U.S. Route 62 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
US-62 on a map of Oklahoma, highlighted in red |
||||
Route information | ||||
Maintained by ODOT | ||||
Length: | 402.48 mi[1] (647.73 km) | |||
Major junctions | ||||
West end: | US 62 west of Hollis | |||
US-283 in Altus US-183 in Snyder I-44 / US-277 / US-281 in Lawton US-81 in Chickasha I-240 / I-35 / I-40 in Oklahoma City US-177 in Lincoln County US-377 in Prague US-75 / US-266 in Henryetta US-64 / US-69 in Muskogee US-59 in Westville |
||||
East end: | U.S. 62 east of Westville | |||
Highway system | ||||
United States Numbered Highways Oklahoma State Highways
|
In Oklahoma, U.S. Highway 62 runs diagonally across the state, from the Texas state line in far southwestern Oklahoma to the Arkansas state line near Fayetteville. US-62 spends a total of 402.48 miles (647.73 km)[1] in the Sooner State. The highway passes through fifteen of Oklahoma's counties. Along the way the route serves two of Oklahoma's largest cities, Lawton and Oklahoma City, as well as many regionally important cities, like Altus, Chickasha, Muskogee, and Tahlequah. Despite this, US-62 has no lettered spur routes like many other U.S. routes in Oklahoma do.
US-62 has been part of the Oklahoma highway network since 1930. With the advent of the Interstate system, the portion of its route through Oklahoma City was revised several times to adapt to the presence of the new freeways. The present-day route of US-62 includes concurrencies with I-44, I-240, I-35, and I-40.
Contents |
US-62 enters Oklahoma in Harmon County, 5 miles (8.0 km) west of Hollis.[2] It then passes through that town, the county seat, where it serves as the southern terminus of State Highway 30. US-62 meets the northern terminus of SH-5 in Gould. The highway passes through unincorporated McQueen 4 miles (6.4 km)[2] and then enters Jackson County. Just east of Duke, the route crosses SH-34. Nine miles (14.5 km) later, US-62 becomes a multilane highway and begins a concurrency with SH-6. The two highways travel together into Altus, where they intersect US-283. SH-6 follows US-283 northward out of town, while US-62 heads east towards Headrick. US-62 runs just north of that town before crossing the North Fork of the Red River onto the Kiowa–Tillman County line.[2]
US-62 continues eastward, sending US-62 BUS north to Snyder, which was the original US-62 alignment in the area. The county line then turns south of US-62, and the route has an interchange with US-183. US-62 heads farther east, meeting the other end of US-62 BUS 3 miles (4.8 km)[3] later. US-62 serves as the southern terminus of the northern State Highway 54 3 miles (4.8 km) east of this.[3] The road then enters Comanche County, where it serves as the southern border of Fort Sill. It serves as the southern terminus of another Oklahoma state highway, SH-115, near Cache. A few miles of the highway east of SH-115 is freeway-grade. Continuing east, US-62 becomes an expressway, Rogers Lane, that serves the north side of Lawton (along with several Ft. Sill gates). In eastern Lawton, the highway has an interchange with Interstate 44 and begins a concurrency with it (joining at Exit 40B), along with US-277 and US-281.[2]
