.S. 60 continues alone, going through Owensboro, |Hawesville, and Hardinsburg.

In Fort Knox, U.S. 60 connects with U.S. 31W, and they remain together until downtown Louisville. Originally built as a "bypass route" around downtown Louisville, Kentucky, Alt US 60 used several existing roads running through Louisville to get between the east and south sides of town without having to travel through the heavily congested downtown or west ends of town. 'Alt 60' runs northeast to southwest from St. Matthews, Kentucky to Shively, Kentucky; including a stretch on one of Frederick Law Olmsted's last remaining parkways, Eastern Parkway.

After passing Shelbyville, it continues through the state capitol in |Frankfort. In |Versailles, its eastbound lanes are the westbound lanes of U.S. 62. After intersecting the Bluegrass Parkway, it is one of the major routes through Lexington. It intersects I-75 and goes to Winchester and the Mountain Parkway. It proceeds to Mount Sterling, Morehead, past Carter Caves, on to Grayson and finally to Ashland. U.S. 23 South follows U.S. 60 East into Catlettsburg, where they split at 35th St. U.S. 23 South continues straight as a 4-lane highway, while U.S. 60 East turns left on 35th St., passes Oakland Avenue, and enters Kenova, West Virginia via the Billy C. Clark Bridge.

Especially in the eastern and central part of the state, U.S. 60 has been largely replaced by Interstate 64 for long distance travel, since both routes follow each other through much of this area. However, several cites in this area rely on U.S. 60 to connect them to the interstate. By contrast, in the western part of the state, U.S. 60 is not paired with an interstate highway and serves a much more independent purpose, connecting communities located along and near the Ohio River.


[edit] West Virginia

Prior to the U.S. Highway System, was the original railroad line to Huntington, WV. Then paved over in the early 1960s and renamed West Virginia Route 3. Portions of U.S. 60 are the Midland Trail, a National Scenic Byway. After the Billy C. Clark Bridge from Kentucky, U.S. 60 goes through Kenova, Ceredo, Huntington, Barboursville, Hurricane, Charleston, and Beckley, essentially providing a scenic alternative to I-64. Although the two diverge greatly in the eastern portion of the state, they intersect just before the Virginia state line.


[edit] Virginia


[edit] History

US 60 had its beginnings in the Midland Trail, an auto trail organized in 1912 by residents of Grand Junction, Colorado.[4] The next year, this route was considered but rejected for the Lincoln Highway,[5] after which the Midland Trail Association laid out and marked its own transcontinental highway, eventually connecting Newport News, Virginia with Los Angeles, California. When the Joint Board on Interstate Highways published its preliminary plan for a system of interstate routes in 1925, the Midland Trail was split among many numbers, including 52, 62, 150, 50, and 40. East of Louisville, where it would become US 60, it was assigned parts of 52 and 62. Route 52 began at Newport News and followed the Midland Trail to Richmond, but took a more southerly route to Lexington, Virginia. The trail was used again through West Virginia to Huntington, where Route 52 split to the northwest. Route 62 began at Ashland, Kentucky (near Huntington) and followed the Midland Trail across northeastern Kentucky to Louisville, where the trail crossed the Ohio River and became Route 150. Route 62 continued southwest along the south bank of the Ohio River to Wickliffe in western Kentucky, and then crossed the Mississippi River at the Ohio's mouth. The final portion of Route 62 crossed southern Missouri to Springfield on an existing main highway that had been numbered 16 by the state.[6][7][8][9]

Kentucky Governor William J. Fields objected to the Joint Board's plan, which took most major east-west routes (multiples of ten) to the East Coast, but sent Route 60 from Los Angeles northeast to end in Chicago, leaving none to cross Kentucky, the only Mississippi Valley state without such a route. Proposals were considered for splitting US 60 into 60N and 60E at Springfield or using 62 for the Chicago route; Missouri had already prepared maps that showed the original plans for 60 and 62.[10] The final plan, agreed to by the affected states, assigned US 66 to the Los Angeles-Chicago highway and US 60 to the route from Springfield to Virginia Beach (extended from Newport News), absorbing all of 62 and part of 52 from the 1925 plan.[11][12][13]

