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File:U.S. Route 67 in Arkansas (32906047025).jpg - Wikimedia Commons
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U.S. Route 67 is a U.S. highway running from Presidio, Texas northeast to Sabula, Iowa. In the U.S. state of Arkansas, the route runs 279.15 miles (449.25 km) from the Texas border in Texarkana northeast to the Missouri border near Corning. The route passes through several cities and towns, including Hope, Benton, Little Rock, Jacksonville, Cabot, Beebe, Walnut Ridge, and Pocahontas.


Video U.S. Route 67 in Arkansas



Route description

U.S. Route 67 runs parallel to Interstate 30 from Texarkana to Benton, where it then runs concurrent with I-30 to North Little Rock. It then runs east, concurrent with I-40, for about 2 miles (3.2 km) then branches off to the northeast as a freeway to US 412 in Walnut Ridge.

Just north of US 412, the freeway ends at a large, partially complete interchange, and US 67 becomes a five-lane undivided highway north to Pocahontas. From Pocahontas, the road turns northeasterly as a two-lane highway to Corning on a concurrency with US 62, then turns north again and crosses into Missouri.


Maps U.S. Route 67 in Arkansas



History

The southwest-northeast bisector of Arkansas has always been an integral motor route. Prior to designation as US 67, the route was known as the Southwest Trail, an old military road around 1803. The Southwest Trail connected St. Louis, Missouri with Texas by steamboat in Fulton, Arkansas. The main railroad was built along the Southwest Trail, which developed many towns along the route. President Andrew Jackson appropriated money for the route in 1831, and designated it as a National Road. Although the route shifted slightly, it always has followed the natural break between the Ozark Mountains and the Ouachita Mountains and the Mississippi Alluvial Plain.

Money for road maintenance was raised individually by county in the early 20th century, which hindered development of the route. In the 1920s, federal money became available, and the route was designated U.S. Route 67. The routing followed the Lakes to Gulf Highway and the Bankhead Highway. Federal designation brought paving to the route, which grew the small towns along the route.

In early 2009, the Arkansas legislature passed a bill naming the portion of US-67 from the Missouri state line to Jackson County "Rock n' Roll U.S. 67" as a tribute to the route that many musicians of the 1950s and 1960s took as they traveled. Governor Mike Beebe stated that he had hopes that the naming would bring tourism to northeast Arkansas. Portions of the route, and also Arkansas Highway 7 between Hope and Hot Springs frequently used by Bill Clinton is designated The Highway of Hope by Arkansas Code § 27-67-220.

Surviving bypassed alignments

Several portions of the original late 1920s alignment of US 67 have survived, some of which are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. One listed segment is in Lawrence County, which is about 11.25 miles (18.11 km) in length, and runs north from Alicia to Hoxie, most of this being sandwiched between the present Arkansas Highway 367 and US 67, and the adjacent railroad tracks. Near the village of Village Creek Relief it briefly turns west, crossing Village Creek, and then rejoining the railroad tracks near the town of Relief. A second listed segment, also about 11 miles (18 km) in length, extends from Biggers in central eastern Randolph County, northeast to Datto in Clay County, and then straight north to a junction with Arkansas Highway 211. Another section in Miller County is also listed on the National Register.


US Highway 67 â€
src: static2.interstate411.us


Future

Arkansas is upgrading US 67 to an Interstate-grade freeway from Little Rock to the Missouri state line, and the corridor is slated to become a southern extension of Interstate 57. The freeway currently runs from Little Rock to Walnut Ridge, but it is unknown when and where the freeway north of there to the state line will be constructed.

Grading for a short distance for two lanes of freeway suggests that the freeway would parallel Arkansas State Highway 34 to the north and east of Walnut Ridge, and not follow US 67 from Walnut Ridge to Pocahontas. Northbound US 67 as it now exists looks to be an exit ramp with bridges already built over the graded path of the freeway extension.


File:U.S. Route 67 in Arkansas (32609734236).jpg - Wikimedia Commons
src: upload.wikimedia.org


Major intersections


US Highway 67 â€
src: interstate411.us


See also

  • U.S. Roads portal
  • Arkansas portal
  • Special routes of U.S. Route 67
  • National Register of Historic Places listings in Clay County, Arkansas
  • National Register of Historic Places listings in Lawrence County, Arkansas
  • National Register of Historic Places listings in Randolph County, Arkansas

File:U.S. Route 67 in Arkansas (32063122574).jpg - Wikimedia Commons
src: upload.wikimedia.org


References


Source of the article : Wikipedia

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