I-44/US-62/277/281 head northward through Fort Sill. At Exit 45, the freeway serves as the eastern terminus of State Highway 49. The three U.S. routes split off at Exit 46, with I-44 continuing onto the northern section of the H. E. Bailey Turnpike. US-277 splits off to the east 5 miles (8.0 km) later.[3] US-62/281 then meet SH-19 in Apache. SH-9 begins overlapping the two U.S. routes 10 miles (16 km) north of Apache. The three routes continue into Anadarko, where State Highway 8 briefly joins the concurrency. US-283 and SH-8 split off to the north, while US-62/SH-9 head out of town to the east.[2]
US-62/SH-9 cross into Grady County just west of Verden. At the western limits of Chickasha, US-81 joins the concurrency. In downtown Chickasha, US-81 splits off to the south, and US-277 once again joins with US-62. In far eastern Chickasha, the routes have an interchange with I-44 (the H.E. Bailey Turnpike). US-62/277/SH-9 serve as the southern terminus of SH-92 and the western terminus of SH-39. The three highways then angle northeast towards Blanchard, where they are briefly joined by State Highway 76. Northeast of Blanchard, they are carried by an expressway. SH-9 splits off at a diamond interchange that also serves as the eastern terminus of the H.E. Bailey Turnpike Spur. The two U.S. routes continue north into Newcastle, running through town on a five-lane (two lanes in each direction plus center turn lane) alignment. On the northern rim of Blanchard, the two routes encounter I-44 once again, at the northern terminus of the Bailey Turnpike. US-62 joins eastbound I-44 toward Oklahoma City, while US-277 terminates at the interchange.[2]
I-44/US-62 pick up State Highway 37 at Exit 107, and the three highways cross the Canadian River into Cleveland County and Oklahoma City. SH-37 then splits off at Exit 110. Just north of the Oklahoma County line, I-44 has an interchange at the western terminus of Interstate 240 at Exit 115, and US-62 follows it east to Exit 4B, where it begins to concur with I-35/US-77. I-35/US-62/77 head northward to the Fort Smith Junction. US-77 splits off to join with Interstate 235, while I-35/US-77 join with eastbound I-40/US-270. I-35/US-62 split off to the north after just over a mile. US-62 leaves I-35 at Exit 130, turning east onto N.E. 23rd St., an at-grade street[2]
US-62 serves some of Oklahoma City's eastern suburbs, including far northern Midwest City, far southern Spencer, Nicoma Park, and Choctaw. In eastern Harrah, the route meets the west terminus of State Highway 270. The highway then crosses into far southern Lincoln County, where it crosses SH-120 at Midway. US-62 runs through two more unincorporated communities, Fowler and Jacktown; the latter is the site of the US-62/US-177 junction. US-62 enters Meeker 6 miles (9.7 km)[2] later, where it meets up with SH-18. 12 miles (19 km)[2] further east, in Prague, it encounters US-377/SH-99.[2]
US-62 enters eastern Oklahoma's Green Country as it crosses into Okfuskee County west of Paden. It begins to turn southeast, intersecting State Highway 48 west of Castle, before joining once again with I-40 near Okemah, at Exit 221. US-75 also joins the interstate, 10 miles (16 km) farther east at Exit 231. The two U.S. routes split off at Exit 240B, where they continue the mainline of the Indian Nation Turnpike, which terminates at I-40. The two U.S. routes serve eastern Henryetta, and west of Dewar, they are the western terminus of U.S. Highway 266. In Okmulgee, US-62 turns east while US-75 continues north toward the Tulsa area. US-62 heads through Morris, where it intersects SH-52. The highway then has a 9-mile (14 km)[2] overlap with SH-72, after which it begins a concurrency with US-64.