Although US 60 initially stretched less than halfway across the country, due to its late creation, it was soon extended west to Los Angeles. One auto trail - the Atlantic and Pacific Highway - and three other U.S. Highways played a part in this extension. The Atlantic and Pacific Highway had been organized in 1921,[14] and connected New York City with Los Angeles.[7] The original alignment of U.S. Route 70 entered Clovis, New Mexico from the east, as it does now, but continued west to Holbrook, Arizona. Crossing US 70 at Clovis was the El Paso-Amarillo U.S. Route 366.[12] Finally, U.S. Route 164 was created by 1928, stretching northeast and east from Amarillo to U.S. Route 64 and U.S. Route 77 in Enid, Oklahoma.[15] The American Association of State Highway Officials approved the first part of the extension in May 1930, following the rest of Missouri's Route 16 to the Oklahoma state line, and several state highways to Enid, before absorbing US 164 to a terminus at Amarillo.[16] The remainder to Los Angeles was approved at AASHO's June 1931 meeting, and involved a number of other changes. US 60 replaced US 366 from Amarillo to Clovis, where it continued west along US 70 to Springerville, Arizona. The remainder of US 70 to Holbrook, Arizona became a new U.S. Route 260, while US 60 followed the Atlantic and Pacific Highway, which it had picked up at Vaughn, New Mexico, southwest and west through Phoenix to Los Angeles. US 70 was not truncated to Clovis, but was instead redirected southwest along US 366 to El Paso, and later reached Los Angeles itself, though most of the route west of Globe, Arizona overlapped US 60.[17]

After the Interstate Highway System was signed into law in 1956, the Midland Trail portion of US 60, from Louisville east to the Hampton Roads area, was bypassed by Interstate 64. From Phoenix west to Los Angeles, Interstate 10 paralleled and replaced US 60. I-10 and I-64 were mostly completed by the late 1970s,[18] though part of Interstate 64 in West Virginia, built on a new alignment east from Beckley, did not bypass the old winding US 60 until 1988.[19] California decommissioned its portion of US 60 in 1964; most was replaced by I-10, while the independent piece in the Los Angeles area became State Route 60.[20] In the 1970s, the portion overlapping I-10 in western Arizona was removed.[citation needed] US 60 between Phoenix and Louisville remains a major regional corridor in most places, and is not paralleled by an Interstate for any significant length.


[edit] See also

[edit] Related U.S. Routes

[edit] Auxiliary routes

Main article at Auxiliary routes of U.S. Route 60.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d US Highways from US 1 to US 830 Robert V. Droz
  2. ^ a b Endpoints of US highways
  3. ^ a b Illinois Technology Transfer Center. T2 GIS Data. Retrieved June 2, 2006. As documented in Wikipedia:WikiProject U.S. Roads/Lengths/Illinois.
  4. ^ Nevada State Journal, Working for Better Roads, May 3, 1913
  5. ^ Lincoln Highway Resource Guide: Chapter 13: Lincoln Highway in Colorado
  6. ^ Missouri State Highway Commission, Route Map Showing Designated Routes and Numbers, Approved September 19, 1922
  7. ^ a b Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas, 1926, accessed via the Broer Map Library
  8. ^ Report of Joint Board on Interstate Highways, October 30, 1925, Approved by the Secretary of Agriculture, November 18, 1925
  9. ^ It should be noted that the 1925 plan took US 62 via West Plains to Ozark, but by the time the 1926 Rand McNally was published, the proposed US 62 followed the former Route 16.
  10. ^ Missouri State Highway Commission, Official Road Map of Missouri, 1926
  11. ^ Richard F. Weingroff, From Names to Numbers: The Origins of the U.S. Numbered Highway System
  12. ^ a b United States System of Highways, November 11, 1926
  13. ^ United States Numbered Highways, American Highways (AASHO), April 1927
  14. ^ Indianapolis Star, August 17, 1921
  15. ^ Oklahoma State Highway Commission, Oklahoma State Highway System 1928, July 1, 1928
  16. ^ Port Arthur News, 25 Highways are Numbered, May 29, 1930
  17. ^ Richard F. Weingroff, U.S. 666: "Beast of a Highway"?, accessed October 2007
  18. ^ Gulf, Tourgide: United States, Canada and Mexico (Rand McNally & Company), 1977
  19. ^ New York Times, Travel Advisory, July 31, 1988
  20. ^ California Highways and Public Works, Route Renumbering, March-April 1964

