State Route 120 | ||||
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Route information | ||||
Defined by S&HC § 420 | ||||
Maintained by Caltrans | ||||
Length: | 152.562 mi[1] (246 km) (Does not include the portion in Yosemite) |
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Existed: | 1934 – present | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end: | I-5 near Tracy | |||
SR 99 near Manteca SR 108 in Oakdale SR 49 near Chinese Camp |
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East end: | US 6 at Benton | |||
Highway system | ||||
State highways in California(list • pre-1964)
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State Route 120 (SR 120), in northern California, runs between the Central Valley near Manteca, through Yosemite National Park, and ends at U.S. Route 6 in Mono County.
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This route is part of the California Freeway and Expressway System[2] and is eligible for the State Scenic Highway System.[3] However, it is not officially designated by Caltrans as a scenic highway.[4]
SR 120 begins as a freeway intersecting Interstate 5 to extend Interstate 205 through Manteca. In east Manteca the freeway ends at SR 99 and becomes a highway which continues to head east through Escalon, Oakdale and other various small towns. East of Oakdale there are no highly populated areas for 90 miles (144 km) as it heads into the foothills of the Sierra Nevada and into Yosemite National Park. After leaving Crane Flat within Yosemite, it is known as Tioga Pass Road,[5] and it retains that name as it travels through Tuolumne Meadows and over Tioga Pass on its 59-mile (95 km) journey to its intersection with U.S. Route 395, at Lee Vining. After a jog to the south along US 395, it continues east as the Mono Mills Road,[6] skirting the south end of Mono Lake and providing access to the Mono Lake South Tufa as well as the historical site of Mono Mills before cresting Sagehen Summit and ending with the intersection of U.S. Route 6 at Benton. Both the portions through Yosemite National Park and the stretch south of Mono Lake are subject to winter closure. Usually the highway is open through Tioga Pass by the Memorial Day weekend at the end of May, and typically closes for the winter sometime in November.
During the Gold Rush, SR 120 was originally known as Big Oak Flat Road, after the village of Big Oak Flat through which it passes in the Sierra foothills. It was a pack trail from Stockton which became popular with prospectors about 1849. By 1874 it was a wagon road which extended to the Yosemite Valley.
In 1921, the California State Assembly authorized San Joaquin County to transfer the county road connecting Manteca with then-Route 5 (now I-5) at Mossdale to the state.[7] It was numbered Route 66, as was a 1933 extension from Manteca east to Route 13 in Oakdale. Also in 1933, Route 40 was extended east from Mono Lake to Route 76 (US 6) at Benton.[8] The route from Manteca to Benton was marked as Sign Route 120 in 1934,[9] and was soon extended west to Mossdale,[10] replacing what had been part of U.S. Route 99W.[11]
County | Location | Postmile [1][12][13] |
Exit [14] |
Destinations | Notes |
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San Joaquin SJ R0.49-21.18 |
R0.49 | 1 | I-5 – San Francisco, Los Angeles, Stockton, Sacramento | Westbound exit and eastbound entrance; signed as exits 1A (south) and 1B (north); former US 50 west | |
R1.33 | 1C | Yosemite Avenue | Signed as exit 1 eastbound | ||
Manteca | R3.32 | 3 | Airport Way (CR J3) – Sharpe Depot | ||
R4.31 | 4 | Union Road | |||
R5.31 | 5 | South Main Street | |||
T6.87 5.82[N 1] |
6 | SR 99 south – Modesto, Fresno, Los Angeles | West end of SR 99 overlap | ||
Manteca | East end of freeway on SR 99 | ||||
6.65[N 1] 6.20 |
SR 99 north / Yosemite Avenue – Sacramento, Central Manteca | Interchange; east end of SR 99 overlap | |||
8.84 | CR J5 (Jack Tone Road) | ||||
11.64 | French Camp Road | ||||
Escalon | CR J6 / CR J7 north (Escalon-Bellota Road, McHenry Avenue) – Farmington, Modesto | West end of CR J7 overlap | |||
R16.92 | CR J7 south (Main Street) / Kern Street | East end of CR J7 overlap | |||
Stanislaus STA 0.00-T18.17 |
3.16 | CR J9 north (Valley Home Road) – Valley Home | West end of CR J9 overlap | ||
CR J14 north (Twenty-Six Mile Road) | West end of CR J14 overlap | ||||
Oakdale | 5.12 | SR 108 west (F Street) / CR J9 / CR J14 south (Yosemite Avenue) – Modesto | West end of SR 108 overlap; east end of CR J9 / CR J14 overlap | ||
Tuolumne TUO R0.00-R41.52 |
8.19 | CR J59 (La Grange Road) – La Grange, Merced | |||
CR E15 (O'Byrnes Ferry Road) – Copperopolis | |||||
12.08 | SR 108 east – Sonora | East end of SR 108 overlap | |||
Chinese Camp | 15.52 | SR 49 north – Sonora | West end of SR 49 overlap | ||
R23.90 | SR 49 south – Coulterville, Mariposa | East end of SR 49 overlap | |||
Groveland | Ferretti Road – Pine Mountain Lake | ||||
Buck Meadows | R39.46 | CR J132 (Smith Station Road, Greeley Hill Road) to SR 132 – Coulterville, Merced | |||
West end of state maintenance at Yosemite National Park west boundary | |||||
Mariposa MPA R41.52-43.75 |
Crane Flat Campground | To SR 41 / SR 140 / Big Oak Flat Road – Yosemite Valley | SR 120 subject to winter closure from Crane Flat to Lee Vining | ||
Tuolumne TUO 43.75-R56.15 |
No junctions | ||||
East end of state maintenance at Yosemite National Park east boundary | |||||
Mono MNO R0.00-58.99 |
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Lee Vining | R12.06 50.74[N 2] |
US 395 north / Airport Road – Lee Vining, Reno | West end of US 395 overlap | ||
June Lake Loop North Junction | 46.40[N 2] | SR 158 south – June Lake | SR 158 subject to winter closure from North Junction to Silver Lake | ||
Mono Mills Junction | 45.96[N 2] 13.37 |
US 395 south – Bishop | East end of US 395 overlap; SR 120 subject to winter closure from Mono Mills to Benton Crossing Road | ||
Benton | 58.99 | US 6 – Tonopah, Bishop | |||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi Concurrency terminus • Closed/Former • Incomplete access • Unopened |