US-62/64 split up in Muskogee, where US-62 briefly shares pavement with US-69. On the east side of town, it has an interchange with the Muskogee Turnpike/SH-165 freeway. Near Ft. Gibson, US-62 begins to concur with State Highway 10, and the two routes stay joined through Tahlequah. US-62 starts to overlap State Highway 51 in Tahlequah as well; the two highways split up near Eldon. The route enters Adair County near Proctor. It intersects with US-59 in Westville before US-62 crosses the state line into Arkansas.[2]
When US-62 was added to the system in 1930,[4] it had the same basic routing as it did today. In 1930, most of the highway was of gravel or earthen construction. The only portions of the highway that were paved were from Chickasha to Tabler, from Newcastle to Oklahoma City and Meeker, from Okemah to Morris, and from just south of the US-64 junction to Fort Gibson.[5] By 1948, the entire stretch of US-62 through Oklahoma had been paved.[6]
On 1950-03-06, US-62 was rerouted through Oklahoma City.[7] US-62 followed Newcastle Boulevard into the city and turned eastbound onto S.E. 29th Street, which it followed to Robinson Avenue. It then turned north onto Robinson, which was also US-77, towards downtown. Through downtown, US-62 followed Robinson, while US-77 paralleled it one block to the east on Broadway. At N.E. 23rd Street, US-62 turned east, concurring with US-270, US-66 CITY, and the second State Highway 1. US-77 also ran along 23rd Street from Broadway to Lincoln Boulevard, where it split off to the north, along with US-66 CITY. US-62/270/SH-1 then continued along 23rd Street to Spencer.[8]
US-62 was realigned once again on 1955-04-06.[7]
US-62 was realigned for a third time on 1961-09-04. This routing was only meant to be temporary, following Agnew, Exchange, and Reno Avenues to downtown.[7]. This change was followed up by the 1963-09-04[7] rerouting, which put US-62 onto its present-day routing (though I-240 did not exist yet, and I-44 still ended at I-35).[9]
County | Location | Mile[10] | Destinations | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Harmon |
0.0 | US 62 | Texas state line | |
Hollis | 5.0 | SH-30 | Southern terminus of SH-30 | |
Gould | 13.3 | SH-5 | Northern terminus of SH-5 | |
Jackson |
Duke | 25.4 | SH-34 | |
33.9 | SH-6 | Western end of SH-6 concurrency | ||
Altus | 38.9 | US-283 | ||
38.9 | SH-6 | Eastern end of SH-6 concurrency | ||
Kiowa |
56.3 | US-62 BUS |
||
Snyder | 59.9 | US-183 | Diamond interchange | |
63.2 | US-62 BUS |
|||
65.8 | SH-54 | Southern terminus of SH-54 | ||
Comanche |
Cache | SH-115 | Diamond interchange, southern terminus of SH-115 | |
Lawton | 94.0 | I-44/US-277/US-281 | Southern end of I-44/US-277/US-281 concurrency | |
Ft. Sill | 99.6 | SH-49 – Medicine Park, Carnegie | Diamond interchange (I-44 exit 45), eastern terminus of SH-49 | |
100.6 | I-44 | Interchange (I-44 exit 46), northern end of I-44 concurrency | ||
Richards Spur | 105.0 | US-277 | Northern end of US-277 concurrency | |
Caddo |
Apache | 113.9 | SH-19 | Western end of SH-19 concurrency |
114.4 | SH-19 | Eastern end of SH-19 concurrency | ||
124.6 | SH-9 | Western end of SH-9 concurrency | ||
Anadarko | 133.0 | US-281/SH-8 | Northern end of US-281 concurrency, western end of SH-8 concurrency | |
133.5 | SH-8 | Eastern end of SH-8 concurrency | ||
Grady |
Chickasha | 149.3 | US-81 | Western end of US-81 concurrency |
151.1 | US-81/277 | Eastern end of US-81 concurrency, Western end of US-277 concurrency | ||