[edit] External links


Main U.S. Routes
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38
40 41 42 43 44 45 46 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59
60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79
80 81 82 83 84 85 87 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99
101 400 412 425
Lists  U.S. Routes - Bannered - Divided - Bypassed - Portal
Browse numbered routes
< SR 51 AZ SR 61 >
< SH-59 OK US-62 >
< Route 59 MO US 61 >
< IL 60 IL IL 61 >
< KY 59 KY KY 61 >

[edit] West Virginia

Prior to the U.S. Highway System, was the original railroad line to Huntington, WV. Then paved over in the early 1960s and renamed West Virginia Route 3. Portions of U.S. 60 are the Midland Trail, a National Scenic Byway.


[edit] Virginia


[edit] History

US 60 had its beginnings in the Midland Trail, an auto trail organized in 1912 by residents of Grand Junction, Colorado.[1] The next year, this route was considered but rejected for the Lincoln Highway,[2] after which the Midland Trail Association laid out and marked its own transcontinental highway, eventually connecting Newport News, Virginia with Los Angeles, California. When the Joint Board on Interstate Highways published its preliminary plan for a system of interstate routes in 1925, the Midland Trail was split among many numbers, including 52, 62, 150, 50, and 40. East of Louisville, where it would become US 60, it was assigned parts of 52 and 62. Route 52 began at Newport News and followed the Midland Trail to Richmond, but took a more southerly route to Lexington, Virginia. The trail was used again through West Virginia to Huntington, where Route 52 split to the northwest. Route 62 began at Ashland, Kentucky (near Huntington) and followed the Midland Trail across northeastern Kentucky to Louisville, where the trail crossed the Ohio River and became Route 150. Route 62 continued southwest along the south bank of the Ohio River to Wickliffe in western Kentucky, and then crossed the Mississippi River at the Ohio's mouth. The final portion of Route 62 crossed southern Missouri to Springfield on an existing main highway that had been numbered 16 by the state.[3][4][5][6]

Kentucky Governor William J. Fields objected to the Joint Board's plan, which took most major east-west routes (multiples of ten) to the East Coast, but sent Route 60 from Los Angeles northeast to end in Chicago, leaving none to cross Kentucky, the only Mississippi Valley state without such a route. Proposals were considered for splitting US 60 into 60N and 60E at Springfield or using 62 for the Chicago route; Missouri had already prepared maps that showed the original plans for 60 and 62.[7] The final plan, agreed to by the affected states, assigned US 66 to the Los Angeles-Chicago highway and US 60 to the route from Springfield to Virginia Beach (extended from Newport News), absorbing all of 62 and part of 52 from the 1925 plan.[8][9][10]

Although US 60 initially stretched less than halfway across the country, due to its late creation, it was soon extended west to Los Angeles. One auto trail - the Atlantic and Pacific Highway - and three other U.S. Highways played a part in this extension. The Atlantic and Pacific Highway had been organized in 1921,[11] and connected New York City with Los Angeles.[4] The original alignment of U.S. Route 70 entered Clovis, New Mexico from the east, as it does now, but continued west to Holbrook, Arizona. Crossing US 70 at Clovis was the El Paso-Amarillo U.S. Route 366.[9] Finally, U.S. Route 164 was created by 1928, stretching northeast and east from Amarillo to U.S. Route 64 and U.S. Route 77 in Enid, Oklahoma.[12] The American Association of State Highway Officials approved the first part of the extension in May 1930, following the rest of Missouri's Route 16 to the Oklahoma state line, and several state highways to Enid, before absorbing US 164 to a terminus at Amarillo.[13] The remainder to Los Angeles was approved at AASHO's June 1931 meeting, and involved a number of other changes. US 60 replaced US 366 from Amarillo to Clovis, where it continued west along US 70 to Springerville, Arizona. The remainder of US 70 to Holbrook, Arizona became a new U.S. Route 260, while US 60 followed the Atlantic and Pacific Highway, which it had picked up at Vaughn, New Mexico, southwest and west through Phoenix to Los Angeles. US 70 was not truncated to Clovis, but was instead redirected southwest along US 366 to El Paso, and later reached Los Angeles itself, though most of the route west of Globe, Arizona overlapped US 60.[14]