152.6 | I-44/H.E. Bailey Turnpike | Diamond interchange | ||
154.3 | SH-92 | Southern terminus of SH-92 | ||
Tabler | 157.6 | SH-39 | Western terminus of SH-39 | |
McClain |
Blanchard | 169.1 | SH-76 | Southwestern end of SH-76 concurrency |
170.1 | SH-76 | Northeastern end of SH-76 concurrency | ||
Newcastle | 174.8 | SH-9/H.E. Bailey Norman Spur | Diamond interchange, eastern end of SH-9 concurrency | |
179.3 | SH-130 | Eastern terminus of SH-130 | ||
181.9 | I-44 | US-277 ends, southern end of I-44 concurrency | ||
183.6 | SH-37 west – Tuttle, Minco | I-44 exit 107, southern end of SH-37 concurrency | ||
Cleveland |
Okla. City | 186.4 | SH-37 east – Moore | I-44 exit 110, northern end of SH-37 concurrency |
Oklahoma |
190.8 | I-44/I-240/SH-3 | Western terminus of I-240, I-44 exit 115, northern end of I-44 concurrency, western end of I-240 concurrency, western end of SH-3 concurrency | |
195.4 | I-35/I-240/US-77/SH-3 | Eastern end of I-240 concurrency, eastern end of SH-3 concurrency, southern end of I-35 concurrency, southern end of US-77 concurrency | ||
200.4 | I-40/I-235/US-77/US-270 | Southern terminus of I-235, northern end of US-77 concurrency, western end of I-40/US-270 concurrency | ||
201.1 | I-40/US-270 | Eastern end of I-40/US-270 concurrency | ||
203.7 | I-35 | Northern end of I-35 concurrency | ||
Harrah | 220.8 | SH-270 | Western terminus of SH-270 | |
Lincoln |
Midway | 225.4 | SH-102 | |
Jacktown | 230.7 | US-177 | ||
Meeker | 236.8 | SH-18 | ||
Prague | 248.9 | US-377/SH-99 | ||
Okfuskee |
266.8 | SH-48 | ||
Okemah | 272.6 | SH-27/56 | Northern terminus of SH-27, northern end of SH-27 concurrency, northern end of SH-56 concurrency | |
272.8 | SH-56 | Southern end of SH-56 concurrency | ||
273.4 | I-40/SH-27 | Southern end of SH-27 concurrency, western end of I-40 concurrency | ||
Pharaoh | 283.5 | US-75 south – Wetumka | I-40 exit 231, Western end of US-75 concurrency | |
Okmulgee |
Henryetta | 289.5 | I-40 BUS/US-62 BUS/US-75 BUS |
|
292.1 | Indian Nation Turnpike | Northern terminus of turnpike | ||
292.3 | I-40 | Eastern end of I-40 concurrency | ||
293.2 | I-40 BUS/US-62 BUS/US-75 BUS |
|||
294.5 | US-266 | Western terminus of US-266 | ||
Okmulgee | 305.3 | US-75 | Eastern end of US-75 concurrency | |
307.0 | SH-56 LOOP |
Eastern terminus of SH-56 LOOP | ||
Morris | 311.0 | SH-52 | ||
Muskogee |
322.4 | SH-72 | Southern end of SH-72 concurrency | |
331.5 | US-64/SH-16/SH-72 | Northern end of SH-72 concurrency, Western end of US-64 concurrency, Western end of SH-16 concurrency | ||
336.5 | SH-162 | Southern terminus of SH-162 | ||
Muskogee | 345.3 | US-64/69/62 BUS/64 BUS |
Eastern end of US-64 concurrency, southern end of US-69 concurrency | |
346.3 | US-69 | Northern end of US-69 concurrency | ||
349.8 | SH-16 | Eastern end of SH-16 concurrency | ||
351.5 | Muskogee Tpk./SH-165 | Southern terminus of Muskogee Tpk., northern terminus of SH-165 | ||
353.8 | SH-10 | Western end of SH-10 concurrency | ||
Ft. Gibson | 355.6 | SH-80 | Southern terminus of SH-80 | |
Cherokee |
Park Hill | 372.2 | SH-82 | Southern end of SH-82 concurrency |
Tahlequah | 374.3 | SH-51 | Western end of SH-51 concurrency | |
376.7 | SH-82 | Northern end of SH-82 concurrency | ||
378.6 | SH-10 | Northern end of SH-10 concurrency | ||
Eldon | 384.3 | SH-51 | Eastern end of SH-51 concurrency | |
Adair |
Westville | 403.1 | US-59 | |
402.5 | US 62 | Arkansas state line | ||
1.000 mi = 1.609 km; 1.000 km = 0.621 mi Concurrency terminus • Closed/Former • Incomplete access • Unopened |