After the Interstate Highway System was signed into law in 1956, the Midland Trail portion of US 60, from Louisville east to the Hampton Roads area, was bypassed by Interstate 64. From Phoenix west to Los Angeles, Interstate 10 paralleled and replaced US 60. I-10 and I-64 were mostly completed by the late 1970s,[15] though part of Interstate 64 in West Virginia, built on a new alignment east from Beckley, did not bypass the old winding US 60 until 1988.[16] California decommissioned its portion of US 60 in 1964; most was replaced by I-10, while the independent piece in the Los Angeles area became State Route 60.[17] In the 1970s, the portion overlapping I-10 in western Arizona was removed.[citation needed] US 60 between Phoenix and Louisville remains a major regional corridor in most places, and is not paralleled by an Interstate for any significant length.

Originally built as a "bypass route" around downtown Louisville, Kentucky, Alt US 60 used several existing roads running through Louisville to get between the east and south sides of town without having to travel through the heavily congested downtown or west ends of town. 'Alt 60' runs northeast to southwest from St. Matthews, Kentucky to Shively, Kentucky; including a stretch on one of Frederick Law Olmsted's last remaining parkways, Eastern Parkway.

[edit] See also

[edit] Related U.S. Routes

[edit] Auxiliary routes

Main article at Auxiliary routes of U.S. Route 60.

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d US Highways from US 1 to US 830 Robert V. Droz
  2. ^ a b Endpoints of US highways
  3. ^ a b Illinois Technology Transfer Center. T2 GIS Data. Retrieved June 2, 2006. As documented in Wikipedia:WikiProject U.S. Roads/Lengths/Illinois.
  4. ^ Nevada State Journal, Working for Better Roads, May 3, 1913
  5. ^ Lincoln Highway Resource Guide: Chapter 13: Lincoln Highway in Colorado
  6. ^ Missouri State Highway Commission, Route Map Showing Designated Routes and Numbers, Approved September 19, 1922
  7. ^ a b Rand McNally Auto Road Atlas, 1926, accessed via the Broer Map Library
  8. ^ Report of Joint Board on Interstate Highways, October 30, 1925, Approved by the Secretary of Agriculture, November 18, 1925
  9. ^ It should be noted that the 1925 plan took US 62 via West Plains to Ozark, but by the time the 1926 Rand McNally was published, the proposed US 62 followed the former Route 16.
  10. ^ Missouri State Highway Commission, Official Road Map of Missouri, 1926
  11. ^ Richard F. Weingroff, From Names to Numbers: The Origins of the U.S. Numbered Highway System
  12. ^ a b United States System of Highways, November 11, 1926
  13. ^ United States Numbered Highways, American Highways (AASHO), April 1927
  14. ^ Indianapolis Star, August 17, 1921
  15. ^ Oklahoma State Highway Commission, Oklahoma State Highway System 1928, July 1, 1928
  16. ^ Port Arthur News, 25 Highways are Numbered, May 29, 1930
  17. ^ Richard F. Weingroff, U.S. 666: "Beast of a Highway"?, accessed October 2007
  18. ^ Gulf, Tourgide: United States, Canada and Mexico (Rand McNally & Company), 1977
  19. ^ New York Times, Travel Advisory, July 31, 1988
  20. ^ California Highways and Public Works, Route Renumbering, March-April 1964

[edit] External links


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